Page 8AThe Battalion/Friday, April 24, 1987 NEED CASH? •';.V v - We offer premium dollars on used Books... SFLOUPOT'S*P Check on our Trade Policy <—nTSTil Jtl;7 d—I and Save 20% More. FREE Parking Behind the Store Now Open on Saturday ’til 3 p.m. Williams m 10 Minute Drive-Thru Lube, Oil, & Filter Change! $3 00 off OIL, LUBE & Filter Change (your choice of oil) | 205 Holleman 764 " 799 «j Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $79. 00 -STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES *$99 °L- STD - EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES ^^^-^ SpARE pR Q NL y $2 o with purchase of 1 st pr. at reg. price 00 -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES $99. SPECIAL ENDS MAY 29, 1987 AND APPLIES TO CLEAR STAN DARD EXTENDED WEAR STOCK LENSES ONLY Call 696-3754 For Appointment * Eye exam and care kit not included CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University Dance Arts Society announces its Spring Concert Friday, April 24, 1987 8:00 pm Rudder Theatre Admission $3.00 tickets available at MSC box office Sigma Phi Epsilon presents the 11th Annual FIGHT NIGHT Fri. 4/24 & Sat. 4/25 For info call Don Saustad 693-8303 Professor praises new cycling class Bicycles provide alternative in P.E. By Tami Tate Reporter If bouncing a ball has become a bore and beginning golf has lost its swing, try a new form of exercise and activity — bicycling. Cycling was offered for the first time at Texas A&M in Spring 1987 through the outdoor educaton class, ODED 300, Outdoor Education Field Experiences, said Dr. Simon Priest, a health and physical educa tion professor. The class consists of rock climbing in the fall and cycling in the spring, he said. Dr. Camille Bunting, health and physical education professor, teaches rock climbing while Priest teaches cycling. This semester is the first in which cycling has been offered at A&M, and so far 12 students are enrolled in the one-credit-hour program. Priest said students can credit the class as a physical education require ment with permission from the dean of their college, and grades are based on attendance, a midterm ex amination, a skills assessment and a term assignment. While in the class, students must devise a plan for a three-day bicycle tour. This includes a list of equip ment and food, a map of the chosen route, an itinerary of activities and camping sites and a schedule of times and distances involved, he said. Despite its availability as a P.E. re quirement, the class is structured more as a lecture course than an ac tivity course. Lecture topics include bicycle construction and mainte nance, road safety and regulations, equipment, group touring, cadence and gearing ratios for hills, fitness training, nutrition and trip planning and execution. Priest said. During one of its regular meet ings, the class took a one-day trip in College Station and a three-day trip to the hill country west of Austin this month. “The first day of the trip, we cycled from Dripping Springs to Blanco, which was 25 miles,” Priest said. “The second day we went from Blanco to Pedernales Falls, which was 60 miles. The third day we cycled 25 miles from Pedernales Falls to Dripping Springs.” Students are required to provide their own bicycles, food and camp ing money. Camping equipment is provided, he said. The students’ cy cling skills are graded during each trip. This accounts for 30 percent of the class grade. Laszlo Szabo, assistant leader for the cycling class, said, “The three- clay trip was very successful and ev erything went as scheduled. The trip was flexible and everyone had a lot of fun.” The class is geared toward bicycle touring instead of road racing, Szabo said. “Bike touring involves riding longer distances and for longer peri ods of time,” he said. Because bicycle touring involves riding for long periods of time, the students were only able to take two riding trips. “I would like to see the students able to take more rides around cam pus and take more day rides,” he said. Priest said the students enjoyed the class and learned more about cy cling. “Many hikers are poorly edu cated in this area,” lie said. “This “It’s a proven fact that bicycles are more healthy and easier on the body than some other activities such as jogging.’’ — Marty Muehleggcr, employee of Cycles Etc. creates unnecessary injuries.” Priest said biking is the bestwayto exercise without injury because rid ing a hike does not stress parts of the body such as the knees. Cycling is a better beginning exercise than aero bics or running, he said. Marty Muehlegger, an employee at Cycles Etc., also says eyeing is healthier than other forms of excer- cise. “There has been a definite in crease in cycling due to health and fitness reasons,” Muehlegger said. “It’s a proven fact that bicycles are more healthy and easier on thebodv than some other activities such as jogging. You’re sitting instead of putting pressure on your knees and joints.” Szabo says many people are cy cling as a hobby, for competition and commuting. This, he says, hascre- ated a price increase in bicycle equip ment. “Bicycle ecjui|jment lias increased 20 percent this year,” he said “There are more imports from Iiali and a larger variety of equipment and products.” Muehlegger also says there is a larger variety of bicycle equipment Prices have increased because of tk equipment’s exchange rate thai comes from Japan and Europe. Wife of minister attacked; condition remains critical DALLAS (AP) — A Methodist minister who wore a bullet-proof vest to Easter