THE Column Fans Have the Right to Boos It Up By Ralph Vacchiano ■ The Daly Orange lynmnll, Ifa hard to behave, but many of tHryfr Ng. irti*ng ,rt,u** — very acandofthe word "boo." I mean, they're really terrified ffw^l ynf »Htir martm Whenever a crowd yells in «*h tote, that athlete it uaually fWBOW w s winning, quivtnng baby, devoid of all aMtaapeet Normally, after an athtote ha> baan booad bj the home1 town crowd htU mqt •omttfiing un, “Ohhhhh, I dcn\ know why they’re booing me. Jaaeaaea guys, fm toy ing my hardeeL I doot know wbat they expect from me. Tin human, you know. I have feeling! too." Whine, whine, moan, cry. For all the athletee who have whined like that, tot roe tell you why they boo you. And more impend— /Ttrhfir me listen here, too — tot me tell you why booing is showed. Athletes in pro feaekmal eporte and coltofB "money* eporte ere paid big money to do a job. Darryl Strawberry to paid to hit home runs fcr the Dodgers, Joe Montana ia paid to throw touchdowna far the 49am, Michael Jordan u pud to won for the Built. Fans pay big money to m thoM athletes do their jobs. If the athletes can't do their jobs corroctHy, the fans don't get their money1! worth and have a right to voice their displeasure. Thia meant that if Michael Jordan acoree 125 point! in a game, but miwm a three-pointer at the burner, fane have a right to boo. Ofoouree, intelligent fens wouldn't think of booing in a situ ation like that—and granted, fans aren't always intelligent — but they have a right to boo. Athletes at Syracuse U. are paid doee to $18,000 per year, phie plenty of extrae. Ihatk tuition, room and board, aD meek, and traveling expenaee all over the place. Certainly they are not norma) college students. So they, too, can be booed. And if there ie an ath lete who doesn't like this, I will be happy to take hi! or her place. Medical Godsend? Experimental drugs being studied at Stanford U. could lx- just what the doctor ordered to nd us of the AIDS epi demic hv helping the bodv restore white blood cells Page 17 EATING HABITS Where the Boys Are Although the pros say the men’s room is a place for ladies, colleges don't seem to be agreeing, as several schools are shutting women reporters out of men’s locker rooms Page 24 More Dippers, Draggers Dying A Tern Tech student drops a pinch of dip into his mouth. An increasing number ol chewing and smoking students are devel ing oral cancer, as the nation. JAWS P SCHAHtH TM| UK'VtRSTY DAilY UXASTfcCHU By Steven Phillips ■ The University Daily Texas Tech U. p-|"«he risk of college-age students developing mouth cancer continues to increase as more _I_ young people begin chewing tobacco and smok ing, said Davor Vugrin. professor of medicine at the Texas Tech Health Science Center In Texas, the Amencan Cancer Society estimated 1,600 new cases of mouth cancer were diagnosed and 425 people died from oral cancer in 1990 Nationally, the ACS estimated 30,000 more people were diagnosed with oral cancer, and that 8,350 peo ple died from it. Oral cancer can invade the tongue, lip, mouth and throat singularly or together, Vugrin said, adding that it is increasing in younger people and is directly related to chewing tobacco “In the past, oral cancer occurred from people older than 50, but people in their 20s are now falling vic tim," Vugrin said. “It used to be unheard of for a 20-year-old to have oral cancer," he continued. Vugrin credits the increased use of tobacco prod ucts, specifically chewing tobacco, to the use of highly See DYING. Page 19 On the Shelves this Year? By Michelle Roberts • Stale Press Arizona State U. A Chicago-based pharmaceutical com pany hopes men will not be the only ones w alkmg through shopping aisles looking for prophylactics before the year is over A new condom designed for women will provide yet another protection option in the fight against sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancies Developed by a Wisconsin pharmecutical company in Chicago, the Reality condom cur rently is awaiting FDA approval and is expected to arrive on drugstore shelves in about 1(1 months Plans call for the female condom to Ik available w here male condoms are sold Estimated cost $1 75 to $2 each The new method of birth control and .STD protection is made of a soft, loose fitting polyurethane sheath It is approx imateh two inches wide, is pre-lubncat ed and has a flexible ring at each end The closed-ended ring is inserted to fit against the cervix, similar to a diaphragm The other ring fits on the outside of the vagina. The condom is a “barrier” method of protection and will Ik- available without a required fitting' from a health care professional. (ifficiah said the female condom's clin ical development is completed, and FDA approval is hinging on a pregnancy rate studs The l’ of Arizona is currently tak ing part in an international study of pregnancy rates among Reality users The clinical study by Kealits's manu facturers revealed that the probability of exposure to seminal fluid when using Reality is 3 percent; probability with a traditional male condom is 11.5 percent So far, officials said there haven't been any pregnancies during the testings, but study participants' reactions to the female condom have been mixed The largest portion of complaints from those involved in the clinical testings come from males, said Janet Dickerson, a research nurse at UA ‘The female condom is not uncomfort able 1 for the women . but men have com plained that they can feel the ring that hangs outside the body," she said Dickerson added that ‘aesthetically," the female condom will take some get tang used to for both partners. GEORGSm OOUGLAS S1*TE PRESS ARI’OHA STATE u Studies show the female condom is a more effective birth control device than the male condom NCAA COACHES: ET PLAYERS 0 FOR THE GREEK I By Bob Pockrass ■ Indiana Daily Studant Indiana U. The money available to college bas ketball players makes it hard for undergraduate athletes not to go pro fessional, admitted some coaches dur ing an NCAA panel discussion. *1 would like all my players to stay four years,' said Minnesota coach Clem Haskins. "I'd like all of them to gradu- I ate But 1 think it’s unfair to ask a young man to stay in school when he has an opportunity to make $1 million plus a year.’ Tlie Big Tto lost two juniors from last season: Illinois’ Marcus Liberty and Michigan's Sean Higgins. Liberty was drafted 41st and Higgins was the last player taken in the two-round draft. ‘Obviously, I didn't have a great deal of impact on Sean Higgins’ decision," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. “You go to college to get an education, but you also go to college to get the job that will make you the most money Sss GREEN, Page II