A CAW of RECENT WRIST KNEE OR ANKLE INJURY? Do you have a recent joint injury (e.g., sprain, contusion, inflammation) causing swelling, bruising, and/or pain? Volunteers interested in participating in in vestigative drug study will be paid for their time and cooperation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE THE EPISCOPAL ii| / CHURCH & STUDENT CENTER g Announce CLASSES FOR THOSE INTERESTED in PREPARING FOR CONFIRMATION $ and/or learning more about the j:* Episcopal Church * CLASSES MEET IN THE CHURCH Beginning 8:00 p.m. Sunday Oct. 6 906 Jersey College Station (So. Side of Campus) Ph. 696-1726 Tuesday, October 1, 1985/The Battalion/Page 11 AHEWf HAVING fw VST’ Signature Office Services O 420 Tarrow-Suite 10 S 268-2759 AG’s - Spend more time in the sun. Send your typing to us! 25% Discount on all work processed in October. COUPON c 0 u p 0 N ro$3 ale Murpki >ve in the ft er tog dory over Ik ay night, larper ledffi to left-cttiffl , and Hat looper to Washington i Bring this coupon to the Brazos Valley Golf Range for free $1.25 basket w/ purchase of $3.75 basket Children under 12 accompanied by an adult receive free $125 basket through September and October Hours Mon.-Fri. 3 p.m.-9 Sat 12 p.m.-10 Sun 1-8 East Bypass across from Mill 696-1220 COUPON FUTURE TEACHERS! PREPARE FOR THE PPST c o u p o N DATE: Saturday, Oct. 5 TIME: 9-12 1-4 or 5-8 COST: $35 PLACE: The Hilton INSTRUCTOR: Dr. De Johnson CALL 822-2254 (after 5:00) For Reservations or Information COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON e in sevent tal of 20I! e lOthtimt* truck out S College Station Only Any complete oil change $3 OFF with student We’ll change your Oil & Filter, Lube your car and check all Fluid levels. (Up to 5 qts. per vehicle) ey I KlNfrft 764-7992 ,|d have ave fi th three have mow two days agether tl sitivesidd ghtdirecw- things i"! “Overall t all" LOWEST PRICES IN TEXAS NOdOOO NQdOOO NOdOOO I.D. Holleman ★ • ^ •Water LUBE KING Rooh’s & Tower Park £ OLLEMAN CD NOdOOD NOdnOO NOdflOO LECTURE Computers in the Humanities and the Social Sciences by Joseph Raben Founding editor of Computers and the Humanities, Computers, and the Social Sciences, SCOPE: Scholarly Communication and Online Printing and Education, and Computers and Translation. Oct. 2, Wednesday Memorial Student Center 206 4 p.m. Sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts, the Dept, of Computer Science and the Sterling Evans Library Battalion Classified 845-2611 Lab monitors, diagnoses various ills Ohio clinic treats restless sleepers Associated Press DAYTON, Ohio — Donald Light- ner spends part of his days much the way most people spend their nights — fast asleep. He’s one of a number of Ameri cans with apnea, a disorder in which a person briefly stops breathing while asleep, and as a result doesn’t get a good night’s sleep. Apnics are commonly overweight and male, and snore as they try to breathe through excess fat, said Jane Skinner-De Marchis, a polysomno- S hic technologist at Kettering ical Center, which opened a sleep disorders lab in January. The job interferes with her own sleep, though she has no problem grabbing a nap when she can. As the person who runs the equipment for sleep tests, she’s used to working overnight shifts, as well as running afternoon nap tests. About 200 centers are accredited by the Association of Sleep Disor ders Centers. A center has to be open at least a year before it can ap ply for accreditation. Skinner-DeMarquis and Dr. Mark A. MacNealy, a medical neurologist and polysomnographer at Grand view Hospital, say there is a need for the service, but question whether Dayton needs three centers. Grandview opened its center three years ago. The Kettering lab opened in January. In July, Miami Valley Hospital opened a neurosci ences institute and center for sleep and wake disorders. Dr. Martin Scharf, clinical direc tor of the center at Miami Valley and director of the Cincinnati Sleep Dis orders Center, estimates that one- third of the population complains of sleep difficulty. MacNealy estimates one in seven people suffer a chronic sleep disor der. Red Cross begins campus blood drives (continued frdm page 1) is administered by Wadley through a system called the Aggie Blood Club. According to the system, for each blood unit donated by an Aggie, a credit is added to the blood club ac count. The credits can then be ex changed with the Wadley Institute for blood whenever an Aggie or an Aggie’s family member needs it. Wadley, a member of the Ameri can Association of Blood Banks, serves primarily Dallas-area hospi tals and other areas of the country. Brazos County hospitals are not a member of the association, so they don’t receive Wadley blood. Aggies — students, faculty and families — who don’t receive blood from member hospitals may send their bill to Student Government, which forwards it to Wadley. Wadley will then reimburse the cost of the blood and any processing costs not covered by insurance. The credits are good for a year. Wadley also says Aggies are cov ered for their entire life. “A lot of old Ags use this service,” Morrison says. “We think we owe it to Ags to nave good drives each year.” Faulkenbery says whether Aggies get blood or not really depends on the hospital they go to, not on to whom they donate blood. “The