0) Jance BALLET TAP JAZZ POINTE Adults, Teenagers and Children (from Age 2) JAN JONES Late Registration thru 9-15 3406 S COLLEGE AV BRYAN End of Summer Sale ...for that Special Occasion Starts at *10.00 and up. Page 4BAThe BattalionAThursday, August 30,1984 specializing in more than just wedding gowns. 'SricCd/ /i Across from Fuddruckers 2305 S. Texas Ave. College Station 693-9358 C.T1 The Creators of Lipstik & Park Avenue Bring You College Station’s Newest Fun Spot Welcomes Back AGGIES Tonight at Malibu The Buck Stops Here to cover till 10:00 $1.00 after 10:00 $1.00 Bar Drinks & Draftsi Where Fun Never Sets Obese people risi T€ toxin vulnerablity United Press International BOSTON — In addition to the health problems fat people already face, nutrition experts say the obese may now have to worry about extra high levels of toxic chemicals being stored in their bodies. Chemicals such as DDT, the po tent insecticide banned by the U.S. government, and PCB, a cancer- causing chemical once used to make electrical eouipment, are stored in the fat cells of the body. These chemicals do not dissolve in water, only in fat. Obese people can store larger amounts of toxic chemicals in their bodies. The problem is compounded by fat people eating larger amounts of food, which means they eat more toxic waste. “The greater the amount of fat tissue in the body, the greater the potential for these toxins to collect and persist in the system for long pe riods of time,”Dr. George Black burn, a nutrition expert at Harvard Medical School, said. When thinner people eat more toxic chemicals, their bodies tend to reach a saturation point after which they begin excreting fat-soluble toxic lickl chemicals as quickly as they are eaten. DDT has been shown to lead to in fertility. When large amounts of DDT become concentrated in the liver, which stimulates the operation of enzymes, an individual’s suscepti bility to other toxins increases. PCBs can also decrease resistance to disease and interfere with repro duction. Blackburn warns in an article in Rx Weight Control magazine against starting a crash diet. Losing lar^e amounts of weight quickly may in crease the percentage of toxic chem icals in a person’s body and circulat ing freely in their blood, said. In one case a person becamed riously ill when large amountsJ DDT were released into his blood tream after he quickly lost weight. In addition, oy eating lowolord foods such as some types of fishiJ people may be increasing id amounts of toxic waste they areal posed to. Blackburn suggests that who weight 30 or more poundsoiitJ weight should begin slowdietsM are approved by their doctors®! seek to bring a person slowlybachl their ideal weight. When using fish as partofid diet, Blackburn suggeststhatpe;;J stay away from fish high in fat,Mi| as tuna, swordfish an< also suggested that low fat fish such as flounder, dock and cod. Fish that hasbeend spected by the FDA is saferthantkj bought directly from fishermanhj cause it has been checked levels of toxic waste. When eating fish it isalsoadiij able to strip of f their skin. “Since most of the fatinusni found in a layer just below thesln| removing the skin removes the fat soluable toxins." accordinpj the article, co-written by Margai Clay, a community health expen It is also more healthy tobroi roast fish and meat rather than(n| ing, because not only do broilingnJ roasting help remove excesscaloml i lu\ als< i i cm<>ve stores o( potaj daily hazardous chemicab. Fnisl and vegetables should also hj washed to help remove chenucal 151 idues. “Rather than bemoaning the fij that our environment isn'tissaftij it used to be, we can take positive*! don to safeguard ourselves unnecessary risk,” the tworeseaid| ers said. Un: WEST |Kvam mt I out of the job to wi I home —; Kvam, Jtant, woi ' kitchen i Idoes mos Apple cc ! away as C Kvam her peop who haw tional ofl powers 0 “Being , large a | Kvam, vs | daughter works. Dave from gr< home in naging a market fi Rocha EP Un HARL Land an e mental 1 [the recer pesticide But a 'dumping [very bad Rep. 1 he i said canisters aluminui not dam Ants invade National Geographic society