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"We're going to take all the fun out of spring break," said Tom Betz, director of Student Legal Services, which is placing the ad. Besides the government warning, the ad also says: "Remember what happened to Natalie Holloway on spring break in Aruba. If you're going to drink, be safe!" Some students said the warnings are unlikely to deter them. University of Arizona sophomore Daniel Wallace is going to Puerto Penasco, or Rocky Point, for spring break, saying he is not worried about violence there. Besides, the 19-year-old said: "It's relaxing, it's warm, I'm a big fan of the beach and the drinking age is lower. It's a fun place to go." Amanda Corbett, a sophomore at North Carolina State, said she is going snowboarding in Virginia because she couldn't afford Cancun. But three of her roommates are going there. "They really wanted to go," the 20-year-old said. "Honestly, they probably think nothing will happen to them. That's the way I would look at it." "If anything is going to deter people," said Danielle Jones, a North Carolina State student who is staying close to home because of a family emergency, "it's the recession." ___ On the Net: U.S. State Department Mexico travel alert:
http://travel.state.gov/travel/
cis_pa_tw/pa/pa_3028.html
[Associated
Press;
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