Page 14/The BattalionTuesday, November 12,1985 lAfforri’e ■ tvIImI U|7 :: Tuesday INTRAMURALSt Entries close: Weightlifting 6 pjm* in 154 BETA BETA BETA BIOLOGICAL HONOR SOCIEI'Y: wilt meet at 7 p.m< in 107 BSRE. I' ' STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN: wil] meet at 7 p.m. in 302 Rudder. AGGIE G.O.P.: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Zachry for brief meeting and Aggieland picture. - FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 145 MSC. ' U • .V :i.. x • l 4 -. ; ; TAMU ONE-WHEELERS: will meet at 6 p.m. in from of G. Rolhe White. ' . ' ' • NAITONAL RESIDENCE HALL HONORARY: will meet p m^ m in ^ u<:l< * er * Aggie land picture in MSC at 6:30 AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. ALVIN HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet, at 7:15 in 504 Rud der. Vearhook picture at 8 p.m.', . ': , A ON CAMPUS CATHOLICS: will meet at 9:30 p.m. at Ail faiths Chapel. ’ C'... I APO-STUDENT GOVERNMENT-OPA: AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE Nov. 11-14 from 10 a.r».-6 p.m. in Shisa, Com mons. MSC. PRE-LAW SOCIETY: will meet at 7 p.m., 6th floor Rudder. BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION* will have a tour ol College of Medicine and Medical Sciences Library k meeting at 7 p.m. 201 VMS, : . ••••••'• 1 • ,. p TAMO HORSEMEN S ASSOCIATION: wUl meet at 7 p;ro. m Louts Fierce Pavilion. Trainer Meg Flemming will speak and give a jumping demonstration, •; X 3 x- y' TRAP Sc SHEET CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 110 Military : Science Bldg. ■ 1 ' paid/professional association for indus trial DISTRIBUTION: will meet at 7:15 p.m. in 701 Rudder. Everyone is welcome to attend the audiovisual presentations of Megatrends and In Search of Excellence. free admission. ASSOCIATION OF BAPTIST STUDENTS: will show the film “ T he Greatest Story Never Told” at 7:30 p.m. tn All Faiths Chapel. 1 STUDENT! ACTIVITIES: Applications available for Speak ers’ Seminar through November 27. For more information call 845-1138 or come by 20S Pavilion. LA TERTULIA; will take a study break at 9 p.m. at the Flying 1 ornato. - • ,"V •. • ^; : .'H :. Wednesday GAY STUDENT SERVICES: whi meet at B:3G CaB 775- 1797. • v ^ TEXAS A&M METEOROLOGY CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in the Observatory at the O&M Building. INTRAMURALS: Weightlifting contest at 5 p.m. in Weight lifting Club Room. ' STUDENT ACTIVITIES: Applications available for Speak- . eiV Seminar through November 27. For more call 845-1133 ot come by 208 Pavilion. APO-STUDENT GOVERNMENT-OP A: AGGIE BLOOD D R1VE at Shisa, (Commons Sc MSC 10 a. m. -6 p.m. TAMU PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS: will meet at 7:15 pan. in 308 Rudder. HISTORY DEPT.: History film series: “Birth of a Nation* at 7 p.m. in 113 BSBE. • -G; TEXAS A&M SAILING CLUB: will take yearbook picture at 6 p.m. in Zachry. ' ' giish Dept. 7 p.m.-8;30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR METALS: will meet at 7.p.m:' in 127B Zaduy to hear Mr. Charles Arnold of Dow Chemi cals speak on corrosion, .. yG ' TAU KAPPA: will meet at 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder. AGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY:'will meet at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. o • . . RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 701 Rudder. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m. at A&M Presbyterian Church:;:.:.:: ?Sd- SULEY’S SYMPOSIUM:' 11:50 a.m. in from of Sul Ross statue. Denis Davis, President ol the MSC, will speak. AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOGIATIONj will meet at 7:30 p.m. ai College Station Community Center. