Pubdate: Sat, 30 Oct 2004 Source: Craig Daily Press, The (CO) Copyright: 2004 The Craig Daily Press Contact: http://www.craigdailypress.com/site/feedback Website: http://www.craigdailypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2334 Author: Christina M. Currie, Daily Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Red+Ribbon (Red Ribbon Week) STUDENTS HAVE FUN WITH ANTI-DRUG ACTIVITIES Students in Moffat County have elected to be drug free and wore red, white and blue Wednesday to show their commitments. "Students learned about the dangers of tobacco, alcohol and other drug use," said Cindy Biskup, director of Grand Futures Prevention Coalition. Across the district, students participated in drug-free and drug-education activities. At the elementary school level, students wore certain clothes to coincide with the theme of each day. On Monday, students wore red to kick off the week. They turned their clothes inside out or backward Tuesday to show they turned their back on drugs. Friday's Halloween festivities also were part of the theme: Drugs are Scary. One day, students had an activity-filled two hours when Craig Middle School students hosted a carnival. "Schools plan a lot of the activities on their own," Biskup said. "We're the coordinating agency." Shannon Samuelson, a counselor at Ridgeview Elementary School, put a lot of effort into Red Ribbon Week activities. "We've had a lot of fun," she said. She created a placemat covered with drug-free activity ideas and information for students to take home. The idea was that they use the placemat during a family meal and take advantage of that time to talk to their parents about drugs and to give parents an opening to share their values. Students were encouraged to bring the placemat back signed by their parents. Of the 240 students at Ridgeview, more than 200 brought their placemats back with signatures. Parents also were involved when students brought home construction paper to collect handprints of all their family in tune with the theme: Hands off Drugs. One student brought back the prints off all of his family members, including his cat. Samuelson said she doesn't talk to students about specific drugs, she talks to them about making healthy choices and preserving self-esteem. "You have the choice," she tells them. "Think, 'How is this going to affect me?'" The message got across -- at least to the students Samuelson talked to. "They definitely got the message," she said. "Research proves the younger the better. Early intervention is the key." East Elementary School hosted an ice cream social as part of their activities, and Sunset Elementary School students planted red tulip bulbs. At the high school level, health class students have spent a couple of weeks in drug and alcohol education with several guest speakers. Several agencies partnered to help fund Red Ribbon Week activities, including the Craig Police Department, Moffat County Sheriff's Department, Substance Abuse Prevention Program and United Way. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek