Texas A&M board chair convicted of 4elony The former chair of the Board of Regents at Texas A&M University was convicted this month on a felony charge of official misconduct, The Chronicle of Higher Education report- ed. A county jury sentenced Ross Margraves Jr. to four years probation nd a $3,000 fine after he used a 4 ate-owned airplane for personal business. The case stemmed from a round-trip flight Margraves and his wife took in 1993 that coincided with their son's graduation from Louisiana State University. The couple used a plane that is lent to Texas A&M for official business and later billed the university for the $1,435 f argraves' lawyer called the convic- tion "dirty and wrong." Professor fired after consuming alcohol in public A professor at Pima Community College in Tuscon, Ariz., was fired after being convicted of drinking in ublic when it was discovered he had a Beer in his office, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. Lee Thorn said he had not known about the college's policy prohibiting alcohol on the campus when he drank a bottle of Budweiser in April before teaching an evening class. He was arrested while teaching a philosophy class and fired by the col- lege's president two days later. Thorn as sentenced to six months of unsu- pervised probation in a municipal court trial last month. Fraternity hosts debate at Syracuse The Beta Theta Pi fraternity chapter 'at Syracuse University hosted a bi-par- san forum following last Wednesday 4ening's presidential debate. Faculty, local political representa- tives and about 50 students came to watch and discuss the debate between President Clinton and Republican pres- idential nominee Bob Dole. Clinton/Gore representatives were scheduled to attend but were unableto do so. tudents fast for 'wo days in support of Burma Students at 67 colleges in the U.S. nd abroad participated in a two-day fast last week sponsored by the Free Burma coalition, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The event was held to call attention t6 human-rights violations by the muntry's military regime, said the coalition's founder, who goes by the ndine Zarni. About 25 students joined the protest at the University of Wisconscin, where Zarni is a graduate student. The military leaders, who renamed the country Myanmar in 1988, last month arrested more than 800 supporters of the democracy ovement, which has been led by Sobel Peace Laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. College students in Canada, India, Japan, Norway, South Africa and Thailand also joined in.the fast, show- ing their opposition to the Burma inva- siOns - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Janet Adamy from wire services. LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1996 - 3 Kilbourne decries tobacco, alcohol ads By Megan Exley Daily Staff Reporter Most Americans say they aren't affected by the roughly 3,000 advertisements they see every day in newspapers and magazines, as well as televi- sion ads that they usually mute anyway. Jean Kilbourne, an internationally recognized activist, lecturer and filmmaker, aims to counter this public assumption that advertising images have no effect. Kilbourne, who spoke yesterday as part of the Town Hall Celebrity Lecture Series, focused on the persuasive effect media images have on the American public, specifically in the areas of tobacco and alcohol advertising. "Ads create quick, cumulative and uncon- scious effects on people," she said. "Most peo- ple don't even realize that they buy into an ad's message." Kilbourne, known for her award-winning film, "Killing Us Softly: Advertising's Image of Women," divided her speech between the prob- lems in alcohol and tobacco ads that target younger age groups and advertising's distortion of female images. "Few Americans realize that alcohol and tobac- co products contribute to more deaths every year than cocaine, heroin, car crashes, fires, homi- cides and AIDS combined," Kilbourne said. "Until recently, the 'War on Drugs' did not include alcohol and cigarettes." Kilbourne said a rise in alcohol and tobacco advertising has caused consumer consumption to skyrocket. "Last year, the increased Absolut Vodka adver- tising campaign dramatically increased consumer buying, nearly by more than 75 percent," Kilbourne said. "You see their ads in most all popular magazines." She said that tobacco companies have also con- centrated their advertising focus on younger sec- tors of the population. "Advertisers want to reach kids, for they know little consumers are a viable business here in the U.S.," Kilbourne said. "When the Marlboro Company changed their ad campaign seven years ago, incorporating the cartoon image of Old Joe Camel, they attracted more younger smokers than old. This cartoon camel image is one that is identifiable with kids as young as three." Kilbourne said Camel, Newport and Marlboro, the tobacco industry's most heavily advertised brands, are also the top three brands smoked by teen-agers. Several students from local high schools attended the presentation. "It is clearly evident that cigarette compahtes target young people,"said Micah Jefferson, a stu- dent at Manchester High School in Chelsea. "Ads never feature people older than their 20s." Jill Pfaus, also a Manchester High student, stressed that the image of women presented in ads can be damaging, a topic that Kilbourne focused on. "Many female smokers believe that cigarettes and nicotine are effective tools for weight con- trol. This message is promoted by the ads them- selves" Kilbourne said. "Messages like this sim- ply bolster society's obsession with thinness and weight-control. They add to the emphasis advertsing places on 'ideal female beauty."' Multiple abortions increase in state LANSING (AP) - The number of Michigan women having more than one abortion has risen steadily over the years to nearly half of those seeking the procedure in 1995, state records show. That's in contrast to the number of abortions being performed overall, which has decreased 32 percent in Michigan since 1980. In all, 29,751 Michigan residents obtained abortions in the state last year, according to Michigan Department of Community Health data cited yester- day by Booth News Service. Of those, almost half had undergone the procedure at least once before, while more than one-fifth had had two or more abortions. In 1980, just 33 percent of women having abortions had done so previous- ly. More accurate reporting may be one reason for the rise in repeat abortions, said Brian Willats of the Michigan Family Forum, a conservative nonprof- it policy group. But Michigan's chief health statis- tician attributed the trend to a grow- ing number of women for whom abortions have been a legal alterna- tive for most or all most of their childbearing years. "All of those women have the chance to become pregnant again," said MDCH's George Van Amburg. State records in part bear that out. They show an increasing number of older women deciding to terminate their pregnancies. Women 30 and older accounted for more than 23 percent of the women who had abortions in Michigan in 1995. In 1980, older women repre- sented just 13 percent of all abortions. More and more older women are get- ting pregnant, and since fetuses of pregnant women over 35 have a higher rate of abnormal chromosomes, women in that group who have abor- tions likely do so for medical reasons, said Dr. Hassan Amirikia, a fertility specialist and assistant professor at Wayne State University. In addition, several physicians said that the use of ultrasounds and other tests allow women to know more than ever before about the health of their fetus. "We have found that, overall, when we do find an abnormality that about 50 percent choose to terminate," said Dr. Mark Evans of Hutzel Hospital in the Detroit Medical Center. Nationally, there were about 1.4 mil- lion abortions in 1992, according to the most recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those, 741,628 women had abor- tions in states that kept track of whether the women had had previous abortions; and about 46 percent had had at least one abortion. About 17 percent had had two or more abortions. Students protest police By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter On the 71st anniversary of t of Sacco and Vanzetti - tw immigrants who some say wer ly executed for murder - U students and local residents from the Diag to the roof of ci a national day of protest again brutality. More than 20 protesters down State Street yesterday "Hey-hey, ho-ho, police brutalit go" and holding signs such a Brutality: Just Say No." "There is constant harassme dents and youth of color by the said Paul Lefrac, member of Arbor Free Mumia Coalition Trotskyist League. "It's only worse.' The rally was sponsored by mately 15 local groups, it Alianza, Ann Arbor Free Coalition, the Black Student U Queer Unity Project. The demands of the s include disarming campus releasing Philadelphia de inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal a tecting the rights of work immigrants. Students also marched in the "Police brutality is nationwi LSA sophomore May Clarke." so many incidences of it everyv When the group reached the of city hall, members of sp groups and political candidat brutality , against police brutality and the political philosophies they say condone such he arrest violence. 'o Italian "We're here to protest capitalist e wrong- oppression," said Kevin Carey, a ca - rniversity date for Congress under the Workers marched World party. "We have to oppose the ca- ty hall in italist system by all means necessary." Ist police Gaia Kile, the Green Party candidate for Washtenaw County Sheriff, stressed marched the importance of citizens monitoring chanting police actions. y's got to "I'm calling for the need of aciti- s "Police zen's police review board," Kile said. Representatives of political organiza- nt of stu- tions also voiced their opinions about e police," police authority. the Ann "It is the job of the police to defend and the the oppressor from the oppressed," getting said Barbara Pliskow of the Industrial Workers of the World party. "They will approxi- act to mace us, to gas us, to spy on'our ncluding homes and occasionally to murder us" Mumia Protesters also called on the city to nion and drop charges against the Ann Arbor Eight, a group arrested for protesting ponsors a Ku Klux Klan rally last summer. police, "The Ann Arbor Eight is one of the eath-row most egregious examples of the poi- and pro- cies. of the Ann Arbor Police ers and Department," said National Womni s Rights Organizing Coalition memir e rally. Lisa Resch. de," said Protesters alleged the police were There are biased in favor of the Ku Klux Klsn where.' members. c rooftop "They wanted to keep anti-racists out onsoring and protect the Ku Klux Klan;' said es spoke Lefrac. WARREN ZINN/Daily Light up my life Ben Lauf works yesterday above Yost ice Arena. He is setting up the lights that are above the press box. Clinton gives foreign policy speech as Dole's bus tours Michigan countryside DETROIT (AP) - Bob Dole and Bill Clinton swapped political images yesterday, as Dole rode a bus across the Michigan countryside and Clinton gave a major speech on foreign policy - a campaign first. With only two weeks before the el action, the paesidential can- didates were try- ing to make the most of their second days in Michigan. Both sides are fierce- ly contesting the Clinton state's 18 elec- toral votes. Dole started first, rolling into Frankenmuth yesterday morning on a bus dubbed "Asphalt I" before heading for rallies in Grand Blanc and Troy. As his bus parked between the Frankenmuth Bavarian Inn and Zehnder's restaurant, Dole sounded optimistic. "I want to welcome you to Bill Clinton's retirement party right here in Frankenmuth," he said. At an early afternoon rally of about 1,000 people in Troy's Firefighters Park, Dole received the endorsements of the Police Officers Association of Michigan and the Deputy Sheriffs Association of Michigan, both of which praised his leadership and trustworthiness. But the GOP presidential candidate got his largest crowd of the two-day tour yesterday morning at the Grand Blanc Community High School foot- ball field, where about 6,000 people cheered his remarks. As he did at every stop, Dole pitched his 15 percent tax cut and derided Clinton for not cutting taxes on the mid- dle class as promised. "I think it's time for the government to start pinching pennies instead of expecting you to pinch pennies," he told the crowd. Dole also criticized Clinton for tak- ing campaign donations from foreign interests, then tackled a new Clinton ad that says Dole and the GOP accepted donations from "foreign oil, foreign tobacco, foreign drug companies." "Let me say up front: All of us in pol- itics have been guilty in one way or another in campaign finance," Dole said, adding that he was not alluding to breaking the law. He said a bipartisan commission should be appointed to draft a package of campaign reforms.: Dole also sought to reas- sure seniors. "We're not going to take away Medicare. We're going to save Medicare, just as we did with Dole Social Security in 1983," he said. Matilda Belanger came to the Frankenmuth rally with a sign that said, "Government needs to reassure senior citizens." She's leaning toward voting for Dole. But she had some concerns. "I'm wor- ried that Dole was with (House Speaker Newt) Gingrich when Gingrich said he was going to let Medicare wither on the vine," said Belanger, 62, of Birch Run. "I think Dole is a good man. But I think Gingrich is a very dangerous man." After spending the night in Detroit, Clinton spoke at the Fisher Theater later yesterday morning to 2,400 invited guests, ranging from community-lead; ers to several busloads of students. In his speech, Clinton said former Eastern Bloc nations should become part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization by 1999. The date coin- cides with NATO's 50th anniversary. "America will be stronger and safer if the democratic family grows," Clinton said in a speech meant to reach out to Midwestern voters with ties 6cvEastern Europe. He got an enthusiastic response, with the packed theater reflecting the support he has consistent- ly received in Michigan since the cam- paign began. Clinton said he has led the way for NATO enlargement,'raising the idea at a NATO summit in 1994. "A gray zone of insecurity must not re-emerge in Europe,' Clinton said. The West must not "allow the Iron Curtain to be replaced by a veil of indifference" . hat's happening ii Ann Auor today GROUP MEETINGS Relation to Self," sponsored by 3:30 p.m. Michigan initiative for Women's U "Press and the Pres i Bread For the World, meeting, 487- Health, Rackham, 4th Floor, 4-5:30 Debate About t 9058, Memorial Christian Church p.m. sponsored by D corner of Hill and Tappan, 7:30 "Discussion on issues Concerning Communication S pom. Second Generation Indian Hall, Auditorium C U East Quad Social Group For Americans," sponsored by Hindu 0 "Women Abroad," Uncertain/Gay/Lesbian /Bisexu Students Council, Michigan Union, International Cente n er 2 as t Isdx 9 " Pond Room, 8 p.m Center, Room 9, 4-5 * i,73-7 ,Est ud J "Employer Gril/Ford Motor a Lutheran Campus Ministry, evening Company," sponsored by COd SERVICES prayer and choir, 668-7622, Lord Placement Office, Dow Building, SERIC s of Lih LteaChr,80 "Room 1017, 12-1 p.m. of LIh uhrnCuc,81~"nformation Meeting Abou~t Studv J Campus Informatii idency P he Deb epartme tudies,A , 4-6 p.r sponsore er, Intern 5:30 p.m. )art 1i: ates," nt of Angell m. d by ational enters, 14 AUSTRALIA 0 CANADA 0 CHILE 0 CHINA? mm o cFY © INFORMATION 3 t MEETING oabout3 a STUDY ARODo gri eat scores Law School Business School Dental School Eu. on Ce