es »m Unitt,. The Batt\lion Vol. 73 No. 99 12 Pages Tuesday, February 12, 1980 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 9. M Local doctors differ ver tanning salons By BECKY SWANSON City Staff Recent Food and Drug Administration eports warning against the hazards of exp- sure to ultraviolet light — primarily in nning salons — has led to some con- oversy in the Bryan-College Station area. Two Bryan dermatologists have differing iews on the use of ultraviolet light for ismetic and medical purposes. “I’m very much against them (tanning alons) because of the large amount to ultra- iolet rays people are exposed to,” Dr. Ter ry Jones, a Bryan dermatologist, said. Dr. Clyde Caperton, another Bryan der- atologist, said, “A normal, healthy person ill not be adversely affected by controlled sxposure to ultraviolet rays.” Caperton said the only people who vould be adversely affected by ultraviolet ays are those who are sensitive or allergic :o sunlight. Jones said overexposure to ultraviolet ays is not healthy. “Fm not much of a sun fan, ” Jones said, In spite of what the American public hinks, tanning is not a healthy reaction.” Jones said exposure to ultraviolet rays lan lead to skin cancer, premature aging nd wrinkling, and keratosis — sores that an become malignant. Jones said that although he does not use jltraviolet lights in his practice, they are jsed by some dermatologists for the treat ment of certain skin disorders, such as acne md psoriasis (a hereditary skin disorder diaracterized by redness and flaking). "Dermatologists do use ultraviolet light For certain skin problems,” Jones said. They are used in specific, selected treat ment for short periods of time. “I do not recommend it for any of my Ipatients,” Jones said. “I discourage them from even getting in the sun, much less exposing tbeir whole body to massive amounts of ultraviolet rays. ” Dr. Caperton said, “Most dermatologists don’t feel tanning salons are real dangerous because the type of lights used requires a lot of exposure to damage the skin. “Our concern is not for the average, ordinary client. Our concern is that there are people who are sensitive, almost aller gic to sunlight and may not even know it, ” Caperton said. Fair-skinned people, especially those with red hair and blue eyes, are often sensi tive to sunlight, Caperton said. “Ultraviolet light is damaging if you ex pose yourself to it long enough for a long enough period of time,” Caperton said. “It takes years of repeated overexposure to ultraviolet rays to cause cancer. “It’s like overeating,” Caperton said, “overdoing anything isn’t good. ” Caperton said tanning salons have be nefits. They allow people a chance to build up a resistance to sunlight before going on a vacation or starting an outdoor job so they will not get a sunburn on their first day, he said. Caperton said people with skin disorders such as acne or psoriasis are instructed to get a certain amount of sunlight to help their condition, and tanning salons can serve as a substitute when it is cold or raining. The FDA warns that persons taking high blood pressure medicine or diuretics, oral contraceptives containing estrogen, the anti-diabetes pill and some antibiotics may become sun-sensitive. Both dermatologists warn against expo sure to ultraviolet light — sunlight or sun lamps — while taking certain medications. A person taking prescription medication should check with their doctor to find out if it causes sun sensitivity, both doctors said. Caperton said he felt the established, reputable tanning salons were safe for aver age, healthy people, but said that ofen the fly-by-night commercial operations do not screen clients to make sure they are not sun-sensitive. Charles Ray, manager of the Bryan Tan- trific Sun franchise, said his company screens all clients for medical problems, medications and sun-sensitivity before they begin tanning sessions. “A girl came in tbe other day and said she was allergic to the sun and I wouldn’t put her through the program,” Ray said. Tantrific, a national franchise of tanning salons, requires clients to fill out a ques tionnaire with such questions as: — Are you taking any drugs which would cause sensitivity to sunlight? — Are you in any way allergic to sun light? — Natural hair color — do you color your hair? — Do you tan easily? — Do you have oily or dry skin? — Do you tend to freckle? — How much exposure to sunlight do you get per week? — Are you active in outdoor activities? — Do you presently use a lotion or mois turizer? The answers to questions are run through a computer. A visit and exposure time schedule are arranged if the applicant meets the requirements. Ray said the Tantrific program is de signed to build a slow tan to prevent over exposure and burning. Exposure time is slowly increased to gra dually build resistance to ultraviolet rays, Ray said. If a person shows any sensitivity or redness, the exposure time is decreased. If the sensitivity is severe enough, the program is discontinued. In order to protect the client’s eyes from ultraviolet rays, special goggles are used, Ray said. Trantrific, Inc. officials announced in December