The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 14, 1983, Image 4

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    age 4/The Battalion/Monday, November 14,1983
oreans honor First Lady
United Press International
SEOUL, South Korea — A
torus of 2,000 South Korean
School children sang “God Bless
tmerica” Sunday as a gift to
Jancy Reagan in a surprise en-
ling to a busy day for the First
tdy.
While President Reagan
toured military bases at the tense
" /Demilitarized Zone separating
the two hostile Koreas, Mrs.
.Reagan watched Korean danc-
r jing, met prominent Korean
-women and visited an orphan
age to which she donated a
piano.
The visit to the Seoul Boys
Town, run by Rev. Aloysius
Schwartz, a Roman Catholic
priest from Washington, D.C.,
featured ballet and Korean song
and dance performances in the
orphanage auditorium.
Mrs. Reagan received warm
applause when Father Schwartz
announced that the new piano
on the stage was a gift from her.
She threw a kiss to the children
as she walked from the stage to
"
m
A. Shanmugam, M.D.
DIPLOMATE OF THE AMERICAN BOARD OF INTER
NAL MEDICINE ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS
OFFICE
at
Bryan Professional Building
1301 Memorial Drive
Bryan, Texas 77802
SPECIALIST IN
DIABETES, THYROID DISORDERS, CALCIUM, CHOLES
TEROL, OBESITY, INTERNAL MEDICINE and HORMONE
DISORDERS
OFFICE HOURS
BY APPOINTMENT
TELEPHONE 775-1757
IF NO ANSWER 775-3133
an audience seat to watch the
performances.
At the end of the perform
ance, the priest said the children
had prepared two gifts for Mrs.
Reagan, “one for the eyes and
one for the ears.”
An 11th grader, Kim Chang
Mok, presented Mrs. Reagan
with a color portrait he had
painted showing the Reagans in
traditional Korean garb.
Then, Father Schwartz said
“Mrs. Reagan, please accept our
second gift.”
At that, the 2,000 children in
the auditorium stood up and
sang “God Bless America.”
suit and bundled in a black over
coat and red and brown scarf
against the 30-degree weather,
began the day by meeting Lee
Soon Ja, wife of President Chun
Doo Hwan.
The two first ladies stood in
the chill by the National
Museum on the grounds of the
Kyongbok Palace and watched
traditional Korean folk dances
by colorfully clad Korean
youths.
As the song ended, the first
lady blew another kiss-to the chil
dren and left.
Mrs. Reagan, clad in a tweed
The two first ladies then went
inside the museum to tour an
exhibit of Korean celadon cera
mics, and to attend a reception
for 140 prominent Korean and
foreign women hosted by Mrs.
Celene Walker, wife of U.S.
Ambassador Richard Walker.
DEFENSIVE DRIVING
COURSE
NOV. 15th & 16th 6-10 p.m.
RAMADA INN
Pre-register by phone: 693-8178/846-1904
FEE $20
Course now required
New class fills fa
by Edye Williams
Battalion Reporter
When Dr. Hottel-Burchart
arrives at Texas A&M this
spring, she will have no prob
lem filling her classroom. Sev
eral potential students, some
from as far away as Hearne,
Hempstead and Milano,
already have inquired if and
when the class she will teach
will be offered.
The course is listed as Ling
uistics 625 and is part of the
English as a second language
glish as a second language be
certified in that area. To com
ply with the ruling, the En
glish department and the
Educational Curriculum and
Instruction department have
revised the certification
program.
in the afternoon
evenings so thost
teaching positionstji;
working while they
their certification.
program.
A recent Texas Education
Agency mandate requires that
high school teachers of En-
The program, which con
sists of four classes for 12
hours credit, has been de
signed to help the teacher
already out in tne field. Those
teachers must go back to
school to obtain their certifica
tion in order to continue
teaching.
