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Then discover how classified can help your business thhvel 845-0569 The Battalion asa&igssgag CHECKERS TANNING STUDIO ...now location mo./unL 5 SESSIONS xo sessions 3 MOS. $95*2 4001 E. 29th St. #109 (Carter Creek Plaza by Bryan Winn Dixie) 146-9454 846-9474 Page 14 The Battalion Tuesday, September 1,155 Ads fail to discourage cigarette sales THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK - Two tobacco industry campaigns to discourage cigarette sales to children are ineffective and one actually encourages youngsters to smoke, a researcher said Monday. The tobacco industry devised the campaigns to try to head off tougher police enforcement of laws banning cigarette sales to children, which does curb teen smoking, said Dr, Joseph R. DiFranza, a chief author of two new studies on the subject. In one study, DiFranza reported that a Tobacco Institute campaign aimed at retail stores and called "It's the Law" did almost nothing to discourage stores from selling cigarettes to children. In a second study, DiFranza concluded that an industry campaign portraying smoking as an adult activity actually encourages children to smoke by making smoking appear to be a desirable "forbidden fruit." The studies are the latest in a series by DiFranza on the promotion of cigarettes to children. He is a member of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester. The director of the federal government's Office on Smoking and Health said DiFranza's studies were solid and "hit at the heart" of the industry's youth campaigns. "The tobacco industry has a vendetta against him because of the power of what he's publishing," said Michael Eriksen, the director. The "It's the Law" campaign involves the distribution of Ju literature and signs observingtiji Vol. 92 sales of tobacco to children at illegal, DiFranza said. He found that 86 percent stores participating in program sold cigarettes ille to children, compared with! percent of the non-participatii stores. The study appears in September issue of the America Journal of Public Health. , to be published Tuesday, The Tobacco Institute sai DiFranza has distorted ti industry's intent because he's on putting the tobacco industi out of business. IstyAjpMZCtvCyhA r/ *>, (Post Oak Mall next to Dillard's) OFF on your first purchase. Framed: Ty Wilson, Brandenburg, Talbot, Ansel Adams, for under $40QQ Great selection of Art prints: Picasso, Escher, Monet, Dali, Van Gogh, Renoir. T-shirts: Escher, Dali, Unique A&M designs. GREAT SELECTION * GREAT PRICES BRAZOS VALLEY AQUARIUM SPECIALISTS 822-0655 We maintain fish and salt water tanks *If you'll tired of cleaning your tanks please give us a call We also do tank set-ups or A ne crime ii Texas ^ tor Bob Univ rect figi before t The : for the ; aggrava injury o The : when oi eluded i ed assat The c charge the Corj survey £ saying s assaulte Also curred i show on "We have be said. "I already about it. "The correct il Colle tribute c publishe DARRIN HILL/The Battalion Carla Sadler, far left, a junior accounting major from Fort Worth, tries to arrange her class schedule with the clid of Swaneece Stockard, a computer registrar, in the Pavillion on Monday. The Pavillion will be open for terminal registration through Friday. oMMuamoNS Reserve a table for nv t Fall msc open house a Do STUDEN, T programs office ABSOLUTE DEADLINE SEPTEMER AT 5:Q0 P 2 ABOUT *G© # at the m Sunday, September 6,1992 2p.m.until{p.ni. r —“—" Over 10,000 students attend Fall Open House. Don't miss out on your chance to increase membership and awareness of your activities or just to promote goodwill. Students and student organizations make MSC Open House possible. v. KJSR,92J MSC OPEN HOUSE IS SPONSORED BY THE MSC PUBLIC RELATIONS COMMITTEE. Financial B Economic recovery still not up to par NEW YORK — The domestic hiring outlook for the fourth quarter suggests the economic recovery is shaky at best, Manpower Inc. said in a survey to be released Monday. The temporary employment firm said its quarterly survey of companies found 21 percent plan to increase their workforce in the October-December period, while 11 percent plan staff reductions. The figures reflect caution among ousinesses due to the sluggishness of the economy, and a concern over the outcome of the presidential election. Manpower said. Manpower conducts its survey four times a year through telephone interviews with more than 15,000 public and private employers in 474 U.S. cities. It said fourth-quarter hiring plans are similar to those for the same period last year, when 21 percent of companies surveyed contemplated increasing their workforce and 12 percent planned reductions. In the third quarter this year, 25 percent intended to hire and 8 percent expected staff reductions. Minorities blame race for lacking bank loans THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STEP. WEIGHTS. RINK. DTE. SUPER SESS ON. MID OF COURSE, ALL THMeJAZL There’s always something new at Jazzercise. Because you’ll dance to the latest steps and your favorite songs. Plus, we’re always adding more of the newest moves and music. And if variety is the spice of life, we’re hot. Because there are also classes with weights, steps, longer sessions, less- intense workouts, stretching and toning, and programs for kids. So call for the classes near you. And start jazzing up your fitness routine. .lazzoiH'ise WW The fitness professionals. • FIRST CLASS FREE • No Membership fee • Childcare Available • 13 years in the B/CS area • Morning, Afternoon, and Evening Classes • Present ad at time of pruchase for special offer • Not valid with any other offer. Jazzercise Fitness Center Call Cathy Lyles at 764-1183 or 776-6696 Wellborn at Grove, College Station (Iblock south of George Bush Dr.) HOUSTON - Some black believe they cannot get loan because of racial discriminatioii but bankers say their lendinj efforts are complicated by so® and economic problems. According to 1990 dati collected under the federal Ho® Mortgage Disclosure Act, and Hispanic applicants in thi Houston area were nearly thref times as likely to be turned dotf? for a mortgage as whites. Applicants from minorit! neighborhoods were twiceai likely to be rejected, regardless u their income. The Houston reported Sunday. The data was the most recent available. Ken Burrell, whos* K&C Car Care Clinic is located if' the poor Fifth Ward, was o® minority business owner had trouble getting a loan. He was turned down for loa® for his garage by several institutions before gettingo ne from Channelview Bank. His six-employee garage si^ on a street of Jensen Drive t”’ once was a thriving part Houston's African-American business community. Now, ntfS of the surrounding buildings ar ( empty. "First of all, a lot of business^ in this area are black-owned Burrell said when asked lending bias has contributed^ the area's decline. "And because they're black owned, the banks aren't going tc lend money, because they thifi' 1 it's going to be a waste. The]J think they're not going to their money back." But bankers say they are trying to lend in such areas a the " ‘ Ward. "I'm not going to sit here and tell you that racism and bias have never been factor in Texas banking," said James Feild community investment manage* for NationsBank Texas. "But the biggest barriers today are some of the socioeconomic factors the minority community as a whole is dealing with." Quit placemer now thro reer Cenl on the se< Services f The ca ing all st use the se ter to get hiring ti placemei sooner a ter. Jay Wh tor of the dents can later in th "A lot end of tb then the eight ball,' Wheeb process ai take up v dents' res Pr rei HOMI emotione Worst ra' pledging gible cost ^effort. ^ He als Base, whi will be re Florida." "We're until the j Homestea gency mei There pade Coi been slow c ation anc da he care c ould cost But he hom And Defense & bon, coml 'ng the ei Workers. Tf it v\ "ivolved Ffave, 33, The Bl Louisiana ^ndrev/s leanerette There, annour '^port qu dtstributio