mu Wfv ; t — m' ■ :. :11cm s , Job’s Quick il Change Cotton «i — ^ For com 50 on Special omplete jfMte^ ■, - and lute. Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8-6, Fii. & Sat. 7-7 3M1 &.Coll*g* 823-1347 (on* block south of VWs Maria) r 4 X * # Page 8/The Battalk>n/Tuesday, December 10,1985 M in The Mogic of Mexico. WWTE Toe TlZZA *D*R)VeX # CHAKACTEK1ST •.SfiNse op'biRacricK •Ew rHus<^sTic. PntsoMAury * K/I6WT Owl- • 2o% Commission / GuATtAMTmB1> at *3.7S/h*. y (Keviewet) >\r 3months‘Ib^ i i.0c/Mie)| • FteXiBte S^-Hc-bui-H’ • Cash NioHruy* *SLfo HiftiHb ItfSlOE PoS\T\orts APRLy 0T CHMFllo's: aMot-ti lax as Ave - S- £©y K^ooe^sX K \ t-’ V •f‘:IvS, ■ . -3 ToDacco war AMA wants ban on cigarette ads, vending machine sales WASHINGTON — Stepping up its ami>tobacco fight, the American Medical Association on Monday weighed new efforts to ban all ciga rette ads. halt vending machine ciga rette sales, put health warnings on chewing tobacco and snuff, and bar smokeless tobacco television com mercials. Doctor after doctor argued dur ing a public hearing that more than physicians* counseling is needed to stop or even to slow what Dr. Robert McAfee, who presented the anti-ad vertising proposal, called “the rav ages of mis social habit.** Physicians argued that tobacco and cancer are linked and that the medical profession has a duty to do something about it. The AMA’s House of Delegates, a 960-member policymaking body, will vote today and Wednesday on the anti-tobacco proposals. Asked for comment, Anne Browder, assistant to the president of the Tobacco Institute, the indus try’s lobbying organization, objected that a ban on print advertising would violate the industry’s right of free speech, and said such bans in ocher nations haven’t worked any way. “Advertising doesn’t create smok ers; it creates brand loyalty,** she said. However, several doctors con tended at the hearing that adverds- ■ can indeed have an effect, espe- on young Americans. f-S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, representing the Public Health Service at the hearing, didn’t comment on the anti-advrrtismg res olution, but he did say efforts should be increased to alert young people to health dangers. ’ tobacco-related ig doc- believe “manufacturers legally produced tobacco prod- ts have tne constitutional right to “Many people, especially boys, are committed to smoke at age 8,** al though they don’t generally begin that early, he said. The proposed advertising ban was praised by nearly a dozen doctors, including A. Stuart Hanson of Min- Give the gift of a Soviet magazine WASHINGTON — The Kremlin has a Christmas suggestion for Americans: Give Soviet Life mag azine. “Prices are going up, but if you act now . , .’’ says a subscription card in the Life-size'magazine, just like its capitalist counterparts. A Givc year long gifts that are truly unusual, and save you money, tool** Distribution in this country of So viet Life and in the Soviet Union of Amerika Illustrated is part of a cul tural exchange arrangement that’s been going on for almost 30 years and that was renewed at last month’s superpower summit at Geneva. So what are the Soviets reading about Americans and wha| do Americans get to read about Soviets? The December issue of Soviet Life — $1.75 at the newsstand, $9.35 for the first subscription — begins pon derously with the text of Mikhail Gorbacnev’s big recent speech in France. But it livens up with a pptpourri section called “Panorama," which in cludes this item, headlined “Coin C-ache”: “A tractor driver on the Rossiya State Farm near Gorkv. Volga Re gion, was plowing a field. After mak ing several rounds, he noticed a box made of birch bark. He stopped his tractor to take a closer look. “As soon as he touched the box, it burst open, spilling out copper coins. The coins turned out to be five-kopek pieces that were minted from 1/63 to 1795. The old coins are now on exhibit at the local mu seum of history .’’ Not much of a punch line there. What follows is a serious article on the stakes in relations between the USSR and the United States that igainst playing “Nuclear Rus- lulette ’’ warns as sian Roul nesoca, who «mokmg “the No. I public health hazard that is pre ventable.” Raising one voice in Dr. D.E. Ward Jr. tors in tobacco-rich said they. too. see tobacco as a health hazard but of ucts advertise their products in a compet itive manner.” McAfee, of South Portland, Maine, said he was “not going to get into the First Amendment argu ment, but “we feel this is the No. 1 public health right . . . the greater national good that we can do at this time." T he 66-page magazine is hand somely illustrated, but it is no match for Amerika. which sells at kiosks for 50 kopeks — 65 cents. Overt propaganda is out, but au thors of this magazine obviously think beautiful pictures make enough of a pitch for the American way of life. Amerika is published by the U.S. Information Agency and primed in Manila (There had been a Beirut plant — much closer, but now inac cessible.) Amerika is sold in 87 cities, trom Arkhangelsk to Yuzhno-Sak halinsk and USIA says the 60.000 copies are snapped up. Tropical storm expected to drop heavy rains Associated Press MIAMI — Forecasters said Mon day that heavy rain in Central Amer ica will likely be the main impact of a late-season tropical depression, only the seventh such December storm recorded in the Atlantic in 100 years but the second in two years. "The satellite information right now suggests that the main problems are going to be heavy rams over Costa Rica and parts of Nicaragua, most likely the southern portions,” meterologist Mark Zimmer said Monday at the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables. “T he winds are not strong enough to cause any significant problem" when the storm moves inland over western Panama and