Tuesday, June 5, 1984/The Battalion/Page 5 : Photo by Deiik itinues on Old Mail on. The Ac* 'ii completion Stri ke 16th hospital joins nurses United Press International MINNEAPOLIS — The largest Inurses’ strike in the nation’s history fspread to a 16th hospital in the Min- Uneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area Monday and most hospitals per- iformed only emergency surgery. About 300 nurses at Mercy Medi cal Center in suburban Coon Rapids Iwalked off the job at 6:30 a.m. Mon- Iday, joining about 6,000 other mem- bers of the Minnesota Nurses Asso- Iciation who walked off the job |;Friday. Bob Weisner, a labor relations ^representative of the nurses, said ikey issues remain the same — em- Iployment and economics. Mercy vice president Michael Johnson said the hospital reduced its patient load to 102 from a capacity |of288 in preparation for the strike. “We are not admitting patients to the hospital,” Johnson said. “Only emergency surgery is being done.” Meanwhile, about 60 nurses were picketing outside the hospital. The strike has affected 16 of the 33 hospitals in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Other area hospitals are not involved in contract negotiations because they are not in the same bar gaining unit. While most of the hospitals are still restricting admissions, some have again begun to accept elective surgeries. “Prior to today, we were only doing emergency surgeries,” said Nancy Gustafson, spokesman for Fairview-Southdale Hospital in sub urban Southdale. On Monday, they began to schedule a few elective sur geries, but only those that are one- day electives. Metropolitan Medical Center also reopened its one-day surgery center to do elective surgeries. But a spokesman at Abbott-Northwestern Hospital said staffing levels would determine how much surgery will be done. The hospitals are operating at 30 to 40 percent capacity, reducing pa tient loads by restricting admissions. Patients who can be moved are being sent home or transferred to skilled nursing homes. The strike has increased patient counts at hospitals not included in the walkout. The nurses are striking for im proved benefits and a seniority clause in their contract protecting them from layoffs or forced reduc tion in working hours. Activists protest arsenal United Press International Rock Island, Ill. — More than 100 protesters were arrested Monday for i crossing police lines at bridges lead ing to the Rock Island Arsenal and trying to halt vehicles of employees on their way to the Mississippi River island. Another 200 demonstrators showed support with signs and songs critical of military weapons produc tion at the century-old plant and the [sending of arms to the Middle East | and Central America. “We know what the arsenal’s for - murder in El Salvador,” they !chanted. The nation’s largest conventional weapons plant was guarded by 300 Army soldiers, who were not needed because none of the protesters ! reached the island facility. I Arsenal spokesman Paul Powell I said several departments reported I that work attendance was up from usual Monday figures. Employees were urged to arrive at work several hours early and to take guarded buses into the installation. “I think our employees were mak ing a profound but quiet statement by showing up in such numbers,” Powell said. Most of the more than 100 people arrested were igiven citations and re leased, said police. Collections taken at a planning rally were used to bail out the rest of the protesters. The arrests started at 5 a.m., w'hen five people darted into the heavily guarded roadway leading to the Rock Island bridge. They were immediately taken away by police. Brian Terrell, one of the first ar rested, said some demonstrators were arrested twice. “As soon as they were released, they ran to Rock Island as fast as they could and got arrested again,” he said. More than 400 police officers from several departments were sta tioned at the three bridges leading to the island. The protest was organized by the Chicago-based Project Disarm, an umbrella group that coordinated the protest with peace groups from sur rounding states. Among the 35 arrested at the Mo line, Ill., entrance to the island were eight people who chained them selves together. They held up traffic temporarily while police with bolt cutters separated and arrested them. Cary Eklund, a Davenport peace activist involved in a federal court appeal of draft registration laws, stayed on the sidelines, fearful that an arrest would jeopardize his case. Eklund has been convicted of failure to register for the draft. “We’ve been protesting at the ar senal for years. It’s great to see so many other people join in and make this a national issue,” Eklund said. CASE report gives colleges ideas for raising revenue Ml...24.5 ■la. r 1...23.7 , 152...20.0 I 1 ...19.3 >3...19.1 shall, Tex. r9...18.8 ich-Boca Ram M8...18.4 Fla. 14.. .17.2 v. >4...17.1 i, Fla. ’7...16.4 ...15.9 ...15.6 16.. . 15.4 6...15.4 . ..15.0 >3... 15.0 I Ilernadino,(i| ,491... 14.6 I t usville.Palni. I ► 7...14.3 'lington.Tet 16.!. 14.0 tdif. > 1 ....13.4 a. *8....13.2 t j x. . ...13.2 United Press International Colleges raise and save revenue lots of non-academic ways these days. An inkling of what goes on is between the covers of a new report from the Council for the Advance ment and Support of Education, CASE. “New Sources of Revenue: An Ideabook” brings up bingo and bar tering, oil and gas wells, among other old ways of raising revenue. Consider. The gym at Lake Erie College in Painesville, Ohio, has re sounded with bingo calls Thursday and Friday nights for five years. Games net $160,000 a year, half for scholarships and half for community organizations, such as American Field Service, that furnish the volun teer staff. Lake Erie also generates $1,000 a month selling natural gas pumped from a well it drilled on campus. In summer, the school picks up around $80,000 by renting buildings for such things as camps or single par ent retreats. Harold Hodgkinson, senior fellow at the Institute for Educational Leadership, believes schools should put campus assets to work full time. “One of the most productive and overlooked resources is the equip ment storehouse,” he says in the re port directed to colleges and univer sities. “Most institutions have a vast ar ray of expensive equipment that sits idle for long periods. Many small firms do not have the capital to buy all their equipment in their start-up days. "Access to your equipment could be a great asset to them. In re turn, they might offer you any num ber of resources in exchange, rang ing from typing services to research.” Hodgkinson