Wednesday, October 9, IQSb/The Battalion/Page 7 ■■■■■■ Students unite to demand better gynecological care | By SANDRA SUTPHEN Reporter WWe must demand proper gyne cological care and access to birth control." ••A flyer with this message was dis tributed throughout the Texas A&M / University campus as publicity for a meeting held in the MSC Lounge ; uesday night. ■The meeting was held in response to an article that appeared in the September 25 edition of The Battal ion. he article dealt with the cancella tion of some health services at A.P. Bejitel Health Center— particularly the lack of a gynecologist on staff. I; kbout 50 students and faculty re sponded to the flyer by attending the meeting. ^■hree students — Katie Cokinos, Anti Robbins and Emily Lee — orga nized the meeting because they said the health center should serve the nepds of the students, and more than 12,000 of these students are i nprnen. ® he group’s organizers said they Heel there should be ready access to I gynecological care at A&M without ^Bng to go outside the University 1 10$ private doctor or clinic. Khe health center has been send ing students who need gynecological care or birth control to Planned Par enthood because of understaffing and unwillingness of doctors to han dle birth control cases, Robbins said. Cost is a problem with students Organizers of the group have joined with MSC Great Issues to provide speakers at Rudder foun tain to bring the health care problem to the stu dents Thursday begin ning at 11 a.in. having to go elsewhere for these services, said Sarah Hambrick, a ju nior psychology major. One member of the audience mentioned that the cost of a private doctor may be prohibitive when both the husband and wife are students. The health center does offer some gynecological care, but it must be a specific problem, Robbins said. No examinations are given. Officials at the health center have been reluctant to talk about the sub jects of birth control and gynecologi cal care, Cokinos said. Robbins said the group’s organiz ers are not affiliated with any orga nization. They are simply students concerned about what they see as a problem with health care at the Uni versity in general, Robbins added. It seems as if health center offi cials are trying to make a moral judgement, Hambrick said. “ The point is that it is descrimina- tion,” said Gregg Cantrell, a doctoral student in History. The group decided to take action. Cokinos and Robbins plan to write and submit a bill to the student sen ate on the topic of improper health care at A&M. Ideas such as petitions, picketing and a “silent march,” which is a mid night march to President Vandiver’s house, were suggested as a way to educate the students and show stu dent concern over the problem. Cokinos and Robbins have united with MSC Great Issues to bring speakers to speak at Rudder foun tain Thursday to bring the health care problem to the students because this is a topic which many students may not be aware of , Robbins said. Three A&M representatives of the National Organization of Women (NOW) suggested that the group unite with NOW to get the benefits of being a campus organiza tion. otyj.tlll Tests show cattle, human blood similar Associated Press LUBBOCK — The need for hu man blood donations could be dras- ,1 ticallv reduced some day if Dr. ] , |i„ Mario Feola’s hypothesis about cattle |i, s : - blood proves valid. ^■or the past eight years, the pro fessor of thoracic surgery at Texas Tech University Health Sciences ll l ta Center has inched along with his de velopment of a method of purifying cattle hemoglobin for human use, and he says within a few' months it should be ready for testing in hu- !(l[ mans. | “jf\ll hemoglobins are tite same ted uui nutre or less,” Feola said, so the beality of the cattle hemoglobin, if it works in humans, will be that there Ivillbe no need for typing and cross of blood m .in enu i gent \ Thl cattle hemoglobin, mixed with a salike solution, would be injected in the recipient and would pass through the system, providing build ing blocks for the body’s replenish ment of the blood supply, he said. Theoretically, emergency medical technicians could carry powdered hemoglobin in ambulances and give transfusions at the scene, Feola said. Also, “we destroy all viruses in the blood, so there is no danger of dis ease being transmitted, so we elimi nate that risk,” Feola said. He believes the cattle hemoglobin will be accepted. “Right now people are afraid of human blood,” he said, “because of the fatal diseases such as AIDS that can be transmitted through the blood.” Some other doctors in the United States are trying to create the hemo globin powder from human blood, he said, but he considers the bovine blood better. “It transports oxygen better than human hemoglobin,” Feola said. From the results of the experi ments in animals, Feola is optimistic about the bovine hemoglobin’s use in humans. In his recent experiments with lab animals, Feola said the bovine hemo globin has been working. He has drained two-thirds of the blood volume from different species such as mice, cats and monkeys, and then injected them with the cattle hemoglobin. He said all have done well. “They’re surviving forever,” he said of the animals. “They start re building their own blood much fas ter than with just a saline solution.” Within a week, the animals have rebuilt the two-thirds of their blood they lost, he said. Feola and a lab in Boston are in the process of designing new tech nology that would create the cattle hemoglobin on a large scale for hu mans, he said. Feola said he can make only one liter of the hemoglobin at a time us ing his present method, but with the new technology he says he hopes to produce 100 liters a day. 9. Itt f TUI/' If XTM-! IV*! Walt; Disneys UU€DN€SDAY OCTOBER 9 Rudder Theatre, 730 pm. $1.50 \acgi IXtll! 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Find out how the Vectra PC can fit your needs—whether technical, pro fessional or secretarial. Call the Texas A&M Micro Center at 845-4081 or Business Systems, Dan Morgridge 713-443-5317. For Technical Systems call Lynn Jones at 713-776-6400 L HEWLETT U r PACKARD Business Computing Systems HP Vectra Specs: MEMORY 256K expandable to 3.64MB MICROPROCESSOR Intel 80286; runs at 8MHZ Optional: Intel 8287; co-processor runs at 5.33 MHZ OPERATING SYSTEM MS-DOS 3.1 (compatible with PC-DOS 3.1) Vectra, along with all Hewlett Packard computer products, will be on display at the micro fair Oct. 9, 10 in Rm 225 of the MSC 9:30-6:00 each day DATA STORAGE 5!4" internal flexible discs (360K or 12MB capacity) 20MB internal hard discs 3'4" stand-alone flexible discs;20MB or 40MB stand-alone hard discs. Lotus 1 2 3 business graphics shown Lotus and 1-2 3 are registered trademarks of Lotus Development Corporation MultiMate“ is a U S trademark of Multimate International R BASE'" is a U S trademark of Microrim.* Inc