services because of a string of life-threatening letters rayed Thursday at the bedside of is wife, who was in a coma after be ing choked and left near death. FBI agents and police said they believed six threatening letters sent to the Rev. Walker Railey may be linked to the attack on his wife, Mar garet. Railey, minister of the 6,000- member First United Methodist Church of Dallas, preached about equality for blacks, said the Rev. Gordon Casad, the church’s exec utive minister. “He was concerned that blacks be given more opportunity to become a part of mainstream America,” Casad said Thursday. Railey returned home about 12:45 a.m. Wednesday after leaving the couple’s house four hours earlier and found his wife unconscious on the floor of their garage, Dallas po lice Lt. Ron Waldrop said. “She was strangled to the point of being unconscious and is in bad con dition,” Waldrop said. Officials at Presbyterian Hospital said Mrs. Railey, 38, was in critical condition Thursday afternoon. Casad said she was in a coma and had not regained consciousness since Railey found her. Waldrop declined to disclose de tails of the letters or how they were delivered, but said they were “gener ally directed at the minister,” who is white, and criticized his efforts to promote racial harmony. Waldrop said police now were guarding Railey and the couple’s 5- year-old son and 2-year-old daugh ter, who were asleep in the house when their mother was attacked. Plainclothes officers also attended Sunday’s services, he said. Railey, 39, was at his wife’s hospi tal bedside Thursday, Casad said. Casad said Railey had received other critical letters since joining the church in September 1980, but that the ones that began arriving in March were the first of their kind. “It’s unusual, but it’s certainly not unheard of,” Sterns said of the threatening letters. “Ministers obviously get involved in some weighty, moral issues,” he said. “It’s rare for an actual physical attack to occur.” Both Sterns and Waldrop said au thorities had not determined the let ters definitely were linked to the as sault, but Casad said he believes they were. “They took nothing,” Casad said. “There was no robbery. Nothing was disturbed —just her life was threat ened.” Railey had spoken out against a new chapter of the Ku Klux Rian be ing formed and urged city leaders to work to ease racial tension. In 1985, while president of the Greater Dallas Community of Churches, Railey went before City Council and accused a councilman of exacerbating racial tension by us ing intentionally inflammatory rhe toric. Austin bank declared insolvent AUS TIN (AP) — North Cen tral National Bank, which had been under regulatory scrutiny! since 1986, was declared insol-1 vent Thursday by the U.S. Comp-I troller of the Currency. Robert Herrmann, senior dep uty comptroller of the currency, said the Federal Deposit Insur ance Corp. had been appointed' receiver of the bank. FDIC officials in Washington said insured deposits and fully se cured or preferred deposits of the insolvent bank would be transferred to Greater Texas Bank, North, of Austin. Federal regulators began re viewing the bank's operations in 1986 because of “rapid growth in loans and very liberal lending practices . . . that resulted in ex cessive problem loans,” Her rmann said. The bank failure was Texas’ 21 st of t he year, the FDIC said. Houston woman arrested in murder of family HOUSTON (AP) — A woman was in jail Thursday after being charged with capital mur der in the shooting deaths of her husband and two children, authorities said. Harris County Sheriffs Lt. Drew Warren said investigators are not certain of a motive for the killings, but said the family recently had pur chased a life insurance policy naming the woman as the beneficiary. “It (the policy) is a definite item that came up during the investigation,” Warren said. “It is a fi nancial gain if you’re looking for a reason for the killings.” He refused to specify the amount of the policy. Sheriffs detectives arrested Frances Elaine Newton, 22, Wednesday afternoon after deter mining she had handled the gun used in the April 7 slayings, Warren said. Newton was being held without bail in the Harris County Jail on capital murder charges, a jail spokesman who declined to be identified said Thursday. The bodies of Adrian Newton, 23, and the couple’s children, Alton, 7, and Farrah Elaine, 21 months, were found in their north Harris County apartment. Newton told deputies she had left the apart ment and found the bodies when she returned an hour later. Her husband had been shot in the head, and the two children were each shot in the chest. Detectives said they were puzzled by Newton’s story because there were no signs of forced entry or of a struggle, and no property was missing from the apartment. Detectives said Newton has denied any partin the slayings. But about an hour after detectives arrivedon the scene, a relative told investigators that New ton had taken a pistol from the apartment and had hidden it in another relative’s house aboui 10 miles away. Deputies found the .25-caliber pistol at tie house, Warren said. Bullets test-fired fromtk weapon by investigators matched those taken from the bodies, he said. A capital murder charge was filed against Newton because there were multiple victims,not because she may have benefited financially from the slayings, Warren said. ❖ MSC Town Hall and AIAS presents LYLE LOVET1 8:00 p.m. Thursday April 30 Rudder Theater with Robert Earl Keen, Jr. Tickets: $6 — MSC Box Office 845-1234