state March 24,1| Battalion/Page 7 March 24, 1982 What’s Up at Texas A&M MafT photo byjabl Wednesday }GIE SCOUTS: Meeting to discuss and make final plans for Kachina and the canoe trip at 9 p.m. in 504 Rudder. _1E CANADIAN CLUB: Meeting to discuss International ' “Week Display and Food Fair at p.m. in 502 Rudder, Please bring anv Canadian items you have for the display. UNITED CAMPUS MINIS! RY: Aggie supper will be at 6:15 p.m. in the A&M Presbyterian Church, 401 Church St. C M SAILING CLUB: There will be a film at 7 p.m. in 401 Rudder. MU ROADRUNNERS: Ladd Moore will talk about the \pril America’s Love Run for Muscular Dystrophy at 7 p.m. in 267 G. Rollie White. CAMP COUNSELORS: There will be a skating party from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Pooh’s Park. Price will be $2.75. J1VERS1TY LUTHERAN CHAPEL: Candlelight Com munion Service of Meditation will be at 10 p.m. in the chapel at 315 N. College Main. LLEL CLUB: Pianist Boa/ Heilman will speak on the history of Jewish music at 7:80 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation. ACK AWARENESS COM MI l I EE: Committee officer positions will be filled and there will be a general meeting in 501 Rudder at 7 p.m. HEELCHAIR FABLE I ENNIS: Instruction and practice will be at 3 p.m. on the G. Rollie White main floor. C AGGIE CINEMA: “Black and White in Color” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Theatre. iMU PLACEMENT CENTER: Health Career Opportunity [Day will be from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. 224 MSC. I)I!TICAL FORUM: The Middle East Poll will be from 9 a.m. [to 3 p.m. in the MSC, Zachry and the Quad. SRAELI CLUB: Film and lecture on Kibbutz at 8 p.m. in 410 Rudder. Everyone is welcome. signs up Tuel e class. I TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: Meeting for those in terested in acceleration, handling or dragging will be at 7:30 p.m. in 607 Rudder. mi MID-EAST TEXAS DIETETIC ASSOCIATION: I Meeting to discuss final plans for the Post Oak Mall Health Fair Twill be at 7 p.m. in 100 Kleberg. Members, prospective mem bers. Nutrition and Food Science Technology students are in vited to attend. HUGHES HALL HEIST FOR HANDICAPPED: Hughes Hall will he collecting donations f or the Special Olympics in the MSC and in front of Sbisa tomorrow. Thursday TOYOTA OWNERS ASSOCIATION: A session on car re pairs will be at 7.30 p.m. in 321 Physics Building. ATASCOSA COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Club will meet at the Hall of Fame at 8 p.m. Bring dues if you have not paid, TAMU ANT HROPOLOGY CLUB: Dr. N.D. Thomas will lecture on Ethnography of Mexican markets at 7:30 p.m. in 301 Bolton. HUGHES HALL HEIST FOR HANDICAPPED: Hughes Hall will be collecting donations for the Special Olympics in the MSC and in front of Sbisa. I AMECT: There will be a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 302 Rudder. CAMPUS CRUSADE. FOR CHRIST: Leadership training class will be at 7:30 p.m. in 108 Harrington. Everyone is wel come. Cl RCLE K: Final planning for the trip to District Convention and Banquet plans will be discussed at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. All students are welcome. SURF CLUB: Surfing movie “Crystal Eyes” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in 100 Heldenlels. Good reviews from both Surfing Maga zine and Surfer Magazine Review. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC POLICY COMMITTEE: Organizational meeting will be at 7 p.m. in 604 A&B Rudder. UNI 1 ED CAMPUS MINIS! RY: Women’s bible study will be from 7:80 p.m. at 1002 Pershing. ALTERNATIVES TO ABORTION: KAMI! presents a 28 minute film “Assignment Life" a film exploring both sides of the abortion issue today at noon, Sat. at 7:30 p.m. and Tues., March 30. at 9:30 p.m. MOSES MOORE WALTON: “Touch of Class Party” will be at Mickey’s at 8 p.m. All girls are free. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL: Leave for Sherwood Nursing Home ot sing and visit at 6:30 p.m. from the Chapel, 315 N. College Main. TEAM CAP I AINS: Meeting for volleyball triples where sche dules will be distributed at 5:15 p.m. in 267 G. Rollie White. OFF CAMPUS CENTER: Moving off campus information ses sion will be at 7 p.m. in 607 Rudder. Girl named hero for saving father United Press International DALLAS — When Kim Bryant socked an angry bull in the nose with a whip last fall, she figured it might save her father, who was under attack by the animal. But she never dreamed it would make her a hero. The Texas Farm and Ranch Safety Council chose the Sul phur Springs girl, 16, as the reci pient of its Rural Heroism Award for 1981. She received the award Monday during the annual meeting of the Texas Safety Association. Bryant was helping her father, Lyle Bryant, drive a bull back to their farm near Peerless in Hopkins County east of Dallas last November. The bull had strayed onto a neighbor’s prop erty. While passing through the neighbor’s pen on the way back to the Bryant farm, the animal turned and charged Mr. Bryant, ramming him against a fence, then tossing him in