Donna Sayers/Sharon Storey Welcome Back Ag’s! HAIR PRO S style shop located in the University Inn formerly Ramada call 846-1843 for appt. walk-in’s always welcome For all your dental C arePk,s needs — "At CarePlus Dental Centers, we know the Importance of a gentle touch and kind words. We ll treat your dental problems with professional, gentle care." FOR YOUR CHECKUPS AND MINOR EMERGENC • Regular Cleaning & Checkups •Gum Disease Treatment •"Emergency" Walk-Ins Welcome •Crowns & Bridges •Oral Surgery •Children's Dentistry CarePlus Dental Centers offer the home town care and old-fashioned service you value most. Plus, you'll find the most advanced techniques and equipment - al! in two convenient locations. •Complete Family Dental Care •Cavity Fillings & Inlays •Full St Partial Dentures •Nitrous Oxide Available •Root Canal Therapy •Extractions •Flouride Treatments •Natural-Lx>oking Cosmetic Bonding & Veneers •Evening & Saturday Appointments Available •10% AAM STUDENT/TEACHER DISCOUNT DENTAL INSURANCE ACCEPTED UP FRONT Call today for vour convenient appointment. Dan Lawson, D.D.S. Jim Arents, D.D.S. Cassie Overley, D.D.S. Karen Moreno Arents, D.D.S. COLLEGE STATION BRYAN 1712 Southwest Parkway 1103 East Villa Maria 696-9578 268-1407 CarePlus^ftt DENTAL CENTER Did You Forget To pick up your 1987 (Fall ’86, Spring ’87) Aggie- land? You can still pick up your copy by coming to the English Annex between 8:30 and 4:30. Bring your I.D. The 1988 (Fall ’87, Spring ’88) Aggieland will be available in October. Look for announcements in The Battalion. Welcome Back Aggie Special 1 dozen Long-Stem Roses $9* M> wrapped $11" Boxed $19" arranged Large Selection of greenplants for Dorms and Apartments Starting at $2 ► 99 764-1828 Post Oak Mall FTD Wire Service Delivery 7 days a week MCAdSA/AMEX FLOWERAMA OF AMERICA Page 67The Battalion/Monday, August 29, 1988 Inmates may be provided with alternative to prison FORT WORTH (AP) — A deci sion by a state district judge nearly two months ago could provide an exit lane for many of those caught in the state prison inmate traffic jam, several lawyers said in a published report. Lawyers in Fort Worth and Austin told the Dallas Morning News that they intend to ask judges to follow the example of District Judge John Bradshaw, who released a 26-year- old Oklahoma woman from Tarrant County Jail on “shock probation” al though she had never officially served the time in a state prison fa cility. Gina Beth Carter should have served between 60 and 180 days in a state prison to qualify for shock pro bation, which can be offered to well- behaved state prisoners convicted of less serious offenses who never served time in prison previously. The theory is that the inmate is “shocked” by the short stay in prison and won’t return to a life a crime if released. The probation is different from the early release program, which is granted through the state parole board. Shock probation can be granted by a state district judge at the judge’s discretion. Bradshaw’s release of Carter is the only known case in which a judge turned someone loose without that person actually setting foot in a state facility in the 10 years since the shock probation law was passed, according to state probation officials and prosecutors. Bradshaw told defense and pros ecuting attorneys he did “not know what real authority” he had to grant her shock probation because “the Art exhibit may bridge racial gap DALLAS (AP) — A Mexican art exhibit, making its only stop in the United States after a European tour, is being touted by officials as a signif icant cultural event that also could help bridge racial barfrers. “It makes a statement that we ex ist, and we must be lAPognized for the contributions we have made in history,” said Michael Gonzales, an advisory committee member of the Dallas Museum of Art, where it opened Sunday. “Images of Mexico: The Contri bution of Mexico to 20th Century Art,” a free exhibit of 350 works by 60 Mexican artists, will run through Oct. 30. Oliver Farres, consulate general from Mexico in Dallas, told the Dal las Times Herald that the exhibition may help erode stereotypes about Mexicans as well as increase Mexi- can-Americans’ knowledge of their heritage. “It leaves you speechless,” said Farres, who has seen the exhibit. “It really gives