United Press International United Press International The National Geographic Socie ty’s Explorers Hall in Washington has been invaded by ants — deliber ately. Colonies of sugar ants and bulldog ants are on display in see-through cases at the society’s cissors, dagger and hypodermic needle, according to a University of Florida zoologist. “When the cell that contains the stinging mechanism is triggered, something like a pair of scissors ex plodes out,” Frank Maturo said. “But it’s sort of like the scissors are closed and then they open, making a gash. That gets an opening and this is followed by a hollow tubethai[ through that opening and injeciii toxin.” The poison causes extreme painisl can result in fainting, shock and!] rare cases, death. Dr. Elizabeth Sheretz, a professou dermatology at the university, anything containing alcohol-rd bing alcohol, liquor or perfume can deactivate the toxin. “If there are signs of hives oral treme swelling or if the persons™ has trouble breathing, he on!i should be rushed to an e facility because people, especial'l children, can die from massiveex|q sure to the toxic material,” shesaii nent. And S 3oast C( varned night fl fexans. The E used to 1 simply e’ iangeroi EPA s said the gency af Iforklift < inum ph ship on j ton. Trucks clean oil spill in San Jacinto River United Press International HOUSTON — Exxon employees used 10 vacuum trucks Wednesday to clean up 84,000 gallons of oil that leaked into the San Jacinto River when a 20-inch pipeline was hit by a vessel, a spokesman said. Perry Smith said divers inspecting the pipeline Wednesday discovered 5il had been flattened. “It is obvious the line was struck by something — a barge or a tug,” Smith said. The firm’s oil traffic control sys tem detected a drop in pressure:! the [pipeline about 9 p in. Tuesdi| and shut the flow in the line,S said. The line runs fromnorthutf of Houston to Baytown. Booms were placed around thefl to contain it Tuesday night andii vacuum trucks were working! dawn Wednesday, he said. Smith said cleaning up theoils should take five to seven days.1 pipeline leak is located near whf:!| Interstate 10 crosses the river,; 20 miles east of Houston. F B We per ery t°| 2: Farm union calls for chili pickers strike in West Texas United Press International EL PASO — Farm officials in West Texas and southern New Mex ico said earlier this week that a strike by the El Paso-Juarez Farmworkers Union has not yet had an adverse ef fect on the harvesting of chili crops, but union officials say the strike will continue. workers on his bus, but a grower, David Holguin, said turnout in the fields was notun ally low. Farmworkers begin togathei work in the streets of El PasoaW a.m., when buses sent by worker contractors arrive to day’s employment. About 40 members of the union, following two days of meetings in Juarez, across the Rio Grande from El Paso, tried shortly after midnight Tuesday to discourage farmworkers from boarding buses headed for the chili fields of neighboring farms. Included among the workers Mexican-Americans, Mexican ^ tionals residing legally in the In states and illegal aliens. Police said the demonstrators car ried hand-made signs demanding higher wages, better working condi tions, travel and employment insur ance. At the end of the day the fat® 01 pay the workers in cash on thete- of amount of chili or other pr^ picked. The workers have fe* any, fringe benefits. One farmworker, 47-year-oW sus Lopez of El Paso, said he c®; not afford to strike because he# the money and the farnworh- The workers are paid between 36 cents and 50 cents per 10-gallon can of chiles, 90 cents for jalapenos with stems, $1.30 per can for stemless ja lapenos and between 40 and 50 cents per can of red chiles. A Hatch a New Mexico area con tractor hardest hit of the farm labor contractors, said there were fewer money union offers no strike relief. Esteban Posada, president c# Union of Border Farmworkers ^ the strike will continue until » cr * ers’ demands are met. A farm leader said recently' rains have all but ruined then: crop in El Paso and the Mesilla' 1 ley of Las Cruces. t C« c< F V.