Tuesday, July 17, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7 's up THEATER ARTS: the Premier Players present The Orphans by Ja mes Prideaux at 8 p.m. today through Satur day in Rudder Forum. Tickets are $1.50 for students and >r the general public. TAMU SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB: there will be a skydiv ing demonstration at 7:30 p.m. on the polo field. An orien tation meeting for interested students will be at 8 p.m. in 401 Rudder. Nursing home workers join strike >w United Press International NEW YORK — About 16,000 nursing home workers joined 30,000 hospital employees in a strike for belter pay Monday, upsetting thou sands of patients and forcing doctors and administrators to work as or derlies, cooks and launderers. The walkout seriously strained the city’s health care network and forced several nursing homes to ask families to take their parents home for the duration of the strike. Strike-bound hospitals cut admis sions, clinic visits and elective sur gery, and unaffected hospitals set aside 2,000 beds in case emergency transfers were necessary. possiWi About 4,600 elderly people in 17 nursing homes and 14,000 patients in 28 hospitals were affected. Nurses at five hospitals also walked off the job in sympathy with the strikers. District 1199 of the Retail, Whole- ihree sa * e ant * Department Store Union udiowe kg 311 strike Friday at 28 hospi- ^ , tals and seven nursing homes follow- , ,,, ing a breakdown in contract talks. II Workers at 10 more nursing homes ronnri walked off the job Monday. ^ ro1 I No new talks were scheduled. “I see no reason to be optimistic of a 13 quick resolution at this lime,” federal * ie !l mediator Paul Yager said, avaiiai yj ie wor k ers — orderlies, thera- seniesnj pists, cooks, and other support staffs — demanded 10 percent wage hikes nlhete and alternate weekends off. The hospitals offered a 4 percent in crease. Doctors, administrators and other employees were on 12-hour shifts, six days a week at Montefiore Hospi tal in the Bronx. Spokeswoman Judy Murphy said 1977 Nobel Prize win ner Dr. Rosalyn Yanow was sta tioned on the cafeteria assembly line, while doctors were pushing patient trays and administrators were an swering phones and hauling gar bage. Administrators said they tried to calm elderly patients, fearing patient agitation would spread “like wild fire.” “It’s an extremely dangerous situ ation,” said Steven Bernstein, exec utive director of the Daughters of Jacob Geriatric Center in the Bronx. “It’s the anxieties they face. For weeks, they’ve been crying, ‘Where will I go if there’s a strike?”’ Bernstein said. “The emotional im pact is far worse on nursing home patients than hospital patients.” Hospitals said their strike plans were "running smoothly,” but the administrator of at least one nursing home, the 265-bed Sephardic Home for Aged in Brooklyn, complained strikers were blocking volunteers from entering the facility to help out. “They’re not letting us bring in people as volunteers in any way,” said Herbert Freeman. “We’re hav ing a great deal of difficulty,” he said. Texans rebuild Times Square United Press International DALLAS — Developer Trammell Crow, a common name in the Texas construction industry, will have a major role in the controversial and costly renovation of New York City’s Times Square. Following years of often acrimo nious debate, the city and state have launched a renovation plan to trans form four blocks of Times Square, the business address for numerous prostitutes, porno shops and drug dealers. A spokeswoman for Crow’s Dallas Market Center Co., says that the ren ovation project has “provided a spe cial opportunity (for Crow) to do the mart in New York, with a good deal of support from the city and state.” Planners expect the $1.6 billion effort will begin in 1986 and hope to conclude it in 1990. Once completed, the new office buildings, merchandise mart, hotel and theaters will generate 23,500 new jobs, compared with 3,285 jobs in the area now. It will also produce at least $860 million in taxes or payments to the city over 20 years, officials said. That is roughly five times the current level of revenue the city gets from Times Square. Following negotiations, Crow, well known in Texas construction circles, is expected to assist in the de velopment of the mart and then manage and market it. The mart will be 80 percent de voted to computers and 20 percent to apparel and designer furniture. Course ‘computes’ anxiety Hof [ane ft' NBt T: !ren. jpeaft* .sted't :r. H ,p(l# r Lai" 1 ?d to* United Press International WASHINGTON — If the thought of working on a computer turns you into a pool of sweat you may be experiencing one of the new est social ills called computer anxi ety, according to a Catholic Univer sity of America study. The symptoms are similar to those of any lest anxiety: tension, nervous ness, sweaty palms, racing pulse, fear of failure and confusion. But Dr. Carol Class, a clinical psy chologist at Catholic University, and Robert Heinssen, a doctoral student there, say computer anxiety is a unique and treatable illness. “It’s not the kind of fear that someone would have climbing a lad der to the 32nd floor of a building,” Glass said. “But people are saying, ‘Yes, I’m uncomfortable. I’m ner vous and uneasy when silling down to a computer.” Glass and Heinssen surveyed more than 150 students and profes sionals — some of whom were en rolled in an introductory computer course— to determine the nature of the anxiety. Asked if they were “afraid of com puters,” 50 percent of the students and 78 percent of adults said “yes.” They were asked to describe their thoughts when silling at a computer terminal. Some said they were made anxious by the impersonality of lech- Some (computer users) said they were made anx ious by the impersonality of technology. Others said they felt helpless, out of control and that they would “never be able to figure it out. ” nology. Others said they felt help less, out of control and that they would “never be able to figure it out.” Class said more women than men acknowledged they were anxious around computers. But, she said, “It may be that men are just as anxious but they won’t tell you.” Men are more likely to have had more exposure to technology and “things you plug in the wall,” Class added. Class said working with comput ers at an earlier age will curb this anxiety for future generations, but adults now need to learn how to deal with their fears — especially as new appliances bring the technology closer to home. Heinssen will be conducting a se ries of workshops for adults at Cath- Emerald Air suspends flights ■ach i United Press International AUSTIN — Emerald Air has tem porarily suspended service to Aus tin, its home base, and Houston In tercontinental Airport, but a company official insisted Monday the regional carrier is not in Finan cial trouble. “This was simply a reallocation of the present resources we have,” said Ray LaCroix, customer relations su pervisor for the 6-year-old airline. LaCroix said the two-week sus pension in Austin will end Aug. 1, but there is no Fixed dale for re sumption of service to Houston In tercontinental. The airline earlier permanently terminated service to San Antonio. Emerald, which recently ex panded into Wichita, Kan., and Omaha, Neb., currently serves Houston Hobby Airport, Dallas-Fort Worth, McAllen and Corpus Christi in Texas with a fleet of nine DC-9s. Although the carrier intends to resume service to Austin and Hous ton Intercontinental, it has asked about 25 workers in the two cities to relocate or be furloughed, said Em erald spokeswoman Debra Treffalls. She said the employees were given the option of transferring to other cities now served by Emerald or to the corporate headquarters in Aus tin. The company has about 280 non-union employees, most of them stationed in Austin. Company Vice President Jay Salter said when service resumes in Austin on Aug. 1, Emerald will ini tiate two new flights to Dallas-Fort Worth and McAllen. Downtown Austin property values soar United Press International AUSTIN — Reflecting Austin’s economic boom, real estate values in the downtown area of the Texas cap ital city have soared by nearly 300 percent since 1982, the Travis County Appraisal District ofFice said Monday. Appraiser Jim Nuckles said some downtown tracts have seen a 1,000 percent increase in land value since the last reappraisal two years ago. Overall property value in Travis County was up 60 percent over 1983, he said. Nuckles said while the owners of a small downtown tract occupied by a tamale stand recently got a record $1.6 million in a highly publicized sale, appraisers considered average market values rather than the sales price of one tract. Nuckles said even in the most re mote areas of Travis County, prop erty is worth at least $ 1,000 an acre. The largest taxpayer in the county, International Business Ma chines Corp., saw the appraised va lue of its land jump from $8,000 an acre to $87,120 an acre. He attributed thejump, in part, to the high demand for property in an area where Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corp., an ad vanced computer research consor tium, has located its headquarters. r Pregnant? ^ AGGIE CLEANERS We cari help. Pregnancy IP Thursday Special Counseling and iHn RIllO loanc- Laundered or MMmh Dlllc Jcallo Dry Cleaned testing gB $1.50 846-3199 mm 846-4116 - Northgate- 111 College ^ Call any time ^ Hours: M-F 7:30-5:30 Sat. 8-3 pm olic University to learn how to relax with computers. These workshops will be the first in the country that are not designed to teach computer skills, but to teach people not to be intimidated by com puters. The workshops will include “anxi ety management programs that teach people to identify anxiety signs, moniter them and replace them with feelings of self control,” Heinssen said. “Some anxiety is appropriate and helps people learn,” Heinssen said. “We want to teach people to control it to the point where it is motivating without being disabling.” The five weeks of 90-minute ses sions will be offered free to all. The workshops will be run by specially trained therapists and limited to groups of 10. They will be very stuctured,” Heinssen said. “Not like an encoun ter group.” Some time will be spent with com puters to practice relaxation tech niques. But the mechanics behind the technology will be avoided. “People can drive a car without knowing the engine,” Class ob served. “It was just an economic deal,” added LaCroix. “We just weren’t doing very well in Houston and Aus tin so wejust suspended it. “It’s just a reorganization,” he said. “We’re just trying to make money in this market.” Emerald was formed as a cargo carrier in 1978 by three retired Air Force officers who hauled cargo out of South Texas for Emery Air Freight with a fleet of prop planes. But Emerald, which began full passenger service in 1981, was ranked No. 1 in the nation last year among small regional-commuter carriers in miles flown and No. 2 in passenger boardings. The company was reorganized in 1982 with the hiring of former Bra- niff executive Thomas R. McCauley as the company’s president. 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