TRA VEL Carrying On for Carry ons Hand luggage comes in almost every size and shape these days. So do the excuses students use to try to sneak more of it aboard planes-but 4 now the airlines are getting tougher about restrictions hen it comes to airplane trips, Softies: Tina some people just Lundberg of UVM can't get a grip on with L.L. Bean traveling light. bags, Ciao! (top) Take the guy in San Diego who packed his squawking parrot in a Nike bag. Or Texas Tech senior Kim Trainor, who tried to slip a giant stuffed vulture on the plane (her boyfriend had won it at an amusement park), only to have to buy it a seat. In recent years, flight attendants have been waging the battle of the bulging baggage as passen- gers have been carrying on- and on. Here's a partial list of excessives that Juliette Lenoir, vice president of the As- 4 sociation of Flight Attend- ants, has compiled: a four-foot fig tree, a BMW drive shaft, a car door, seven projectors lugged by a college football team and a large model of the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria. To get a handle on the situa- tion, which was dangerous as well as annoying to other pas- sengers, the Federal Aviation 4 Administration put new regu- lations into effect last January limiting the number and size of carry-on items. Each airline can set its own guidelines, but generally, most are permitting only two pieces of luggage- which must fit under the seat, in the overhead compartment or in the garment-bag closet. Standards vary. TWA, for ex- ample, allows just one bag on board but does not consider a briefcase as carry-on luggage. American, on the other hand, does. On all carriers, a purse 32 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS MAY 1988