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet m 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. £ ; AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PERSONNEL ADMINISTRA TION (ASPA): will meet at 7:30 p.m, in 163 Blocker. Terri Poindexter from Westinghduse wilt present the interview process. ' Stores fight shoplifting (continued from page 1) to town preying on Dillard's stores in this region. Petty described the non-profes sional as a person who shoplifts to see if he can get away with it or as a person who just doesn’t have enough money to purchase an item. Shoplifters come from all back grounds and show up in every age bracket. Kapella says a 60-year-old man re cently was arrested in a College Sta tion store. “Shoplifters can be from 3 to 90 years old,” he says. To help deter shoplifters, Petty says Dillard’s uses the sensormatic system, which sounds an alarm if anyone tries to exit with tagged clothing. “Loss prevention personnel” also move about the store to mingle with shoppers and keep an eye out for anyone suspicious, ne says. Walling says more money is lost by shoplifting from department stores than robbery or theft combined. “Communities should be con cerned about it because every item that comes out of the store has to be E aid for and stolen goods result in igher prices,” he says. Most shoplifters see it as a game and do not realize the stakes in volved, Walling says. Once someone is caught he is “tagged” and has a record, ne says. People think that all they will get is a slap on the wrist, he says, but since shoplifting is recorded as a theft, they will get slapped with a pair of handcuffs instead. Such an offense also can keep someone from getting future em ployment very easily, Walling says. Chimney Hill jL Bowling Center "A Family Recreation Center’ 40 Lanes — Automatic Scoring League & Open Bowling Bar & Snack Bar STUDENT SPECIAL MONDAY TO FRIDAY 9 AM to 6 PM $1. 00 a game student ID required 701 University Dr. East 260-9184 NTSB trying to determine reason for air collision Associated Press CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J. — Two more bodies were recovered Mon day as investigators inventoried wreckage strewn over 20 blocks and impounded air traffic control re cordings to determine why two planes collided and crashed, killing . at least five people. A sixth person was missing and believed to have been in his apart ment when a burning corporate jet slammed into two buildings here Sunday evening, igniting a fire that also engulfed three other buildings. Fourteen people were in the two buildings and 13 had time to escape, said state police Capt2. Joseph Cra- parotta. “I was listening to the stereo and the next thing I knew my windows blew in,” said Joseph Gramuglia, 29, whose apartment was gutted. “In three seconds, I was out the door. The two bodies recovered Mon day afternoon were found in rubble and were believed to be those of the pilot and copilot of the jet, which was owned by Nabisco Brands Inc., said police Sgt. Eugene Handschin. Three bodies were found Sunday in the debris of a light propeller plane, which struck the front porch of a two-story apartment building about five blocks away in Fairview. Each piece of wreckage was to be “itemized and tagged” as part of the reconstruction of the crasn, said Na tional Transportation Safety Board spokesman IraJ. Furman. Tape-recordings of conversations between the pilots and the tower at Teterboro Airport about five miles away were impounded, Furman said. The jet’s pilot said he saw the Piper Cherokee and the pilot of the smaller plane said he was clear of the area where the Falcon 50 was sup posed to be as they flew over the densely populated suburbs across the Hudson River from Manhattan, said Federal Aviation Administra tion spokesman Peter Nelson. The missing man was identified as Abdullah Tana, 34, an emigrant from the Middle East who was sleep ing in a second-floor apartment he shared with his brother’s family. The jet was en route with another corporate jet from Morristown, near the company’s Parsippany head- ronto office, Ms. Fee said. The second plane landed safely. The riper took off from Caldwell Airport but its destination was not known, said Craparotta. Jarvik-7 recipient Schroeder shows signs of third stroke Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. — William Schroeder, the world s longest-living recipient of a permanent artificial heart, has suffered a third stroke and was readmitted to the hospital Monday, a spokeswoman said. A pair of CAT scans, or computer nem- enhanced X-rays, indicated a orrhagic stroke on the right side of Schroeder’s brain in an area unaf fected by previous strokes, said Donna Hazle, director of public rela tions at Humana Hospital Audubon. Schroeder was admitted about 4 p.m. and was listed in serious