Pubdate: Sat, 28 Oct 2006 Source: Brazosports Facts, The (TX) Copyright: 2006 The Facts Contact: http://www.thefacts.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1406 Author: Mena El-Sharkawi Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Red+Ribbon (Red Ribbon Week) STUDENTS RALLY AGAINST DRUGS BRAZORIA -- Students had a police escort and walked to the music of the junior high marching band to proclaim their message during a Red Ribbon Week parade at Barrow Elementary on Friday. About 730 students from pre-kindergarten to sixth grade gathered at the First Baptist Church of Brazoria parking lot Friday to jump on their designated trailers and get the parade started. "They're just learning about drugs," Susan Parker said about her daughter, Taylar Laughlin, a kindergartner at Barrow and her classmates. "I think they're excited to be with classmates and be in a parade." Students were escorted by two Brazoria Police Department cars and a Columbia-Brazoria ISD Police Department D.A.R.E. Camaro, as well as a few West Brazos Junior High School band members. Along the streets, parents waited with cameras to snap pictures of their children on floats. Brazoria residents Mark and Nancy Guidry were waiting for their sixth-grade daughter to pass them. "She's got red all on -- painted her face, her hair red, red T-shirt, practicing her song," Nancy Guidry said about the say-no-to-drugs chants the sixth graders had to memorize. The family had lived in Brazoria for only six months, and this was their first time to experience the parade, Nancy Guidry said. "I like this community," she said. "It's so small, but it's so involved." Red Ribbon Week is a nationwide program that educates students about the effects of dangerous drugs. It was started by the National Family Partnership in 1988 in honor of former Drug Enforcement Administration investigator Enrique "Kiki" Camarena, who was killed three years earlier in Mexico while working as an undercover agent to investigate a major drug cartel believed to have involved Mexican officials, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services' Web site. Fourth-grade teacher Cindy Weathers said when the district started the parade in 1993, it was just a walk around the block. "It wasn't meant for people to watch us more than it was to make that statement," Weathers said. Parents, teachers and volunteers have become more involved over the years. Some were up at the parking lot to decorate the floats as early as 6:45 a.m. "We had more people that want to participate than having to search for people to participate," said fourth-grade teacher Shannon Hamilton about this year's parade. Students thought the effort was well worth it. "When I look back at how we did it in kindergarten, and how we do it now, it gets better every year," said fifth-grader Chad Lewis, who has participated in the parade since he first entered school. "People know what to fix to make it better," sixth-grader Emily May said - --- MAP posted-by: Derek