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RAFFINATI® SUITS Reg. 195.00 ea. Sale 149.99 ea. 2 for 249 SAVE $110 ON 2! RAFFINATI® SPORTCOATS Reg. 125.00 ea. Sale 89.99 ea. 2 for 139 POST OAK MALL 764-8195 HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 10:00 am-9:00 pm Sun. 12:30-5:30 pm Page 10 The Battalion Wednesday, April 12,1989 TV characters enter fight against DWI National Briefs BOSTON (AP) — JR. Ewing slept off a night on the town before heading for the ranch. And Alex Keaton agreed to be “designated driver” as prime-time stars took on new roles this season in a campaign against driving drunk. The message — that drinking and driving is socially unacceptable —has been written into 32 television pro grams since the season began last fall, including an entire episode of ABC’s top-rated “Growing Pains” to be broadcast Wednesday night, Jay Winsten of the Harvard Alcohol Project said. “You don’t change social norms overnight, hut we’re off to a good start,” he said. The Harvard Alcohol Project, be gun in late 1987, is trying to harness the influence of Hollywood and Madison Avenue in making drink ing and driving as socially passe as smoking cigarettes. Last year, Harvard researchers targeted the small screen, making a low-key appeal to television exec utives to write in occasional refer ences to designated drivers. The proposal was endorsed in April by the board of the Writer’s Guild of America-West. “One of our goals was to increase public awareness just of the concept of designated driver to introduce it into the American lexicon,” said Winsten, assistant dean of Harvard’s School of Public Health and director of its Center for Health Commu nication. Having characters casually refer to picking a designated driver, some one who stays sober to drive the drinkers home, reinforces what is al ready becoming accepted partying behavior, Winsten said. “Our role really is as a catalyst,” he said. “Producers, like the public, are primed and ready to respond to this issue.” The message was broadcast in va rious ways this season. On one episode of CBS’ “Dallas,” a bedraggled J.R. Ewing arrives at the family ranch one morning and explains to his young son that he couldn’t drive home the night before because he’d been drinking. Of course, J.R. isn’t telling the whole truth about his nocturnal adven tures, but the message is dear. On NBC’s “Family Ties;” Alex Keaton, the character played by Mi chael J. Fox, visits a restaurant fea turing a tank of live fish. When a member of the group is soaked in a mishap in the tank, Fox is asked to take her home. He re sponds by saying he is the desig nated driver, but he had expected to drive home someone who drank like a fish, not someone who was hit by a fish. Weather changes help fight against oil spill VALDEZ, Alaska (AP) —- Rough seas that helped stall and break up some of the giant oil spill from the Exxon Valdez be came calmer Tuesday and winds shifted away from fish-rich Ko diak Island, the Coast Guard said. “Kodiak still seems to be saved,” said Jim Hayden, the state of Alaska’s cleanup coordinator. Coast Guard spokesman Ken Freeze said the spill appears to have stalled and is breaking into tar balls. “That’s better than ooey, gooey oil,” he said. Equipment continued to pour into the area aboard military transports. About 67 tons of material, everything from con tainment booms to absorbent pads, were scheduled to arrive I uesday. A huge ^oviet oil-skimming vessel, the Vay Dagursky, was ex* pected to arrive Saturday stale officials said. The ship can skim 200,000 gallons an hour and store 2 million gallons of oil on board, according to the officials But it remains unclear how diet live it might be against the Alaska spill. Despite the favorable weather a light sheen of oil seeped into the Kenai Fjords National Park at scattered inlets and fjords, Freeze said. With a thickness measured in molecules, the sheen does not threaten serious environmental damage, he said. House panel votes to stop gas price regulation WASHINGTON (AP) — A House panel approved legislation Tuesday to end 35 years of fed eral control of natural gas prices, a step cheered by the energy in dustry but criticized by some con sumer groups even though de control could mean slightly cheaper gas for the nation’s con sumers. The House Energy and Com merce Committee, on a voice vote without dissent, sent the measure tVi4“ full Mouse urh ****** **\'**r\ its strongest critics say approval is likely. A similar measure has been in troduced but has not yet been acted on in the Senate. The legislation would complete a price decontrol process that be gan in 1978 with the Natural Gas Policy Act, which removed price limits on certain kinds of gas while also establishing two dozen categories of gas, each with a ceil ing price. Bush S&L reform meets stiff opposition WASHINGTON (AP) — A House banking panel voted Tues day to gut the key reform of the Bush administration’s savings and loan proposal but then rolled back in several follow-up votes on some of the changes that most weakened the plan. By a 24-23 vote, the House Banking subcommittee on finan cial institutions diluted a require ment to force S&L owners to back loans with more of their own cap ital. Cornell group tackles summit as class activity Try this for your next college outing: the summit of Chimbo-. razo in the Ecuadorean Andes, at 20,703 feet the highest peak in North America. A Cornell University group made a successful ascent of Chim borazo in December as part of the school’s outdoor education pro grain. Led by Dan Tillemans, director ol Cornell’s outdoor education program, the group’s four rope teams climbed the summit in nine hours, starting from a base camp at 15,000 feet. Adjusting to thinning oxygen above 18,000 feet was the most difficult part, the climbers say. “Some people took one step for every three breaths because there’s so little oxygen up there,” Tillemans says. “ When we got there, some people were too tired even to take pictures.” Tillemans planted a red and white Cornell banner at the summit. The group made three ascents during their trip. Ruminahui, at 15,455 feet, was regarded as a “practice” climb. It also climbed Cotapaxi, 19,348 feet, before tak ing on Chimborazo. The climb to Chimborazo be gan at midnight to take advan tage of calmer conditions though temperatures dropped to about 20 degrees at night. During the day, temperatures warmed to about 50 degrees, and the most serious risk wasn’t frostbite but sunburn. The wind blew fiercely at the summits, the climbers say. Tillemans says the Andes views are breathtaking. While climbing over the Catapaxi glacier at night, he watched lightning storms in the clouds below him. Cat, Ap'd PStA rent Ut SfitwJiAy Jw TAXING Ltt TAt £?!/£ POZ Texas Stu By Alan Serr sInIor sta A federal A&M student on charges o dents last yea federal studei An FBI sp Keith Anthon j< charj Vo< Cu MATAMO Members of a drug smuggle border said Y\ sacrificed peo a Cuban “god the slayings v monic protect The Gubar on both sides c “We killed Elio Hernand amoros said, news conferei and decapitate Mexican p< Tuesday at a Matamoros a: them of 14 kil had been four and digging 1 Juan Benitez Mexican Fede Matamoros. 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