Tuesday, March 6, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7 n ileo Warped by Scott McCullar HELLO AGAIN- THIS IS BERNICE. BROWN AT STATION WRPD To 'l^TROPUCE VOL) TO fAORE OF THE NEW PAY CABLE STATIONS SOON TO BE AVAILABLE. THE PUBERTY CHANNEL'THE YOONS LUST CHANNEL,FEATUR ING ALL THE BEACH,SKIING, PARTY INS, VACAT/C///NS ANP H/6H SCHOOL STUPEA/T /AOVIE5 EVER MDE. COA^/AERCIALS ON THI5 STATION ARE PREPPAWNANTLy ABOUT BLUE TEANS. THE ANDY ROOAfEY CHANNEL 18 HOURS A PAY. FOR THOSE WHO WANT WORE THAN 'A FEW WINUTES'OF THEIR FAVORITE COWWENTATOR. THE STEVEN KIMS CHANNEL FEATURES EVERY MOVIE HORROR: WRITER STEVEN KINS EVER HAP APAPTEP EROM ANY ONE OF HIS ston/es, in;lop\ne> letters HE WROTE TO HIS MOTHER ANP EVERY B/RTHPAY CARP HE'S EVER SEAT. LUlon'i I RuiL >W ibkii j ekend!^ 50 for !| Kidney stone ‘crusher’ tried; patient responds favorably run :m ofi h At- miles sank-1 rst»j aiboni lothf giscti uago, epet-j nd$5j Tease; handj Kvk 845-! ips United Press International I INDIANAPOLIS — A Ken tucky man Monday became one of the first patients in the coun try to be treated for painful kid ney stones with acoustic shock waves, eliminating the need for surgery, Methodist Hospital doctors said. I Tony Battaglia, 28, an Er- langer, Ky., freight company ftanager who has suffered from kidney stones since last October, underwent the treat ment Monday morning at Methodist. K Hospital spokesman David Richards said Battaglia, who was unconscious during the op eration, was in good condition Monday afternoon and “feeling chipper. He said he was feeling free of pain, and that he had been in a considerable amount of pain before the treatment." Methodist Hospital doctors have been conducting a clinical evaluation of the kidney stone crusher, called the extracorpo real shock wave lithotripter. “Today marks the beginning of a new era in treating one of mankind's most painful medical problems,” said urologist James Lingeman, one of the physi cians conducting the Food and Drug Ad minis! rat ion-super- vised investigation of the equip ment at Methodist. “We are proud to be the first hospital in the country to test and offer this new and com pletely different type of the rapy,” he said. “It is an enor mous breakthrough.” Lingeman said the device de- creases dramatically the “dis- comfort and cost” usually asso ciated with kidney stone treatment. “The shock waves pass through the patient’s body with no damage to the body itself be cause we humans are mostly wa ter anyway, and the density of our body tissue is almost identi cal to that of water,” Lingeman said. “Extensive testing done has shown no adverse affect on bi ologic tissues. But when it reaches a very hard substance such as kidney stones ... it will fragment the stone,” he said. Battaglia Monday was given a general anesthetic, then low ered into a bath of water. The lithotripter then used X-rays to locate the stone and generated acoustic shock waves that fo cused on the stone, doctors said. The shock waves pulverized the kidney stones into small particles without damaging the surrounding tissue, doctors said. Doctors said the particles, the size of sand or gravel, will be ex creted in the urine. The $2 million kidney stone pulverizer arrived at Methodist Hospital in December, and has been tested on 17 patients since then. Hospital officials said pa tients using the treatment re quire a four-day hospital stay, as compared to surgical patients who must be hospitalized from five to 15 days. The difference in cost currently is about $2,000, Richards said. Pilots’ trial set to begin United Press International SAN ANTONIO — A non jury trial was scheduled to begin in federal court Tuesday for two striking Continental Airline pilots charged with possessing pipe bombs. The trial for Calvin Early, 43, and Charles Weldon Hall, 47, was scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. before senior U.S. District Judge D.W. Suttle, who will hear a motion to waive a trial by jury, attorneys said. Last week, Suttle denied a de fense motion to suppress evi dence provided by Texas De partment of Public Safety trooper Hector Herrera, who arrested the two pilots on Nov. 22, 1983. Hall and Early were arrested after they allegedly tried to avoid a routine drivers license check by making a U-turn at the checkpoint on Bulverde Road in north San Antonio. As Herrera checked the li cense, a woman drove up to the roadblock and told the officer she had seen a paper sack thrown from the car. The sack was found with two unexploded pipe bombs inside, police said. A search of the pilots’ car turned up a canvas suitcase con taining a wig, a hat, pliars, a screwdriver and pictures of at least three nearby homes of non-striking Continental pilots. Defense attorneys argued the initial license check stop was im proper and searches of the au tomobile and its contents were illegal and should be sup* pressed. Gather up all of your broken baubles and bangles and bring them in to DOUGLAS JEWELRY Culpepper Plaza 693-0677 and save 50% on most of your jewelry repairs (watch repairs and stone setting excluded) Good thru March 31, 1984 This coupon good at Culpepper Plaza location only. No charge cards accepted on this offer. Must bring this coupon in when leaving repairs. .TEXAS AQQIE MOTORCYCLE CLUB The Texas Aggie Motorcycle Club would like to extent our deepest thanks and appreciation