Monday, May 4, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 oinputet ,cr Cenif enter or® •y a coDik; s of Ixil! t ' Kempt f'DOVisi, inch quid hod, and! l ative eve ise. e direct ies to nee ill out i) 1 is availaii Station Is pends oiu! efix), his-, e student® 'V box. 0® '(Hit $250. m ,dv they can® a out and || re begin® ation dui® of $15,® be billed® w M ■i * . a-: , i * ^8SSSi^< • iii V$8§ mkm lispatcliet the Hous itiel Union ikes thej) ealfsaid. and keep ugh.” :ad' om the the past, to thee ates andli s involved my R«ei< port and ts. xerciseio 1 dds. “i' ( ■{he Reset have it of thef' ,ur Reset Dog Day Afternoon Senior Paul Hinds contemplates graduation as he reads a card outside the Aggieland Station Post Photo by Jay Janner Office. His pet dachshund, Danke, keeps him company Sunday afternoon. Medical students examine hard courses, dead bodies By Adrienne Dunbar Reporter mSmt 1 he transition from an under graduate university to a medical school is a drastic and difficult one. Texas A&M Medical School students lived inikl 0111151 quickly adjust from from tak ing 12, 15 or 18 credit hours a se mester to taking the equivalent of 18 ar more hours in a quarter system. “We like to call it the ‘blitzkreig ystem’,” says Mike Clark, a second- U.S. tr(®y ear medical student. “You are over- tationed* whelmed the first quarter. They just give you more and more and more o know.” One professor in the department seems to disagree. Tom Champney, a neuroendocri- nologist and assistant professor of anatomy, describes a first-year medi- o f 0 uri cal student’s curriculum. “They will take two anatomy classes, gross and micro, and a medical humanity,” Champney says. “That’s a relatively asy quarter.” Microanatomy, called medical his tology, studies the basic cells and how they function. Gross anatomy is what one might guess, the study of the human body in its entirety. “The first day of class you go for a few hours of lecture and then they put you in front of the body,” Dave Schneider, a second-year medical “The first day of class you go for a few hours of lec ture and then they put you in front of the body. The head, hands and feet are all covered because a lot of people freak out when they see a body. ” — Dave Schneider, medi cal student student says. “The head, hands and feet are all covered because a lot of people freak out when they see a body. It helps the shock.” Champney says the bodies don’t shock people, the work does. “Gross (anatomy) is fairly easy for med school,” Champney says. “There is a one-hour lecture four days a week, and four or five hours of lab every day. Micro is usually two hours a week, and a humanity is usually one hour. All the rest is free time, most use it to study.” The undergraduate attitude is hard to shake, he says. “Students ask me ‘What do I need to know for the exam?’ and I try to stress that they need to know every thing,” Champney says. “Med school is not the same pace and volume as other schools, it’s a lot more. Some just get blown away.” Because students are training for a profession, they must be precise. “We don’t want generalities,” he says. “A lot of information comes at them (students) full-barrel. They have very little time to assimilate, yet they must take in as much as possi ble.” Although anatomy is the first class facing a medical student, it is the most important. “This is the instrument they will be working with,” Champney says. “They need to know it well.” Flag flies despite neighbor's complaints a flagpole business he owns in Ir COLLEYVILLE (AP) — Steve |Symonds wants to fly his flag high tnd he’s leading a drive to seek a Ireferendum election against flag- jpole height restrictions set last week |by the City Council. Symonds, who has been at the It enter of the flagpole controversy, |says he thinks the people should de ride the height limit. Some skeptics contend that Sy- Iraonds is using the flap to advertise vmg. “I think that all he wants is the publicity,” said Bedford Mayor L. Don Dodson. Symonds denies the allegation. “I’m in the flagpole business, but that’s not why it’s up there,” Sy monds told the Fort Worth Star- Telegram in an earlier interview. “It’s something we enjoy. I don’t sell flagpoles from my home.” The council Tuesday approved an emergency ordinance, aimed at Symonds, requiring a building per mit for any flagpole taller than 35 feet. Half of Symonds backyard is in Bedford and the other half in Col- leyville. In February, neighbors in both cities complained of the flapping noise made by Symond’s 20-by-38 foot flag and the spotlight he kept trained on it. ALPHA KAPPA PSI NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY Congratulates and Bids a Fond Farewell to Our Spring and Summer Graduates: Gary Ashmore James Elkins Ash Harris Mary Kirchner Mary Wilkie Kevin Blacketer Paul L. Gilbert Jill Jenkins Barbara Maley Janet Wyatt GOOD LUCK!! Betsy Brewer Ruth Groves Maria Jung John West SPECIAL $1295 (Expires 5/15/87) -ALSO— Includes * Free mad test LOCAU.Y OWMED BY * Free pan inspection jim WILSOM * Fluid change. neu> pan gasket * Clean screen, pan. and sump * Adjust bands I filter extra) (This special good witfTcoupon only. Transmission must be serviceable.) _ s p E C I A L COMPLETE SOFT PARTS OVERHAUL FOR AS LOW AS $335 50 Expires 5/15/87 with nationwide warranty included Exotic and 4-speed, overdrive automatics not included at this price CALL FOR APPT. 1215 Texas. Bryan 779-2626 fA Free shuttle Bus this summer. ^ N Hwy 6 Bypass IS PUN7XTI0K Post Oak Mali OAIS „ I Texas Ave The TAMU shuttle buses will only make a few stops this summer and Plantation Oaks is one of them. And we're picking up the bill. Plantation Oaks has six floor plans to choose from, two pools, basketball courts and a volleyball court, men's and women's exercise rooms, each with a sauna, no utility deposits plus gas and water bills paid. Summer leases start at $165. Come by Plantation Oaks today. PLANTATION OAKS 1501 Harvey Road/693-1110 the Waist, new Basket 2 Weeks Unlimited Tanning and Aerobics $29. 95 (tanning or aerobics only SlS ' ea.) 846-1013 1003 University Dr. E. Aggie rings select your diamond today, wear it tomorrow. You’ve worked hard for your Aggie ring, and you deserve a special diamond for it. David Gardner’s Jewelers Gemologists are Aggies. We know the tradition behind having a diamond mounted in your Aggie ring. We shop the diamond markets of the world to offer you the best value in diamond quality and cost. Choose from our special selection of diamonds. We offer one day service on Aggie rings. You select your diamond today and we’ll set it so you can wear it tomorrow. OAVid qarcIner'S JEWELERS 9 GEMOLOGISTS 701 University Dr t asi • C himney Hill Retail Pia/.a (across from the Hilton) College Station. TX 846-4151 • (For repairs 846-036.1) I 9 Free Rent! Helicopter Service Tb Class! Indoor 18 Hole Golf Course! Get a grip, Redstone doesn’t have all that. Redstone DOES have the lowest rent on two bedroom apartments of any comparable complex in town. And with an annual lease you save even more. Redstone is less than a mile from cam pus, on the shuttle bus route and near dozens of shops, banks and restaurants. Redstone has a volleyball-pool, new Jacuzzi with sun deck, security patrol and on-site maintenance. No apartment complex gives you more than Redstone. (Even if we don’t give you a 27-story parking garage with valet service.) 1301 Bartholow • 696-1848 0. TAMU J-r-, 1 i J Br*nf»*oon 4