I 11 f • • i mu : j: : t I' Moving Yourself? Before you decide to move yourself, check out North American Van Lines' WE-DRIVE program. The concept is simple: you pack, you load, and a professional North American Van Lines' driver moves your belongings to your new home in a custom-designed "air ride" van. You can still save money by doing part of the work yourself, and leaving the hard part to us. It’s the worry-free alternative to a rent-a-truck move. Nixon Transfer & Storage 779-6333 northAmericane Page 2B/The Battalion/Thursday, May 3,1984 Job-jumping teacher fulfill^ United I dream, teaches 25 classes United I CHICAC OPEN HOUSE September 2, 1984 Pick up your organizations’ application in the Student Finance Center. Turn in application to Jodie, Room 216 MSC. Space Reservation Is First Come, First Serve All Recognized Student Organizations are invited to participate United Press International BOSTON — When Sandi Ser- kess graduated from college a decade ago, there were no jobs open for the teaching training she was so anxious to use. Faced with a glutted market and an oversupply of elemen tary school teachers, she found employment and frustration in one job after another — from clerk to stand-up comedienne. Now at age 31 she describes herself as a "one-woman uni versity,” teaching 25 different subjects in a 10-week semester and qualified to teach 25 more. She says the ideas all emanate from her rocky emotional and professional past. “My teaching dream has fi nally come true,” she said. The classes she teaches in clude such basics as grammar, writing skills, vocabulary build ing and spelling extending through a huge repertoire deal ing with psychology, business skills, preparation for graduate school exams and the histories of psychoanalysis, economics, holidays and humor. “But I’m always looking out for new subjects,” she said. ‘Td try teaching almost anything.” Serkess, who has written a book on improving memory, teaches at the Cambridge and the Boston Centers for Adult Education. With a master’s de gree in counseling, she is often an instructor of American liter ature and salesmanship at Chamberlayne Junior College. By choice, she hasn’t taken a vacation in seven years. “My courses are my autobiog raphy,” she explains, going through a list four pages long. “If you read the list, you’ll know me.” “Take Math Anxiety,” she said. “In order to work as an in come tax preparer, I had to get over my apprehensions about math.” But the popular class goes far beyond her success in overcom ing her trepidations during her years of jobjumping. “Sharing anxieties in a sup portive environment encour ages adults to tackle what they fear, whether it be decimals, fractions or the many problems found in everyday math. “Together we balance check books and learn to get the most for the money on shopping trips.” Citing “Business Strategies" ■ are ti itil childr and a selection of re arsliall sa jects such as “Org, Flic new Decision Making" an wom< Writing for BusiruL xubl libei ref erred to the of! )m l to nou she encountered from a u uni, y- clerking position i 0 To their public relations. 'erydiing “The class focuses 0 y s ,he aut behavior, communicanJpS-' w< terns and sexual haraJI the workplace,"sht sj! j Races give doctor a break United Press International BEN WHEELER — Like an ap parition, the lean figure strides, weapon in hand, before his dog, the pair silhouetted against the gathering dawn of a more es sential American landscape. The figure is not the spirit of a Cherokee brave on the heels of game. It is a Nike-clad coun try doctor leading his dog Manfred on their morning miles. The feather-dangled cow’s rib clasped in his right hand is not an ancient weapon, al- Book Signing HALF PRICE MAGAZINES we buy and sell anything printed or recorded open 7 days a week Mon. - Sat. 10 am - 9 pm Sundays noon - 9 pm Allen Ginsberg Friday May 4 ,h 2 30 - 3 30 though it may be related to one. But the aura of simplicity, of life close to the earth and stars, is real. At 66, Dr. Charles Ogil- vie has found his spot of earth. And he has found a new facet to life — . running. He and Manfred often run 90 miles per week on the country roads sur rounding his Arc Ridge Ranch near Ben Wheeler. Ogilvie began running when he was 59. Today he is a “mas ter’s runner” ranked second in the nation in his age bracket in the marathon and 10-kilometer races. He ran 10 marathons, 26.2 miles each, in 1983. He placed first in his class in all but one. The three hours or so that Ogilvie puts in with Manfred each morning clears his mind, he says, and gives him time to chart his day. The osteopathic physician has a busy practice in Ben Wheeler, about 30 miles east of Tyler. He is the only doctor in a medical district of 4,000 people. He and his staff of three attend to an average of 27 patients each day, he says. One day each week, he trav els to Fort Worth to lecture at the Texas College of Osteopa thic Medicine where he founded the department of medical humanities before com ing home to Arc Ridge Ranch in 1981. Once each week he drives to Mineola to assist the radiol ogy department at the osteopa thic hospital there. For a man who seems to be running continuoulsy in one fashion or another, the white- haired doctor is serene and soft- spoken. A hand-written phrase from Thoreau’s “Walden” pinned to a wall in his study echoes his demeaner. “To be a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found a school. But so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates is a life of •simplicity, independence, magnaminity and trust.” Every windowsill and shelf in the Arc Ridge Ranch study is 11 also deals with i.hj ken rules, handling liA pest and answering sit jfcipnited P lions as, ‘Is it good ioK eager beaver?’" SM.RAN Then there’s a 'papist S "Woody Allen Mettt r s | °* c l u ‘ < Freud” class that shes ie l rno * 1 I from her nightclubcoi st< r m ° se created when she wasjHpp 1 e ?. SK several jobs to paythelB 01 , ' ' ^Kelf-infl Ked, bui he advised "Touch alk to five oleone cf atneone ha ^iBiend. crowded with parades tit , phies. Medals and plaqueH 11 % ai a wall and another d# d - Tre medals hangs on There are more than liBso do sc mug prizes altogethet ‘‘Walk, rn wim. Get pi Ogilvie says he beccomnliing y ested in running * he said. “O joined Texas College, tcss theme heir bodies “The running niove™r nterna * just beginning, andlJp len ds a running magazine: 101 *-’ enthusiast and read liked what he read. “I was ,t little ovenrajl out of shape,” he recaHtf Ogilvie entered hisfbj in 1978. He won. "I real could wipe out guys my had been running for years,” he says. Da spl United Pi CHICAG 3828 Texas Ave Bryan Wildlife Biology Society Wildgame Cookout & Dance Saturday, May 5 at Central Park Fun at 4 pm, Food at 6 pm. All you can eat & drink! Tickets at Nagle Donations __ $4 members, $5 nonmembers Vi ■■mu£5. MAY 3 <3 : 00 P.M. PUPPEP rOPUM TOPIC 1 N.613EKG ANt? WI6 POETKY PP0GEAM5 3P0N50PEt? M6C SfcEAT I56UE6 PEPT. OF EN0LI5W PEFT. OF HliTOttV HALF Pit ICE POOIC:f>TO£E WUMANITJE6 £E50U£CE5 G,R.0UP FP.IENP6 OF ALLEN G,IN5£E£Q CLU^JCOLLEOE. STATION CWAPTEP. |LI&EfcAL APT6 6TUPENT COUNCIL pOETPY ipEAPINQ In December, 1978,1 tered his first marathonIbom clotht and behold, 1 took secdoukl not b guy who beat me wasiBo SO phy class runner from Nt'Rmassen. la^d. Bt the mat “I don’t b His first national aaY e man >’ merit came in 1980 ; ]CT er said, broke the U.S. recordff eil A w ‘^ class in a 25-kiIonieierf| eaiin S j * meet in San Francisco [ x j ress ^is a that race, Ogilvie realitB son con i had potential as a mastflB 15 Y lal tier, he says. In 1981 hej Y ^ ie ls - seventh in his class Ir y IIle world’s most prestigious^ clothes the Boston Marathon.HB’ a( ^ ln f run marathons in LondoB , and e * e muda, Canada and HondflfcySign p more than 45 in all. fl;. aomas Theving v United et he srni Bpself de: oming.” IAs he pu EPI. MAY 4 IZ — Z P.M. PUPEEE 30! TOPIC: 0IN5bEPG, J 6 INVOLVE MEMT WITH THE £EAT GENERATION OF THE EO 1 * ANPT YOUTH REVOLT OE THE 60T LU NO t NUKE R FK.EL APMI5510H ,1SC GREAT