to Joe Fisher at University Cycles, College Station, and Meril Moen and Cen tral Cycle & Supply, Bryan, for their tremendous support given to us during the Outdoor Horizons Con ference. These motorcycle dealer ships graciously loaned Yamahas, Kawasakis, and BMW's to the Club for display. Thanks to you, our dis play was an outstanding success. ■ationj! Coni' f SUl-il iC mu- rthis lyof i ob- ivail- ilion Actor William Powell dead at 91 firm United Press International I PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — Actor William Powell, the breezy sophisticate of more than 100 motion pictures who was best known for his por trayal of Nick Charles in the “Thin Man” detective film se ries, died Monday. He was 91. Powell died at Desert Hospi tal early Monday morning, a hospital spokeswoman said. The actor entered the facility Sunday with pneumonia, i "He passed away of natural causes about 5:45 this morn ing,” Powell’s wife of 44 years, Diana, said in a telephone inter view from their Palm Springs home. “He was in no pain. I was jwith him all night long and at his side when he died.” neglfi | Powell, one of the few actors ) hon |o survive the transition from si- Ifori lent films to talkies, was nomi- ,nvfi nated for an Academy Award jranThree times but never won. He .St®) |was nominated in 1934 for the original “Thin Man,” in 193b jndj for “My Man Godfrey,” and in 1947 for playing Clarence Day in the movie version of the Broadway hit “Life With Fa ther.” Powell attributed his sophisti cated style to his training on the stage, where he began his ca reer before moving to Holly wood in 1921 to make a silent version of “Sherlock Holmes” with John Barrymore. His last movie was “Mr. Rob erts” with Henry Fonda, Jack Lemmon and James Cagney in 1954. Powell played the role of Doc. He was teamed so many times with actress Myrna Loy in the Thin Man film series that fans thought they were actually married. But they never were more than friends and co-stars. Among his other memorable pictures were “The Great Zieg- feld,” “The Senator Was Indis creet,” “Dancing in the Dark” and “How To Marry a Million aire.” Powell was born in Pittsburgh on July 29, 1892, and grew up in Allegheny, Pa., and Kansas City, Mo., where he got a taste of acting at Central Union High School. He had planned on a career in law, but following his youth ful stage debut changed his mind and decided to become an actor. He worked as an usher at the Grand Opera House and the Home Telephone Co. in Kansas City to earn money to attend the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York. At the end of his term at the Academy, Powell was given a bit part at $40 per week in “The Ne’er Do Well.” In 1920 he scored an outstanding success in “Spanish Love” on Broad way, leading to the Sherlock Holmes film with Barrymore and a long-term contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Powell married three times and was reported to have been in love with the sex symbol of the 1930s, Jean Harlow. When Harlow died in 1937, Powell became despondent. He collapsed during her funeral and took a long respite in Eu rope before returning to Holly wood and his work. He later purchased a $25,000 crypt for her and visited it twice weekly, bringing two dozen red roses each time. His first wife was actress Ei leen Wilson with whom he had a son, William Jr. They were di vorced and he later married Carole Lombard in 1931. That marriage also ended in divorce, in 1933 • Lombard was his co-star in “My Man Godfrey,” playing a giddy but good-hearted debu tante. TAMU MBA INFORMATION SESSION Date: Tuesday, March 6 Time: 6:30 pm Place: 114 Blocker Bldg. ,3J.: 16» r lOfflil 1 nd nliiJ/ 0 , Couf ell in* »f I Tn iiidj aci“ mill 1 aile 11 r/> iSJCrAO m m H: offices which are now open filing: Student Government Student Body President Vice President, Academic Affairs External Affairs Finance Rules & Regulations Student Services Senator :Ja; TLrvfng Area (38) College (38) Off Campus Aggies ffPresident Tpybe President Secretary Treasurer Resident Housing Asso ciation President Vice President Secretary . Mtreasur$r Class of ’85 President Vice President Treasurer Historian Social Secretary Class of’86 President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Social Secretary Class of ’87 President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Social Secretary Yell Leader Senior (3) Junior (2) Greyhound’s Spring Break Go anywhere Greyhound goes And back. *100 or less. /STUDENT GOVERNMENT Tl'.X.kS ,\&M I'NIVIIRSITV FILING INFO: When: Mon-Wed March 5-79-4 Thursday March 8 9-6 Where: 214 Pavilion This spring break, if you and your friends are thinking about heading to the slopes or the beaches — or just home for a visit - Greyhound can take you there for only $100 or less, round-trip. Between now and March 18,1984,whenyoushowusyour student I.D. card, any round-trip ticket on Greyhound is $100 or less. Anywhere Greyhound goes. So this spring break, give yourself a real break. Take Greyhound anywhere, for $100 or less. Go Greyhound And leave the driving to us. For more information call 696-0209 Must present a valid student I.D. card upon purchase. No other discounts apply. Tickets are non-refundable and good lor travel on Greyhound Lines, Inc. only from March 2,1984 through March 18.1984. Schedules subject tochange without notice 19H1 Greyhound Lines, Inc.