Titanic's wreckage found under 13,120 feet of water — Page 10 men fualif mm It won't be a Becker-McEnroe quarterfinal at the U.S. Open — Page 18 Mmm^^^^^mmmmmm mmmmmmmm damage fi the wool d beetles 'e cleaned >y a techni d keys of i ed by Texas m m m • The Battalion ?nance much use ano is pb -s a wee(§ 81 No. 2 GSPS 045360 20 pages limes a y string te , then o tionines L't College Station, Texas Tuesday September 3, 1985 r electric electronK lena hits Biloxi at 122 mph; none seriously hurt ctromc in end toch ;)logy beo :are suga and red ised your nee tips: iinent fi sunlight h to dust, vaxy de ing the! ;d withal ic cover, as digital don’t un| it off sin nory to b the instr avoid m ■vboard ( uard i arm in parts. gu; n ha Associated Press ■IL0XI, Miss. — Hurricane El- ■ftnally howled ashore along the Rissippi coast Monday with winds Ijlto 122 mph, ripping off rtKjfs, ■noting ttees, flotKling highways, Kng telephone poles and leaving Most 300,000 customers without m Mespitethe damage, no serious in- .Wes were reported as the season's foitrth hurricane made landfall after Bagging around the Gulf of Mex- cofor four days. Warlier, the storm contributed to ID Telethon achieves (33,181,652 Associated Press r three deaths in Florida. More than half a million people were evacuated in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana after El ena reversed course off the coast of Florida on Sunday and headed northwest with winds of 125 mph. The hurricane’s highest sustained winds quickly dropped after it hit land here just before 8 a.m. Monday. By late afternoon winds were down to about 40 mph, just above tropical storm strength, and all hur ricane warnings were discontinued along the coast. By 5 p.m., CDT, the storm’s cen ter was about 55 miles north of Ba ton Rouge, La., and it was moving west-northwest at around 15 mph. Curfews were set in at least five stricken communities, and National Guard troops were called out in Mis sissippi and Louisiana. Several dozen of the 2,000 Na tional Guard troops called out in Florida over the weekend remained on duty Monday, helping to main tain order as an estimated 1 million refugees returned home. “It was a mijor hurricane, . . . worse than Frederic in 1979,” Hal Gerrish, a forecaster at the National Hurricane Center in Florida, said. The hardest-hit areas appeared to be Dauphin Island, Ala., and Pasca goula, he said. Frederic caused between $2 bil lion and $3 billion damage, mostly in the Mobile-Pascagoula area, the Na tional Hurricane Center has said. Herb Sully, a Red Cross volunteer worker, described Ptiscagoula as “bombed out,” according to Terri Gautier, an American Red Cross spokeswoman in Mobile. BAS VEGAS, Nev. — The star- Blded 20th annual Jerry Lewis Bcular dystrophy telethon raised Be than S33 million Monday, the ^ |ge.st amount ever in the history ol ■■ B Labor Day weekend event to Iht neuromuscular disease. ■he$33,181,652 raised across the I Ijntry in the 22'/2-hour “Jerry Le- IBJ ■ Supershow” surpassed by $1.1 P lllion the record set last year. Kn addition to the $33 million ommuniaWlg e d Monday, an estimated $50 ritd 1( j|lion poured in throughout the j ^ |nni ?ear Irom corporate and civic spon- > develop* 8 na t* onw '“ c ‘ ther,”Bewis said he expected the entire >es and fear’s donations to exceed last year’s beinfj mfliBlof$81.6 million. Id ci»®''l'! ho , n i. i S au * u ™ cd New fork City m 1966, was telecast over nearly 200 stations this year. meant wBThe money raised for the associa- s. B helps support MDA’s worldwide leas aboutBearch effort and a national net- ral; they Brk of some 240 hospital-affiliated if listenii. linics. id theyp/B ;ouplesto|B . l ^foups get new lications sB Whooping It Up Juniors Rob Spiller of Junction and Chris Adams of Houston show their Aggie spirit Monday night during yell practice at All-University Night in Kyle Field. Texas A&M President Frank Vandiver, Photo by Kyle Hawkins Head Football Coach Jackie Sherrill and Student Body President Sean Royall spoke during the pro gram. The 1985-86 student leaders and football players also were introduced. opportunities University recognizing fraternities By TAMARA BELL Reporter known a* ile for cou| esigned to .■stematief] marriage, inical psyd he prop^A social category has been added nnesota, " j t0 ^ |j st () [ student activities at the Fanil |. exas a&M, Dr. John Koldus, vice ilient.■resident for student services, said, itionnaire newcate g 0r y grants social orga- probieni ’Kjtions, such as fraternities, the out am right to be recognized on campus, who has Bwhen University officials decided 1 his cola dlls summer to create a social cat- est ' Bory, Koldus said, it was with the mnaire. pought that this would open up a e been at»| lew area that would allow social rcent an 1 groups t 0 expand and take advan- be happ' ijjgeof the leadership and otjier ofa iled or cm portunities available at A&M. fraternal organizations have already taken advantage ol the new category. The Interfraternity Coun cil, the organization that governs the fraternities, was granted University recognition in August, Todd Ousley, student activities adviser, said. The Farmhouse fraternity is the first national fraternity to be ac- knowleged by A&M. Another frater nity, Kappa Sigmd, is waiting for fi nal approval, Ousley said. Once an organization is recog nized by the University, it is entitled to certain privileges such as: • Use of the A&M name to iden tify institutional affiliation. • Holding meetings and func tions on campus. • Having access to free publicity in publications like the University calendars, Student Organizations Guide, etc. • Publicizing activities on campus bulletin boards. Jeff Wright, president of Farm house fraternity, believes these priv ileges can only benefit the fraternity and its association with A&M. “Being recognized opens doors to work with not only our alumni, but to become more involved with A&M,” Wright said. “It certainly can’t hurt us. “We’ve worked all summer for this recognition,” he said. “A lot of fraternities think that once they hre recognized the University immedi ately takes over every detail like reg ulating rushing rules but that’s not true. That’s what the IFC is for.” Another concern of some frater nities is the University’s control of fi nances. Although most of the frater nity’s funds will be regulated through the Student Finance Cen ter, Koldus said money used for house accounts, paying rent on a house or saving to build one, will be regulated according to the individ ual fraternity’s rules. A social organization can gain rec ognition after its constitution has been verified and its statements on such topics as alcohol and hazing have been approved. The process usually takes two weeks, Ousley said. “He said there were trees in half, houses collapsed, semis turned over,” Gautier said. “He said he saw one Goodyear store where all there was was steel girders. Completely gone. It looked Tike one big tornado in the whole town. His words were ‘bombed out.’” The mayors of Biloxi, Gulfport, Pascagoula and Ocean Springs set an 8 p.m. to dawn curfew for Monday night, and warned that civilians seen on the streets during those hours could be arrested. In Gulfport, an apartment com- f »lex burned, leaving as many as 130 amilies homeless, officials said. There was no immediate word on the fire’s cause. Dauphin Island received at least two hours of sustained winds at 92 mph to 104 mph, with a gust peak ing at 122 mph, Will Shroeder of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, said. •Mobile County Sheriff Tom Pur vis estimated damage in the narrow island resort area at $30 million. Contributions to A&M benefit many students By DONNA DAVIS Reporter Scholarship contributions have been accepted at Texas A&M since 1946 when Cornelia Cooke Smith ave half of her estate “to be used to elp poor Texas-born students, male and white, get an education.” According to the Cornelia Cooke Smith story, this began a new pro gram — Opportunity Awards. The College received $19,100 in her name to provide a scholarship for one male to stay in school every year for as long as there was an A&M College of Texas. Since 1946, the College has be come the University, women have enrolled at A&M and the $19,100 Smith donated has become a drop in the bucket compared to the $10 mil lion to be awarded to students dur ing the 1985-86 school year. But contributions such as Smith’s are not uncommon. Organizations and former stu dents donate large sums of money through the Development Founda tion, the Aggie Club and the Asso ciation of Former Students toward a wide range of scholarships. Available scholarships range from as little as $200 per year to as much as $2,500 per year. Types of scholarships include one-time donations, contributions lasting for a designated period of time and the prestigious President’s Endowed Scholarship, which is per manent, allowing only the earning of interest from the principal donation to be spent. Though the money for these awards does not fall from the trees, it does come easily from the hands of generous former students. Harry Green, executive director of the Aggie Club, says students get so much out of the University that, when they leave, they want to give something back. “It is an emotional type of contri bution,” he says. For example, he says Clayton Wil liams cried at the ground breaking ceremony of the new Association of Former Students Building. Williams, a successful oil man, do nated money to A&M for a long time and was the principal donor for the new building. “A&M alumni have become very close to each other,” Green says. He says the alumni give what they can, and that “so far they’ve an swered the call.” Green informs state Aggie Clubs about A&M activities. He says club members are inter ested in a first class athletic program, and they donate money that can be used for athletic scholarships. Wallace Groff, the Club’s associate athletic director of finance, says this year the Aggie Club donated an ad ditional $406,000 to compensate for the tuition increase. Groff says the increase hurt the athletic program because out-of- state students on athletic schol arships no longer receive the waiver of out-of-state tuition. This affects out-of-state athletes on partial scholarships because they must now come up with additional money, - he says. Athletic scholarships are regu lated by state laws, the National Col legiate Athletic Association and the Southwest Conference. According to the 1985-86 athletic budget, $1,362,673 will be awarded in ath letic scholarships. Groff says that head count and equivalency sports also are used to categorize types of athletic schol arships. See Scholarships, page 6 loliday death toll at 44 I Associated Press Four hours short of the end of the bor Day weekend, at least 44 fatal- lies on Texas roads and highways hud been reported to state officials, ■uring the similar 78-hour period kb! year, 41 Texans were killed and Be others died later of injuries. The i)unt began at 6 p.m. Friday and Bded at midnight Monday. ■ Many of the accident victims were tun wearing seat belts, despite a new law requiring them for those in the lont seat, Department of Public fety officials said. The following fatalities have been ported by the DPS: • Jimmie Atlas Foust, 52, of Mar- lall, was killed when the car he was fiving left the roadway and landed ib a culvert. I* Matilde Castellanos, 19, of frownwood, died of injuries suf- red when her car ran off the road d overturned three times. • Penelope Ann Arrington, 30, of Garland, died in a three-car colli sion. • Paul Gerard Padilla, of Hous ton, was killed when his car flipped over several times. • Mrs. Gordie Allison, 83, of Pol- lok, died of injuries she suffered in a two-car collision. • Margie Allene Williams, 3, of Kilgore, was killed when she was struck by a car. • Jimmy Richards, 65, of Fort Worth, died Sunday when his car slid into an exit sign. • Clay Alan Martin, 22, of Am arillo, was killed when his pickup skidded and overturned. • Philip Mederios, 52, of El Paso, was killed when his motorcycle struck the rear of a vehicle stopped at a red light. • Mildred Morce, 44, of El Paso, died of massive injuries suffered when she was struck by a car. Society obsessed with ‘perfect body’ By D’ANNA HEIDEMAN Reporter Continuous exercise, concoction diets and cos metic surgery are the answers to achieving to day’s image of the “perfect body.” “Attractive is what culture decides it is,” says Dr. Steve Picou, a sociology professor at Texas A&M. “Commercialism backs up this lifestyle to achieve bodily perfection.” Picou says the exercise craze began because “real” data showed regular exercise was essential to live longer. He says the American Heart Asso ciation’s research on exercise not only stresses the health benefits connected with exercise, but that exercise also enhances psychological well-being. “The jogging-exercise craze had h real impact on what became socially important,” Picou says. “It caught on visually with clothing trends and expanded into the social demand for a physically beautifully appearance.” The concept of a glamourous lifestyle prompts people, especially women, to have cosmetic sur gery, he says. “Playboy has recently featured a 54-year-old woman for one of its centerfolds, and the Joan Collins’ image is very popular,” he says. “These popular media topics direct society into over-con cern with physical perfection instead of spiritual perfection.” The quest for the perfect body is what con cerns Dr. John Kinross-Wright, a psychiatrist specializing in body image. “Basically, I examine how my patients perceive themselves and how they feel others perceive them,” Kinross-Wright says. He says most of his patients are people with se rious body image problems, such as anorexia and bulimia. But he does treat those who can’t relate to others because they feel they are “ugly.” “Through therapy I help people learn to ac cept themselves tne way they are,” Kinross- Wright says. “Some have gone through extensive plastic surgeries or are exercise addicts because they desperatly desire a youthful body.” Our need to be on top and stay on top, and the direction of the present social trends is what both Picou and Kinross-Wright seem to think pushes people to take health risks such as fad diets, ob sessive exercise and even physical reconstruction. Dr. Joseph Argis, a plastic surgeon, says cos metic surgery is the fastest-growing medical spe cialty in the United States. “According to an American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons’ report, cosmetic surgery is on the upswing by about 65 percent since 1980,” Argis says. “The ASPRS calculates that it has approximatly 3,000 certified surgeons performing approximatly 500,000 esthetic sur geries in a year’s time.” Esthetic surgery, defined by Argis, is an opera tion not essential to maintain one’s health, but one that aids a “normal” person in his efforts to look better. Argis says the ASPRS does attribute close to 2 million procedures of reconstructive surgery to necessary operations such as treatment for burn victims, loss of limbs or breast reconstruction af ter mastectomies. One of the latest techniques in cosmetic sur gery is suction lipectomy, Argis s^ys. “This procedure sucks those fatty deposits you ladies call saddlebags away forever,” he says. “The surgeon uses a cannula, a small hollowed tube, through a tiny incision in the crease of the buttocks and gently probes for the chicken-like fat, which is literally sucked out,” Argis explains. “This leaves a very little scar that disappears in time, and, once the skin’s elasticity is regained, the legs look great.” Since the fat cells are virtually vacuumed away, Argis says the “saddlebags” will not reappear, no matter how much weight a woman may gain. Other reconstructive surgeries that have be- See Perfect, page 8