Red Cross covers 50 percent of the entire nations’ hospitals,” Faulkenbery says, “so whether you get Red Cross blood really depends on whether that particular hospital is served by us. It’s a community phi losophy.” Faulkenbery emphasized that comparisons between Red Cross and Wadley credit policies aren’t fair be cause the Red Cross covers commu nities where Wadley covers individu als. Local Red Cross officials argue that they are trying to cover some of the Brazos County community blood needs with A&M blood drives. “The American Red Cross as sumes students are residents of Bryan-College Station,” DuVall says. “Therefore the Red Cross is respon sible for your blood needs whether you’re in Dallas, Houston or Austin. “They (Red Cross) will cover you as long as you’re in school. The Red Cross will credit you for blood even if you don’t give blood, as long as you’re a student, you’re covered.” DuVall says tne Red Cross was looking at some empty shelves two weeks ago. “Last week (two weeks ago) we had high blood use,” DuVall says. “Without the blood collected at the (vet school) drive we’d be in trouble, I think last week was the highest (lo cal) blood usage since last May.” . DuVall says the chronic problem for the local Red Cross is getting do nations to match blood use, some thing that rarely happens in the Bra zos County. Morrison says the blood drive committee was pleased with the first ever Red Cross blood drive and says Student Government will meet with the Red Cross on setting up an on- campus drive, probably in the spring. “We were just worried that if we had six blood drives a year,” Morri son says, “then the students would get burned out. We don’t want blood drives to be casual.” Jane Skinner-DeMarchis places wires on Donald Lightner for a test at Kettering Medical Center’s AP photo sleep disorders lab in Dayton, Ohio. Three sleep disorder centers are located in Dayton. Scharf says the primary complaint is insomnia. Another common com plaint is apnea, which causes some people to complajn they’re more tired than when they went to bed. Snoring is hard on the body be cause “snoring represents blocking of the airway,” he said. Typically, during snoring, blood pressure rises, which has made doctors question the relationship between snoring, high blood pressure and strokes. Sleep is important because “sleep recharges our batteries and allows us to function optimally. Most of us are sleep deprived,” which affects sus ceptibility to illness, Scharf said. A sleep disorders test amasses re sults of between 1,000 and 1,500 pages of neurological functions dur ing a night, Scharf said. Lightner, 35, a research chemist from Enon, Ohio, didn’t realize he had a sleep disorder until co-work- ers last year reported he was drop ping off to sleep at odd times and would seem to fade in and out of conversations at work. As a graduate student with responsibilities of a family, he was accustomed to keep ing strange hours. After testing in Cincinnati, he un derwent surgery last fall to remove excess tissue from his throat and pharynx, but his problem was not to tally corrected. Lightner underwent a follow-up test at Kettering to see why surgery hadn’t fully corrected the problem. Book cites corporate waste Associated Press NEW YORK — The private sec tor wastes $862 billion a year, according to a new book on cor- E orate bloat, which the authors ope will rival in importance the celebrated Grace Commission re port on waste in the federal gov ernment. “If the federal bureaucracy stunts economic growth, the cor porate bureaucracy does six times worse,” says Mark Green, co-au thor of “The Challenge of Hidden Profits: Reducing Corporate Bu reaucracy and Waste,” published by William Morrow 8c Co. To arrive at the $862 billion fig ure, “We took the best studies and estimates from scholars, consul-' tants and business leaders,” Green said. In each of 13 categories, the waste estimate was taken from ei ther an existing economic study or from a recognized expert in the field, and these are cited in more than 1,100 footnotes as well as a name index. Other categories of corporate waste include environmental abuse, market constraints, product safety, innovation, discrimination and “corpocracy,” a term they coined “to distinguish the cor porate bureaucracy from its more well-known federal cousin,” Green said. Acknowledging that the “meth odology is necessarily primitive and imprecise,” Green and Berry arrived at the $862 billion figure. “If Professor Murray Weiden- baum could make a guesstimate about the cost of regulatory waste and J. Peter Grace (head of W.R. Grace 8c Co.) could make an esti mate about the cost of federal waste, we should attempt a parallel effort to guesstimate the cost of corporate waste,” said Green. Back in 1980, Weidenbaum, an economics professor at Washing ton University in St. Louis, esti mated the cost of compliance with federal regulations at about $120 billion a year. In 1983, the Grace Commission issued its report claiming that $424 billion could be saved over three years if government waste was reduced. Eleventh graders taking exit-tests (continued from page 1) a failing grade while 25 percent will flunk the math test on Wednesday — a total of about 62,000 students. They also have estimated the fail ing grades among all blacks will be at least 45 percent and 35 percent for all Hispanics. Those making failing grades will be able to take the exit-level test again on May 1 and 2, and two more times during their senior year, said Pat Potter, Texas Education Agency director for special programs. “There are no tricky items” on the tests, said Keith Cruse, TEA director of educational assessment. “These are things they have been taught and that are essential for a high school graduate to know.” State Education Commissioner W.N. Kirby has predicted to the Board of Education that the passing average will rise rapidly the next two years as the state’s new emphasis on academics in schools becomes effec tive. The tougher new curriculum standards, laid down by the Legis lature, did not become effective until the 1985-86 school year. The Legislature’s mandate for exit-level tests also requires school districts to provide courses to help those students who do not make passing scores. Special remedial help must be provided each failing stu dent. The Texas Educational Assess ment of Minimum Skills tests ini tially consisted of four multiple- choice questions on each of 18 objec tives in both the mathematics and English language arts tests, making a total of 144 questions. However, the Board of Education at its July meeting agreed that stu dents should not be penalized for missing any of the questions in areas not adequately taught to them be fore the reforms took effect. Reagan offers Heckler new job (continued from page 1) spokesman said. “Meanwhile, she re mains as secretary of health and hu man services.” Speakes was asked repeatedly why Reagan wanted Heckler out of the Cabinet post but would not reply di rectly. Although Speakes characterized the offer as a promotion, it would mean a pay cut of about $15,000 a year ana the loss of a department largest budget in nployee the world with the exception ot the entire U.S. and So viet budgets — $330 billion. Reports had circulated for days that Reagan was about to name Heckler ambassador to Ireland. “That’s a lovely position — for someone else,” Heckler said of the ambassadorship last month. Much of the confirmation for re ports Heckler’s position might be in jeopardy came from her supporters on Capitol Hill whom she sought to rally to her defense. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, said Regan told him the president would offer Heckler the ambassadorship. Hatch’s spokesman reported. The spokesman, Paul Smith, also quoted Hatch as saying Regan promised to pass on a letter to the president urging Reagan to keep Heckler in her Cabinet post. Soviets confirm kidnappings £ (continued from page 1) anuary 1984. Thirty-five foreigners ave been abducted since then and 14 other foreigners are still missing — six Americans, four Frenchmen, three Britons and an Italian. Lebanese authorities identified the Soviet diplomats as Second Sec retary Valery Kornev, Commerce Attache Oleg Spirin, Cultural At tache Arkady Katakov and embassy physician Nikolai Versky. Anonymous men claiming to rep resent Islamic Jihad telephoned two Western news agencies in Beirut and claimed the Shiite Moslem funda mentalist group had kidnapped the Soviets and would kill them unless Syrian-backed leftists end their siege of Moslem fundamentalists in the northern port city of Tripoli. (The news agencies asked not to be identi fied.) Leftist militias, including the Mos cow-oriented Lebanese Communist Party, have besieged Moslem funda mentalists in a bloody two-week bat tle for control of Lebanon’s second largest city. The anonymous callers said the lyr ild soon” unless Moscow pressured Syria, its main ally in the Middle East, into stopping “the annihilation of Moslems m Tripoli with Soviet tanks and artillery guns.” The Associated Press bureau in Beirut also received a call from a man claiming to represent Islamic Ji had. He said in Arabic that the Sovi ets “will not be freed until the siege of Tripoli is lifted.” Then he hung up without mentioning any death threat. There was no way to authenticate the calls. The shadowy Islamic Jihad has claimed before that it holds six Americans. The group says it wants to trade the Westerners for 17 com rades jailed in Kuwait for a string of bombings in 1983. Kuwait has refused to free any of the men, including three sentenced to death. Islamic Jihad remained silent Monday atiout a reported plan to produce some of the hostages at a news conference. A caller claiming to represent the fundamentalists told a Western news agency by telephone Sunday that some of the Americans would ap pear at a news conference. The caller said in Arabic that after a news conference, the U.S. govern ment “will assume full responsibility for the lives of the hostages.” He did not elaborate. He gave no indication when or where the news conference would be held. There was no way to verify whether the call was authentic. In Washington, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said of the report: “We would, of course, wel come any first-hand evidence of the well-being and the actual situation of the hostages.” Speakes repeated the administra tion’s refusal to make concessions to terrorists to obtain the hostages’ re lease, but added: “We’re willing to talk to any party in order to obtain their safe and prompt release.”