, A&M worker dies THE BATTALION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1977 Page 5 Services are pending for Texas A&M University staff member Mil- ton R. Brown, 33, who died Wed nesday of an apparent heart attack. Brown was a custodial worker in the Physical Plant Department and had worked at the university since 1968. University officials said the cen tral campus flag would be lowered to half-staff Oct. 25 in memory of Brown and 62-year-old Dr. Karl F. Mattil, director of the Food Protein Research and Development Center. Mattil died Tuesday. Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 Sun Theatres 333 University 846-9808 The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 am - 2 am Mon-Sat 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS PUBLIC LIQUIDATION SACRIFICED. * WUUOtSCWMN fMNCHisnrtw NTlRE STOCK right): students Wayne Hughes, David Haefeli and Clifford Simmang; Dr. William Fife, head of the project, and student Mike Mans field. ivers receive scholarship Wall /an. ti Dzikowli Dr. William Fife, associate dean tin' College of Science and chief If Texas A&M’s Hyperbaric Labora- t, v, announced this week that rep- ■rscntatives of the Sin it-Led er i iternational Corp., a diving com- ■any now with an office in New Or- lians, has donated $ 10,()()0 to estab- li ii a scholarship fund to support Indergraduate and graduate stu- lents who are studying in areas re- 1, ted to diving. I The firm’s executive vice presi dent, Thomas Juijn, made the pres entation and visited the university’s decompression chambers where Fife and his team of student re searchers have been experimenting with new breathing mixtures and constructing new diving tables to allow divers to go deeper, stay longer and come up faster. They also run a 24-hour emergency serv ice for patients needing treatment with oxygen under pressure. Dr. Fife and his researchers are currently working with Smit-Leeler on a project using decompression chambers where as many as six di vers can live and work for up to 30 days at depths down to 1,000 feet. Such capability would greatly in crease the effectiveness of divers and reduce the cost of this type of work. The project is a cooperative effort with faculty researchers from Texas A&M and the University of Houston at Clearlake. or thin living. Living Slim taught case, wa in. w arrives homemi eelings if; to do is ' it looks g to give door, from mother igo not li ■ weight, as a nerv ey spent and 1 sp nger / 1 ne from lid, datai on howl ir eating ii By DEB KILGORE Many people try fad diets, taste- ;s recipes, extreme exercises and 11s to lose weight overnight, says llurti Hasselhack who teaches a .iving Slim” course. People lose 10 to 20 pounds using lesc extreme methods, but they ift back into old eating patterns ma^pg fid regain lost pounds, Hasselhack ays. To break this cycle, she aches the Living Slim course to lose who are serious about losing eight and keeping it off. Hasselhack holds a master’s de- ree in health science. Living Slim is a new concept in mnanent weight control,” Hassel- aek says. “The diet is the main Ii ns of most weight programs, but I ! y to look at the person as a whole. 11 of us have an undermining factor iat keeps us overweight. One part fus wants to be slim, and the other art wants to be fat to punish us. We eed to be aware of how we sabotage ur efforts to be slim, so we can cou ld ourselves.” Awareness of one’s motives and neselfis one part of the Living Slim ourse. A thorough knowledge of ud relatii utr 'bnn and a personal program tal stimuli rea l so important in weight control, caches pi 1 ® elba , ck sa y s - Behavi 10 understand nutrition, Ilassel- Mich. ^ as ber students fill out data beets on the foods they eat, the asserli |uantity eaten, the calories con- |te new m utned, where and when they eat, bod, andi iow they feel while eating, who ney eat with and why they are eat- Aff She says she reads these sheets o find eating patterns that can he ‘hanged gradually. If someone is eating a cup of r ’ T 3 " 1 l( ' anuts eacb night in front of the n snacking I suggest substituting a cup of ir the tew mpcorn, which is a lot less dunes, Hasselhack says. “This hange is an easy one to make.” ^ A personal program with a weight l ' S tben determined for each thanshakii itudent based on his height, frame , „ !!, a ge, Hasselhack says. ie said, j ‘| Everyone has a program of weight nt food orf— 16 With Foods. tensions o reprogn instead at you din to the control, whether it’s stopping after the second cookie or riding a bike regularly. Most people are not lucky to be thin. They work at it in some way. “We do not ask our students to go on a diet because to go on a diet means they will have to go off of it at some point and the pounds will re turn. We help each person to gradually modify his eating habits, behavior and lifestyle in a painless way, so-weight will gradually come off and stay off. ” Hasselhack says a person should not punish himself for small failures in a weight control program. She tells her students to think positively that they will continue losing weight even if they fail sometimes. While obesity is caused by eating more than the body can use, reasons for overeating are many, Hasselhack says. Our culture, boredom, frustra tion and bad habits all lead to over eating, she adds. “We are an eating society,” Has- selback says. “If we want to show our love for someone, we make them a rich chocolate cake. We are also stimulated by advertisements to eat, and our language is oriented to eating. On the other hand, we are told we must be skinny to look good. We re receiving a double message. “People were not overweight several hundred years ago, because they worked hard and ate natural foods. The food industry today is out for personal profit and not for per sonal health, so our diet has a lot of harmful white flour and sugar in it. ” H asselbaek says people are motivated to be slim not only for their appearance, but also for their health since hypertension, shortened life, lowered self-esteem, heart disease and high blood pres sure are the results of being over weight. Women are more interested in staying slim than men, but people of all ages take the course, she says. The Living Slim course is offered by a non-profit organization called The Growing Center. X Store \ f Fixtures ' AND EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Buy ALL or ANY PART AT BIG SAVINGS COME IN AND k LOOKATTHE A V PRICE TAGS M QimriMC BUSINESS EVERYTHING' IN THE STORE,NOW IDISCO! IBSON’S SCOUNT CENTER LONE 29 STAR ■ 6-PACK CANS 1420 TEXAS AVENUE COLLEGE STATION Plan Your Holiday Trip NOW! Good Travel Savings: $ 186 Round Trip Los Angeles Lv. Nov. 23 from Hou. Return Nov. 27 p.m. Round Trip Denver *149 for details call: World Travel 3211-A Texas Ave. - Bryan 822-1311 3rd BIG PRICE DROP! WESTERN WEARH0USE lAMKAMEDICARO. We Honor Mastercharge and BankAmericard /mimk HHBH OPEN EVERY NITE UNTIL 9 P.M. M0N.-SAT. IpM 0 P.A Y :ial Beef im s and ther nd Butter I MICHAEL MURPHEY Texas A&M - Town Hall presents Michael Murphey - Oct. 28, 1977, G. Rollie White Coliseum - Tickets and information at MSC Box Office beginning Oct. 10, 845-2916.’ CIAL :ning b i dinner 1 jce ;sing . Butter- a 3 f any le ‘J m/c