Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, July 27, 1988 cut along dotted line and present attime of purchase TWO PIZZAS $9.99 Get two Medium Pizzas,with Cheese and choice of two top- - pings per pizza. Good for dine-in, take-out, or delivery! Not valid with any other coupons or special otters. Good only at parJoioating Mr. Gatti’s. Expires 8-15-88 Skaggs Shopping Center The best piru In 268-BEST University Lutheran Chapel Wednesday of Summer Sessions 6:30 p.m. Evening Prayer 315 N. College Main Down the street from Loupots Northgate 846-6687 Air Conditioning Specialists yer/ 0 Auto Service 111 Royal Bryan across S. College from Tom’s BBQ 846-5344 This Ad is Good for $5 OFF any Service or Repair Not valid with any other coupon or discount expires 8-31 -88 YOU’VE GOTTHE GOOD SENSE TO GO TO A&M... WE’VE GOTTHE DOLLARS AT Bring this ad in when we disburse your GSL, SLS or Plus Loan & we’ll give you your 1st order of checks FREE! Your Student Loan Headquarters First Bank & Trust is now offering a guaranteed student loan program. To get into college, it takes intelligence, talent and ambition. We can help with the rest...financing. If you want change in your life, come talk to our loan officers...we want to make getting a student loan easy: •Fast turnaround time on loan processing-10 days •Open door lender •Eight locations in Texas •Loan kept in Texas IRSTT O/VIMK S. TRUST <= 1716 Briarcrest Dr. Member FD1C (409) 268-7575 P.O. Drawer 1033 Serving Brazos Country Lobby Hours: M-Th 9-3 Drive-In Lanes Bryan, Texas 77805 for over 75 years Fri. 9-6 M-F 8-6 Chimney Hill Bowling Center (409) 260-9184 “A Family Recreation Center” OFFERS A PASSPORT TO SUMMER FUN —AIR CONDITIONED -1988- UNLIMITED OPEN BOWL MONDAY-FRIDAY 10 a.m.-5 p.m. GOOD UNTIL-AUGUST 31 * Aggies, Employee & Staff Special $50.00(id -Required) ANYTIME LANES ARE AVAILABLE THIS OFFER APPLIES TO OPEN BOWLING ONLY! RENTAL SHOES NOT INCLUDED. YOUR “PASSPORT” WILL BE ISSUED WHEN THE $50.00 IS PAID... IT IS NON—TRANSFERABLE, AND MAY ONLY BE USED FOR GAMES BOWLED BY THE HOLDER. Dermatologist says fair skin is what’s in due to cancer risks By Kelly Champman Reporter Porcelain skin is in. That’s the latest word in fashion from dermatologists. Increasing numbers of skin can cer cases have prompted dermato logists to work with agencies to bring porcelain skin into fashion, Dr. C.M. Caperton, a Bryan dermatologist, said. “Dermatologists are working to gether and with modeling and ad vertising agencies to change Ameri ca’s love affair with the sun by developing a campaign called ‘Paler is Better,’ ” Caperton said. One objective of this campaign is to make people recognize that the Victorian look of porcelain skin should be the ‘in’ look instead of bronze skin. “Another objective is to educate people on which skin type is more susceptible to the sun and what they can do to avoid it,” he said. Caperton links the increase in skin cancer cases to modern lifestyles and attitudes. “People’s lifestyles are the main reason for the increase in skin can cers,” he said. For instance, within the past 30 years people have taken to the out doors for recreation. The style of less clothing also has contributed to the increase in skin cancer cases be cause more skin is exposed to the sun, with the image of a suntan rep resenting beauty also being a factor. People considered at high risk for developing skin cancer have fair skin, blond or red hair, blue or gray eyes and burn easily. However, people who have dark hair and skin also are at risk. While the risks are less than 1 in 1,000 for a black child born today, odds have in creased for whites of all skin types to 1 in 100, he said. Skin cancers make up 20 percent of all cancers and 90 percent of skin cancers occur on sun-exposed skin, Canerton said. Many people already have re ceived half the sun damage they will get for life by the time they are 20 years old. But how much sun is too much sun? The First sign of too much sun is a sunburn, Caperton said. The skin turns red because ultra violet light from the sun has penetrated through the skin and damaged the blood vessels. Repeated exposure resulting in sunburns increases a person’s chance for developing skin cancers. Another sign of too much sun is moles that appear on the skin after years of overexposure to the sun. Skin cancers generally take three forms: melanoma, squamous-cell and basal-cell. A sudden or continuous change in a mole is a sign that it could be can cerous. Melanoma is the easiest of all skin cancers to detect, Caperton said. It begins in or near a mole or other dark spots in the skin. The edges are ragged or blurred and one half of the mole does not match the other half. Shades of tan, brown and black also are present and the size of the mole suddenly increases. Squamous-cell skin cancers often start as sun spots that are hard, crusted and warty type growths. If left alone, some of these may pro gress to a rapid growth of skin can cer, Caperton said. Basal-cell skin cancers are clear, solid growths that bleed in the early stage of forming. They also appear as sun spots that are hard and crusted looking. The best way to decrease the chance of developing skin cancers is to wear a sun screen with the sun protective factor from 15 to 29. Sun screens are most effective when ap plied 30 minutes to one hour before sun exposure and when reapplied after swimming or sweating, Caper ton said. What’s Up —•» Wednesday GREEN EARTH SOCIETY: Will meet at 7 p.m. at the Flying Tomatotoj trip to the Guadalupe River and plans for the fall. For more information call;; bert Gonzalez at 845-9093. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS:Will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 145 MSC. Formoreir?; mation call the Center for Drug Prevention and Education at 845-0280. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION:Will meet at St Mary's StudentC»s For time and more information call Rose Kinnebrew at 846-8765. Thursday TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCERS:Will meet at 7:30 p.m. Rude; Fountain to teach beginning and intermediate dances at a special outdoorss sion. Singles and couples are welcome. For more information call Ellen atlg 2415. ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCHOLICS:Will meet at 6 p.m. in 146 MSC. For no information call the Center for Drug Prevention and Education. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS Will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 146 MSC For merer mation call the Center for Drug Prevention and Education at 845-0280. ATHEISTS, AGNOSTICS AND FREETHINKERS Will meet at 7 p.m Sully statue in front of the Academic Bldg., to discuss “art and life." Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDor-; : no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only pubs the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. l/WialsUs | a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissionsw on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. Ilf. have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Beat The following incidents were reported to the University Police Department from July 18 through Sunday: MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • Two bicycles were stolen from various locations around campus. • A speed limit sign, two park ing lot signs and three “Do Not Enter” signs were stolen from campus. • A student reported that someone stole a blanket from her clothesline. • Someone stole a 6 volt bat tery from the Engineering Phys ics loading dock. • Thirty-six toner cartridges for a laser printer are missing from the inventory of the Com puting Services Center. • A student reported that someone stole his wallet at the Bus Stop Snack Bar BURGLARY: • A woman reported someone stole $140 from her. let, which was in a root Krueger Hall. A student reported someone stole his nigh sdi ring from his room in Dorml • Another student repo: that someone stole his passp and $200 from his room Hobby Hall. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • Someone forced open a - dow frame at the Corps-areal: ric care center. A cash rejis was damaged, but nothing; peared to he missing. DISORDERLY CONDUCT: • A student reported tk male approached her near: MSC Main Desk and mi obscene gestures while talltint her. I tha Sch the dit pre me tioi has ley she hm has qu: Te ass the “I dej stit to i nia agi ma wh art Ra ab< M( tal is f sai as mi vai ite Ca do or cla “R mi A I duct Committee names lawyer in Wright case AUSTIN (AP) — The House ethics committee on Tuqsday named Chicago attorney Richard J. Phelan to investigate allegations against House Speaker Jim Wright, saying an outside counsel was needed to as sure the public that the probe would be fair and objective. Chairman Julian Dixon, D-Calif., said all six Democrats and six Re publicans on the committee agreed on the choice of Phelan, an active Democratic fund-raiser. Dixon said Phelan and his Firm, Phelan, Pope & John, would be paid no more than $300,000 for their work. He said it was impossible to es timate how long the investigation will last. Phelan, who appeared briefly be fore television cameras outside the closed committee room, said “As I see our job, it’s to conduct an inde pendent, full review of all the facts that have been presented in the in quiry and report back to the commit tee.” But Dixon, in response to a ques tion, said Phelan would not be au thorized to go beyond the scope of the six-count resolution of inquiry unanimiously adopted by the panel on June 9. That drew a complaint from Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., Wright’s chief accuser, who said no probe could be considered independent if it does not permit investigators to follow leads to their conclusions. “The independent counsel has to be truly independent,” Gingrich said. “He cannot be on a short leash held by the Democratic chairman of the committee.” Just a few hours before the an- nouncment, the lobbying group Common Cause asked the commit tee to demonstrate publicly that any outside counsel will have authority and independence. That could be done by giving the investigator full authority to investi gate, review documents, issue sub poenas and present evidence to the panel; to hire whatever staff is needed to conduct the probe; and to recommend formal charges be brought before the committee if warranted, Common Cause, which describes itself as a citizen’s lobbying group, said. Wright is under formal investiga tion on charges of using his office to lobby federal officials on matters where he had a Financial interest, and for alleged improprieties in the publication of a book by a campaign contractor on which Wright received unusually high royalties, among other charges. Wright said today he does not know Phelan, but said, “Apparently, he’s a reputable attorney.” Florida police chief accepts appointment to Dallas start DALLAS (AP) — Stressing com munication as a way to ease racial tensions, the police chief of a small Florida gulf coast city Monday ac cepted appointment as