you a sensation about the many souls of Mexico.” Exhibit catalogs have been printed in both English and Spanish, and bilingual guides will conduct tours. Letters promoting the exhibit were sent to Hispanic chambers of commerce around Texas, and a group of doctors from Monterrey, Mexico and Mexico City will arrive in October to tour hospitals and see the exhibit. It is being called by museum of fi cials the largest unveiling of Mexican art works in 30 years. law is not clear.” Later, he said he wanted to give her a “fair shake.” “This woman had enough time for parole already, under the gen eral view of what we see with people getting out on parole, but she did not want a final conviction on her re cord,” Bradshaw, former 90th Judi cial District judge in Fort Worth, told the Associated Press. “1 was open-minded to it because I feel with probation, the supervi sion is for a longer time, with the net effect, on probation than on parole,” he said, “plus the factor that if she had the innate decency not to want a final conviction on her record, to give her a shot at it. “Under this situation, since site had been in jail a substantial period of time, she had nothing to lose and I thought it appropriate under the circumstances,” Bradshaw said Sun day. David Spencer, general com for the Adult ProbationCommisij in Austin, said he knows of no| requiring someone to actuallysn time in a state prison before beet; mg eligible for the shock probai and believes oilier judges may foil Bradshaw’s example to relieve) and prison overcrowding. Fort Worth lawyer Layne Hi well, who plans to request shod;]: hat ion for one of his clients win awaiting transfer at the Tarn County Jail, said he will worktodi ify the law. “I’m drafting a change tot shock probation law saying thaif person can’t get to TDC, thentli 60 days would start in the coin jail.” Harwell said. “Hopeful),i c an get it passed at the next Lej lature. Child AIDS cases rapidly increasing BOSTON (AP) — He is 3 years old, wearing a red T-shirt and boasting how his dad had taken him to see the fireworks. His little sidekick sucks on a Popsicle and shows off his purple tongue. “You can’t get me, Daddy,” shouts one of the boys as he races playfully down the hallway of the hospital wing. The illness that put them there is masked by their innocence and perfectly normal ways. They are the children of AIDS. Not all are so f ree to run and play. Some come into the world prematurely and drug-addicted. Many have swollen glands, sometimes enlarged livers and spleens. Their bodies are wracked by diarrhea and nausea, burning with fever and wet from night sweats. More than 500 of them across the United States have died of AIDS and 3,000 are infected, according to Dr. James Oleske, medical director of the children’s AIDS program at Children’s Hos pital in Newark, N.J. Their numbers are growing at an alarming rate in a nation ill- equipped to care for them; in many places, hospitals must serve as expensive baby sitters while foster homes are desperately sought for the infants. Dr. Martha Rogers, chief of pe diatric and family studies for the AIDS program at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, estimates about 10,000 children under the age of 13 will he infected with the AIDS virus within a few years. That’s the low end of Oleske’s estimate; he foresees 10,000 to 20,000 infected children by 1991. “I estimate that one in every 10 to 15 hospital beds for children in the United States will be occupied by a child sick with (AIDS) infec tion,” he said. “That is a frighten ing statistic.” About 13 percent of the child victims got AIDS through tainted blood transfusions. Almost all the others, however, were doomed before birth, born to mothers infected with the AIDS virus through intravenous drug use or through sex with a drug user. Six out of 10 of these children die by age 2 or 3, Oleske said. The tragedy is compounded when the mother is a single par ent and unable to care for the in fant because of her drug habit or because she is incapacitated with AIDS herself. A grandmother may care for both, watching boih daughter and grandchild deterio rate and die. With family members unavail able to help in many cases, “Where are ihe increasing num- hers ol children horn with AIDS going to he cared for?” Oleske