Eddie’s Wrecker Service Special Student Rates Page 1 OAThe Battalion/Friday, February 8,1985 $18.50 Call Mobile Unit Evenings anywhere in Bryan-College Station 8 a.m.-7 p.m. 779-0422 (unit 3119) 779-6525 Sunday Night Special $9 95 fORT iSTEAKHOUSE i 2 chicken fried steaks, salad bar, homemade rolls, choice of baked potato, french fries or rice 5-10 pm 2528 Texas Ave. S. College Station 693-1164 Texas Ave. between Southwest Pkwy & Kmart Muslim Students Association OF T&XA6 A4M University.. Invite.6 You To A Lecture On Why You Look Should At Islam 99 By Steve Johnson ^ An 'American Bopn Muslim Scholar ft PATE : 9 TH EeSy H0S ^ Time : 3 pm ^ PivXCg.: Ruppe^ T^wer Rcom toi ^ V 9 ^ Grand Opening BEER Thursday & Friday 5-8 p.m. Buy One Get One Free Pizza-By the-Slice Thursday & Friday 11 am-5 pm Delicious Homemade Italian foods: Lasagne Meat ball Sandwich, Italian Sausage Sandwich and other fine foods. 846-TAMU 317 Patricia Next to Kinko's Northgate DO YOU KNOW SOMETHING WE DON’T? OOO WHY MOT TEACH IT FOR FUM S. IVIOMEY? MSC AFTER HOURS is looking for new instructors, of non-credit courses for Spring Session II. If you think you have something worth teaching call Karen Hronek at 845-1515 or come by room 216 of the TAMU Memorial Student Center. The last day for teacher registration is Feb. 15, 1985, so hurry!! We especially need instructors in these areas: BALLROOM DANCE MASSAGE CPR BARTENDING COMMUNICATIONS AUTO REPAIR GUITAR SELF HELP POCKET CALCULATOR LANGUAGES PHOTOGRAPHY FIRST AID {•MSC AFTER HOURS-! Slouch By Jim Earle “It’s a watch that commemorates our new bell tower. It seemed like a better idea when it was on the drawing board. ” Woodpeckers have a secret Associated Press SPRINGFIELD, Ohio — Study ing a woodpecker’s tongue may help researchers lick the problem of pro tecting the human brain from in jury, a Wright State University pro fessor said. R. Fred Rolsten, professor of en gineering, is looking at woodpeck ers, anteaters and karate experts to discover how they are able to hit hard surfaces without brain damage or broken bones. It may help researchers develop better protective gear for athletes, soldiers and accident victims, he said. Rolsten said woodpeckers appar ently can use their unique, barl>ed tongues as a sonar device to help de tect bugs under the tree bark and then to spear them. The woodpecker’s tongue wraps around its brain to buffer the con cussion of hammering, Rolsten said. Items such as football and motor cycle helmets would protect better if they were softer on the inside in stead of harder on the outside, he said. “The helmet is basically a rigid shell designed to minimize injuries due to spear impact—that is, the penetration of a sharp object," Rolsten said. "But in my opinion, the nurabe of blunt impacts—someone hitiit, the pavement or crashing intoatdt i phone pole—far exceeas the nur, her of spear impacts,” he said. If the foam liner inside thehelnit were doubled, impact protects j would also double wnile aadingonl .2 of a pound extra weight, hesaid Rolsten, who has studied thee! feet of impacts on the human bodi | for the past 25 years, researchedc- vers and diving birds trying to lean how they can hit the water at tit mendous speeds without breakin; their necks. “We found that when they din they tense themselves. Muscle toi* appears to be very important, Rolsten said. The pangolin, a giant Asian an eater, may provide another due, “If you prod them when theyd up in a tree, they just roll upinabal and fall to the ground and bounce he said. Rolsten is also interested inkarai experts who seem to “sense” howt shape their hands and wrists wha j breaking through wood and coup crete blocks. "What we’re trying to do is to fi! ff out how soft tissue and bones car take these impacts and redistribn the force so they do not break Rolsten said. Happy Birthday Once-scornful neighbors plan events to honor Sinclair Lewis Associated Press SAUK CENTRE, Minn. — Sixty- five years after Sinclair Lewis scan dalized his former neighbors with a satirical account of small-town Mid western life, the people of his home town are throwing a birthday party for him. Lewis, the first American to win a Nobel Prize in literature, was born in this central Minnesota farm town 100 years ago Thursday. Now, the town’s 3,800 residents are kicking off a year of festivities to honor the writer whom the town once scorned. Some debate whether the mythi cal town of “Gopher Prairie,” the set ting for Lewis’ 1920 novel “Main Street,” was based on his hometown, or whether it was a composite of small