chief of po lice in Dallas, the nation’s seventh largest city. Mack M. Vines, 49, chief of police in Cape Coral, Fla., was named to succeed Billy Prince, who resigned in April with police and community relations in disrepair. Characterizing his new job, Vines said, “It’s keeping lines of commu nication open and putting people in the right position.” In selecting Vines, City Manager Richard Knight rejected three Dallas police officers who were among nine finalists for the job. “I felt that we were at a point in time in our history we needed a fresh perspective,” Knight said. Vines said his administration would bring “1988 policing” to Dal las. “That’s the 1988 into the 1990s concept today, it’s getting the com munity involved,” he said. “Crime is a community problem, it’s not solely a police problem.” Knight said Vines will begin the job on August 22. Vines, a 28-year law enforcement veteran who has been chief in Char lotte, N.C., and St. Petersburg, Fla., said he did not think coming to Dal las from Cape Coral, population 44,000, posed a problem. “Cape Coral has really, in all es sence, enhanced my career, because I found myself involved with more hands-on law enforcement in deal ing with a number of issues I didn’t have to do at a larger agency,” Vines said. Vines is paid $57,000 to run the Cape Coral department. His Dallas salary will be $85,600, according to Knight’s aides. Vines said he is prepared to work with the controversial Citizens Re view Board, a panel championed by minority leaders concerned about the department’s record of using deadly force. The Citizens Review Board, cre ated in January with investigative powers to consider complaints against police officers, had its sub poena power stripped by the City Council last month, a moved sup- ported by the Dallas PoliceAsB lion. Vines said he has little love'll view boards but said policeshotiiH responsible to the public. “(Citizens) have a right torf® and we have to answer thee I lions,” Vines said. “I have ife problem with civilian reviewkfe| . . and I think most progressivtiy nistrators would say the same'I • “More often than not,dviS view boards are generated th :i | lack of communication,”hesa«l| Marvin Crenshaw, a blad| ! | munity activist who is a frequeriij ticipant in City Council niee||| said minority leaders would ill wait-and-see altitude concerniJB new chief. Dallas Police Associations dent Monica Smith pledged|M group’s support of Vines. “I think he can be reallysutfiB as long as there is an undersufl that what is in this departmemH greatest asset, and that is thefl police officers,” Smith said. Execution-style slaying of man sparks narcotics investigation AUSTIN (AP) — The execution- style slaying of John Frank Garcia, a former Texas school teacher wanted in the United States on kidnapping and drug trafficking charges, has sparked a major investigation into the narcotics underworld operating on the U.S.-Mexico border, authori ties said Tuesday. Hernan Guajardo, judicial police director in a northern Nuevo Leon state capital, said Garcia was “a per son dedicated to narcotics traffick ing on a grand scale.” Gilberto Sanchez, Guajardo’s as sistant, said Tuesday the investiga tion into the slaying and Garcia’s in volvement in the narcotics trade would extend to both sides of the border. Capturing Garcia’s killers, he said, would provide an important break in the war on drugs. Garcia’s body was found shortly after midnight Saturday in an aban doned car in Guadalupe, a suburb of Monterrey, about 140 miles south west of the Texas border at Hidalgo. His head had been covered with a gauze bandage and his hands were tied behind his back. He had been shot in the head four times at close range with a 9mm Firearm, police said. Garcia, also known as Juan Fran cisco Garcia, Miguel Garcia Olivares and various other names, had plastic surgery to change his appearance and his body was identiFied through Fingerprints provided by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the FBI, authorities said. Guajardo said police believe Gar cia had been kidnapped in the bor der city of Reynosa or another city in the border state of Tamaulipas and driven to Monterrey where he was shot. Guajardo would not elaborate, but he said the slaying was con nected to Garcia’s activities in the drug trade. A spokesman for the U.S. Em bassy in Mexico City con Firmed the identification Tuesday and said Gar cia is considered “an important nar cotics trafficker” who had been sought by authorities on both sides of the border. “He apparently was assassinated by another drug trafficking ring,” U.S. Embassy spokesman William Graves said. “We hope his death will lead Mex ican authorities to other members of the gang that he was working with and will help reduce liie ufl drugs into the United ^1' Graves said. “About half the drugs intro^ l into the United States crosstlifj| Mexico border.” He said Garcia was considllj “class one violator” by author! I Texas’ Lower Rio Grande' I hut was not considered a king 1 the drug trade throughout the 1 ! try. But, Graves said, “The Lo"W Grande Valley has become the® of drug transiting, specific-, caine. It has become a center* struggle against narcotics traMi along the border.” Garcia, 38, taught element# tory in the Donna Indep® | School District for two years.! taught migrant students ini burg, Texas, where he and In. ily lived in South Texas, accorF Files kept by the Edinburgh Garcia, who had one con on a drug smuggling charf' wanted in Hidalgo County Edinburg on a 1984 H" 1 " charge.