the air twice. As the bull continued its attack on her father on the ground, Bryant began striking the bull with the whip she car ried. “ The whip didn’t faze him much,” she said. “But my grand father told me once il you want to get a cow’s attention, to hit him on the nose.” She struck the bull across the bridge of its nose with the hand le of the whip. Ehe blow stopped the bull’s attack, so she hit the animal again. With the bull tem- porarly stunned, she helped her father from the pen and shut the gate. “Daddy was in trouble and I just did as I had been told,” she said. “I didn’t think much about it.” The girl’s father spent nine days in the hospital with a broken rib, a minor shoulder fracture, cuts and bruises. But he was happy to be alive. However, the experience may have a lasting influence on Bryant. She said her career plans now were divided between being a nurse or being a veter inarian. As for the bull, Bryant said il made it hack to her family’s farm, but its stay was brief. “We don’t have him anymore. He was sent to the packers,” she said. “1 guess there was a little hit of revenge in that.” MOSES * MOORE * WALTON PRESENTS THE 6TH ANNUAL one, £ of at' i [Town’s appointment debated Houston hot over chief s job MICKEY’S ALL GIRLS FREE present-thrill I ifrican bnshnrl 1)11 a snull arew United Press International Desert, are,ait(®0USTON — A town meet- ies of noinatjirag called to discuss whether m id. 1 he ;irafcnta’s Commissioner of Pub- studied existjuBSafety Lee Brown should be a bridge bettve tolur chief here brought ■in bushmen. Ipens who were for and id's eatlv irrl»»' nst ^ man — and an un- larmiMgorflw® come v ' s * t from the Ku Klux cities and villa# 11 , material go# About 350 people attended elatively easvi# nda y night’s meeting to dis pit lures of # t i le appointment of the ci- he said ^ llst U ac k chief and police t. were called to escort black citizens to their cars and protect them from the hooded Klan members. City Council was to vote on Brown’s appointment Tuesday. Mayor Kathy Whitmire said she is confident he will get the job. The community appears to be split on whether Brown should be hired. Police say they would prefer someone from within their ranks to be prom oted, but Whitmire said Brown is the most qualified for the job. There was no violence Mon day at the meeting, but the 13 klansmen — some clad in white sheets and others in black clothes with no masks — were told by Councilman John Good- ner they could come into the meeting, but without their robes. The men refused, claiming their civil rights had been violated. Members of a police organiza tion who traveled to Atlanta last week to check on Brown’s credentials released a report of their findings Monday. They said Brown’s failures are that he does not delegate au thority, has poor relations with the media and was blamed for poor recruiting and training in Atlanta. March 25 8:00 p.m. Semi-formal dress Free mixed drinks Non-residents: $6 u nters used it and therei otheiiTifestffl mined bounffli mg bands of ba isting die tojl csthev left in® Coronary bypass lids other surgery FRESH BAGELS United Press International Kt successful coronary bypass p improve the success of M-vessel surgery elsewhere The body, according to Jesse pompson, head of vascular gory at Baylor Medical Cen- m Dallas. Designed to avert heart lc ks, the bypass reroutes 'd that cannot flow easily _ coronary arteries clog- with fatty deposits. Gusto- ! aril y. another vessel — usually rough a vein snipped from the patient’s leg — is used to make a new con nection between the aorta and a coronary artery, which supplies the heart with blood. However, some patients need additional surgery to relieve blockages in the vessels of the neck or legs. Studies done at Baylor and at the Cleveland Cli nic in Ohio showed an 80 per cent lower death rate during surgery for patients who had the coronary bypass first. Hillel Club Orders taken March 24-26 at the MSC For ROTC : r M •s ates l irity [an- call tion FLORICULTURE-ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE CLUB AND THE HORTICULTURE CLUB Plant Sale Saturday, March 27 10 a.m.-2 p.m at the Floriculture greenhouse PLANT SALE hanging baskets tropicals vegetable plants ci.rrB < > •ehi ROTC, rnYfrC C\ASSWl€tf0(>xMr li about savings on auto insurance or schokuship ROTC its are eBciblefur TOP SECRET rebootUSAAmeanberFhtu Member-1. i that doesn’t cost you anything, but can aiitri insurance ran save you from 10 to 35% over what you woulay in jfBiiHums at many insurance companies. Savings like tpan night out every moblft, Ot, savtngsllke that military otfr- * USAA isrvihg pm be&tmmk we I&ow pit b&M djsrf fepk hoi prahehsfee coverage, for the# «; .(os.; ' md jgG Thfc| like, and vOuli like, USA As ocfevment way of hoing buai- less vt? ioTfiye telephone. Whm Mm gfHedti have a riaim, .yuuTeJpsfei fhonetipmM Free number to dial for t noneinfortj tion atbm auto insurance Mvings from USAA.- ■ Your CONTACT at IBM. will pse on :Strase|pc ilejlppbout oecomfrig apriferred risfcfr:ts«red : without going tluough any red ta?