local/state December 15,1 What’s Up Wednesday MSC VARIETY SHOW:Applications to perform in the 1983 MSC Variety Show are available now at the secretar ies isle in 216 MSC. Deadline for applications is Feb. 4. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS:Juniors, seniors, and gra duate, veterinary, and medical students may have their pictures taken between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, at the Yearbook Associates at 1700 Puryear Dr. For more information, call 693-6756 or 845-2611. The final deadline for pictures is this Friday. No make-ups will he allowed after this date. PARENTS’ DAY COMMITTEE:Aggie “Parents of the Year” applications will be available now through Friday in 216 MSC. Deadline for applications is Jan. 25, 1983. CENTER FOR NUMERICAL ANALYSIS: I he Center for Numerical Analysis, Department of Mathematics, will host an international symposium on Approximation Theory on Jan. 10 through Jan. 14, 1983 at 9:30 a.m. in Rudder. Approximation theory is a part of applied mathematics and includes practical and theoretical methods for solving a variety of real-world problems, often with the help of computers. The conference will be attended by over 100 mathematicians from 20 countries and approximately 100 lectures by leading experts will be given. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL:A Candlelight Communion Service of Meditation will be held at 10 p.m. at the University Lutheran Chapel, 315 N. College Main in College Station. Will meet Thursday to sing and visit at Sherwood at 6:30 p.m. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CAMPUS NET- WORK:An effort to resurrect this organization is being made. Students should be interested in promoting stu dent awareness of individual rights and should contact John Cook at 696-3241 if interested. Around town Friday last day for yearbook picture Friday is the last day to have your picture made for the 1983 Aggieland. If you are a junior, senior, graduate, vet or medical student and if you want to be in next year’s Aggieland, go by Yearbook Associates sometime before 5 p.m. Friday. There will be no makeups and no exceptions. Go to the studio soon and avoid the long lines. Alpha Zeta sponsors turkey sale Alpha Zeta, the Agricultural Honor Society, is selling smoked turkeys from now until the end of the semester. Proceeds from the sale go to finance scholarships, spon sor trips to Agricultural Convocation, and to fund campus service projects. The price for a nine-pound turkey is $15. An 11-pound turkey costs $18. Persons interested is ordering a turkey for Christmas should contact any Alpha Zeta member or call 846-4539 or 846-9238. Parks department to move office The College Station Parks and Recreation Department is moving into a new office building located at Central Park, on Krenek Tap Road and the Highway 6 Bypass. The mailing address of the department will remain P.O. Box 9960, but the telephone number will change to 693- 7273. The move is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, and the office will be open for regular business on Dec. 20. ’82 Aggielands being distributed The 1982 Aggielands are available for pickup in 216 Reed McDonald. Bring a student ID card to pick up your yearbook. If you did not order one and wish to purchase one, the cost is $21. If you have an announcement or interesting item to submit for this column, come by The Battalion office in 216 Reed McDonald or call Tracey Taylor at 845-2611. Now you know United Press International NEW YORK — A pilot media tion service designed to keep cases out of Family Court may also help improve parentchild communications. This conclusion was reached after a six-month study of a Chil dren’s Aid Society PINS Media tion Service. PINS are children who have committed acts of non-criminal misbehavior, such as chronic truancy, running away or being incorrigible or beyond parental control. The service helps families recognize that the problem that initially brought them to court is a family problem, not just the children’s, and efforts are made to help resolve it. Margaret L. Shaw, director of the project, says it offers backup social services designed to help families already hardpressed by poverty, poor health, inadequ ate housing and inferior educa tion. New technique helps vision by Dawson Clark Battalion Reporter Two-and-a-half years ago Daniel Townsley couldn’t dis tinguish the “big E” on an eye examination chart from a big. black blur, So, to solve the prob lem he spent about $2,500, mis sed two weeks of work and allowed a doctor to make several incisions on the corneas of his eyes. “1 saw Dr. Doyle Leslie on an Austin morning television show describing a new procedure for correcting nearsightedness,” Townsley said. “Three months later, I was watching the same television show without my glasses.” The surgical procedure, which is called radial kerato- tomy, involves making about 8 radial cuts on the cornea. Townsley had a severe case of myopia, which is called near- Mike Zaby’s Wishes You Happy Holidays! Tuesday — Ladies Night. . . Ladies drink free all night! Wednesday — Bash Night. .. Free drinks for all, 9-12! Thursday — Another Ladie’s Night... Prettiest in Dallas! Friday & Saturday — Party time... Anything goes! *Open Christmas Eve and Day! *New Year’s Eve Party! *19 year olds admitted with student I.D. 5915 E. Northwest Hwy. Dallas, Tx. Ph. 361-4272 sightedness because of the eye’s inability to focus on objects which are far away. The surgery is done at an