a / N Monday, November 10, 1986/The Battalioh/Page 3 IS? State and Local visabled athletes hope to revive club ■ Roomate Problen Cramped Quarters? 00 TOTAL MOVE-IN STUDENT SPECIAL WITH I.D. Wheelchair dribblers still ‘on a roll’ B'. By Julie Vass Reporter Basketball players Jim Magdalenski and Sam jj'reorge aren’t just on the ball, they’re on a roll — wheelchairs, that is. George and Magdalenski are the only mem- liers of the Association of Handicapped Athletes, ]n almost extinct club in the College Station area. Magdalenski says the organization began in 1981 with a membership of about 25 people that jnjclio led non-handicapped as well as hand icapped people. ^Heorge says membership, which is organized Ihrlugh the A&M Intramural Office, has jlropped drastically in the last year. ()i\e reason f or the membership drop, George lays, is that many handicapped students think liey are too disabled to become involved. ^BiVe cannot stress enough that anybody with linylkind of disability can join,” George says. “We lever say or think that someone can not partici- oati." People in electric wheelchairs who are not able to use their upper bodies to play sports, can also participate by keeping score, George says. “There are some handicapped students on campus who could be good wheelchair basketball players, but they are just not interested,” he says. George says that often handicapped people do not realize they have the ability to play a compet itive sport. Magdalenski agreed. “Some people may not know what they can do until they are actually doing it,” he says. George, who was crippled with polio in his childhood, says he has been playing wheelchair basketball for three years and also has competed in several wheelchair marathon races. He says the association is not only suffering from a lack of membership, but also from a lack of interest. To address this problem, Magdalenski says the group is trying to establish more contact with stu dents. It also is working with the Bryan-Gollege Station Mayors’ Committee for Disabled Persons to try to get people in the community involved in handicapped athletic activities. Those who have never watched wheelchair basketball, George says, may be surprised to find out how last-moving it is. George, who has been knocked out of his wheelchair on more than one occasion, says, “They’re wrong if (they) think it is a non-contact sport.” Rene J. Jaime, a non-handicapped A&M stu dent who has played wheelchair basketball with George and Magdalenski, says the reason for the lack of interest could possibly be that people are ignorant about the sport. Jaime says some people may think it is unfair to the handicapped person to play against a per son who is able to walk. “The rules and the way the game is set up are such that being able-bodied is no advantage,” he says. Learning to control the wheelchairs makes the game not only more difficult but more of a challenge, he says. George says practice is held on Thursdays at 8 p.m. and on Saturday afternoons in DeWare Field House. Wheelchairs are provided for those who do not have their own. NO RENT UNTIL JANUARY 15, 1987 check our new rates 1 & 2 Bedrooms Available Ulillouiich Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 5:30 Sat. 10-4 Sun. 1-4 apartments 502 Southwest Parkway 693-1325 Teacher enjoys roles in classroom, pulpit S By Fawn Haynes Reporter ■evera! plaques adorn the walls of die neat and ordered basement of- l^Mice in Senates Hall. Two plaques, from the state of South Carolina *^anc the other from Missouri, read “Honorary State Farmer.” Another reads “International Clergy Appre- l ^ 1 nation Week.” VccnuM he office belongs to Dr. Alvin lyue Larke Jr., an assistant professor of ,| r agricultural education. . ^B-arke, 39, has two professions — that of a teacher and that of a pre acher. 1,1 guess it (preaching) was a call- i urn ing early, but it was the accepting of iilin, it that took a while,” Larke says. He says has been preaching since 1982. ^^■.arke, who preaches in the Afri can Methodist Episcopal Church, says he thinks that his roles are com plementary. ■Preaching is a form of teaching,” he says, “and teaching is a form of ministering.” B-le adds, however, that he is care- it we i ‘Dr. ful not to bring his preaching into the classroom. One of Larke’s classes, Agricultu ral Education 440, Principles of Technological Change, deals pri marily with the introduction and adoption of change in society. “My class deals with controversial issues,” Larke says. “I try hard not to let my values and beliefs flow into the class lectures.” Larke says he restrains any ten dency to preach in class by following his lecture notes. He says he does a lecture each se mester on ethics. And when the class discussion is about what is right or wrong, he tends to get caught up in that lecture because he lives the bib lical way of life, he says. “But f have done it (given the lec ture on ethics) for so long that I won’t tell you that something is wrong,” he says. “There are times that you want to say how you feel in ternally but you can’t — because you know your opinion will be biased be cause you relate everything to the biblical doctrine.” Larke says he has had very few students write on their teacher eval uations that he preaches too much in class. Sometimes he has to ask his stu dents if they want the minister’s point of view or the professor’s point of,view, he says. The answers could be different or the same depending on the question, he says. Larke says he has many students approach him with their problems partly because he is a Mentor, a per son students are encouraged to look to for informal guidance and coun seling. He earned his master’s in special education from South Carolina State College and his doctorate in agricul tural education from the University of Missouri. Larke, an advisor for Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., says he can see himself as a role model for the group of young men. The f raternity consists of 20 members who share the same common bond of schol arship and love of all mankind, he says. He also is an active supporter of the gospel group, Black Awareness Voices of Praise. The gospel group is made up of about 60 A&M students. Larke also is a member of Faculty Friends, a group of faculty members united by Christian beliefs. Larke preaches in churches in both Hearne and Calvert, with one service at 9 a.m. and the other at 11 a.m. He says his type of preaching has resulted in his being labeled a teach ing minister, because he incorpo rates teaching in his preaching. Larke says he has goals for both his role as a teacher and his role as a minister. He says he would hate for his church to tell him they need him all the time. He also says he would hate for his dean to say “teach or preach.” “I hope I never have to make a choice between the two,” he says. Cambodia: Graveyard for 2,000,000 Innocent People isCGREXT iss^and \ A C GI /^fclNEM a/ Present Dith Pran and the movie based on his life THE KILLING FIELDS Monday, Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m. Dith Pran will Speak Tues, Nov. 18 7:30 p.m. Movie: $2.00 Program: $2.00 Combined Pass: $3.00 The Battalion er li irnA a Texas A&M Tradition ” •Distributed FREE, Monday Friday, x campus & city the^Ti .h XC + LUSIVE newspaper of by 45 nnn n I mc,rl<0t — read daily 00 students, faculty & staff. • 23,000 published daily. 90 J® xas A&Jvl University zoo Reed McDonald Bldg. College Station, Tx. 845-2611 Save 13%-23%! FASHION FLANNEL SHIRTS From Arrow , Van Heusenh Regular or trim fit 100% cotton flannel shirts in a wide range of colors and patterns. S,M,L,XL. Orig. 16.00-18.00 Save 40%! DOWN-FILLED JACKETS Keep warm and cqmfortablejn a down-filled jacket - nature’s most perfect insulator! Tightly-woven poly/cotton shells. S,M,L,XL. Assorted styles. Orig. 85.00. Save 43%! BIVOUAC SWEATERS Ramie cotton sweaters with versatile Henley collar, wooden buttons. Natural, teal, red, yellow, peacock, 12 great colors! S,M,L,XL. Orig. 35.00 POST OAK MALL 764-8195 Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 12:30-5:30