condi tion, she said. Schroeder’s doctors, including neurologist Gary Fox, had not deter mined the cause of the stroke, nor had they been able to pinpoint when it occurred, she said. The 53-year-old federal retiree underwent the first CAT scan late Sunday evening after showing “symptoms of lethargy,” she said. Tne second test was performed early Monday. The initial stroke occurred Dec. 13. Since then Schroeder has suf fered memory loss, has been weak and has had trouble speaking. He has been receiving physical and oc cupational therapy for several months to help overcome the disabi lities. terms lethargic and listless to de scribe Schroeder after his second stroke in May. Coffee drinkers risk heart disease Associated Press BALTIMORE — A person who drinks five or more cups of coffee a day has an almost three times greater risk of having heart prob lems than a non-coffee drinker, according to a study of more than 1,000 doctors released Monday. Findings from the study, which tracked 1,130 white males who grad uated from The Johns Hopkins Medical School here between 1948 and 1964, were presented in Wash ington at the 58th scientific sessions of the American Heart Associatiorl. Information on drinking habits was obtained from the graduating physicians at five-year intervals for up to 25 years. No information was obtained on whether the type of cof fee was eaffeinated or decaffeinated. A person who drinks at least five cups of coffee daily has a 2.8 times greater risk of having heart prob lems than the non-drinker, the study found. Even when other risk factors — smoking, high-blood pressure, cho lesterol levels and age — are consid ered, the study determined there is still a 2.5 times increased risk, the re searchers reported. Other studies into possible links between coffee consumption and coronary heart disease have resulted in contradictory findings, said Dr. Thomas A. Pearson, an associate professor and director of the Johns Hopkins Precursors Study. Some found a link, while others did not. American coffee drinkers con sume an average of S'A cups a day, the association said. March to Alamo ends (continued from page 1) Also on hand for the ceremony was Alberto Acosta Rosaro, rep resenting the 139-niember Vietnam Veterans of the Bronx, N.Y. Rosaro said his brother, Hum berto Acosta Rosaro, was among a group of American soldiers am bushed at a rubber plantation at Tai Ninh Aug. 22, 1968. Rosaro, who said he has traveled throughout the country attending similar ceremonies, said he is con vinced his brother is still alive. “We are trying to get the issue across to the government of the United States,” Rosaro said. “We want to bring them back alive.” During tne ceremony, Marine Capt. Ronny Yowell used a Mame luke sword to draw a line across the courtyard in front of the Alamo. Yowell said Mameluke means “slave” in Arabic. The word is used, he said, to mean “cut the bonds of slavery.” Tim Holiday, who helped orga nize the march with Martin, urged veterans “to cross that line and live for freedom. Too many have died.” Holiday said he was referring not only to soldiers who died in Viet nam, but the veterans who have committed suicide since. The veter ans, most wearing camouflage fa tigues, then walked across the line. The group hoisted a black and white POW-MIA flag in front of the Alamo and sang songs written by Martin and Holiday. Some carried combat helmets dec orated with flowers, others walked arm-in-arm and many wept during the ceremony. U.S. Rep. J.J. “Jake” Pickle told the crowd that congressmen some times “regret” spending as much as they do on defense, but said, “We will vote that level needed to keep this nation strong. As cruel as is war, it would be more cruel if we didn’t stay prepared.” Women’s studies offer variety of classes (continued from page 1) structor, says her class deals with ste reotypes about women, differences between men and women and rea sons for those differences, the level of inequality between men and women and now it has changed, and problems of women in the media. The class also looks at issues such as violence toward women and the effects of the women’s movement on some of those issues. Sociology 489 will be offered this spring on Mondays at 6 p.m. There is no prerequisite for the