that the equipment used in their franchised salons “meets or exceeds (the FDA) standards” for eye protection, timer control, minimum use distance and certain construction, mechanical and elec trical requirements. Ray said the program is safe and benefi cial for both medical and cosmetic pur poses. “If someone is concerned or has ques tions, I tell them to talk to their doctor about it,” Ray said. Many joggers and athletes come to the salon, be said. Dr. Caperton said anyone thinking about going to a tanning salon should follow a few simple rules: — check with your doctor about any medications being taken to find out if they cause sun-sensitivity. — follow all directions and rules of the salon. — only stay in the booth for the time allotted and don’t overdo it. Charles Ray, manager of the Tantrific Sun Tanning salon in Bryan, shows one of the booths in which customers are exposed to ultraviolet light to hasten skin tanning. Staff photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Bryan puts clamp on local wreckers Trash explosion injures 2 By ANGELIQUE COPELAND Campus Staff Chemicals from a park dumpster at the comer of Montclair and Luther in College Station exploded in the back of a city gar bage truck injuring two men Monday. Chief Landua of the College Station Fire Department, said the workers had just emptied the dumpster when there was a I smail explosion and smoke started coming from the back of the truck. The men then backed the truck up to a garden hose in the yard of the house across the street. When the water hit the chemic als, Landua said there was another explo sion that “shook the windows in houses down the street.” The explosion also threw garbage and glass into the trees near the house. The men, Johnny Ray Williams and Hulon Young were taken to the city physi cian and treated for hand and facial burns. Landua said the truck was not damaged. “We took the truck and emptied it in a separate, remote area of the city’s dumping ground,” Landua said. “We don’t know if it was one chemical or a mixture that caused the explosion, but it was the combination with water that made them explode,” he said. “When we were watering down the yard there would be occasional flash-ups.” Landua said they were not sure who had put the chemicals in the dumpster that is supposed to be used only by the park, but that they had a “pretty good idea” that someone in the neighborhood had put them there. Landua said that a combination of house hold chemicals could not have caused the explosion. “These are the kind of chemicals you find in all the labs on campus,” Landua said. By LAURA RUTHERFORD City Reporter After Monday, when a car is towed away in Bryan, the owner won’t need to search city-wide for the company that towed it, or mortgage his house to pay the towing charge. The Bryan City Council made the follow ing changes Monday in the present city ordinance about the towing of unautho rized vehicles. — The wrecker company must report the removal of any unauthorized vehicle to the police department within one hour af ter towing. The wrecker company must report the time, date and location of the removal to the police department. Rio Airlines workers were “out on a wing” at Easterwood Airport trying to right a company plane which lost a wheel while taxiing before a scheduled take-off on Thursday. None of the plane’s 12 passengers or crew members were reported as injured. But, as co-pilot Fred Arbuckle (far left) said, “It’s a good thing it was an easy landing coming in.” Staff photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. — The wrecker company must provide the physical description and license plate number of the vehicle to the police. — The wrecker company must provide the location where the vehicle is stored to the police. — The wrecker company must provide a telephone number the company can be reached at on a 24-hour basis for tbe release of impounded vehicles to the owner. —The wrecker company is now limited to a miximum $25 charge for towing unau thorized vehicles. An unauthorized vehicle is any car towed without the owner’s permission. The city council decided (4-3) to get the public’s opinion of a city mass transporta tion system before applying for grant money. Bryan residents will vote on the issue during the municipal elections, April 5. The mass transit system would cost an initial $165,000, for buses and other captial investments. The annual operating cost would be $227,000. The yearly cost would be greater than the initial cost because the high price of fuel. Councilman Henry Seale said this sys tem would increase property taxes by 13 cents. The tax, which was raised 13 cents in early August, is a 60 cent tax per $100 of the assessed value of the property. If this tax was raised by 13 cents, the owner of a $40,000 house, now paying $240, would pay a tax of $292, an increase of $52. Council members disagreed on the feasi bility of the system. Seale said he didn’t think people would want the system once they understood the cost. Councilman Joe Hanover, a member of the Urban Transportation Committee, said the city would need the transit system in a few years. Mayor