towns. Either way, the book sparked outrage in Sauk Centre with its portrayal of small-town narrow mindedness, provincialism and hy pocrisy. “There was a certain indignation on the part of local people,” said Dave Jacobson, president of the Sin clair Lewis Foundation, which is or- f anizing Lewis centennial events in auk Centre. “They were, at first, very excited he had written about their town. Then they realized it was a biting sat ire, and some of them felt they rec ognized themselves, and there was some resentment.” In “Main Street,” heroine Carol Kennicott is frustrated in her at tempts to bring social reform and ar tistic enlightenment to the residents of Gopher Prairie, who are quite content with the way things are. Legend has it that the nearby town of Alexandria banned the book from its library, and that an area preacher told his congregation not to read it. In Sauk Centre, “Main Street” was not required reading in the high school until Jacobson, a for mer English teacher, introduced it to his classes in the early 1960s. Time has mellowed any lingering ill will Sauk Centre might have telt toward Lewis, who went on to write a string of best sellers during the 1920s, including “Babbitt,” “Arrows- mith,” and “Elmer Gantry.” By the time he won the Nobel Prize in 1930, he was considered America’s fore most writer. “The town (Sauk Centre) is practi cally a memorial to Sinclair Lewis,” saia Michael Connaughton, an assis tant English professor at St. Cloud State University. If the town left its mark on Lewis, he left his mark on it. Sauk Centre’s mile-and-a-half- long main street, with its lone traffic light, has been renamed “The Origi nal Main Street,” and the street it in tersects — the street where Lewis grew up — is now “Sinclair Lewis Avenue.” The Palmer House, at three sto ries, is still the tallest building on Main Street. Lewis’ boyhood home, a two-story, turn-of-the-century house, has been restored, declared a state and national landmark arc opened for tourists. P A Sinclair Lewis Interpretamt Center, housing memorabilia fra the writer’s life, was opened in 19*i The high school team is nicknamet i the Mainstreeters. Lewis, the youngest of three sonU was born to Dr. E.J. and Emmab wis on Feb. 7, 1885. His fatherwasi country doctor. His mother diedo: tuberculosis when Sinclair wasi “Doc Lewis," as he was known,late remarried. As a boy, Lewis was gangly, quit 1 , and unpopular. He suffered fromi lifelong case of acne, and reported told friends, “Anybody who would say they love me must be lying,bj cause I’m so ugly." After graduating from Yale, It wis, known to his friends and faml' as “Harry” or “Red,” launched hif' career as a writer. He wrote 23 nm ! els, many of which are out of prim and numerous short stories anaatu cles. Grading the quality of grains Inspector ‘nose’ his duty Associated Press DULUTH, Minn. — A lot of peo ple depend on Rick Wetterlind’s eyes and nose. If he sorts through a sample of merchandise and sees that it’s in good shape, the price of that ship ment could rise. But if he detects a sour odor, the price could plummet. Wetterlind is a Minnesota state grain inspector, one of 10 people in Duluth who determine the grade and, ultimately, the price of grain shipped from the city’s three grain elevators. Several times a day, state employ ees take samples from much of the grain being poured into ships and railcars. The samples are sent to the inspection office in the Board of Trade Building, where the inspec tors test the grain and assign a grade to it. A wide range of grain can spill across the inspectors’ clean, white ta bles—wheat, corn, barley and cith ers. The testing is done on samples weighing precisely 1,000 grams—a little more than two pounds. When the tests are done, inspectors tally the sam ple's good and had points and assign a grade, which could mean hundreds or thousands of dollars dif ference in the price of a boatload or train load of grain. Once the sample is weighed, it is sifted by machine to determine its dockage content—the amount of chaff, weed seeds and other junk in each bushel. The sample is then weighed again to determine its grade. Top grade spring wheat, for instance, weighs 58 pounds per bushel. If it’s lighter, the grade goes down. The inspectors then perform the “sniff test, putting their noses just a fraction of an inch from the sample to check its aroma. A fresh, grainhke smell indicates a good sample; a musty, sour or oily smell means the grain is spoiled or polluted and earns it a lower grade. Inspectors then spread the grain out on a table and pick through it to find broken kernels, shrunken ker nels, heat-damaged kernels, stones, mold, fungus and other imperfec tions. When the tests are done, inspec tors tally the sample’s good and bad points and assign a grade, which could mean hundreds or thousands of dollars difference in the price of a boatload or trainload of grain. Crain inspectors must pass a test every three years and Know the grain inspecting regulations, which fill a book two inches thick. There’s also another test that will make or break a grain inspector—al lergies. Even a small dose of grain or grain dust can do strange things to the human body. “Everybody here is allergic to something, but some guys are so bad they have to quit,” Gerald Goad, an inspector from Duluth, said. Crew fleeing ship with passports made officals suspect scuttling Associated Press HOUSTON — A maritime offi cial said he be^an to suspect an oil tanker was deliberately sunk when crewmen who said they’d been fight ing a ship fire got into lifeboats wearing fine clothes and carrying their passports. Alister Crombie, deputy commis sioner for the Liberian Republic’s maritime affairs bureau, testified in U.S. District Judg;e Carl O. Bue’s court Wednesday in the fraud trial of Houston businessman Frederick Soudan. Crombie assisted the investigation into the sinking of the Salem on Jan. 17, 1980 off the Senegalese coast. A 23-count indictment alleges Soudan, 41, stole 200,000 tons of oil from its Italian owner and ordered it delivered to South Africa in the Sa lem. According to the indictment, Soudan and four other men ar ranged for the ship to be scuttled to cover up the theft. Also charged in the case is Sou dan’s brother-in-law, Wahab A1 Gha- zou, 48, of Syria, who is charged with helping Soudan hide his profits from U.S. tax authorities. Crombie said investigators from around the world were shocked when, several days into their inquiry, they realized what had occurred. “I can’t believe something like this could have happened,” Crombie said. Crombie asked Lloyd’s Register of Shipping, an international ship building register, whether the tanker could have been sunk with a full load of oil. Crombie said Lloyd’s answered, “We’re not in the business of sinking ships; we’re in the busi ness of keeping them afloat.” “It was concluded that the Salem, fully loaded with crude oil, would not sink,” Crombie said. Soudan, who has been in jail since May in lieu of bond, is accused of us ing fraud in the purchase of the Sa lem for $12.3 million and convincing the South African government to pay $43 million for oil he didn’t nave. Prosecutors contend Soudan made $4.25 million from the alleged scheme, which they claim was part of a conspiracy to steal 1.4 million bar rels of oil from European firms and secretly ship the crude to South Af rica. Soudan has contended he was only a broker in the deal and was duped. New law benefits county Associated Press HOUSTON — The feded government and local authorities; will share proceeds from the sale; of a 33-acre Montgomery County; farm seized in a drug ring investi-1 ; cation, authorities said Wednes- ° a y- “ 1 his is the first time in our ;; history we have been able to share assets with state and local agen-. cies,” Dan Hedges, the U.S. attor ney in Houston, said. Under the new Crime Control Act program, signed into law in Octooer, the federal government : may share with local authorities proceeds from property seized in drug investigations. Narcotics agents seized the land, 45 miles northeast of Hous ton, last September while investi-! gating an international drug smuggling ring. The land was used tostoreand; package imported marijuana be fore it was snipped to be sold,of- ! ficials with the U.S. Drug En forcement Administration said. No arrests or indictments have, been made in connection withibe; seizure, but prosecutors said aM grand jury is investigating people who allegedly have operated an| international drug ring forseve-; ral years. The land has been appraised at $125,000, officals said, and pro ceeds will be shared by the fed eral government, the county Or ganized Crime Control Unit and the Texas Department of Public | Safety. I Prosecutors said the farm is owned by Frank Garcia of Edin burg and Jose Luis Cantu of McAllen. Neither has commented 1 on the case or filed a claim after; being notified the land wa. ! j seized. Deputy Attorney General Carol Dinkins said Attorney Gen eral William French Smith hadto approve the agreement Tuesda) because the program still lacksset guidelines.