class. • Interdisciplinary Education 689: Women and Organizational Leadership. This class is available only to grad uate students. Dr. Grace Chisolm, associate pro fessor of educational administration and instructor of the course, says her class takes a two-fold approach to women’s development. The first is conceptual devel opment in which students develop a basic foundation of understanding concerning the historical devel opment of women in the work world, theoretical issues of discrimi- legai issues and supportive equality of opportunity for women. quality ot opportunity for women. The secona approach is skills de velopment in wnich students are given ideas and suggestions on strat egies to help them advance in exec utive roles. “I’d like to see a broadening of the knowledge and awareness of both women and men,” Chisolm says. “I’d also like to see a research agenda in which research interests of both fac ulty and students might be sup ported. “I’d like to see the new women’s studies program given the same sta tus and credence of any of the other outstanding programs at this Uni versity.” Gail Dienburg is a Ph.D. candi date in the women’s studies program at A&M and works in the Women in Development Project Office located in the sociology department. “Part of my interest in the role of women’s organizations is that they will help women to develop the po tentials they have in order to become whole people,” Dienburg says. “I don’t think a lot of women have that opportunity available to them, and the best way I can see to change the societal view is through education.” Dienburg says an improved wom en’s studies program also will benefit men because it will give them a chance to understand the potential women have. “It will help get men more com fortable with the thought of women being equal,” Dienburg says, “and they will feel less threatened by this equality through a better educa tion.” Another doctoral candidate in so ciology, Marjorie Coppock, has had a long-standing interest in bringing women’s concerns to light. “Women have made very valuable contributions, many of wnich have been igno'red,” Coppock says. “The study of women needs to be devel oped in all institutions to help women step out of their traditional roles into broader opportunities and horizons.” Coppock earned her master’s de- -ee fro gree from Cornell University and wrote her thesis on women volun teers. She says women often are made to feel that what they do is insignifi cant. STUDY 1 STUDY II STUDY III Recent injury to wrist, knee or ankle? Severe enough pain to remain on study up to 10 days and 5 visits? Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint? One-dose (4 hours) in-house study. Recent injury with in flammation (swelling, pain, heat, tender ness)? Study of 5 day dura tion with only 2 visits required. Volunteers interested in participating in investigative drug studies 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 J ^ Brazos Valley i > Crisis Pregnancy Service \\ We’re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE 41 Battalion Classified 845-2611 tne company s rarsippany head quarters, to Teterboro to pick up ex ecutives headed for Nahisco’s To- • P.A. Equipment • Bass guitars • Mandolins • Guitars • I • Sell • Trade • Repair 1911 S. Texas, C.S. Acrots from the water tower 693-8698 HEY GIRLS! how about a dinner date at the DELUXE with the TEXAS AGGIE YELL LEADERS? - Vol. It could happen to you and four other lucky winners — forji ONE DOLLAR!!!! Proceeds go to BONFIRE '85. Come by the MSC (9a.m. • p.m.) and the Commons (5p.m. -7 p.m.) from Nov. 11 - Nov. 15, f PLITT THEATRES. Imi 50 f'inAmn Q 319CollegeN. MWW Vsinema O Midnight Shows ~w»»ewe»i««a^wiriw SPltLSCAG Presents sjeveN spi< JZFUTUaf 'Mon-Frl 7.45/9.55 First Show Only SiUSu. A&M Nile Tuttdiy Senior CltlzeniAnylmt | UniO doub Wars ion ( Bi efu! agre< nto ial late Death Wish III (n Bmnson Mon-Fri 7:20/9:!) Post Oak3 in the Mall S ‘BRING ON THE NIGHT'/STINC Mon.-Fri. 7:40/9:40 B WHICH DO YOU TRUST-. lAfiftfD YOUR EMOTION?; or [R] cfv^r EVIDENCE?. 'EIAJG Mon.-Fri. 7:30/9:45 Mon.-Frl. 17:20/9:20 B Ql SCHULMAN THEATRES Coming Soon: Rainbow Brit* &r*f> -1*t Snow S«(. A Sun. Alt S*«ts f *KORA Family Nlt»-Mon. 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