“…No behavior comes under the exclusive dominance of a particular generation, either peers or parents. When the issues involve immediate gratifications, such as drug use, smoking (Cresswell, Huffman, & Stone, 1970;Horn, Courts, Taylor, & Solomon, 1959;Laoye, 1970), drinking (Alexander & Campbell, 1967;Haer, 1957), sports and other youth activities (Coleman, 1961), cheating (Wilder, Friedman, Hill, Sandis, & Sieber, 1968), or delinquency (Glueck & Glueck, 1951;Hirshi, 1969;Short, 1957), adolescents tend to be particularly responsive to pressures from members of their own generation. When the issues involve future life goals and behaviors which do not contravene adult standards, adolescents tend to be more responsive to the parental generation (Kandel & Lesser, 1972)?…”