asked. “Who’s going to care for them?” One answer may lie in thees- tahlishment of siate-supporied transitional group homes that provide temporary care for out- patient children until fosrer tomes can he found. Several have been set up in the last 18 months, including homes in Boston, Al bany, N.Y., and Elizabeth, N.J. More are being planned. At Boston City Hospital, a ren ovated wing known as Dowling 5 South can house four children. Among current residents are the two boys whose fathers cannot care for them full-time but who take them on outings like the Fourth of July fireworks. Since the Dowling wing opened in February 1987, the mothers of two children living there have died. <. “Give me two weeks," pleaded one mother -— ana she held on long enough to make arrange ments for the care of her child. Anne Murphy, a 31-year-old social worker at Dowling 5 South, has seen dying mothers “just coming in ana spending rime with their kids, playing witlr them, putting them to bed, feed ing them supper, some of the da ily routine kind of tilings that I think take on so much more meaning when you leehhatyour time could he limited.” For many of the chidren, how ever, the warmth of mothers and fathers is absent, and nurses try to comfort them when they cry out with withdrawal pains. Some of the older children, un able to understand what is hap pening to them, turn to their toy doctors’ kits and play out their own tragic lives. “They give us fake shots and take our blood pressure,” Mur phy said. “They play outalotof the things that happened to them in the hospital . . . and kind of deal with the experience removed from it in a way.” Many potential foster parents are reluctant to consider children with AIDS — fearful or ignorant of the disease or unwilling to commit the extraordinary amount of time and energy re quired. Wa MEI If ' coc SOI Wa THE SOON FOR / 3 ill t N o GA of T launcl lish tl minoi Bac grant, Scienc UT N have s tal H( uled ti Tat panic searcl and C Texa« nandi and 1 preve healtJ Th adole randc Our instructors are our best equipment, -ype fines! In -k oui our semesfer special'- in aerobics, toning and fanning- Manager Kirstin Brekken 1003 University Dr, ‘King’ of Ludlow Hobo Club retires after 23-year reign LUDLOW, Ky. (AP) — Even a hobo can get too old for his profession. Harry Messer, “the king” of the Ludlow Hobos, is ab dicating. He’s going to kick back and take life even eas ier. Messer, 71, has been king, or top hobo, of the Lud low Hobo Club for 23 years. “They appointed me king for as long as I could prove myself worthy,” he says. Soon, another hobo will get that chance. In the main, the Ludlow hobos are knights of the road in spirit only. They come from all walks of life, many of them hold ing blue-collar jobs. Their common thread is the fellowship found at Hobo Springs. Since the mid-1960s, when Messer and the late Duke Botkin founded the hobo club, the leisure-hour hobos have been coming to the springs to have a few brews, maybe some homemade soup or barbecue and carefree talk. The club, nestled in this Ohio River town in Kenton County, has about 150 members, some being non-active membership card holders. In a ravine, and within earshot of passing trains, the springs attracted hobos and drifters in decades past and provided water for Ludlow during the 1937 flood. It’s the steep climb out of the ravine, whether by con crete stairway or up the banks, that pushed Messerinio retirement. A former bartender and cook who traveled as a hob some, Messer said his health is in decline, and hisdoctoi has recommended he avoid climbing. One of the king’s duties is to be judge of a kangaroo court. The charges against members were anything Messer could think of. “They were always guilty, but the top fine was 5 1 cents,” he says. The Ludlow hobos lease their clubhouse, whereMes ser lives, and picnic grove from the Norfolk & Southern Railroad. Messer plans to move back to his hometown ofWesi Union, in Adams County, Ohio, where several of he children live. He plans to return to Ludlow for future hobo event) “if I’m able.” Along with a few dollars in the hobos’ treasury, Me) ser is leaving the club his chickens — a tough rooster and eight hens. It’s hardly a rich inheritance, but, as Messer says, hobo isn’t supposed to have too much anyway.” A A ,t