Richard Smith said, “I believe we’re a long way from people riding it.” Councilman Pies Turner said he thought people would be interested in the system in the if the price of gasoline rose to $2 a gallon. Since Bryan residents will vote on a re venue bond at the municipal election, Sea le said he didn’t want the mass transit sys tem issue to be on the ballot. He said he didn’t want any negative controversary associated with the election. Smith said he doesn’t care if the public votes on the system at the election or not as long as they understand that the vote is just a measurement of public support for the system to see if the council should pursue a grant. The council bought 11 new vehicles for the police department at a cost of $66,498. City manager Ernest Clark said the cars would be delivered in about 90 days. In other action, the council commended KAMU-TV, channel 15, for public service to local residents an made Feb. 15 “KAMU Public Television Day.” Related editorial, pg. 2 Bus routes remain unchanged By RICHARD OLIVER Staff Writer Although the death ofTexas A&M Univer sity student Steve Sikora has touched off a few questions about the safety of shuttlebus routes off-campus, no routes will be changed this spring. Gene Oates, chairman of the Shuttlebus Operations Committee, said Monday the group met last week to discuss whether changes should be made, but decided no thing would be done this semester. “At the end of the spring, all the routes are re-evaluated,” he said. “Any changes which need to be made will become effec tive in the fall. ” Sikora, a freshman transfer student, was killed Jan. 28 when a car went out of control at the intersection of Krenek Tap Road and Texas Ave. The car hit another car, serious ly injuring the driver, then struck Sikora, who was waiting for a shuttlebus on the side of the road. The Battalion received a letter from sev eral A&M students saying the shuttlebus stop at the intersection was dangerous be cause students have to stand in a ditch close to the highway. Linda Northcutt, manager of Oak Forest Mobile Home Park on Krenek Tap Road, said she talked to Oates Monday about the dangerous situation at the intersection, but he told her the route would not be changed any time soon. “It doesn’t look like it’s going to be re routed,” she said. “The main reason he gave me is changing the route would add more time to the route. It would take five to seven minutes to reroute the bus another part of the highway. “I was just disheartened. I think my problem lies with the (Shuttlebus) commit tee. It (the bus stop) is very dangerous.” Northcutt said she will attend the next meeting of the Shuttlebus Operations Committee in April, and present her objec tions again. Oates said he believed the shuttlebus stop was not the cause of the accident. “That same accident could happen any where, anytime,” he said. “It could happen on any other bus route.” Gang also takes van By JAN EVANS Campus Reporter When robbers took a safe from the Stu dent Publications Office over the weekend, they also took a university van to transport it. The safe was reported missing first, but police later learned that a van had been stolen also. Both the van and the safe were found Monday. The safe still contained some cash and a tape recorder. University Police Chief Russ McDonald said police spotted the van abandoned off the East Bypass. They searched the area and found the safe about 150 yards from the road. McDonald said the safe had been opened with a cutting torch. It is not known whether any of the money known to be in the safe had been taken. Police will first have to check the safe for fingerprints. But McDonald said it looks like about $100 is missing. The safe was stolen from the Student Publications Office on the second floor of the Reed McDonald Building sometime between midnight Saturday and noon Sunday. A desk drawer had been pried open in the communications department on the third floor, but nothing was missing. Police have not determined whether the incidents are related. Prison may make room for an inn !i United Press International OKLAHOMA CITY — Saying it would be just like stopping at a motel, a state senator has proposed that prison ers be permitted conjugal visits with their spouses in special quarters inside prison walls. “Conjugal privileges among married prisoners,” said Sen. Melvin Porter, D- Oklahoma City, “would reduce tensions within the prison, offer responsibility and hope and would demonstrate a be neficial effect upon discipline.” Porter introduced a resolution Mon day urging the state Corrections De partment to set up the system. In urging passage he told the Senate his resolution was “merely to permit conjugal visita tion rights.” Porter proposed that prisoners be permitted to construct their own quar ters within the walls for such visits and that several prisoners share the same facility on a visit reservation basis. “It would be just as if you were travel ing and stopped at a motel,” Porter said. The Senate voted to refer the resolu tion to the Rules Committee after Sen. John Young, D-Sapulpa, suggested the proposal could “give rise to debate.”