WILDGAME BBQ, AT THE VFW Saturday APRIL 13 • • Fun & games start at 4:00 V ^ • Food served at 5:00 Al l. VOI CAJV EAT & IHil.YK $4.00 Member $4.50 Non-Merber s S !> New Location Custom Alterations By Bea The place to go for all your spring formal alterations. Professional quality/reasonable rates 4012 Stillmeadow • Wee Village Center Bryan/846-5920 Jl a t m CAMPUS Walk, Cycle, or Shuttle. It’s only 8 Blocks. Half Rate for Summer with a year’s lease Eff, 1 & 2 bedrooms starting at 260.00 3902 COLLEGE MAIN country place apartments 846-0515 APRIL 15th through 2ist Purchase any 12”, 16” or 20” pizza at the regular price and receive an 8” pizza with the same toppings FREE! CHANELLO’S PIZZA. Call Us. NORTH: 846-3768 SOUTH: 696-0234 please mention this ad. void with any other special offer Student Exchange Study Abroad for One Year University of Stirling, Scotland Competition Now Open Applications & More Information: Study Abroad Office 101 Academic Bldg. 845-0544 Page 12/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 10, 1985 M Slouch By Jim Earle “Does it scare you to know that all of that has to be in your head by the end of the month?” Swede first to get artificial heart outside of the U.S. Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Doc tors at Karolinska Hospital per formed the first artificial heart im plant outside the United States, placing a metal and plastic Jarvik-7 lean in a Swede with an “enormous will to live.” Dr. Bjarne K. H. Semb, a Norwe gian surgeon who led the 12-mem ber team that carried out the world’s fourth artificial heart transplant on Sunday, said the patient was in “un expectedly good shape” Tuesday af ternoon. He was identified only as a Swede in his mid-50s. Semb said the patient had requested anonymity and that all personal details be withheld “as long as he is helpless.” Semb, 45, told a news conference that the patient was “off the respira tor, awake and talking.” He said Robert Jarvik, the American inven tor of the artificial heart, was present at the operation to offer advice. He added that Jarvik would not be avail able for comment until Wednesday. Semb said there was “no other al ternative” for the patient, who had a history of heart disease and had suf fered two severe heart attacks. lasted more than five hours. The operation in Sweden was per formed a day after the world’s sec ond recipient of ati artificial heart, 53-year-old William J. Schroeder was allowed to live outside the hospi tal. Schroeder was discharged Satur day from the Humana Hospital Au dubon in Louisville, Ky., where he received the Jarvik-7 heart on Nov. 25. Murray Haydon, the world’s third artificial heart recipient, on Feb. 17, remains at Humana’s coro nary care unit. Semb said the Jarvik-7 heart was purchased from the university clinic in Salt Lake City, Utah, where the first artificial heart implant was made in December 1982 on Barney Clark, a 62-year-old dentist. Clark died 112 days after the operation. Semb said he had performed im plants of artificial hearts on calves at the clinic in Salt Lake City. He said he had also visited Dr. William C. DeVries at Humana in connection with DeVries’ operations of Sch roeder and Haydon. DeVries is the only American sur geon authorized to implant the Jar- Semb said “the patient himself brought up the possibility of an arti ficial heart. His enormous will to live made him a candidate for it. “The last thing he said before going into anaesthetics was ‘We’re gonna make it, you hear me,’ ” he said. Semb said that after the heart was implanted Sunday there was a sec ond operation because of “technical problems.” Semb would not elab orate, but said the two operations Bob Irvine, a spokesman for Hu mana Inc., said, “We (Humana offi cials and DeVries) knew about it (the Swedish implant) yesterday. Dr. DeVries was consulted about the op eration and was in contact with the surgeons.” Semb was a member of the pi oneering group led by Dr. Christiaan Barnard in Cape Town, South Africa, which performed the world’s first heart transplant in 1967. Jackson rallies behind farmers Associated Press PLATTSBURG, Mo. — The Rev. Jesse Jackson brought his Rainbow Coalition to this tiny farming town in northwestern Missouri on Monday, urging about 300 people rallying be fore a foreclosure sale to work with urban laborers and blacks to fight in justices of the Reagan administra tion. Jackson, wearing bib overalls un der a brown leather jacket, delivered a rousing 30-minute speech before the final 127 acres of the Perry Wil son farm was sold. The crowd was orderly during the sale, a marked difference from the pushing match with state troopers that resulted in five arrests and a few injuries when the first part of the Wilson farm was sold March 15. Jackson, who had stayed over night Sunday with Wilson, called the sale a “human disaster” and said American agriculture is in a “crisis of gigantic proportions.” “We need leaders that think,” Jackson said. “We need compassio nate leaders. Someone must care for a 73-year-old man who has nowhere to go.” Wilson has farmed 52 years in the rolling Missouri countryside about 35 miles north of Kansas City. He said he owed banks $234,000. The final part of his land was purchased for $85,000 by the Kearney Trust Association. Jackson said Reagan administra tion policies were to blame for an ad ditional 12 million people who have fallen below the poverty line since 1980. He said 2,000 farms were being foreclosed each week because a strong American dollar has limited exports, the administration failed to block farm imports coming into this country and because the arms buildup took needed money away from agriculture. “Save the farmer and export Rea gan,” Jackson said as the crowd cheered. “We can do without Rea gan. But we cannot do without the farmer. We need you.” Please come by 101 Academic Building NOW thru April 12 to pick up a pre-registration form!! Courtyard WAS) Apartments M PRE LEASING SPECIAL’ •Great location...Walk or bike to shopping malls •Shuttle bus to campus •Extra large ...Roomy enough tor 4 •Easy living extras •Air conditioned laundry room swimming pools, tennis court, party room, laundry room, cable TV. on-i age. security program, fulltime maintenance i Ol/I 3> •« cfi expl oratory six Ame ing the annoum The over tht Central j Honolul turn of in Hano Burch. The 2 Vi acre courtyard with large oak trees For Summer, or Fall and Spring 1AV or move In today 1 & 2 bedrooms available all utilities paid except electricity, cable TV. partial or lull fun extra. Ask about utility options. Sat. 10-4 Sun. 1-5 693-2772 Office Hours 8-7 00 600 University Oaks Hwy 30 at Stallings College S ungs at nominal SYxai were rei individu service u lab prod lions, Bt Four were Ai shot do North ' ★ ★★★★★★★-A-* Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity presents The Ninth Annual iFc d< FIGHT NIGHT EIGHT NIGHT Admission: $3.00 Presale 84.00 at the Gate Friday, April 19 and Saturday, April 20 Brazos County Pavilion Fighting Starts at 6:00 p.m. Plenty of Food, Fun, and Beverages Available * Come watch boxing between TAMU Organizations and Sorority Pillow Fights ■ WASf ter deed; tions dei socialism James t. deals an name o capitalist Watt ; ircuit, h gan revt press am pjages tin t ■and is es campuse Harry W Watt c jfor spea that cost Bober 191 | He is v Courage lists that ambition that he i his native * i _ a rer y Tickets Available: Rothcrs Bookstore, Texas Aggie Bookstore, j black, a -* Tri State Sporting Goods, any Sig Ep 1 | cr 'Ppie” ■K ‘ ended \\ * Fight Niglit...Be There! j fes crus: freedom country, ground.” Today ■fonserv; £