Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, November 24,1987 Contact Lenses <^s Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $79 00 $99°° $99 00 ( STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only saa 50 STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $49*° STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR Spare PR at V2 price with purchase of first pr at regular price! Call 696-3754 For Appointment Sale ends Dec. 30,1987 Offer applies to standard Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds lenses only. CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY * Eye exam & care kit not Included fe-; 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University CAROLYN BANKSTON Don’t Wait Until the Last Minute! Now is the time to order your Aggie gifts for Graduation. Let your parents know of your appreciation and love Let your friends know of your pride in their achievements. Custom Engraving, genuine OMC products qVc| AGGIELAND w arS=AWARDS And GIFTS in the Skaggs Center 846-2376 More than Just a Trophy Store THE DEAL ALVAREZ, MARTIN, OVATION, YAIRI NOW ON SALE ASK US ABOUT “THE DEAL” jSSS # /w w SELECTION OF , STRINGS-50% OFFf \ KtyboARcl M Center Inc. LAYAWAY NOW! POST OAK MALL Near Sears A&M researchers study effects i h of bacteria on ocean’s ecology By Susan Miller Reporter Texas A&M is part of a broad- based study group researching the effects of methane-consuming bacte ria on the ocean’s ecology. Dr. Gary Wilson, professor of mi crobiology at Texas A&M, said the bacteria are helpful to the ecology because they are able to consume methane and these organisms pro vide food for other sea life. “These methane-utilizing bacteria detoxify the methane for the sea or ganisms they live in, and in doing so, provide amino acids and nutrients for the organisms,” Wilson said. Chuck Kennicutt, an associate re search scientist in Texas A&M’s Geo chemical and Environmental Re search Group, said without the bacteria’s help, sea organisms, such as mussels and clams, would not be able to live in deep waters or near oil seepages. “The bacteria are what oxidize the methane,” Kennicutt said. “When they do this they turn it into organic matter that mussels can directly as similate. “The mussels then obtain their nutrition from the bacteria itself. So the bacteria mediate the process.” Over the past 20 years scientists have discovered large communities of such organisms. Researchers at Texas A&M also have uncovered thriving colonies on the sea floor in the Gulf of Mexico, he said. Kennicutt said these communities represent a whole new component to the slope ecology not previously rec ognized. “Slope ecology is defined, ba sically, as how all the animals live to gether in different water depths,” he said. “The continental slope is de fined by the water depth, which is generally somewhere from 300 me ters to maybe 2,000 meters deep.” Since organisms that live in these water depths cannot utilize sunlight directly, it previously was thought they were surviving off material uti lized by organisms at more shallow depths, he said. “In fact, these organisms don’t need sunlight,” he said. “They have a mechanism of gaining nutrition that is completly separate from what you would see on land where sun light is necessary. “So this is a new type of mech anism for living in the deep parts of the ocean.” This type of energy production is called chemosynthesis. It is thesynl thesis of organic compounds to ptol vide energy for the organisms witkl out sunlight. “The bacteria get their enerjil from the methane or other inoil ganic compounds in the water,”kl said. “In this case the methaneistlil only source of energy for the I ria.” Study of the bacteria has bml funded in part by the National Sol ence Foundation, the Office of Nil val Research, the TAMU SeaGram| Program, NO A A and the Mineral Management Service in New Oil leans. Researchers and scientists fro!t| Harvard University, Louisiana Stall University, Scripps Oceano^raphil the Smithsonian, a| Institute and well as Texas A&M, are involvedii| the study. Late night TV show to feature woman with odd hobby of collecting gizzards DAVE’S LIQUOR —Annual— Roast The Longhorns Sale Coors Light 12 pk Btls $9 9 c 9 s Miller Lite 12 pk Btls Miller Lite Keg 16 Gal $39 99 Meister Brau Keg 16 Gal $28" 8 PK Seagrams Wine Coolers $5" Stop By and Enter DAVE’S Roast the Longhorns Contest no purchase necessary 696-4343 524 University MARLIN (AP) — It doesn’t always require a stupid pet trick for the average person to get on the “Late Night With David Letterman” show. Sometimes it just takes a bizarre hobby. For almost 30 years Ruth Stone has collected turkey gizzards and the odd things that come out of them. Her hobby got her a round-trip ticket Monday to New York to appear on the popular variety- talk show hosted by Letterman. Her appearance will be broadcast tonight. Stone used to work at a turkey processing plant and part of her job was to clean and inspect the gizzards before they were shipped to stores. While cleaning them, she noticed many of them contained an odd assortment of small objects. Her first find was a coin. “I even got a spark plug,” Stone said. “And things like rocks and marbles. Oh, and I got one dice out of it.” Over the years, Stone has collected hundreds of the odd items. “Nearly all gizzards have a little something in them,” she said. As fast as Stone could bring the objects home, her husband would build display cases for them, and the cases now adorn several walls in her home. The unique knickknacks are a big hit with visi tors, who often express amazement. “They say, ‘A turkey swallowed that?’ ” she said. “And I say, ‘Sure.’ ” Stone and David Letterman might never have crossed paths had it not been for a friendly cup of coffee she offered Brent Shehorn, 19, and his father one afternoon at her home. The Shehorns immediately saw the display boxes filled with items that had been discovered in turkey gizzards: spark plugs, crucifixes, change, springs, water nozzles, glass, marbles | and shiny rocks. “We were just amazed with it,” Brent Shehorn recalled. “When I saw them, the first thing 1 thought was, that was something David Letter- man would have on his show.” Fans of the Letterman show know it is noto rious for its offbeat humor, seen in such features as “Stupid Pet Tricks,” “Top Ten Lists” and Let- terman’s irreverent treatment of celebrities. Shehorn wrote Letterman about the “Gizzard Lady” last summer and finally was contacted about her appearance. Houston stripper teaches trade in classroom HOUSTON (AP) — GiO struts to the front of the class carrying an armful of pastel chiffon, silk and lace. She is wearing 4-inch spike heels, blue lace stockings and an electric blue teddy. When she turns to face her students — 30 women, many of them mothers, in their 20s to 40s — the giggling stops. “When you strip, wear pretty, feminine underthings,” GiO sug gested. “A lot of people like red and black. But, to me, red and black says cheap hussie. And I will have no cheap hussies graduating from my class! I want only sex goddesses.” She drops the demonstration lin gerie to strike her point with a “clas sic sex goddess” pose — ankles tight, one-knee bent, a hip cocked and arms V-ed over her head. For a moment, the raven-haired stripper resembles Marilyn Monroe. GiO’s job is disrobing. For the past five years, the professional stripper has taken off her clothes at a rate of 24 shows a week, about 35 weeks a year, mostly in Canada. “I am a pro fessional sex object,” she said matter- of-factly. your sexual About a year ago, she began shar ing a few tricks of her trade with am ateurs and novices through once-a- month classes for the New York- based Learning Annex. .Her goal, GiO says, is to help women boost their sensuality and self-confidence and to express some of their sexual fantasies or those of their mates. “I teach women how to take con trol,” she said. “I have had women tell me it has saved their marriages.” good way to enhance relationship.” GiO’s real name is Lisa Suarez. She is 32 years old. She began danc ing without a costume in New York go-go clubs more than 15 years ago. She said she needed the money to pay her way through the Pratt Insti tute of Design. ation’s Gypsy Rose Lee,” she emphatically. “I want to definestripl tease for the rock ’n’ roll general tion.” It just might, agreed i psychologis offers sexut gist sexual and marriage counseling. “If it’s something you enjoy and that gives you and your partner pleasure, I don’t see anything wrong with it,” Frede said when told.of GiO’s classes on at-home stripping. “It might be a After graduating and working for Jimmy Carter’s first presidential campaign, she danced in George town clubs to augment her salary as a junior exhibit designer for the Smithsonian Institution in Washing ton, D.C. GiO takes the term “dancer” se riously. In 1984, she spent a summer training with Twyla Tharp’s dance company. In 1986, her determined competition at the Golden G-String strippers’ convention in Las Vegas was featured in a Twentieth Cen tury-Fox documentary “Stripper.” “I want to be known as this gener- After watching a demonstratios of one of her 30 regular acts, tkf! Houston students had no doute about her commitment or ability GiO calls her class “How toStrif for Your Man.” The Houston lessot took place in a basement ballroom the Stouffer’s Greenway Plaza hoti apparently unnoticed by a group librarians gathered just across hallway. tli| GiO’s sometimes brash self-confil dence apparently developed at ail early age. The only daughter of I Cuban salesman and an Italia! songstress, both first-generationi migrants to the United States, sbl says she was raised to pursue succesl in whatever way she decided to (’ fine it. Court battle about oysters to continue Warped by Scott McCulla HOUSTON (AP) — The 500- member Texas Oyster Association plans to continue a court battle to have this year’s oyster season opened. In late August, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department cancelled the oyster season to allow depleted populations a chance to recover. The season normally runs from Nov. 1 through April. On Oct. 29, Chambers County fish house owner Joe Nelson ob tained two temporary restraining or ders against the department. WOvJ H0LP OH. THAT TV PREACHER. 5 A IP Ll)5t FOR FOOD WAS PE-RVE.RTE.P AMP SEX WAS DE-L1CI0US...OR... ALLEtf, WHATEVER HE WAS 5AYIVG WAS A BUNCH OF CRAP/ SE.X AND FOOD ARE BOTH NATURAL BODILY HWGE.RS... XT ... You’re not SUPPOSED TO IGNORE. THEFT TO DO THAT ^15 TUST STUPID/ AND COHFVSlNG.m X HAVE A WEIRD D£S|R£| TO FONDLE A LARGE Pixz-A. Waldo by Kevin Thomas! The department then filed coun ter-motions that kept the season from opening. “We’ve tried to talk and negotiate with them (parks and wildlife),” Tom Hubs, president of the organi zation said. “But they didn’t want to listen to what we had to say,” he added. After talks broke off, the 500- member association voted to start a legal fund, and hired Austin lawyer Jim Matthews to represent them. “This is our last resort,” he said. Hulls said he expected a lawsuit to be filed in Travis County over the next two weeks, but declined to say more. “I hesitate to say too much now because it might tip the other side,” Hubs said. “But our attorney has something he’s working on.” David Gottorn, parks and wildlife spokesman, said, “No matter how much legal wrangling goes on, it’s not going to change one iota the fact that there just are not enough oysters on the bottom of the bays.” Gottorn said the department has provided the association with data showing that opening the oyster sea son would harm the oyster crop. He said legal action by the group has been expected. WALDO HAS MADE IT TO THE EAST.' AT LAST/ MY QUEST IS OVER! v-/ I COME IN PEACE FOR THE KING OF BKITTAINY/ I AM THE GREAT KU- BLAI KHAN! & M SEIZE HIM! O I DION' HAVE A DATE FOR TONIGHT ANYWAY... Joe Transfer by Dan Barlov. HeY, t)EAM l I WAt> JUST ItdOUbeRlMG ! 1)0 You... ... BEWD YOUR KWE£. BEFORE YOU Hit the ball , or do you lock it ?) if 7} <§> I 6ut‘jb YOU BEMD IT, hluuj lh 'Ll