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   They see themselves playing  and living on the edge with a  defiant fury -
the punk  "rockers" and the more  aggressive heavy metal  "stoners" who glory
in their  tight black leather pants,  boots and black gloves, often  speckled
with studs and filed  spikes.    They dance with a frenzy and  worship the
angry music and  band members of such groups as  "Suicidal Tendencies," "Septic
 Death," "Nazi Punks," "Slayer,"  Sex Gang Children" and "Social  Destruction."
   Drug and alcohol abuse,  sexual recklessness, satanic  rituals and
outrageous behavior  and rebellion against all forms  of societal authority are
part  of the culture.    For the extremists, so is  self-mutilation, such as 
burning "happy faces" on their  arms with cigarette lighters  and cutting crude
slogans into  their thighs and arms.    Is punk and heavy metal a  passing fad
for most teenagers,  just another generation showing  its youthful antipathy
for the  establishment?    Or is it a peril to society  that must be halted by
using  various "de-punking" and "de- metalizing" techniques, as some  members
of the psychiatric  community are now advocating?    Apparently, the notion is 
growing that a small percentage  of true believers in punk and  heavy metal are
dangerously out  of control, acting out their  faith in the nihilistic message 
of the music until they end up  in juvinile courts, mental  hospitals, maybe
even  cemeteries.    Some suggest that they  should be "de-punked" and "de-
metaled" before it's too late.    More than 150 parents,  teachers, probation
officers,  psychiatrists and police turned  out for an all-day conference  in
Pasadena earlier this month  to discuss the potentially evil  effects of the
punk and heavy  metal culture.    Punk and heavy metal  paraphenalia was passed
around.   Chilling stories were told,  like the one about the 15-year  old
"heavy metaler" who smashed  all the furniture in his  parents' house and beat
his  mother about the face.    A videotape called "Spikes  and Studs" was also
played  showing young women tearing  away their clothes and offering  their
bodies to the musicians.    (Ed. note:  As far as the  women offering their
bodies  goes, remember, they did that  to Frank Sinatra, too.)    Titled "Sound
and Fury," the  conference - one of the first  to be held on the punk-metal 
phenomenon - was sponsored by  the Back In Control Training  Center in
Fullerton, which was  started up recently by two  former Orange County 
probabation officers to teach  parents what to look for and  how to get tough
with their  children.    For center directors Greg  Bodenhamer and Darlyne 
Pettinicchio, punk and heavy  metal - particularly metal -is  public enemy
number 1.    They maintain there is a  direct link between the  aggressive
music and lifestyle,  and teenage suicide, homicide  and self-inflected wounds.
   "These kids have been  totally brainwashed by this  stuff.  They've got to
be de- punked and de-metalized,"  Bodenhamer said.    He and Pettinicchio point
to  some well-publicized cases over  the past year:    Last October, 14
year-old  Jennifer Newton was sentenced  to 25 years in prison for  stabbing
and bludgeoning her  mother to death in Fullerton.   Prosecutors said Newton
and her  boyfriend were absorbed with  heavy metal music.    Last August, two
teenage San  Bernadino boys, described by  authorities as "into the heavy 
metal scene," were accused of  murdering a 15-year old boy who  was shackled to
a heavy milk  crate near his home.    In January, one 14 year-old  boy was
found by his parents  bleeding in his Santa Monica  bedroom after he sliced his
 knuckles and scrawled a giant  "A" for anarchy on the wall.   He survived.   
Not everyone shares the  somewhat alarming position that  surfaced at the
Pasadena  conference.    "I really don't think  they're any big threat," Los 
Angeles Police Detective Harry  Andrews said.  "Sure, we arrest  a few of them
for dangerous  weopons like attaching spikes  on their hands.  But, really, 
you know, people thought we  were crazy too (in the 60's)."    Dr. Rex Baeber,
assistant  professor of medicine at UCLA,  explained: "I would make the 
argument that in any given time  in history, there's always been  a percentage
of young people  that are nihilistic,  despairing, with psychological 
disorders and into a lot of  drug use.   "But I also think it's a  mistake to
say the music  promulgates the nihilism,  although the metalists will 
reinforce violent, crazy  behavior."    Although punk and heavy  metal are used
as terms  interchangeably by outsiders,  there is a difference.    For the
punker, the dress  code covers the spectrum, the  hair is short and often dyed 
several colors.  And the music  suggests a certain desperation  and
hopelessness about the  world.  The punk symbol is an  "A" for anarchy.  Shock
value  is vital.  The true punker may  autograph himself with knife  cuts
across the arm or run a  safety pin through the cheeck.    By contrast, there's
more  militancy, almost a fascist  strain to the heavy metalers.   The black,
spike-strewn uniform  is important, and metalers,  unlike punkers, wear their
hair  longer and cropped on top.  -By Ellis E. Conklin  -Los Angeles Times 
-Reprinted with permission