also recommends that schools look into bartering. Consider a school that needs word processors but has no money to buy them. “It does have a fine physical edu cation facility,” he says. “Across the street is a rapidly growing business that has plenty of word-processing equipment but no health mainte nance program for the people on its staff. “The solution? The company staff swims in the college pool during off hours, and the college uses the com pany’s word processors during the company’s down time. Neither ... in vests dollars, but both get what they need.” Opportunities in land promise to yield big revenue for the University of Texas at Dallas. Over the last 15 years the school was given about 1,100 acres of land, for starters. Now the school intends to sell or develop 600 acres — at least 100 to corporations that want to put re search and development or com puter facilities on campus. Richard Ceyer Jr., UTD’s vice president, believes the venture may eventually yield $60 million to $80 million from sale proceeds, options and leases. On a smaller business scale there, is evening rental of classrooms and Study warns runners of anemia other facilities to individuals and groups. Maria Regina Colege in Syr acuse does this, as do numerous schools. The Menual School in Albuquer que, N.M., leases its facilities to the University of New Mexico for a mi crocomputer school for students age 9 years through high school. Facili ties also are leased for a four-day yearbook workshop. Marylhurst College in Marylhurst, Ore., remodeled dorms into offices. Tenants include 25 non-profit agen cies. Gross income: $500,000 a year. Xavier University’s recreation fa cilities in Cincinnati, Ohio, are rented by hospitals and other health agencies for patients’ physical the rapy sessions. Memberships in the recreation facilities also are available to alumni and corporations for exec utive use. Here are some other non-aca demic ways the report suggests schools make money: • Renting tennis facilities to a lo cal municipality or tennis pro who will run a program in the summer. • Selling records, tapes, books, prints, other artwork, and school supplies if the community needs such services. “You can easily turn a bookstore into a community re source and increase the inventory to include items of interest to more people,” the report said. • If the publications unit has slow periods, a contract arrangement can easily carry that office through lean times. “Even the production of large mailings represents a capacity many others would wish to make use of,” the report said. lice »ot inc idents wed iversity Politf l Monday. )R I flFFT: -diite Whites l. s stolen W all. -c hwinn ten-sf f rom thebilf 1 ■ iversity Politf F A BUlLDili —y’s cassette f- □ 5P oftheOM ke into three’ west side off ■ ions items of id clothing'® Athletes United Press International Washington — Many of the na tion’s 10 to 30 million marathon and long-distance runners suffer mild anemia because they bleed internally while racing or training, doctors said Monday. Researchers from the Mayo Clinic and Yale School of Medicine said in an interview that two studies showed the bleeding tends to be mild and its effects can be offset by taking iron supplements. “My hunch is there is probably not a lot of importance to this,” said Dr. Douglas McGill, a Mayo Clinic gas troenterologist and co-author of one of the studies. “If you run, forget it. Your knees are going to go first.” McGill said researchers have known about running-induced ane mia for some time, but the condition apparently has not had much effect because “people keep running, and records keep falling.” may bleed internally Anemia is a shortage of red or ox ygen-carrying blood cells, causing slight weakness and pallor in mild form. The two studies, published in the June issue of “The Annals of Inter nal Medicine,” showed that up to 30 percent of runners who completed marathons, half-marathons and other long-distance races showed signs of mild bleeding in their gas trointestinal tracts. The runners for the most part were healthy. But for a few people blood loss during running could be more severe, causing a more serious form of anemia and — rarely — death from a heart attack. McGill advised runners to keep in touch with their doctors and take iron supplements. Iron is vital to blood production and is a compo nent of oxygen-carrying blood cells. In an editorial to appear in July, Dr. Maire Buckman of the Univer sity of New Mexico Hospital in Albu querque, N.M., said the reason for the bleeding is unknown, but the problem may be caused by the jos tling of internal organs during long runs. McGill said it could originate in cells lining the small intestine, which are sensitive to reduced blood flow. Blood supply to the intestines is re duced during running. In the Mayo study, researchers measured the level of hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying component of red blood cells, in stool samples from 24 long-distance runners before and after a 26.5-mile marathon, 13-mile half-marathon, and a 6-mile race. The researchers found that after the race, runners had lower hemog lobin levels and high gastrointestinal hemoglobin levels than a group of non-runners. The Battalion Since 1878 — 1 PROFESSORS, END THE PAPER CHASE WITH KINKO’S ^ PROFESSOR PUBLISHING We'll Turn Your loose" Course Materials into Bound Class Readers kinkcrs copies 201 College Main 846-8721 SPECIAL NOTICE 1st SUMMER SESSION OPTIONAL BOARD PLAN Stundents, on campus, off campus, and graduate, may dine on meal plan during the 1st Summer Session at TAMU. Students selecting the 7-day plan may dine three meals each day, except Sunday evening: Those se lecting the 5-day plan may dine each day, Monday through Friday. Meals will be served Commons. Fees are payable to the Controller of Accounts, Fiscal Office Coke Building. Notice dates: Commons will be open for cash business on Registration day, June 4. Meal plan will begin on the first day of class, June 5. Fees for each plan are as follows: 7 Day $215.00 June 5 through July 3 and 5 day $188.00 July 5 and 11 Meal plan validation will begin at 7:30 a.m., June 5, in Commons Lobby. Fee slips will be required Aggies, got the summer time Back-to-School Blues and can’t call home because it’s too expensive? Yes, it’s been a short vacation and we at StarTel sympathize with you! So... with you in mind, StarTel is offering the “Get-Rid-of-Summer-Time-Blues- And-Save-Money-Aggie-Special” * No Monthly Charge * No Hook-Up Charge StarTel saves you 20-50% off of AT&T’s lowest rate at that time. So... Start saving money today and put your money to better use...