Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 29 Mar 1998 Author: Betty Barnacle - Mercury News Staff Writer S.J. YOUNGSTERS ASK MANAGERS AT 17 STORES TO MOVE SMOKING ADS It was a tall order for the young anti-smoking brigade. But students from San Jose's Washington Elementary School overcame their shyness Saturday and braved grown-up store managers, asking them to remove smoking ads from the eye level of kids and cut down on the number of posters in their windows. The youngsters got a mixed reception at the 17 markets, liquor stores, mini-marts and mom-and-pop groceries they visited, armed with fact-filled speeches and no-smoking pamphlets. The six groups of girls and boys from Washington as well as Castillero and Willow Glen middle schools went into stores in groups of five as part of a project financed by cigarette tax money authorized by voters a decade ago in Proposition 99. ``The people at Bill's Market rushed us out,'' said fourth-grader Erica Jimenez, 10. Beatriz Soto and Evelyn Arreola, both 10, backed out of Ooka's Market when the new owners, busy taking inventory, shooed them away without letting them speak. They weren't really scared, the girls said after, because they'd done practice sessions at school and had been told to be prepared to meet some shopkeepers who wouldn't appreciate their message. Besides, Rene Picazo, 14, of Willow Glen Middle School said he was there to help them if things got rough during the first of two months of visits to shops in their neighborhood just south of downtown San Jose. They find a listener Erica, Evelyn and Beatriz were visibly relieved, however, when George Haddad of Alma Liquors smiled at them and listened to all their speeches. Haddad not only agreed to remove the row of cigarette posters below his checkout counter but also started pulling the placards off while the kids talked to him. ``The cigarette people won't be happy,'' he said as he ripped out the nails. ``But I don't care. I want to make the kids happy.'' When she got outside, Erica smiled. ``He was the nicest one so far,'' she said. Haddad told a reporter he didn't mind the visit. ``But it won't do any good. What the children need are educational programs,'' he said. Washington's pupils aren't the first in Santa Clara County to take on tobacco recruiting on their own time in their own neighborhoods. But they are the smallest, said Trish Jensen of the Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention. Since 1994, she said, both public and private high school students have carried out similar anti-smoking projects throughout Santa Clara County. ``Washington's are the first grammar school kids to be involved,'' Jensen said. It will take time to see if the little ones are as successful as Sunnyvale teenagers were in their recent efforts. ``We'd never measured the effectiveness before then,'' Jensen said. ``But we evaluated Sunnyvale (after students confronted shop owners) and found a 68 percent reduction in the number of ads below the counter.'' The leader of the neighborhood project is a student himself. At 21, Mark Lopez formally finished the kindergarten-to-fifth-grade classes at Washington 10 years ago. But the San Jose State University junior never really left the elementary school campus a few blocks from his home. Lopez has worked with the students -- which over the years included his brother and two sisters -- in a variety of roles throughout his studies at Castillero and Pioneer High School and currently is the San Jose Unified School District's outreach consultant and homework-center coordinator at Washington. Two weeks ago, at one of the first meetings held after students volunteered for the project, the kids were told to be cooperative and non-confrontational when they took their message to the business community. Why they do it Lopez also had the 10 youngsters at the meeting discuss what smoking means to them and explain why they were willing to give up their Saturday mornings every two weeks for months to battle tobacco. Maria Salas, 10, volunteered because ``The posters are in the store windows and by the candy (shelf).'' Gabriela Lorenzo, 11, was more blunt about her reason for battling tobacco. ``It gives you cancer,'' she said. Anabel Cardena, 10, nodded. ``It could kill you.'' she said, wrinkling her nose as the group talked about how smoking smells up the house. ``Two of my uncles smoke. They say they can't stop.'' Lance Lopez, 10, also was inspired by an uncle to turn out for the anti-smoking crusade. ``I'm doing it because my uncle, Alfredo Lopez, had a heart attack and had to have open-heart surgery,'' he said. ``He had to give up smoking. Two packs a day.''