Wednesday, April 6, 1983/The Battalion/Page 11
What’s Up
Wednesday
N ANGELO/WEST TEXAS HOMETOWN CLUB:A
fanning meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder.
i. NAVY:Interviewing for officer positions in Engineering,
personnel Management and Business Management is sche-
luled from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. today and Thursday at the
Placement Center, 10th floor Rudder.
^ THOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION:A Bible study is
id ^ itheduled for 6 p.m. at the student center. Newman Club mass
uid fellowship is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the student center.
,C AGGIE CINEMA:Will show “Citizen Kane” in 601 Rud-
ler Tower at 7:30 p.m. $1.50 with an A&M I.D.
FRAMURAL-REGREATIONAL SPORTS:Running
jventsin Intramural Track Divisional at 7 p.m. in Kyle Field.
1ER1CAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY:Dr. John A. Montgom-
ry from Southern Research Institute, Birmingham, Alabama
livill discuss “The Current Status of Cancer Chemotherapy” at 8
Ijp.m. in 105 Heldenfels.
PS1 CHI —PSYCHOLOGY HONOR SOCIETY:Dr. Brad-
itiry will discuss jobs available for those with a psychology
kground. All those interested in psychology are encouraged
o attend.
(AGRICULTURAL COMMUNICATORS OFTOM-
iennoMMOROW):Budget report, story summaries, deadlines, ACE
usintip-egional meeting and a critique contest will be discussed at 7
.m. at the third floor RDMC.
IUBA CLUB:A tour of the Hyperbarics lab is scheduled for
iear fe 1:30 p.m. in 407 AB Rudder.
'ICS' AMERICAN PRODUCT ION AND INVEN-
rORY CONTROL SOCIET'Y:Career Day field trip to the
[a[ j 0[] , llniversity of Houston. Tickets available in the Industrial En-
rineering Office.
inoi ilTEI) CAMPUS MINISTRY:One dollar dinner and fel-
Smtili owship at 6:30 p.m. at the A&M Presbyterian Church.
1GIE MOT ERCYCLE CLUB:Meeting in 120 Academic &
it, a Agency Building at 5:30 p.m. Riddle run April 17, springbreak
ecaps. New, interested persons welcome.
FCAMPUS CENTERThe OCC is holding roommate ses
sions for students who need roommates for the summer and/or
fall semesters at 2 p.m. in 502 and 504 Rudder.
TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB:Upcoming events and
Aggiecross IV results will be discussed at 8:30 p.m. in 410
Rudder.
T’AMU SAILING CLUB:This weekend’s outing will be discus
sed at 7 p.m. in 302 Physics. Club T-shirts are in. Get yours now!
MANAGEMENT SOCIETY:Marilyn Moncrief from Conoco
— Natural Gas Products Division will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 120
A&A.
TAMU WINDSURFING CLUB:Outing and races at Lake
Somerville will be discussed at 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. Any
one interested in learning how to windsurf is welcome.
MSC BLACK AWARENESS:An announcement of new offic
ers for ’83-’84 will be made and end-of-the-year planning will be
discussed at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder.
AGGIE SCOUTS:A camping trip will be planned at 8:30 p.m. in
607 Rudder.
Thursday
MSC AMATEUR RADIO:Officer elections and fate of shack
equipment will be discussed at 7 p.m. in 140 MSC.
MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE:“20,000 Leagues Under the Sea”
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. in 701 Rudder.
TAU BETA PI ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY:Of-
ficer elections are scheduled for 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry.
SOCIETY FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND NEW
VENTURES:Sludent entrepreneurs will hold a panel discus
sion at 7 p.m. in 120 A&A.
PUERTO RICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION:Officer
elections for ’83-’84 are scheduled for 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder.
AGRICULTURE ECONOMICS CLUB:Officer elections are
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 110 Harrington. All members are
encouraged to vote.
If you have an item for “What’s Up,” you can fill out a notice in
216 Reed McDonald at least two days in advance of the activ
ity. No items are accepted by phone.
Japan’s rock gardens
reveal art, tranquility
United Press International
TOKYO — It is a garden
without trees, without a blade of
grass. There are only sand, peb
bles, groupings of rocks in what
seems an infinity of space.
The focal point of virtually all
Japanese gardens is the stone.
People have been known to
find an especially prized stone
far from home, have it cut into
manageable pieces and trans
port it to the garden, to be reas
sembled.
Much of the stone is buried in
the ground, so it appears to have
been in the garden forever.
The single stone is placed to
be admired from various van
tage points.
After the stone, the rest is up
to the gardener, making the
arrangement fit the contours of
his house, making it imitate na
ture.
At all costs, the owner avoids
having too much in the garden.
Even with a pond, a stone lan
tern, bamboo trees, there is a
feeling of space.
“Everything superfluous to
the total effect of the garden is
discarded,” say Kiyoshi Seike,
Noburo Kudo and David H.
Angel in their book, “A
Japanese Touch for Your
Garden.”
“The gardener’s design is
complete when there is nothing
more he can remove from the
garden.”
The Japanese also have boat
ing gardens, pond gardens, flat
gardens, tea gardens, happy
gardens and dry gardens.
The imperial gardens and
boating gardens are vast.
The nation that gave the
world “ikebana,” the art of flow
er arranging, also has perfected
techniques for creating a garden
in a small area, carving out room
for tranquility in the bustle of
modern-day Japan.
Wealthier garden owners
pipe in ice cold water to create
miniature rivers, waterfalls and
rapids. Bamboo stalks form
fountains and sound boards for
the running water.
Arc Vou
My Type?
Aggie Blood Drive
April 4-7
MSC A&A
Commons Sbisa F
THE
BLOOD CENTER
at Wad ley
9000 Harry Hines Bivd. • Dallas, Texas 75235
TFT’TWTTFP
rr itttt'
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ut pain
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^ H I United Press International
. YORK — Ancient
'^jrBeks a nd Egyptians who ap-
1 “Ba electric eels to wounds
be on the right track.
— tlearical impulses from the
were supposed to relieve the
li —and probably did, Drs.
Tol A. Warfield and
jhatham M. Stein, of the Har-
Medical School, say in a re-*
irt nn pain relief by electrical
ulation.
lectric fish, the two said,
ire used to ease pain for many
Jditions well into the 19th
mtury. Even Benjamin Frank-
1, say the pain experts, ex-
limented with electricity in
ie control of pain.
Warfield and Stein, writing in
ie: journal Hospital Practice,
11 of more recent success in us-
jelectrical stimulation against
|i. It is called transcutaneous
f trical nerve stimulation —
VS.
Transcutaneous stimulation
I safe and effective mode of
Irapy for both acute and chro-
ic painful conditions,” they
id, noting a lack of side effects,
•access of TENS, they said,
in be judged by the fact that
|eral companies now turn out
tket-size, battery-operated
hices for TENS therapy.
â– hey described TENS as a
Mlvenient, non-addicting type
â– pain therapy which patients
in be taught to use in the
rse of daily activities,
hey said its use appears to be
out only in patients with
land-type cardiac pace-
r
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