Page 16/The Battalion/Monday, March 19, 1984 Hearts could be losers in the game of squash United Press International WASHINGTON — Scottish doctors have a warning for squash players and others undertaking vigorous exercise: check with your doctor, especial ly if you suffer chest pain or other possible signs of heart dis ease. If you don’t take this precau tion and you do have heart dis ease, the researchers said, your next match may be your last. Of 27 people who died sud denly between 1977 and 1983 after playing ash, 23 had coron ary heart disease which they had ignored or which had gone un detected. “CHD (coronary heart dis ease) was the probable cause of death in 23 cases,” the doctors from the department of medical cardiology at Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow reported in the Brit ish medical journal The Lancet. Sixteen of those suffering coronary heart disease were found to have severely nar rowed arteries leading to the heart, a condition which can re sult in sudden cut-off of blood Gallery Datsun > <2 Open ‘till 8 Thursday nights fiTThTI 1 > v l 10% discount with current Aggie I.D. % s & 1214 Texas 775-1500 Oil & Filter Change $11.99 Datsun Cars Only supply to the heart muscle. Seven had evidence of a heart attack, although only one had been diagnosed during life as having suffered such an inci dent. A majority of the victims had suffered warning signs well be fore their fatal engagements on the squash courts or were in groups considered at high risk for heart disease, the doctors said. Twenty-two suffered symp toms before their final match, including chest pain, heartburn or gastrointestinal discomfort, fatigue, excessive breathless ness, dizziness and severe headache. In addition to the coronary heart disease, 10 were found to have suffered high blood press ure, but only one had received treatment for it. Three had high blood cholesterol levels, also a warning sign of heart disease. Among the remaining play ers, three had disease of the heart valves, one had a disorder known to be associated with sud den death during exercise, one died of a brain hemmorrhage and two were believed to have died of cardiac arrhythmia, in which the heart beats wildly and uncontrolledly. These were not sedentary people, the doctors said. Next of kin described most of them as ver un 1. fit. None was considered Twelve of the victims had been business executives, six had worked in higher educa tion, four had been civil ser vants, two engineers, one a sales man, one a student, one a police man and three were in other occupations. “Only four of thi vidua Is had sought advice, and it is remarl none of them tl symptoms should interfc their exercise," the wrote. “Suchdenialofpi al (warning) symptoms noted by others and ns characteristic to w sive sportsmen are Only six were considered “competitive, ambitious, hard- driving, perfectionistic.” Eleven were considered very aggres sive, two very competitive, and one obsessive about fitness. Ten were described as having no rec ognizable traits. “Squash is “a vigor#.! able to raise heart rateto cent of predicted ma Both of these, effectsb harmful in subjects alt risk through CHD on heart disease,” the rest said. /. Humanities get welcome mat Vol78Nc United Press International Jobs besides those of taxi driv er, window washer and checkout clerk are out there for English, art, music, psychology, history and other liberal arts majors. That word comes from com pany chieftians who huddled with college officials at Prince ton, N.J., cogitating about how to get word around that corpo rate America’s putting out the welcome mat for liberal arts gra duates. “The sixty participants A GENETIC ENGINEERING A MONDAY MARCH Rudder Theatre 8’00 pm FREE 19 ? of such idy subjects as languages, literature, history, philosophy, compara tive religion, ethics, and the his tory, criticism and theory of the arts can provide knowledge and develop skills necessary for suc cess in the business world,” a re port on the conference said. The conference was spon sored by the Association of American Colleges and the Na tional Endowment for the Humanities. “There is a place and a cen-. tral place — for the humanities and the liberal arts graduate in business,” said Charles L. Brown, chairman of the board, American Telephone and Tele graph, opening the conference. “That’s the good news. The ximately a third of bachelor’s degrees m; the humanities ando< thirds in liberal arts. • American Teleph Telegraph foundinasii managers that humani social science majorsm oted more rapidlythanj I Hi aduates. After 20p y 1 percent of the liberalljti I managers had achie; I fourth level of manageml sign of considerable sit iThe recent compared with only S’] pining genei of the business majors roubling soc pet t ent of the engine ihe technolc • Many compar pnstbeoven found that attracting■fiial cont ties graduates is in their# interest. At Stanford mouth. Harvard and By R< “Students in the humanities are welladi to acquire basic business skills — in ing and finance, for example. But ns bn educated graduates they are betterpre for a lifeline of work than are students have narrowed their studies to secure a job. bad news is that the good news is not better known.” To get word around, a copy of proceedings of the conference just has been sent to chief execu tive officers of hundreds of cor porations. The covering letter was signed by Brown ancl James L. ferguson, chairman and chief executive, General Foods Corp. In the letter, Ferguson and Brown go to bat for liberal arts graduates, long poor relatives along the academic trail as a re sult of heavy demand for wizards in engineering, busi ness, computers, math and sci ence. ■ “We write to call your atten tion to the. findings and recom mendations of an important conference on connections be tween the study of the humani ties. and careers in business,” they said. “Please read it. You will learn, as we and some sixty corporate and academic leaders did, how much business and the humani ties have to offer each other and what you, as a business person, can do to make more effective relations possible.” Among vignettes in the re port: • Chase Manhattan Bank dis covered in a recent study of com mercial banking trainees that those with only bachelor’s de grees developed stronger tech nical banking skills than those ether the the bazar eater itnpi nday nigh genetics < [y, a doctoi Human eof Medii ector of tl at the Kennei rgetown The presi [SC Great 1 [mes Wild,; ehemistry M. Caskey, w ence first, sai erest and Irea, genetic w era. “Right no the numbers of com] ing interviews with students are from tl times greater now were in the mid-1’ • Many major firmi Wques are ii liberal arts graduatesii|>( |! ential is tial numbers. Several tions, including M01 ley, General Motors ican Can, haveestablii rams especially to n train them. How does the stuii humanities build sucli foundation for a careci ness? “It develops streiJ scientific or technical alone seldom provides ment, an historical semB'y, anoth ledge of other langm cultures, recognition issues, interpersonal Pne communication skills IM. tual flexibility, a capat£| Past^ gene lerpretive and creative “In a complex, business environment vestment in these qui|iabetes, cot offer important turns. “Students in the hi)| are well advised to acf business skills — in afl and finance, forexampl broadly educated gi they are better prepai lifeline of work than dents who have nanot with advanced degrees. Appro- studies to secure a firsi Caskey sai of gen ssibilities c sorders sue Correctinj ine in tw< ansfer an |ansfer, he s These arc or embr) nant DNA. 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