Classes will be offered late
Guy Bailey, assist!
fessor of linguistics,
program hasbeenine.
for a while, but untilili JjQtGnSl\
mandate there wert
many interested ]
■
A defensi
Bailey said the d* Age n.
offered so teacherscani
n.m. The co
endorsement w «||„ eanor trail
they attend classes4 r: discount on .
summer, or in foursQ da Inn The
otherwise. nre-register
~ Inn at 5 p.n
Breakthrough reporte
in hydrogen research
Former
Ticket Defferral and 10% Insurance Discount
United Press International
LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — Los
Alamos National Laboratory sci-
firi
entists say the successful firing
of both amplifiers of the world’s
largest carbon-dioxide laser is a
benchmark in a national prog
ram to produce high-yield ener-
Aors
seniors
vet
med
:VW«A
Don
forget
have your
pictures
taken before
Thanksgi«d»»S
the year
xx&mi.
booh!
1700 S. Kyle behind Culpe^
located at 1 / wo- ^ Nov . 14
from
6756 or 845-2681
Dec 9 ’
Pavilion Dec. 5-9. m
at their office Nov
28-Dec. 2 and at the
.ifttu
|C.E. Lot, I
lecture tonig
f rom plentiful hydiv jl* 88 /’ 1 h <i
1 he two 1‘2-beam,,Christian F,
tive-sized amplifier^ Everyone is
last week for the firstt3L|i
integrated mode, viE§g
beams delivering powg pUj] n ^ n
target vacuum systoj runusv
said.
The Antares sntag
over two acres, w >Ul*w The Dec
experiments in coiwt! ^ Paul Ti
sion reactions. humanities
If uncontrolled,iti wd j S p ea k >
lions produce their public,
explosions, but saentagi
controlled fusion is tli|
future productioni |) /r
abundant energy. ri OICS.
Measurements onl^.
lines last week verified:#
of 18and20tem«« Dr . D ia
watt equals one mi I recei
"‘"This event effect^ ^e. h Tlu
the completion of tr teac; hing a
construction prograi: f orm t j ie ,
permit initiation of avtm G hi ra d<
sive target ex pen men;: a( | ( i ress 0
during fiscal l-M. « architectu
Reichelt, Antares o F and a tori
manager. ture with
“This milestone ( arcitectur
have been accomphshede frarnpi
the efforts of a lot of n«- he Ross
cated workers, he Dec embe
are really a terrific teas f uture c \- c
Commissioned in 1
cost of about $6D|yt
Antares is the fourthgti' Jprfjy)
of high-power, short-pus -
bon-dioxide lasers develp,-.
Los Alamos. , Jd
It is part of the natioif Junioi
tial fusion program, su; land take
by the federal Energy! 1 Associate
ment, to study thepte and Dec
thermonuclear weap
laboratory scale.
Ultimately, scientists! OOC1C
provide a controllable^ 1
thermonuclear power If
mercial application. piede
In layman’s terms,tfaj . sodet y^
fusion research is tod 25 ^ ^
terns that will result in every T
non of more power fr ^ 1
reactions than is requirdi q [
crate .he power-pro- X
mechanism. But theent
quirement is enormous
may require systems eve ^ subj
than Antares. office
The hydrogen fuel cat'
traded easily f rom wa |
must be subjected to'
energy to “fuse,” orjotn
lei of its atoms.
Lasers are used topw
ertial f usion by compress
heating atoms of deute*
tritium — isotopes ofbvi
— confined within tiny|*
lets known as microbal
Mirrors focus the laser
on these targets, collapf
inner shell and compr ess .
fuel, causing the atoms 1
and produce energy.
Police
beat
AH1
AN1
AIL
The following incidej
reported to the Univers 1
Department on Friday
THEFT: ,•<
• A blue 10-spe ed ;
from between dormit° rl ■
O
• A white 10-speed ’
from the front or
Building.
BURGLARY:
• $85 in cash from ar
Briggs Hall.
• Ceiling tiles from' 1
ford.
ARREST:
• A person waS f rr nia j
stealing four pizzas fr 0
Hu. vehide parked
Coun'!
} ro' ;
AN'
AN'
AN'
AN
AN
AN
Ali
lot east of Hart
was taken to Brazos
OTHER: , ,,i
• A man touche ,
women in the chest an jjl
areas when they ' vere «•
’Kyle Field, Univers'd
said. The police found
Lhe women pl an t0
charges.
• A fire alarm on ;
floor of Sterling C ' ^| t »)
rary was activated, bn 1
false alarm.