southern Costa Rica by early Tuesday, he said. The depression, which formed Saturday, was not expected to de velop into a m>pical storm before then and was expected to dissipate once inland, Zimmer said. At midday Monday, the storm was centered in the Caribbean Sea about 150 miles west-northwest of Balboa. Panama, and was drifting wesi- southwest at about 5 mph. “It’s very weak right now and it appears on our satellite pictures to be becoming somewhat more disor ganized,’’ Zimmer said. The maxi mum sustained winds ranged from 30 to 35 mph If the depression surprises fore casters bv strengthening into a storm with maximum sustained winds of 39 mph. it will be named Tropical Storm Larry Experts says AIDS fear often exaggerated Shelled I iSynchilUT Whether you’re trekking m Tyangboche _ Or the Big Thicket your Shelled Synch ilia "jacket will keep you warm, 8 dry. 100% TaaJan nylon shell offers protection from wind 4 rein. SynchilUrpOe on the inside is a hybrid, double-faced, dacron - polyester fabric. It provides lightweight, soft warmth 4 wont pill or lose its loft when wet. This lightweight stylish jacket m available for men 4 women in a wide selection of colors Whole Earth m (continued from page 1) • The pentagon is exploring plans to screen personnel for expo sure to AIDS. Some private compa nies are doing that already. • People who are friends of AIDS victims nave been fired from jobs in cafeteria work. In an Associated Press story, Washington lawyer Leonard Schnet- derman said laws in Texas are am biguous about civil rights protection for AIDS victims The article also reported that in Atlanta earlier this month, a U.S. Court of Appeals recognized civil rights protection for AIDS victims under federal laws barring discrimi nation against the handicap And William Hale, the director of Texas’ Commission on Civil Rights, says he is prepared to take action against anv firm, government orga nization that discriminates against AIDS victims. Hale told The Dallas Morning News that his agency feels homosex uals deserve protection under a Texas Human Rights Act which pro hibits discrimination against the physically handicapped. Although Hale says he hasn’t had any cases of AIDS discrimination re ported, he feels that inevitablv there will be plenty. “Sooner or later we are going to have to deal with it,” he says. “And when we do, it’s going to be a very hot potato." Meanwhile, Texas health officials are considering a maneuver which would enable tnem to isolate AIDS victims from the community at large. Last week, Robert Bernstein, Texas Health Commissioner, said he favors a quarantine of certain AIDS cases. Bernstein says the quarantine would be used infrequendy and only when the patients are deemed a pub lic health threat. Bernstein planned to submit his proposal to the State Board of Health in hs Nov. 16 meeting. But partly as a result of opposition from Gay Rights Groups and the the Texas Civil Liberties Union, Bernstein decided to postpone the presentation until the December board meeting. Bernstein savs he is pleased that his proposal has drawn so much at tention and public discussion. When he does go to the board. Gov. Mark White says he will support him. In the meantime. Bernstein says he plans to solicit input from local public health officials. Dr. Fed Rea, a Bryan gastroente- roiogist, says people with AIDS aren t out spreading AIDS. “Anybody who nas AIDS is too sick to be out spreading AIDS,” Rea says. Meanwhile, lab owners are con cerned that lab workers may be in danger by handling blood products. Concern was increased last month when three San Francisco nurses be came infected after accidentally in juring themselves with needles used in AiuS blood tests. The situation was made worse after doctors learned one of the nurses had passed the disease to her boyfriend. Dr Oscar Beck, owner of Beck Bi omedical in Bryan, says his workers are following careful parameters to protect against mishaps. Beck’s Firm does blood tests for local physicians and health clinics. An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association, says increased care in the handling of blood samples and blood sampling equipment will greadv reduce the chances of spreading the disease be yond the laboratory. But another article in the Journal says it is too early to tell what risks clinic workers are taking. Dr. William W\ McClendon says AIDS lengthy five-year incubation period win keep researchers gues sing about the risks clinic workers face in contracting the disease. At Wadley Blood Center in Dallas this incubation period is causing even more problems for scientists. AIDS incubation period means the vims can lie dormant in the body for up to five years. Osther says that when tested, infected blood in incu bation will not show HTLV-III anti body. Dr. Kurt Osther says even the greatest care canfcot prevent some AIDS contaminated blood from reaching hospitals and clinics. ck»e for outdoor soccer at Posada and Lmm- Demon stratum oC 5 bo hear meet at 7 p in, m 208 Zachry t Ottfl#gim:cring id 404 ton Engine* DEMOCRATS? will meet at 7 FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN A „ p.m outride 145 MSC to go caroling AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES V# W-AJr j| 1* IB fXMENPi <11 rt Dr. W%tw*J RHA FRESHMAN LEADERSHIP PROG __ 7p.m. in 607 Rudder .o hear . weaker on I COLLEGIATE FFA: Hall for officer, * •. at V v v ra. m 208 t ■ Tpmm formal 8 M Tl SL 845-2611 HEALTH Through Chiropractic WITH Dr. Richard B. Vance SUBLUXATION. WHAT IS IT? tMMwaar a »» anw u—d tty Chwopwtfi to ■»« WWBWwnl o« bon—, miang » pnii.r* on ha ——. o—n latlng la irmaoi. S>4»1ur—om 9m mimem . by W, wow common ' \ mwagrwrt cm pcoduc* ur« md Hr—iwi toon SNclinQ otnasnfwiiiitiiii—tewnovpoootyOM/ftoZy. I pMln or dMomtort. 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