Monday, October 24,1983/The Battalion/Page 3 Student WICIchapter earns national honor by Clara N. Hurter Battalion Reporter The Texas A&M student [chapter of Women in Com munications Inc. was one of five university chapters to re ceive an award this month for [outstanding achievement. The WICI national organi- j/ation presented the Texas 'A&M student chapter with a plaque for its achievement at its National Professional Con ference in Philadelphia on jOct. 13. Chapter President Kim [Schmidt, a senior journalism major, says chapter members are excited and proud of the S award. “It’s a pretty big achieve- jment because we’ve only been around for a year,” she said. The Texas A&M chapter [of WICI was chartered on March 25, 1982. All of the chapter’s accom- fplishments should be attri- Jbuted to the 1982 officers, (Schmidt said. “They sort of established a [good reputation and a sound [foundation on which future WICI members will be able to build,” she said. WICI was founded in 1909 at the University of Washing ton. It was then called Theta Sigma Phi, and was a college honorary organization for women in journalism. National headquarters for WICI was established in Au stin in the 1930s. In 1972, the name Theta Sigma Phi was changed to Women in Com munications, Inc., and men were granted membership in the organization. There now are 170 profes sional and campus chapters of WICI. The five campus chap ter being honored are Boston University, Hampton Insti tute in Virginia, Miami Uni versity of Ohio, Southern Methodist University and Texas A&M. Chapter members have a good reason to be proud. The Texas A&M chapter was a rookie vying for first place amidst seasoned veterans. Texas Tech, for example, has had a chapter for 50 years and Boston University has had a chapter for more than 60 years. The awards were given on the basis of programs the chapters sponsored during 1982. The Texas A&M chap ter produced eight programs and a Fireman’s newsletter. “The programs we put on to win the award were done with a grand total of 17 mem bers,” Schmidt said. Now that the Texas A&M chapter has received the award and recognition, the chapter is changing the focus of its goals. “Our focus has shifted,” Schmidt said. “Instead of building programs, we’re trying to build up member ship.” The membership drive has been very successful, she said. The chapter has added 14 new members, and 12 more applications have been sent to national headquarters in Au stin for approval. The goal shift resulted from a loss of members in May. Many of the officers were seniors and graduated, Schmidt said. Only nine mem bers remained in the chapter last May. Nicotine, alcohol among socially accepted drugs ^ by Holly Powell Battalion Reporter ■ Nicotine, caffeine and alcohol bve become accepted drugs in our society, a local neurophy- , siologist told a group of local ji qitizens at the College Station ■ommunity Center Friday. I “Because these three drugs ' s are commonly used in our socie- tl, they have come to be socially I acceptable,” Dr. Clifford Sherry ; said. I He said part of the problem is -fth.it people don’t realize they are j taking a drug. I “I think the number one Bason why alcohol is so popular is that it decreases all our inhibi tions,” he said. “It’s an iceb reaker.” ■ After a few drinks, a shy per son is much more likely to approach a stranger at a party, he said. {I A problem with alcohol, t ’ Skerry said, is that people don’t jlBalize the effects it has on the ’libody. He said alcohol has the Bost profound effect on the i nervoussystem — it impairs the ^Bion and muscle coordination. j-j “lean think of a lot of organs ij/ that we can do without, but with out a liver, we’re in bad shape,” ■terry said. Sclerosis, or scar ring, of the liver is the leading use of death among alcoholics, said. Nicotine is as much of a prob- Jlm as alcohol, he said. In 1975 there were 4,200 cigarettes sold for every man, woman and child in the United States, he said. Nicotine increases the respir atory and heart rates, and con stricts the blood vessels so that the smoker feels cool, he said. Studies show that three out of four smokers want to quit smok ing cigarettes, but less than one out of four can do so success fully. “The real tragedy with nico tine products is that less than 15 percent in that circumstance will be able to remain abstinent,” he said. Nicotine is a very potent drug, Sherry said. Two and one- half grams of nicotine are needed for a euphoric feeling compared to 10 grams of mor phine by injection needed for the same feeling. Overseas study programs meet many students’ goals by Rhonda Snider Battalion Reporter Imagine spending your next semester studying in an Italian monastery just south of Flor ence or in the museum district of London, or spending three weeks touring Europe with your classmates. A number of Texas A&M stu dents have done precisely that through the help of the universi ty Study Abroad Office, which works with colleges and depart ments coordinating overseas study programs. Coursework for a study abroad program is tailored to best take advantage of the locale, Mona Rizk-Finne, study abroad coordinator, says. A group of students from the College of Architecture and En vironmental Design spent the spring semester in La Poggerina monastery in Italy. Ron Edwards, a senior en vironmental design major who participated in the program, said he gained an understand ing of Italian architecture that he could not have learned sitting in a classroom here. “I picked up some methods of thinking,” Edwards said, “through studying there and seeing the buildings that I couldn’t have picked up through watching a slide show. To really understand about foreign architecture, you have to know about their culture.” Edwards said he recommends participating in a study abroad program, but with the right atti tude. Students need to be willing to reach out and try to under stand the people and the cul ture, he said. “If people are going just to get away from here, they need to re-examine their motives or the trip for them will be a waste,” he said. The Study Abroad Office also helped the finance department coordinate a summer session in England. Pam Pritchett and Judy Law spent five weeks in London attending their Finance 454 class between field trips and ex cursions in the area. The students talked with management people in foreign banks and witnessed first-hand the banking system in London, senior accounting major Law said. Pritchett, a senior finance ma jor, said the program was be neficial and worth the more than the $2,000 which each stu dent paid to go on the trip. Pritchett said the living ex penses worked out to be about the same as it would have been if they had stayed here. MONDAY OPEN BAR 7-9 P m No Cover for Ladies before 9.00 pm $100.00 to the best DANCING COUPLE for more info 693-2818 Rizk-Finne said the office is trying to dispell the myth that a study abroad program is finan cially beyond most students’ reach. Attending school over seas in most cases would cost an equal amount or a little more than going to school here, she said. Mark Kirkpatrick, a graduate student working on his master’s degree in mechanical engineer ing, who went on an European tour for engineering students, also thought his study abroad program was well worth the money. Twenty-nine Texas A&M en gineering students spent 19 days in Europe, touring plants and engineering facilities in Holland and Germany. The things Kirkpatrick said he enjoyed the most were the relationships that developed and the friendships he made with other students on the trip. The Study Abroad Office has recently received approval for spring and summer programs. The College of Architecture and Environmental Design is again offering a semester of study at La Poggerina monas tery in Italy this spring. In- t3rested students presently are attending seminars to prepare them for their trip. Two summer sessions have been designed for students in the College of Liberal Arts. Dur ing the first summer session stu dents can take courses in Italy. A program in Great Britain is planned for the second summer session. In each session the stu dents may take two courses. The College of Business Administration has five overseas programs planned for the sum mer — one in Germany, three in European countries and one in the Orient. Other summer programs in clude a session in the United Kingdom through the College of Education, a two-week Euro pean study tour for engineering students, and various programs in France, Germany and Spain offered by the modern lan guages department. MSC TOWN HALL presents JIMMY nimn nuc MffMUR HARBOUR TOUR Wednesday, Nov. 2- 8pm G. Rollie White Tickets 8.50, 9.50, 10.00 MSC -TOWN HAOv w