Pubdate: Mon, 01 May 2006 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: 2006 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 Author: Andrea Bushee, Telegraph Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) AREA STUDENTS LEARN TO SAY NO BROOKLINE -- If Alex Duhaime did drugs, he might not be able to play basketball, lacrosse, football or baseball. That is one of the things Duhaime, 11, said he learned from the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program at his school. "I learned that you should resist drugs and they can harm you in many ways," he said. He and the rest of his fifth-grade class at Capt. Samuel Douglass Academy graduated from the program April 20 with about 150 of their friends and family members watching. They promised Brookline Police Officer Michael Kurland they would never do drugs at the ceremony that lasted about an hour and a half and ended with an ice cream party. DARE is a nationwide program designed to give kids the tools they need to avoid using drugs and getting involved in gangs. It also addresses issues with peer pressure and violence. Kurland has been running the program in Brookline for six years and said there is another benefit to DARE that has to do with children trusting police officers. "I remember back when I was a kid," he said at the graduation, "when we saw police we ran the other way. We were afraid." Now kids run toward him, which can make him feel as if he were "the biggest recipient" of the program, he said. Several students read essays they wrote about DARE during the ceremony and received certificates and T-shirts. John Ogrodowczyk of Hollis sang several songs to the students during the event while Carol Yetto of Mont Vernon played the piano. During the ice cream party, Alex Driscoll, 10, said she learned from DARE that tobacco is "very harmful to your body," that "marijuana is illegal in the United States" and "alcohol can affect your body if you're under 21 much more than it can affect an adult's body." Kaitlyn Atkinson, 10, said her favorite part of the program was attending a Manchester Monarchs hockey game. She learned from DARE that, "drugs are very, very, very, very bad for you." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom