^Disabled given hope ;t would y * Stop, ^lierewof sunken la, iter is is oftheBi : won’t reh mds oftlif :l larged, wnwood \ ^eralage, ' to Congn •fore any ces long] Jy. tomeofitu i oneconjn >ts will bu a Brow® imilies will i ship goc: THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APR. 7, 1976 Page 5 By KAREN SMITH “I can walk again,” said a patient from the Brazos Valley Rehabilitation Center. Despite two knee operations, that pa tient was unable to walk or go to work. He received treatment at the Center which consisted of therapy and traction and now he is able to walk and work again. For 19 years the Rehabilitation Center in Bryan, has been giving help to the hand icapped and disabled, providing physical, occupational and speech therapy. Audiol ogy and counseling are other services pro vided by the center. Under the audiology program, the pa tient’s hearing problem is evaluated. If a hearing aid is needed the Center fits the aid and orders it for the patient. If an aid will not help, lip reading or sign language is taught to the patient. Occupational therapy utilizes activities such as crafts and writing. Whirlpool baths, deep heating and strengthening exercises are used in physical therapy programs. Counseling is also provided for patients who have emotional problems resulting from a physical or mental handicap. Before a patient can begin occupational or physical therapy he or she must be refer red to the center by a physician because the therapists aren’t qualified to make medical diagnosis, said Jim Thompson, director of the Center. A doctor’s referral isn’t neces sary for speech therapy or audiology. There are 145 patients receiving help from the clinic, Thompson said. “I’m glad that there is a place like the Rehabilitation Center,” one woman said. “It has really helped me to use my hands again. They were so crippled by arthritis.” Students from Texas A&M University used to go to the Center to receive treat ments for athletic injuries or tension, but now the hospital on campus has a therapy division which is more convenient for them, Thompson said. A&M students who are majoring in sociology and therapy work can do volun tary service at the center. The Center is supported by the United Fund, Easter Seal Societies, the March of Dimes and the Shrine. These funds enable the Center to charge minimal fees, not to charge patients who need help but who can’t afford it. People of all ages disabled from strokes, birth defects or accidents can receive therapy at the Center. Wheelchair awareness day Students can experience difficulties of the handicapped date authorities hope to vaccinate 10 million It said. Associated Press AUSTIN, Tex. — State health au- lorities hope 10 million Texans can V 1 3 given a vaccine to protect them PfflWMnst a feared epidemic of swine ( , u j fluenza next fall, t r ' l 0 vacc ' n ate maybe 1 million Te- 1 " ink in three months is really a tre mendous task but we are hopeful it can be done,” Dr. Fratis Duff, direc tor of the Texas Department of Health Resources, told a news con ference Monday. Duff said pharmaceutical man ufacturers are making the vaccine now and they hope to have enough for nationwide distribution next Sep tember. Congress is considering a bill that would appropriate $135 million for the manufacture and dis tribution of the vaccine. “Then it is our goal to have it dis tributed and administered by the end of November. It will require all the resources of state and local, pub lic and private health officials to do the job,” Duff said. Private physicians would be ex pected to administer the vaccine to their patients on request. A wheelchair basketball game will highlight Wheelchair Awareness Day April 22. The evening game will be played in DeWare fieldhouse. Wheelchair Awareness Day is sponsored by Students Concerned for the Handicapped, a campus or ganization, and the Rehabilitation Engineering Center of Houston. About 60 wheelchairs, loaned by local rental agencies and the Vete rans Administration in Houston, will be available for the use of interested students. “People can sign for a chair, then go about their daily routine,” said Rick Baldwin, president of Students Concerned for the Handicapped. By attending all their classes in a wheel chair, students can experience first-hand the problems whcich the handicapped must face in getting around the campus. After returning the wheelchair, students will be asked to describe any problems they have had, Baldwin said. He is ex pecting at least 300 people to test their mobility in a wheelchair. The basketball game will feature two teams from a national wheel chair basketball league, the Dallas Raiders and the Houston Easyrid- ers. The winner will then play mem bers of the Texas A&M basketball team. The reason for bringing the wheelchair basketball game to A&M is so the audience can see what people can do with their handicaps, Baldwin said. “Our main purpose is to bring handicapped people into the light, and make others more aware of them as people,” he said. The Students Concerned for the Handicapped attempt to improve the physical and psychological at mosphere in the community for handicapped people, Baldwin said. By working with campus planners they have been instrumental in mak ing the A&M campus much more CHUCK BONELESS, U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF . . LB. WHITE SWAN BISCUITS 8 0Z. TIN i, B-6, ^ S SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK POWDERED DISH DETERGENT CASCADE 35 0Z. PKG. GOOD DAY, 16 0Z. TIN CORN CREAM STYLE, WHOLE KERNEL FOR ONLY SPARETIME POT PIES 6 0Z. 16 0Z. 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Meier, a historian from Kent State University, directed his speech to the meaning of the Declaration of Independence for Afro-Americans. He quoted such famous black Americans as Martin Luther King, Jr., Fredrick Douglas, and Dubois who upheld the idea that all men are created equal. In the late 1700’s “only a handful of whites saw the Declaration’s prin ciples applied literally to blacks and whites,” Meier said. And blacks con tinued to have trouble getting their unalienable rights even after their emancipation in 1863. They asked state legislatures to strike the word “white” from certain laws, he said. They based their stand on the Declaration of Indepen dence. In Texas blacks fought the “white primaries” for 50 years. Meier said the problem that still exists is the failure of white Ameri cans to live up to their promises. He said the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) has made the most headway for the rights ofblacks. The NAACP made its greatest achieve ments during the Depression and World War II, paving the the way for the 1950s and ’60s, he said. Meier said the Black Panthers were overrated, and they were “cre atures of the ramparts in the Com munist party.” He noted that the Panthers have done little to further the rights ofblacks. He concluded with a quote from Vernon Jordan saying, “The Decla ration has just become another piece of paper.” —Ce Cowart Carter, Ford, Jackson take primary wins Associated Press Jimmy Carter, in Wisconsin, and Henry M. Jackson, in New York, gained primary victories last night. President Ford won his sixth Re publican primary, winning easily over challenger Ronald Reagan in Wisconsin. Tuesday’s two primary elections point to a three-way race in the next big Democratic test, for Pennsyl vania’s 178 delegates on April 27. The two Tuesday primaries put Ford’s nationwide delegate count at 251 of the 1,130 it would take to win nomination. Reagan had 84. 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