PROFESSIONAL NAIL SALON AT THE MALL We do all kinds of artificial nails. Friendly, Clean, good atmosphere. Experienced nail technicians. Page 10 • Tuesday, September?, 1999 ATION attali' 'ii ■ — Come to see us and SAVE for your nail care. You will have a SUBSTANTIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT. 693-0996 LeNails Post Oak Mall Across form Lyby’s California bill boosts buckle ^ To the New Students in the College of Liberal Arts: Dean Woodrow Jones, Jr. invites you to attend the New Students’ Reception Thursday, September 9,1999 5:0ft to 7:00 P.M. in the MSC Wayne Stark Galleries Proposed law woull require safety seats for children ages 6 and uift 100 _ FREEDOM, Calif. (AP) — Donny Bal za r rides proudly to kindergarten every mornt in the front passenger seat, toying with the ^e, loose seat belt that slides up over his mou “I like it up here in front,” he said. “I lil\to play with the seat belt.” Donny’s been riding shotgun for two y< ever since his mom, Marguerita Baltazar, b him out of the car seat mandated in Califod for children under 4 years old and 40 pound! Safety advocates point out that seat belts c! be as dangerous to children as air bags. They sa^ California’s law does not go far enough. Childn as old as 6 also are usually too small for a seat bel designed for an adult. The shoulder straps slidi dangerously up their necks, and lap belts sit across their vulnerable abdomens, not low on their hips.l Gov. Gray Davis is considering a measure' passed by the Legislature last week that will put kids like Donny back into booster seats or har nesses through their seventh birthday. The de vices cost $20 to $110. If signed, it will be the toughest child pas senger safety law in the country. “Children are irreplaceable,” Judy Barrett- Miller, a consultant for the California Coalition For Children’s Safety and Health in Sacramento, said. WAS11 INt eliminated if the childivn usat an t0 child safety seat, booster seat orse; are 11m > “If we want to safeguard our children, this is the best approach/' — Judy Barrett-Miller California Coalition for Children’s Safety and Health every ride. i?°, V l ' California Highway Patrol officer ft'* 111 W( - by would not dream of driving her: etcn c ° 1 daughter anywhere without buckling Aj teat ' lfe= booster seat. plemcuk. "The seat belt could come across# ^ lvsli and. in children, that windpipe is realT 111 cai ( - ; ‘ so it could kill them. And then there® ternal injuries that can be caused b, belt.” she said. “Parents just aren't aw dangers. We really need this law." “Traffic accidents are the leading cause of death for children who this law applies to. If want to safeguard our children, this is the ^>est approach.” A National Highway Traffic Safety Admin- Uration study of traffic accidents involving jhildren under 15 found that 71 percent of choo 1 k search i >s Codes . hreats. All 50 states, the District of Colum® ( ) ' 1 /'"T. to Rico and the U.S. territories havtl® 1UK ' A laws, most of which cover children up * 4 years old. st.hK nis Consumer and safety advocates Jf r an ' u k laws have saved thousands of liv 1979, when no states had car seat . until I' most had ^ Cl ’ lu 0111 acted, deaths among children under4; lI W' ) ian ' £ 30 percent nationwide. g J K u '\c i In lie wc e llecome MSC Great Issues is an open membership committee, meaning anyone who is willing to join our team is welcome. Our goal is to increase student interest and awareness in current events through programming. Topic areas: • Campus Issues • Relationships • Environment • Science and Technology • World Affairs • Society Past Programs include: - School Choice - Preventing Worldwide Depression - The Biotech Century - The Origin of the Kiss - The Responsibility of Photojournalism - Technology and the Ethics of Cloning Informational Meeting Tonight!! MSC 229 7pm MSC Great Issues and Political Forum have joined forces in the biggest merger since Exxon Mobil. Come check us out. For more information, contact us at 845-1515 i#k Political Forum For 30 years, the Memorial Student Center Political Forum has focused on providing educational non-partisan programs on political topics to the students at Texas A&M University and to the people of Central Texas. MSC Political Forum has hosted a wide variety of speakers including former President George Bush and Mrs. Bush, former Governor Ann Richards, Senator Phil Gramm, and most recently Governor George W. Bush and H. Ross Perot. Pfizer promates new drug Gore g Uehige wi n Allen, vyool after 1 rm her reo v 5he and n la$s to m< Officials dispute effectivernss of ear-infection treatment backiF"-. WASHINGTON (AP) — Pharmaceutical giant Pfb er Inc. is trying to convince doctors the best drug children’s ear infections is not the cheap, proven an\ tibiotic the government recommends, but Pfizer’j own pricey product. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] (GDC) said in January that amoxicillin should be doc tors’ first choice for treating ear infections, which ac count for 25 million visits to doctors’ offices each year. The GDC ranked Pfizer’s competing Zithromax among other antibiotics that “lack good evidence” for effectiveness against ear infections. The consumer advocacy group Public Citizen un covered a schedule for Pfizer teleconferences targeted at doctors nationwide to counter the GDC guidelines. “We urge you to inform the nation’s pediatricians of this campaign so they are not duped into draining the Medicaid program of needed resources and of wasting large amounts of money on treating other patients with this needlessly expensive and second- rate drug for ear infections,” the advocacy group said in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary' Donna Shalala. A Pfizer spokesperson defended the campaign, saying the Food and Drug Administration had ap proved Zithromax for treating ear infections. Consequently, "everything we re doing is under the umbrella of what we’re allowed to do according to the FDA,” spokesperson Mariann Caprino said. The GDC is “just basically weighing in with yet Another opinion," she added, noting that the igency’s amoxicillin recommendation is not an offi :ial treatment guideline. As for the Pfizer teleconference schedule, Capri- said “it’s not a corporate document that came iwn from on high,” and it probably came from lomeone in one of our sales forces." Pfizer has aggressively promoted Zithromax to ttors and parents, including giving away the drug s bhnbag mascot “Max the Zebra.” Max lives on an hernet site called KidsEars, which tells parents to as,their doctors about Pfizer's drug. of labo er io rem (“Tire sch it the First ilip an A( d to take i reached.' Journal describes camper’s death PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Journal notes purportedly made by two friends who were lost while hiking in the New Mexico desert describe in detail how one killed the other, be fore rescuers reached them. The diary ascribed to Raffi Kodikian and his friend who was killed, David Coughlin, also in cluded farewell notes to friends and burial instructions. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported yesterday. “I killed & buried my best friend today. Dave had been in pain all night. At around 5 or 6 he turned to me & begged that I put my knife through his chest. I did, & a second time when he wouldn’tlie. He still breathed & spoke so I toll him that I was going to cover his Lv. He said OK. He struggled but die. I buried him w/ [sic] love. God &bis family & mine, please forgfe me,” Kodikian wrote in a joumalmtry dat ed Aug. 8, the newspaper Aid. Kodikian, 25, has tolcnnvesti- gators that Coughlin, 26,\leaded with him to end his pain dter the two men got lost early lastmonth while camping in Carlsbaf erns National Park and ran water. Kodikian said they b( they would die. Investigators will not say eactly what they think happened, bufehey Cav- ut of eved do not believe Kodikian's story and have charged him with murder. He is free on $50,000 bail and currently is living with his parents near Doylestown in suburban Philadelphia. The U.S. Secret Service is cur rently examining the journal for fingerprints and analyzing the handwriting to determine whether Coughlin actually wrote in the diary, Gary McCandless, chief of detectives for the sher iff’s office, said. On one page is a farewell note signed “David Andrew” and ad dressed to Coughlin’s girlfriend, Sonnet Frost. DES MOINES, Iowa Ray Vus\\i With an jtvasionsoi Sen. Tbm Harkin, VicePres£ s * u 'N ,lu Gore paraded througha foraperso: class neighborhood yesteranothei.a basked in warm wordsir nlsU .' 1 t ' lu bor leaders with whom mulai sometimes disagreed. *h e D os Gore strode side-by-s: AFL-CIO secretary and Richard TYumka, who spoke ap provingly of Gore's bid for the Democ ratic presidential nomination. "I'm proud I be with the vie president as he helps us cele brate Labor Day,"Trumk said the labor federation is :• DETR0 to endorse a candidate at Tachers a tober convention, said, greed on the heads-on favoriteistbontract \ president. reeklong President Clinton has roposed I with labor leaders in pushirTict chief trade proposals that un: 'ruggling amount to exporting jobs,a Teachei said that tension will conthGhool by is elected. )rs said. " We have the same gens “1 ’ m go losophy i'n trade,” Gore^e teachi think part of our successhs® contr economy has been to optOn of Tea markets for our products." Hiott saic Gore shrugged off CR Student about differences with lab ass last \ trade issues. ass agair The tea Rates Low Enough For A Starving Student Now, 430 AAa.tl~l*\ Rebate Ot\ AH New Phones. 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