Monday, March 18, 1985AFhe Battalion/Page 3 TATE AND LOCAL claim perfeci ion doesoctt >ng both moii me Court u| ? decision * Court ffirmative gesting unentally ■rious lack ofi xmumty ate and ui se. One could lie Black An ■ Committee -American f the purpost lucate w and perspec ?se issues ski f avor to mini teself. As Int ese issues vel. Itpayste uiirman oft ty Student! Photo by ANTHONY S. CASPER Ann McGowan helps Kyle Dewitt in warm- up exercises. Adapted P.E. program Exercise for the disabled |Q caused byi t an awkwat; )g” style ani times a if :an sense np. A beauli ssity. Whaii sense, suit ittle traininf » are natural ;s about tliii es people of need only lie k and learn ace a jump, ts many fmt The Texas iation sp riders from n overseas n Kentucky ive begun to erious com- ronopolized are walking 2 blue’s and a Texas soil o Western,” e wind, and . those who be the most ore — have y the fever, ouldn’t you journalism tor for The By JENS B. KOEPKE Reporter Texas A&M is one of the lew universities in Texas which of fers a physical education program for students enrolled in activity classes who are injured during the semester or who are chroni cally disabled. Adapted physical education is an alternative for those A&M stu dents who are chronically or acu tely disabled by injuries. “In most universities, if you get hurt in physical education, you have to drop the course or take an incomplete,” said Anne McGo wan, coordinator of the adapted physical education program. Hie class starts the semester with 100-125 students, but ends with 150-200 students, McGowan said. The larger class at the end of the semester is the result of students who join the class be cause of injuries, she said. Each student who transfers into the program from another physical education course is given an individual exercise program tailored for his injury, McGowan said. Weight training, aimed at strengthening the injured mus cles, is combined with warm-up and flexibility exercises. By transferring into the adapted program, injured stu dents avoid losing credit in their regular P.E. class. Grading is determined by the instructors in both the adapted section and the student’s regular section that the student was in, she said. Since she cannot follow every student through his exercises, some students may not work all the time and may consider the class a “blow-off’, McGowan said. But all students who spend more than four weeks in adapted must write a 8-page term paper, she said. “My program is the only one with a term paper, which is worth 50 percent of the grade,” McGo wan said. Chronically disabled students also participate in the program. McGowan said that for these students, an individual exercise program is designed based on their abilities and not their disabi lities. Stroke victims, for example, do flexibility exercise# to increase their range of maflfep and jump rope to improve wpir coordina tion and balance, sfie said. An aquatic program, although not a permanent part of the adapted program, is an activity especially useful JR* wheelchair students, she saidTlvnese students suffer numerous medical prob lems due to their lack of locomo tion. The aquatic program negates the pull of gravity on the body and increases circulation and blood pressure. This program also can be use ful to adapted program students with acute injuries, such as dislo cated shoulders, twisted knees and sprained ankles, McGowan said. Exercising damaged joints or muscles is much safer in the water than through weight training. During aquatic exercises, a per son can only stretch as far as his body will let him. Dr. Charles Powell, coordina tor of handicapped and veteran services, said mat the influx of handicapped students at A&M in the last five years has made the adapted program increasingly important. The growth in the number of handicapped students at A&M can be traced to passage of A fed eral law passed during the 1970s mandated that universities make their campuses accessible to the handicapped, he said. Tom Van Dyke, a senior com puter science major from San An tonio, has been in the adapted program twice. He transferred into the adapted class as a fresh man, following a knee injury suf fered during military training. Since Van Dyke wore a cast for three months, he spent most of the semester exercising his upper body. When his cast was re moved, Van Dyke was able to be gin strengthening his hamstring and quadricep muscles. While recovering from knee surgery a second time. Van Dyke returned to the program this se mester after he tried to partici pate in aerobic running. “I think the biggest difference is that everybody in here (adapted) is doing his own pro gram,” he said. “There’s also a lot more interaction between stu dents.” Offshore oil platforms useful as artificial reefs University News Service Obsolete offshore oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico and along the west coast could provide the founda tion for a lucrative sport-fishing in dustry, says a recreation and parks expert. Rather than scrap the huge rigs, Dr. Robert Ditton of Texas A&M suggests leaving some of the struc tures in the ocean because they act as artificial reefs which attract a variety offish. “Fifteen to 30 years ago the fish were distributed all over the Gulf of Mexico,” Ditton said. “Then the oil and gas industries came in and built these vertical steel columns which at tracted the fish that attracted com mercial fishermen and spurred the development of a recreational fish ery," Ditton said. “Now we’re at the point of wondering what’s going to happen when these platforms are re moved offshore Galveston, for ex ample.” Ditton, who serves on a National Academy of Science panel looking into a variety of alternatives for dis posing of the platforms, said there is , The platforms are pre ferable as- attiBdal reefs] the vertical ste** 1 the whole water column. considerable interest in retaining some of the structures for fishery enhancement purntglfc. “ The platforms wBpreferable to using ships because rryou sink a ship for an artificial reef it doesn’t come up that high in the water column and there’s really not the same diver sity of fish,” Ditton said. “When you’re talking about an oil structure from the surface to the bottom, you’ve got a good fish profi le.” Serious fishermen learned quickly that the platforms provided good fishing grounds and often dock around them, Ditton said. He said this is true in the Gulf of Mexico where there are more than 4,000 petroleum structures. About 1,000 of them are major structures. Once drilling is complete, oil and gas companies are required to re move the platform and usually do so to eliminate their insurance liability. “There are thorny issues involved in keeping the platforms in place and the main one is liability issues because there are few precedents in court,” Ditton said. Ditton said companies and federal agencies are ironing out differences wnere liability, tax breaks and other issues are concerned, to increase the number of artificial reefs off the country’s coasts. “Artificial reefs date back to the ancient Chinese who threw piles of rocks in the water to create vertical profiles,” said Ditton. “Since then we have thrown lots of things in the wa ter for reef development, only in re cent years we’ve been doing it care fully.” • ••••#••••• • • • All You Can Eat | HHHNllo p.m / Offer expires Feb. 28, 1985 Sunday Pancakes $1.99 Ail You Can Eat Mon. Tues. Wed. Spaghetti $1.99 All You Can Eat Thurs. Fri. Shrimp $4.99 All You Can Eat Saturday Special Steak Dinnej $4.99 Complete U'V At - - ; INTERNATIONAL HOUSE Of PANCAKES® RESTAURANT : ; , . J®ft:A03N. CollegeSkaggs Center fVJiVv uv g-y. . ;• : . vB 1 :•••: j • : : •. \ • ' It's no rumor... RUMOURS is still opGn!!!!!! Bring in this coupon and got o single ^rnnn oF Bluo Bell Ice Creom For scoop onlp. 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