THE BATTALION Page 15 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1981 Small businesses need legal help, lawyer says United Press International NEW YORK — Legal worries can absorb an inordinate amount of a small businessman’s time if he does not have access to proper help, says Washington lawyer Mary Helen Sears. After listing the everyday legal problems with which a small busi ness must contend, she concluded the company which tried to man age with only the help of an ordin ary lawyer, would find its execu tives pressed for time to run the business. What a small business needs, she said, is the services of a law firm with wide and specialized ex pertise. Sears listed among areas of real ly serious legal pitfalls: — research, trademark and pa tent infringement. This is a really complex area involving the possibility of deli berate or subconscious plagiarism of competitors’ advertising either in wording or substance. Research also involves a bewil dering variety of other required federal, state and local clearances. For example, many food and drink products, drugs and pesticides re quire more than one set of clear ances. — consumer safety laws. There is now a bewildering array of federal, state and local laws covering safety and require ments for adequate and appropri ate insurance to cover the risks. — over-exuberant promotional advertising and instructional materials. It’s important to understate rather than overstate the capabil ity or safety of products. There must be plenty of warnings to the buyer. — obscure government regula tions or those- simply not antici pated. tions have practically the effect of law. — discretion. Businessmen can get in much legal trouble by talk ing too freely. Don’t tell a corpora- *; tion that is your financial angel ev- *• erything about your business. ~ That could cause some enemy of * your angel to embroil you in an ^ antitrust or unfair competition. — concurrence. Failure to get in writing the Z concurrence of everybody in- ~ volved in a transaction whether it - involves money or merely policy * can invite serious litigation, espe- Z cially in the form of liability suits ^ against management by stockhol- *■ ders. t If the Army or Navy is a big user of a product, for example, “that may be the bottom line on what can be done or not done commer cially with the product and may be the practical standard on what you may be sued for,” Sears said. — trade association standards. Electrical goods are subject to the standards of fire underwriters. Many other sets of standards set up by recognized trade associa — investigation. Failure to investigate the back grounds of employees as to their education or prior experience can boomerang and hurt a business badly. — naivete. It’s as bad as being paranoid about people. If the business ex ecutive doesn’t show a healthy skepticism about people, he or she may blunder into many legal pit- falls. First Presbyterian Church and he kfrom carpenl of Hate relive A ers pern utritional study )est available ;e anbij me wall the orgii ol, Krebbi luring tk United Press International Milk is the source of more than versialsu lpercent of American children’s r aubusai erage daily sugar consumption Hallwke compared with 13.8 percent s befoit >m sweetened drinks such as soft Hall, Mrs.jinks and 11.2 percent from ikes, cookies and pies. These surprising figures are im a nutrition study made by ed one Karen). Morgan of the University its, calls® Missouri and Prof. Mary E. ty, Natioftbik of Michigan State Univer- sitv. hefs gk| Morgan, who directed the the 5-f»i|udy, is an assistant professor of y a shcnfflitrition who has made many stu- choppiralesoffood behavior of school-age Htildren. :a Springi The pair found the average dai- het Hj! | sugar consumption of 5- to 12- for mu,: year-olds in the study was the e” at tkfjuivalent of two-thirds of a cup of wnulated sugar. Equivalent is tie aboHlle key word. Most people don’t ago, no«lalize sugar occurs in differing gardedaiinns in a lot of food and bever- o her teles we don’t think of as sweet, vomen, I Lactose, for example, is a com- fonent of milk and maltose, of bm. The human body doesn’t istinguish among the sugars for pergy—it simply converts them glucose, or blood sugar, Mor gan said. The Morgan-Zabik findings are lased on analyses of seven-day food diaries kept by families of 657 randomly selected youngsters in 1977. Asked how up-to-date and truthful the researchers thought the recordkeeping was, Morgan said: “The scientific community considers this to be good informa tion for about 10 years. “We don’t know that it’s com pletely reliable, completely valid, but it’s the best we have avail able,” she added. The children were selected from a group of 2,000 families in the 48 contiguous states and are thought to be representative of the U.S. population as a whole, she said. “There are two types of nutri tional research,” Morgan said. One is done in a laboratory set ting, using rats or guinea pigs in a controlled environment. The other looks at what people really are doing in their daily lives. Morgan said about 75 percent of scientists blame childhood obesity on reduced activity rather than eating more than lighter weight youngsters. 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