THE BATTALION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1978 Page 6 MSC AGGIE CINEMA Study Shakespearean costumes Merry Christmas EE MOVIE* Tech fashion class visits Europe United Press International LUBBOCK — For $1,900 and loose change, 25 students can enroll in a course at Texas Tech University this spring called “Clothing and Textiles 330.” There are no prerequisites and a seat is available to anyone with the tuition. Ordinarily a three-hour class at Tech would cost state resi dents $50 plus regular fees. But Dr. Patricia E. Horridge, chairwoman of the Clothing and Textile Department, isn’t worried about filling the class with the not- so-exciting title. The course, she feels, has its own merits. Much of the semester students will remain in class, listening to lec tures from language instructors and art historians. But in mid-May the class will move off campus — to Europe. There, during non-class hours. students will have the chance to stroll the Champs Elysses, photo graph Westminster Abbey or sip Chianti in Rome. During work hours, the itinerary will include tours of Europe’s lead ing fashion houses like Pucci, Dior, LaChasse of London and Gucci. There also will be excursions to tex tile mills, fashion schools and museums. Finally, students will lug their notepads to Stratford-upon- Avon in England to observe the cos tumes worn by performers in a Shakespearean play. For three spring semesters stu dents have made the annual fashion pilgrimages, alternating each year between New York and Europe. At $500, the New York trip is cheaper. Dr. Horridge says, but in an in creasingly international fashion in dustry, students need to see Euro pean fashion houses first-hand. “The value that we see j n ^ trip) is a culmination of, really, ^ the fashion industry is. Wetryij expand (the students’) horizon Fashion is not just drawing a d ress and producing it. she says. Students have the opportunity she says, to observe the fashion jj. dustry from a European pointy view and to receive first-hand ij. struction from business profession als. Rapid Reduce Energy NOW The Bishop’s Wife Muscles Future Bar 693-7431 shB?ts + Woodstone Center starring Cary Grant Loretta Young David Niven SELL YOUR BOOKS 693-9308 907 Harvey Rd. (Hwy. 30) "We Sell Shirts" Open 9-9 Tuesday December 5 8 p.m. Rudder Theater UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE NORTHGATE CULPEPPER PLAZA We Buy Used Books NORTHGATE - Across from the Post Office Persistent joggers risk heart attacks United Pre«* International DENY'ER —— Zealous joggers who run despite the cold or a bout of the flu risk asthma and heart disease in their persistence, an Ameri can Lung Association researcher reports. Dr. Edward Morgan, a University of Colorado Medical Center researcher in exercise and the mechanic’s of breathing, said symptoms include shortness of breath, wheezing or chest discomfort following exercise. Joggers who experience a tight chest after running in the cold may actually have asthma, which can be induced by exercise, coldairor viral infections, he said. “A combination of the three might really do the trick, Morgan said. The heart strain in extreme cases may cause a heart attack.” Fhe persistent joggers, along with "hidden asthmatics who attrib ute their breathing problems to the cold air or pollution can becunaj with drugs, he said. Although there is no pn>c>f that inactivity during viral infection will prevent permanent heart damage, it makes sense. And it niakes sense in general for a person with a viral infection to take it easy, lie said. Don’t forget to pickup Aggielands and Directories LAST CHANCE Still Need 1,500 Volunteers SIGN UP NOW For The Russian Flu Study The Russian Influenza Study needs 3,000 student volunteers for the 2nd part of a flu vaccination program. Benefits Include: A) Making be tween $S0-$70, B) Immunization against the Russian Flu at no cost, and C) Special priority in the Health Center. Sign up and start the program by going by: Monday & Tuesday Health Center, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Commons Lounge, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Commons Lounge, 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Violence in schools declining! United Press Internatiood Violence in Americas pul schools continues, but guards in hallway s and a get-tough attit among educators has stoppedj even reversed its spread thisyeari a number of the nations schools'! terns, a UPI survey found Monda To deal with the major and grw ing problem in recent years,i number of cities also report trainir teachers and children in the pf chology of violence so troubled be quelled before it occurs. A spot check of administrate teachers and police in more than dozen big cities sho\Vs violent against teachers and amongstufa on school grounds is down fromb year in Chicago; Miami; Memphi Tenn.; Detroit; Little Rock, M Portland. Ore., and Birminghat Ala. wbei hers ii before you go home for the holidays BOTH ROOM 216 REED MCDONALD A LARGE VARIETY OF TITLES INCLUDES CHILDREN’S BOOKS For Aggielands, bring your student ID. For Directories, you MUST bring your fee slip. Both books are available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Room 216, Reed McDonald and while you’re at it, it’s also a good time to get your photo taken for next year’s Aggieland at — barker •not photography 846-5766 NORTHGATE Gift Giving Books Freshmen and sophomores at Va to Vi Publishers List Price! A-T A-Z Makeup Through Dec. 15 Jan. 15-Jan. 20 Jan. 22-Jan. 24 TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE hail nk 1 The problem appears wore? last year in Newark, N.j., money for security and teac short, and in San Francisco, public school ninth graders created problems for the first Troublemaldng is reported ing of! in Boston, New Yor and Albuquerque — and in Angeles, where spanking soon be permitted with parents ppn® , j sion. Portland school administrate voted last year to ban eorpoj 1 punishment. But Portland " started a program from kindergi through the third grade aimeif teaching kids to deal with tially violent situations i violent ways. There were 5,494 violent --j in New York City’s public schW last year, including a murderoi^ student by another and 63 sexualJ saults on students, teachers visitors to the schools. •;$* City Board of Education spo** 5 man Bob Terti said 1,732 guard 5 now assigned to the 1,000 schooj the system and major violence' not increased from last years p a In Los Angeles, gang viote away from the schools is a bi? P 1 ^ lem and reported teacher assa [ are up this year. But thatincreatf due in major part to a new rejOT system negotiated with the l nl Teachers of Los Angeles union Rt E L7 pron num Bi the > Scho rece macl Educ Th for n 40 p Com Th creas ble t not h book; novel Th “eye, nizin verba like v Var to ch; their word; la Pr< me de: CU] Sac wh 1 cor wa; E hoc ext< T wee Tin h Var in ( E hole cup P viev his B the pow Mighty gorill seems bashfu as ‘husband United Press International TOLEDO, Ohio — Max, order husband for Happ)’ al , Malaika, has arrived, but, likea^ men, he is shy. Max is a 330-pound gorilla^' 1 to the Toledo Zoo from his n^ Frankfurt, Germany, in hope 51 ' mating with the Toledo-born g 01 sisters Happy and Malaika. Hf; 1 rived Saturday morning ended a two 7 year search for a te 1 gorilla. He was shy about moving i new Cjuarters, a glass-fronted c | i opposite the unit occupied by ® two females. It is adjacent to “ cage housing Togo, the fei" 1 ^ 25-year-old father. A combination of bananas an 1 German-speaking reporter on scene when Max arrived got hite 0 ® of Ins crate and into his cage. He occasionally pounded on glass front of his cage, and ^ scared when Togo pounded on closed door which separates the t" cages. SC Ret Ret $3 si Culpe tirsj Sa