Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, September 16, 1972, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 16, 1972
16
by PETER G. HAMMOND
Executive Director, National
Coordinating Council on Drug Education
Drug abuse prevention has
not escaped America’s pro
pensity to deal with social
problems by dumping them
on our educational school sys
tem. We have unjustly de
manded that education ac
complish overnight what law
enforcement, the medical pro
fession, and others have
failed to do. If the task is
the same —preventing all il
legal drug use—school sys
tems will also fail.
Any progress the school
systems make will be a result
of modification of goals, flex
ibility of curriculum, certi
fication exemptions, and em
phasis on decision making.
Unfortunately, there is little
or no evidence of these es
sential changes.
Education, as in “drug
abuse education,” is primar
ily indoctrination or attempts
to persuade through commu
nication. Selected informa
tion which supports precon
ceived notions of the drug
problem is presented to stu
dents corralled in assemblies
or health classes. Success is
measured by the number of
students reached and quanti
ties of materials distributed.
The assumption is made that
so-called “facts” about drugs
will change attitudes and re
sult in predetermined beha
vior change.
This approach to drug ed
ucation is defective and
counter productive. Yet, it
characterizes more than fifty
WHETHER you store in a sealed unit, conventional,
or trench silo, the Allis-Chalmers Forage Harvester
has the BIG capacity and the attachments to chop
any crop the way you want it ... as fast as you can
store it And its cutting accuracy is unsurpassed. It
makes uniform silage from as short as 7/32 of an inch
up to as long as 2-1/4 inches.
Top-quality silage means top livestock gains . . and
your silage gets to the silo in top condition every time
with the Alhs-Chalmers Forage Harvester. That’s why
Going Orange is Going Great 1
CUTS SHORT...
PACKS TIGHT
Roy H. Buch, Inc.
Ephrata, R. D. 2
A
ALUS-CHAIAICRS
per cent of our national ef
fort and is fostered and sup
ported by federal, state and
local governments. In the
next column, the why’s of
drug abuse education failure
will be discussed.
Many communities work
ing to prevent drug misuse
jnly need a place in the com
munity where young people
lan talk to each other, and in
.he process, head off reliance
m drugs. These facilities are
mown as “awareness houses,”
‘listening posts,” "frustra
,ion forums,” and “rap cen
.ers.” Whatever the facility
,s called, what’s needed is a
place to meet (regularly),
some money, man-hours, pro
fessional counseling. What we
caution about other programs
applies equally as well to
awareness houses.
Many communities have
discovered that its young peo
ple turn to drugs because
they cannot “find them
selves,” because they feel cut
off and adrift from society.
In some towns, “awareness
houses” have been founded to
provide a place, a setting, for
self-discovery and open-ended
discussion. Operating under
guidance, but not adult direc
tion, awareness houses give
kids a place to talk it out, to
find common ground with
each other, and frequently,
to find out more about them
selves.
The basics are a storefront
or meeting room, a volunteer
or part-time counseling staff
or single professional, and
the usual support services of
clerical work and mainte
nance. The key to the
awareness house concept is
responsibility. The center will
probably be most effective if
I. H. Brubaker
Lancaster, Pa.
Nissley Form Service
Washington Boro, Pa.
N. G. Myers & Son
Rheems, Pa.
Grumelli Farm Service
Pa
Ihe Old Im&c-
WASHINGTON
FUND r IT
“Uncle Sam gets most of
our funds, so Washington,
D.C. should be named ‘Fund
City.’”
the young people who use it
are given major control over
its operation. Responsibility,
in many cases, leads to self
discipline and self-awareness,
and these, in turn, can help a
young man or woman head off
drug reliance before it be
comes a too-welcome crutch.
00
STA-RITE CAN PUT A PIPELINE IN ANY BARN
WHY BUY A PIPELINE?
For An Average
40 Cow Herd
You Con . . .
1. Save walking 100 miles a
year.
2. Save carrying 292 tons of
milk a year.
3. Save 200 hours per year
on-an average herd.
Produce higher quality
milk.
Increase your milk
production.
WHY BUY A STA-RITE PIPELINE?
1. Engineered for the modern dairy farm of today as well as the dairy farm of
tomorrow. Around the barn pipelines and milking parlors.
2. The only milkhouse control unit that is assembled at our modern new factory
on a stainless steel panel. Pretested for trouble free operation, self-draining
with patented washing features.
3. Built and guaranteed by Sta-Rite Industries, Inc., of Delavan, Wisconsin, a
recognized leader in home water systems and agricultural components.
MOVE UP TO THE NEW SUNSET “SPACE SAVER”
Move up in convenience as you add
capacity The “SPACE SAVER’S" shape,
with its single positive-closing cover
makes it ideal for automatic Sunset
Spin-Clean washing. It’s'easier, more
thorough, more economical, with no
overspray.
w
24 Hour Milking Equipment Service
Installation and Service
CALL TODAY AND ASK FOR AN APPOINTMENT
SUPPLY CENTER
1027 Oillervilie Road, Lancaster
24 Hour Service Daily—Ph: 717-397-4761
Take me
“sale-ing”!
iMr charge
;4'!TH'ESiiiTERBANK CARD
Commonwealth A
National Bank AX
The Master Charge Bank
A
The Latest Development in
Stainless Steel Milk Coolers
for the Expanding Dairyman .
Move up in capacity without adding
space. This efficient atmospheric cooler
with the modern, elliptical shape gives
up to 50 per cent more capacity in the
same floor space.
Move up m versatility. “SPACE
SAVERS” are “Advanced Evaporator”
models which can be installed with one
or two compressors, controlled from a
dual refrigeration system. These “AE”
designed coolers permit buying for your
present production needs and allow
future expansion at lowest cost.
Four “SPACE SAVER" sizes
800, 1,000 and 1,500 gallons
Y
600,