Pubdate: Mon, 01 Nov 2004 Source: Desert Sun, The (CA) Copyright: 2004 The Desert Sun Contact: http://www.thedesertsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Author: Christine Mahr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Red+Ribbon (Red Ribbon Week) ATHLETES CHAMPION RED RIBBON WEEK COACHELLA VALLEY -- Scott Saunders, A.J. Scott and Blair Tiedeman weren't scoring points on the football field or volleyball court but they still were getting cheers and applause. The enthusiastic audience was comprised of 500 students at Cahuilla Elementary School where the three Palm Springs High School athletes went Friday to deliver a "stay-drug-free" message. It's a message the Cahuilla students heard all week, as did students across the valley as part of the nationwide Red Ribbon Week observance. At Cahuilla, school officials decided that with the help of a few star athletes from the nearby high school, they could end the week on a strong anti-drug note. "These are idols the kids look up to," Principal Renee Loewen said. "The kids can identify with them more than they might with someone else." When asked to be a part of the program, Saunders and Tiedeman, 11th-graders, and Scott, a senior, accepted the invitation without hesitation. "It's important for younger kids to have older high school students as role models," said Saunders, a quarterback on the football team. "They can look up to us, see our achievements and strive to be like us," he said. "It's an important message -- why you shouldn't do drugs and what you can achieve if you don't," said Tiedeman who's on the volleyball, water polo and track teams. The athletes told the students that if they decide they want to play sports in school, they'll have to sign an agreement saying they won't use drugs and alcohol. "If you're using drugs you can't perform to your highest ability," Saunders said. "Alcohol and drugs will hurt the team and you don't want to do anything to hurt the team," he said. "You have to put your teammates first -- always," said Scott, a tailback on the football team and a member of the track and wrestling teams. The athletes also had some general advice for the students. "Listen to your parents and work hard," Scott said. "You need to choose good friends -- good friends influence you to make good decisions," Saunders said. Students had a few minutes to ask the athletes some questions. "What if you're in sports and someone accuses you of using drugs and you don't but you get kicked off the team?" a student asked. "A drug test will prove you're not," Tiedeman said. "Good friends won't say bad things about you so choose friends wisely," Saunders said. Fifth-grader Brittny Lozano said she paid close attention to the athletes because what they said was important. "They said do well in school, make the right choices and don't do alcohol and drugs," Brittny, 10, said. "They taught us a lesson so we can make the right choices like they did," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek