Tuesday, September 13, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 own Harris County votes on toll roads today speak Tuesday on ocracy." The prog- and will beginalS Matson .ssociation of For- non-profit orga rketing Society, is 02 Blocker (A&A), enng >f Engineering at American Astro- ranking memben t contributions ti heads the largest than 11,000 s United Press International HOUSTON — Harris County voters will consider today a $900 million revenue bond to build three toll roads which hopefully will relieve the city’s crowded freeways. County Judge Jon Lindsay said Houston’s freeways are operating at double their designed capacity and called the toll road plan demo cratic since only users would pay for them and not taxpayers in gen eral. Voter turnout is expected to be better than in June when 12 per cent of the registered voters over whelmingly rejected a Metropoli tan Transit Authority plan for a rail system. The entire county will vote this time as opposed to the smaller Metro service area. The proposed roads total 49 miles in length. One is a 21.6 mile Hardy Street toll freeway be tween the North Loop and Inter continental Airport. The other two roads would be toll-supported links in the Beltway 8 system, which has been planned since 1954. Absentee voting on the propos al for toll roads ended Friday, with 1,648 ballots being cast in person. Harris County Clerk Anita Rodeheaver said 1,118 absentee ballots were cast in the Metro rail election. Metro has gone back to the drawing boards to try to come up with a mass transit plan voters will accept. Meanwhile, General Manager Alan Kiepper has dire cted continued improvement of historically inadequate bus ser- Crash kills stunt pilot ■r * ■ 'uMi *: Ll A little canine tutoring staff photo by Guy Hood Scott Speck, a senior agricultural economics major from Rock Spring catches up on studying, with a little help from his constant canine pal Liz. They were caught studying near the System Building on a typical Aggie dog day afternoon. United Press International PLAINVIEW — Some 1,000 spectators watched helplessly as a stunt pilot lost the wings of his plane and crashed to his death while his wife described the air- show routine he was attempting over a public address system. Wes Winter, 46, of Mesa, Ariz., died Sunday while perform ing a stunt at 250 feet during an airshow at the Plain view Municip al Airport. Spectators said he had com pleted two passes in his Partenavia P-68C, making rolls and a figure “8 On his third pass, Mrs. Win ter told the crowd her husband would perform a loop in the twin- engine plane which she said was not designed for aerobatic stunts and had not been modified. % WE BUTGOLm GUARANTEED HIGHEST PRICES PAID ON USED GOLD COME IN TODAY! 415 UNIVERSITY DR. WEST 846-5816 The Listening Ear Pastoral Counseling Now Open: All Faith’s Chapel Meditation Room 10 — 2 Dally University Lecture 'ompany 'en Texas A6tM irsbips, graduate ment purchases ling gift by em- 'ineering, scien- A portion of the rograms and the Today’s children being eroticized’ say doctors w film )iabetes Associa- ipbeat film full of ting Wednesday oung people that to the problems 's to help them to the public. It building, 401S. - Battalion office winn ten-speed to wered outside ll« lent Center, jn in Noveifl Mongoose MXlii- vered by the Col- dice Department d stolen from tto lent Center bik United Press International CHICAGO — Children today ire being'eroticized” by overexp- isure to sexual materials, often eading to incest, and are making narijuana a regular part of their ives, doctors say. Parents are no longer the prime itiiluenee in their child’s life after age9and are deluding themselves if they think they are, Dr. DomeenaRenshaw said Sunday at a conference on "Impact of Lifes tyles on Child and Adolescent i Problems,” cosponsored hytheAmerican Medical Associa tion. "We have to learn desexualized affection,” she said. ‘‘Grandpa rents can he loving but they can also be oversexualized. "Grandmothers seduce grand sons,” she said, citing a case of a woman who slept with her young grandson over a six month period. Who thinks of a grandmother as icing a sexual offender? "Boys get seduced by older women in and outside the family. ” Rape usually is associated with ds because of the consequences of pregnancy. However, she said, boys also must he protected when leave home because “boys also are raped. ” "Kids are exposed to an enor mous amount of sexual materials, ” she said. Children may be highly “eroti cized” by available X-rated cable or cassette television programs, said Renshaw, a psychiatry profes sor at Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine in Maywood, 111. On Saturday, Dr. Kenneth Schonherg, director of adolescent medicine at Montefiore Hospital in the Bronx, N.Y., told the con ference: “What we re seeing in the rise in the use of marijuana is here to stay. “It is not a trend. It is not afad, he said. “It will become ingrained within us. Once a month, one-third of high school seniors become intoxicated with alcohol — and between 15 percent to 20 percent with mari juana, National Institute of Drug Abuse statistics showed. “There is clearcut evidence smoking marijuana interferes with the ability to learn,” Schonherg said. An adolescent smoking mari juana while attending school may experience short-term memory impairment, poorer oral com munication and may not he able to recall information gained while under the influence of the drug. Marijuana use also impairs motor coordination — slowing reactions — interfering with abil ity to perceive lights and sounds and altering sense of time, he said. The leading cause of death for young people in 1979 was acci dents— and more than 60 precent of them were alcohol-related car accidents, Schonherg said. The 19-year-old driver is in the most danger, followed by 18-, 17-and 16-year-olds. Unfortunately, Schonherg said, adolescents do not perceive their alcohol and drug use as a problem. Five percent of adolescents are in “deep trouble’’ with alcohol abuse, meaning they run the risk of suicide, pregnancy, running away from home and dying in a car accident, he said. KETING OOCIETY SEPT I3.TUES V T:OOp.. ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING featuring: Come UsTen Jo one of A4M$ ■most; famous Aggies I RANDY MATSON SPEAKS on MARKETING the FORMER STUDENTS ASSOCIATION Executive Director inMINflTING TOUGH; DURABLE; PLASTIC COATING Good For: • POST6R5 • CLASS PR6S6NTATIONS • I.D. CARDS • MAPS • PHOTOS • NCLUSPAPCR CLIPPINGS MINKS PICTUft€ FRAMING % 923 TEXAS AYE. IN BRYAN 775-9292 Cut Your Study Time By%! FOWLER PROMOTIONS PRESENTS THE AWARD WINNING SHOW J IN CONCERT WITH VERY SPECIAL GUEST THE 1982 COUNTRY MUSIC ASSOCIATION FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR Friday, September 30, 1983 8:00 p.m. G. Rollie White Coliseum Tickets: >11.50 & >12.50 MSC Box Office 845-1234' Well show you how...free. Would you like to: □ Raise your grade average without long hours over texts. □ End all-night cramming sessions. □ Breeze through all your studying in as little as 1 3 the time. □ Have more free time to enjoy yourself □ Read 3 to 10 times faster, with better con centration, understanding, and recall. Evelyn Wood works — over 1 million people, including students, executives, senators, and even presidents have proven it. A free 1 hour demon stration will show you how to save hundreds of hours of drudgery this year (as Veil as how to increase your speed immediately with some simple new reading techniques!. It onlv takes an hour, and it’s free. Don’t miss it. SCHEDULE OF FREE SPEED READING-LESSONS You’ll increase your reading speed up to 100% on the spot! □ TODAY 4:30 or 7:30 p.m. The Community Center 1300 Jersey (Across from A&M Campus) EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS— G 1978 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS A uRS COMPANY