Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 1999 Source: Courier-Mail, The (Australia) Page: 3 Copyright: News Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.thecouriermail.com.au/ Author: Rory Callinan and Paul Whittaker STUDENTS DISCIPLINED FOR ILLEGAL DRUGS AT SCHOOL TWENTY-EIGHT students from Queensland state schools have been disciplined for using or possessing illegal drugs this year, including 10 pupils caught with marijuana at a leadership camp, latest records show. In another incident, five 11-vear-olds from Toowoomba North Primary School were disciplined after stealing wine from a cask at a parents and citizens' function. The drug possessions, all for marijuana, were spread across nine schools while 88 students were caught smoking cigarettes and 35 drinking alcohol in schools across the state, according to figures released by the Education Department yesterday. The worst drugs case involved 10 Maleny High School students who were suspended after being caught with marijuana "joints" during a Year 12 camp on Moreton Island. Maleny High principal Paul Tarbuck confirmed that three other pupils on the camp were suspended for drinking alcohol during the week-long camp. "I don't think anyone was caught actually using but it was a matter of being in possession and then as a result of inquiries by the staff concerned, a lot of kids owned up to the fact they had it and they suffered the penalty," he said. "They (the drugs and alcohol) were kept until they could be handed over to the police. They (the students) were all suspended." The next highest incidences of state school marijuana abuse after Maleny were Harristown High and Miami High, both with three students disciplined, according to the departmental figures which dated from the start of term in January. Bundaberg, Lowood, Mossman, Rosewood, Sunnybank and William Ross state high schools all recorded drugs incidents involving two students each. Toowoomba North Primary School principal Maxine Hetherington said yesterday the students, four in Year 6 and one in Year 5, had consumed one or two small mouthfuls of wine each from a cask set up for a P&C function. The revelations of the expulsions came a day after the release of a report showing almost 19,000 students from Queensland state schools were suspended or expelled last year. Substance abuse was one of the main grounds for expulsion, along with bullying and disobedience. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry