I Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, October 9, 1985 Off Campus Aggies Meeting Tonight! 7 p.m. 601 Rudder See Ya There! a novel idea! New and used hardbacks, paperbacks, magazines, records and cassettes... all at half price or less. 3828 TEXAS AVENUE Bryan, Texas 846-2738 we buy end Bell anything printed or recorded MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE We are overstocked and beef prices are at a five year low. Our coolers and freezers are full of grain-fed beef that is equivalent to U.S. Choice and U.S. Good grade beef. We must sell some product to have room for the rest of the semester. This is an excellent time for you to capitalize on our low prices and help us reduce our inventory. BEEF SIDES (cut. wrapped, and frozen) Average weight 300-400 lbs. Sold on hanging weight basis. BEEF HINDQUARTERS (cut, wrapped, and frozen) Average weight 125-200 lbs. Sold on hanging weight basis. $1.16 per lb. $1.35 per lb. PRICE PER POUND REGULAR SALE 30-40 lb. BOX BEEF ROASTS CHUCK ROASTS (bone-in. 3-6 lbs.) $1.39 $ .99 $ .79 ARM ROASTS (bone-in. 3-6 lbs.) $1.89 $1.19 $ .99 SIRLOIN TIP ROASTS (boneless, 3-6 lbs.) $2.69 $1.69 $1.29 RUMP ROASTS (boneless. 3-6 lbs.) $2.69 $1.69 $1.29 BRISKETS (trimmed, boneless, 5-8 lbs.) $1.89 $1.49 $1.29 TENDERLOIN ROASTS (boneless. 3-6 lbs.) $5.00 $3.99 $3.69 BEEFSTEAKS ROUND STEAKS (l/pkg. I/2 in. thick) $2.29 $1.29 $1.09 RIB STEAKS (2/pkg, l in. thick) $2.79 $2.29 $1.99 BREAKFAST STEAKS (thin cut strip steaks) $2.99 $2.49 $2.09 SIRLOIN STEAKS (l/pkg. I in. thick boneless) $3.29 $2.49 $2.19 T-BONE STEAKS (2/pkg. I in. thick) $3.69 $2.69 $2.39 TENDERLOIN STEAKS (filet mignon) $5.00 $3.99 $3.69 Other Beef. Lamb. Pork, Sausage, and Dairy Products are available. Prices effective through November 2. 1985. We are open for business Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Saturday October 12 and November 2 for the Houston and SMU football games. We are located on the West Campus between the Kleberg Center and the Horticulture/Forest Science Building. (Phone 845-5651). Robot doctoring offs A&M graduate student plans for medical care’s future Froi By BILL HUGHES Reporter At a time when most prospective Texas A&M December graduates are thinking about what they'll be doing in 1986, Jim Vandenberg is thinking about what health care will be like in 1995. Vandenberg, a graduate student in architecture, is working on a pro ject for his master’s thesis called “Advanced Diagnostics System In corporated.” The thesis is a concep tualization of what health facilities and their peripheral systems will look like 10 years from now. The project is being partially funded by a joint fellowship Van denberg received from the Ameri can Institute of Architects and the American Hospital Association. Vandenberg will present his find ings in Toronto at the American Hospital Association’s national con vention next July. The focus of Vandenberg’s pro ject is the use of computers in medi cal diagnosis. Vandenberg’s system includes a one-stop computer-aided diagnostic and treatment center. Subscribers to the system will be able to have medi cal histories taken and updated, computer-analyzed lab tests per formed and computer-aided scan ning done in one step at the center instead of being shuttled from lab to lab. Texans host Associated Press AUSTIN — Four top Texas polit ical strategists are hosting a private $500-a-plate luncheon Friday for Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., ap parently to discuss his 1988 political plans. “This is sort of a joint venture,” said Joy Anderson, executive assis tant to former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes, one of the hosts. “They are hoping to begin a dia logue with the senator since he is now supporting oil and gas deregu lation and he also is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee,” Anderson said. The other hosts are Shannon Rat liff, Gov. Mark White’s campaign treasurer; Austin businessman Jack Martin, a former aide to Sen. Lloyd Bentsen and Bentsen’s 1982 cam paign manager; and Ed Wendler, Austin land developer and lobbyist with strong ties to trie Texas Demo cratic Party. Vandenberg’s system includes a one-stop computer- aided diagnostic and treatment center. Subscribers to the system will be able to have medical histories taken and updated, computer-analyzed lab tests performed and computer-aided scanning done in one step at the center instead of being shuttled from lab to lab. HOU m Tue The center’s diagnostic computers will catch problems early, allowing minor treatment to begin at the cen ter and preventiirg unnecessary trips to the hospital, Vandenberg says. Peripheral components include home monitoring units and mobile units. The home monitoring units will allow subscribers to tie into the sys tem and be diagnosed without leav ing their homes. Subscribers to the mobile system will wear wrist mon itors which can send information for diagnosis back to the center, as well as acting as locating devices if the subscribers are too ill to make the trip to the center. Some of Vandenberg’s research for the project was done in Boston over the summer. He worked for the Ritchie Organization, an architect i- ral design firm specializing in health facilities — a bonus, Vandenberg says, because he was able to talk about his project with people in the firm who specialized in different f ac ets of health facilities design. He also did some research at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology. In the middle of the summer, Vandenberg made a side trip to the American Hospital Association con vention in Chicago where he talked with members about the feasibility of the technology involved in his sys tem and to get some ideas on how to further develop the project. Vandenberg plans to complete the design of the computer diagnos tic center before his graduation. In the spring, he savs he plans to work on tne presentation phase of the project, which includes further de velopment of the theory and a pro grant which details the different sys tems, processes and other facets of the project such as how the role of physicians will change under the new system. “Get a job," Vandenbergi;, a laugh. He says he’d like to kind of design capacity ijp' kind of design firm, but»^ r |j nes c i.dtv in health facilities will- 1 j_j ous Ik* a f actor in his choice of, )aren , t (,<) - nes, or Vandenberg says his inet r< ff nt health facilities begirt when hares o senior majoring in envinj yj K . design. He entered a stair, nore tl sign competition sponsorn j on () f j Texas Medical Center Inn American Institute of Mp riKl Committee on Architect. ian, sa Health and won first pi si.ooo. :)r stod The design was cbosa 'ould e> 1 exas Medical Center of: But F; toi its Central Facilities 1-hedule \ andenberg used thepmfc labo to continue work as a gi >r. dent in die master s pi sv The I chiiecture. led a fe lanent \ andenberg also has tec j r ’s atte James S. and Mary G.B| 1 ellowship ss bile in graduate^ I Ik \\ light Idhmshipwasi^BV What does he plan to do af ter makes his presentation in July? he former student James 5. ^ is awarded to a graduate sta architecture during the sua nai year of study. Vanderte ing tfie $5,000 from this Id to help defray travel and! costs involved in the destii and design of his system. By M fund-raising luncheon for Kenned Kennedy’s Senate seat will Ik* up for election in 1988, a presidential election year. Kennedy has not said what his 1988 political plans w ill be. Ratliff said Tuesday, “It is my thought the money will be for the senator’s position in the Senate." host the ut asking trip to Ja- Ratlifi said he agreed u Kennedy lunch witho White, who is on a trade pan. l-ast Saturday, former Gov. Bill Clements, who is a Republican can didate for governor, told a meeting Some [raduat- UOO.OO f Propo ■rs Nov. aid in a Pane Texas 1 of young Repuliluam iLjiauro s was “a junior-size 1.BJ who>|ancli F Ik* on the ticket with ltd o aid i o in 1988." White’s aides have denit governor has any aims tow pi csidcntial campaign. Kent Hance will speak at Rudder tonighl V By JENS B. KOEPKE Staff Writer Kent Hance, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomi nation in the spring, will speak on issues relating to the election at 7 tonight in 701 Rudder. The address, sponsored by MSG Political Forum, is part of the cotn- mittee’s gubernatorial series de signed to allow candidates to pre sent their views on issues relating to the election and on politics in gen eral. “Students will become more ef fective voters because of the issues involved in the gubernatorial se ries," said Heidi Kemp, state pro grams coordinator for Political Fo rum. In 1978, after a career as an at torney, college professor, rancher and state senator, Hance was elected to the U.S. Congress. In 1981, he teamed with now U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm to push budget cuts through to congressional approval. After serving a second term in the House. Hance ran for the U.S. Senate, losing a close race; Sen. Lloyd Doggett in tk Democratic primary niiKf tion. Doggett losttoGran: election. In May 1985, Hanctjo® Texas Republican Party sc was happy to be in a partuk philosophy and his partyafi finally matched. Kemp said the gubemaw ties will allow stuciemsto# the candidates differ on fating to the election. W Freshmen & Sophomores cA^ ce The schedule lor Freshmen and Sophomore photos for the 1986 Aggieland has been extended to October 11. Photos will be taken at Yearbook Associate’s studio located above Campus Photo Center at Northgate. Office hours are 8:30-12 and 1-4:30.