The Battalion Thursday, February 22,1990 Special Spring Break Ins; Negative effects of tanning include skin cancer, premature wrinkles Sophomore Mark Holcomb is one of the many A&M students hit- Holcomb, who uses the tanning facilities at Tan-U on Northgate, ting the tanning beds to get their skin ready for spring break. plans on going to South Padre Island. By PAM MOOMAN Of The Battalion Staff It will catch up to unsuspecting sun- bathers sooner or later. “The damage that comes from ultra violet light, like the sun or tanning lamps, has an additive cumulative ef fect,” Dr. Clyde Caperton, a local der matologist, said. “When you’re 40, you’ll look 60.” The price paid for a tan at 20 is dry, wrinkled skin and scaly patches that could turn into skin cancer at age 40 or 50, he said. Tanning, he said, ages you before you are old. But the negative effects don’t al ways come later. Repeated bad sun burns can cause black moles to form, whatever the sunbather’s age, Caper- ton said. Black moles could signal dangerous melanomas (skin tumors), he said. With spring break approaching, sunburns inevitably will crop up. “That’-S when (people) are partic ularly susceptible because they’ve been indoors all winter,” Caperton said. Another factor adding to this spring break phenomenon is alcohol. Caper ton said people who are normally sen sible might drink heavily and stay in the sun longer than they should. Coloring also affects skin damage. People with dark pigmentation can stay out in the sun longer with less risk of serious damage, Caperton said. But it’s a different story for blond, blue eyed people who never tan. “If you’re extremely fair, you’re in the greatest danger,” he said. Sunburns occur both at the beach and the ski slopes, Caperton said. Hours spent in the sun and the close ness to the equator also determine the probability of sunburns, he said. For example, you are more likely to get sunburned on a Texas beach than a New York beach, he said. But there are some general precau tions that sunbathers can take to pro tect their skin: • Use a sunscreen with a sun pro tection factor (SPF) of at least eight. • Cover up with clothing. • Be reasonable in the amount of sunbathing you do. • Be aware of sun sensitivity that may be caused by medicines. “You cannot make the skin tan in one exposure,” Caperton said. “Burn ing does nothing good to the skin. “(A bad sunburn) will ruin (your) vacation, if nothing else.” Officials in Mexico provide guest sign-ii By BILL HETHCOCK Of The Battalion Staff Spring-breakers venturing into Mexico at the Matamoros bridge will have a chance to register their visit as they cross the Rio Grande River. A new program by the Mex ican immigration office will allow any temporary visitors to the country to log their names and destinations as they enter. Antoline Licona, chief of the Office of Immigration on the Mexican side of the bor der, said he hopes students will take advantage of this vol untary service. University of Texas student Mark Kilroy was abducted and killed last year on a short trip into the Mexican city of Mat amoros. Licona said that he hopes- this program will decrease the chances of a recurrence of this type of accident and wi narrow the search process case of an emergency. “The main reason for registration is so we can for sure if a person has the border into Mexico,’; cona said. “In case gency, we can try to person. At least we wi they have entered the con! if they sign in at the bridge Signing in upon entryis; mandatory but is strong!J ommended, Licona said, Carlos Perez, deputy cot to the Mexican consulate Brownsville, said itisag idea for anyone going Mexico to sign in. Heh there will be five to lOit gration agents working program, so lines won up and visitors to the c won’t be delayed. The voluntary registralj See Sign in/Page 4 Students should book tour packages with can By SELINA GONZALEZ Of The Battalion Staff Spring-breakers take heed — local travel agents agree that students might be suck- ered into tour company pack age deals that prey on naivete. “It’s safer and better to go through a travel agency,” Sue Niemeyer, a travel agent with Aggieland Travels Inc., said. “At least when you do, you know that you are dealing with tour companies that have been in the business and are reputa ble. “A reputable tour company will be registered with the In ternational Airlines Travel Agency Network.” Students can call a travel agency and check if the package they are considering is listed. Niemeyer said to be cau tious of tour companies not listed with the International Airlines Travel Agency Net work. She said while mosl companies aren’t tryingtt advantage of students, ili portant to read the fine pm all advertisements. “For example, someaii will run specials foroif and in fine print downt the bottom it will say, on round trip per direct^ Niemeyer explained, would end up meaningSfiJ direction.” She said that one group of vacationers arritf the airport to find the cl! had been cancelled. “In cases like that,; times you don’t gets money back,” Niemeyerf Hilda Hill, a travel! with Dog Gone agreed that students arei^ ; protected from being take! vantage of by making! ments with an agency. “We know most See Safe/Page 4 Alcohol overindulgence can cause harmful side effects By SUZANNE CALDERON Of The Battalion Staff Spring break, the greatest week you’ll never remember. But overindulging in alco hol and staying drunk all week could be harmful, said Dr. Dennis Reardon, coordinator for Texas A&M’s Center for Drug Prevention and Educa tion. Staying drunk all week or overindulging in alcohol can impair body functions, over work the liver and destroy brain cells, Reardon said. “Since the effect of alcohol is to anesthetize the brain, (drinking too much) can de stroy brain mass,” he said. But, Reardon said, the im- Safe Break ’90provides safety tips during all-University party By SUZANNE CALDERON Of The Battalion Staff It’s a party before the party. Informing students of how to stay safe during spring break is the purpose of the Texas A&M All-University Beach/Ski Spring Break Party from 8 p.m, to midnight March 7 in the Grove. The party is part of Safe Break ’90 — National Collegiate Drug Aware- - ness Week, which is the week prior to spring break, March 5 to 9. Admission to the party is free. A committee of students from orga nizations such as Alpha Phi Omega, Residence Hall Association, Interfra- temity Council, MSC Hospitality, Off-Campus Aggies and Panhellenic are organizing the party, said Timm Keen, coordinator of Safe Break ’90 and a graduate assistant for A&M’s Center for Drug Prevention and Edu cation. Booths representing various spring break destinations will be set up at the party. Information about safety and fun in those specific places will be available at the tables. Keen said. Bill Huddleston, a friend of Mark Kilroy, the student who was kidnap ped and murdered last year after See Safe/Page 4 mediate danger of excessive alcohol consumption is what people do while under the in fluence. “With that kind of drinking. we are more concerned with the difficulties people get into when intoxicated — things like driving while intoxicated, public intoxication and not making responsible deci sions,” he said. “There is also the danger of blackout, where a person is operating almost on automatic and doing things but having no memory of what those things were,” he said. Reardon said mixing sun alcohol also can cause problems. With the anesthetize| feet of alcohol, people 1 stay out in the sun longefl not realize they are gel burned, he said. Alcoholl has a dehydrating effectffll body, making it moresosf ible to sunstroke. Should spring-breal overindulge, the bad nil that nothing but thepassai time can ease a hanai Reardon said. 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