out-patient surgical suite. Pa tients are admitted at 7 a.m. on the day of surgery. About 1 Va hours later, cocaine drops are put in the eye for local anesthe tic. After the anesthetic takes effect, Leslie spends about 15 minutes making the incisions in the cornea. Patients normally are released by noon on the same day. Lisa Sailer, a counselor and surgical assistant for Leslie, said the surgery is done one eye at a time, usually on the less domi nant eye first. She said the second eye is done about three months after the first. “The operation sounds very simple, but for me it was a little scary,” Townsley said. “You see, I was the first person in Austin to have it (the surgery) done by Dr. Leslie.” Leslie was about the tenth American doctor to learn the ra dial keratotomy procedure. Dr. Svyatoflav Fyodorov of the Mos cow Research Laboratory of Ex perimental and Clinical Prob lems of Eye Surgery began ex- “I have nothing but praise for the whole operation. The best feeling of all was when they took the (glasses) restriction off my driv er’s license. ” — Daniel Townsley, recipient of a radial keratotomy. perimental animal surgery to test the procedure in 1973. One year later, Fyodorov made his first successful attempt on a human. In 1978, Dr. Leo Bores went to Moscow’ to learn the techni- ining an que from Fyodorov. BeRgram, 1 passed the techniqueoimuhe 18 . eral American docion. Jme physic: ing Leslie. Kipnal The radial keratowlerapists, S I dltre has been criticized: tcial work' American doctors, n some a “I wish the operatic:Annel. been invented, then hi j} ie center have to make the mori®|lementa sions: Do 1 or don't]3®, su mrne with a basically healtht«Klf' or hand can be corrected withi iumi nn' day or contact lenseshanO. ^paired chi ophthamologist said' Joanswh meeting of the Texas jokers anc Association in 1980. Bfopedic c “Sooner or later, s .hjldren. going to lose an eyeonitj Thompsor now can we justify losiii|ij c ej patients that could be correffiLft exceller glasses?’! said Dr. Will vpe of servi coe, who pioneered a pB for cataract patients tkB was controversial when! was introduced. The risks of the op were well worth it, Id said. |D1 “It was worth the if” JL - , • adverse long-termeffeasB because even if sometfcB go wrong in the next It: ^ 5:35 p. years, ITl have had p nst 0 ff 1C( years of perfect vision, liB a f ema "1 think it’s kindofnd® eturn j n j to call the surgeryexpera^Q cai , at this time. He(Leslie)tz: e ( j n i oc k ef | more than 2,000 s*Me a rd son surgeries.” fte,-, Leslie said that even t f he suspe' is successful to one d(fS e p osta j another. B caused “Some patients' visiotp' bad that it cannot be totif rented, but it is always ter the surgery," he said, not totally free the pat wearing corrective lens at least lessens their p: or allows them to £0 1 their glasses some of “We’ve done about?,M dial keratotomy surgene i' 111 " er e y Introducing ioo% AutO Financing. —- / to our knowlege therehai'Bf 131 no long-term comp!: nnm g we: The results are still fauB' Our success rate (fortotWU su spe rectionj runs about 85pet®^ ir !f' e ’ P I hr procedure costsB 3 " 1 Hit $2,600 for two eyes, butiH n 8 3 da covered by some insuran(BJ at ket., panics. Boes. Sailer said there is a lB 0 ™y be charge for each eye. Thtifip re Pori eludes preliminary eiB n0 j Ion b lions, thfe doctor’s surpp e ' ( 0 ! 0rec and post surgery checbiB ' vll b a one year. An additionaliB 001 • charged for the surgical® / 011 ba' and anesthesiologist. Leslie is positive f uture of the “radial K"lB c ?ded ghymity. I dure. “I believe! will become a common?. dure in the future,” y° u rewar * that this prtvP. 10 die “The risks are minimali', , r , ewar suits in general are veit and the patient is happy®: > Townsley said he isp^|f with the results of hiss tions. Ian Cars, Trucks, Trailers. “I have nothing but pul the whole operation,”M said. “ The best feelingof»[ when they took the/ striction off my driver's Irty m ] . Institutes 1th police t 1 „f Jesse Dial drug ufe i i IB s * 10we checked* 10 ' w employ* Ber’s trestedjun ^ Uni'edPr.ss Interna^ ndercover ALIAS — Mon /■L the District Judge Barefoot*j,- He w outlined the maximumq D • of mind-altering drugs : ) f ht . comn cians could administer^ dents in Texas statemen tt f!$i^ e ^ tutions as part of a court ^ ^ ^ , upgradingconditionsatt^yj “ een ' t ^ llUes c , tenalinste Sanders ruling caiq^ weeks after a three-r 1 ® panel reported some Biablo, v state’s hospitals wereinab Houston, “chaos” due to 'TackofcjyB work i ness of the (drug) treati/eld. and th The panel’s report citi'w as a hoc serious incidents of the 1 "V e woul excessive doses of me^wn up a a in adolescents.” It sakfoitfack home,’ incidents was life-threatqThe pros Sanders’order rises ^rguod the settlement reached lasL Ad Diablc tween state officials and miiished. 1 tiffs who filed a 1974(1$' ^ike Mane: suit alleging the state mis 11 lilts sex see its mental patients. pted by tf Panel member DavidP®°wever social worker, said the >' jPded tha tions on drugs was one By offen requirements in the suit is |jgi a blo to ment. He said Sanders Brned t Monday was designedtoklf 51 ’ but < health officials kno* JJed that wanted to come to an ‘■Pasted a Bedlv sp ment. Opm HI • pjn. thfloufth Finals W« giva 20% more in trada on usad books! F 1 T V Bedly se To an ut Sanders’ ruling s ct *1 N days 1; guidelines for the quaf; titer a ph mind-altering drugs ^nd case could legally admimst er T|j tients. It broke down the f by drug and age of P aB j