The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 01, 1988, Image 12

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    S
DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS
Nov. 4 (6-10 p.m.), 5 (8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.)
Nov. 11 (6-10 p.m.), 12 (8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.)
Register at University Plus (MSC Basement)
Call 845-1631 for more information on these
or other classes
Contact Lenses
Only Quality Name Brands
(Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve)
$ "7Q00 pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT
» ^ LENSES
$ QQ00 pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT
LENSES
$QQ00 pr. *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES
W ^ DAILY WFAR OR EXTENDED WEAR
SAME DAY DELIVERY
ON MOST LENSES
Call 696-3754
For Appointment
CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C.
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
* Eye exam & care kit
not Included
707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D
College Station, Texas 77840
1 block South of Texas & University
PIZZA
SALE!
99
0
PERSONAL
PAN PIZZA
pizza
I'Hutl
READY IN 5 MINUTES.GUARANTEED.
Just For One • Just For Lunch
Guaranteed 11:30 AM-1:00 PM. Personal Pan Pizza available ’til 4 PM
5-minute guarantee applies to our 3 selections on orders of
5 or less per table. 3 or less per carryout customer.
m
Personal
I Pan Pepperoni
I
Limit one
per coupon
Personal
I Pan Pepperoni^^^ I
Limit one
I
Pr»«nt coupon wtwn a>4«rfng. On* eou- — ~
pan pOT p*r*on fMr vfajl Pwaonal P»n» —sflUa •
per coupon
Mrvsd botxw.n 11*m-«pni, Mon.-Frt. *1
portfcfpoting Pin* HuW rOTtawanls.
■ Pin
Present coupon when ordering. One coupon
<r person per visit. Persons! Psns served
Ween 1Mon.-Frt. st psrtldpslng
Pins Hoi® restaurants.
4W.
Cash redemption value 1/20 cent. Not valid In
combination with any other Pizza Hut® otter. 5-
mlnirte guarantee appDe* 1130 AM to 1.-00 PM
to our two selections on orders of Bor less per ta
ble or 3 or less per carryout customer.
©1983 Pizza Hut, Inc.
I Cash redemption value 1/20 cent. Not valid In
combination with any other Pizza Hut® otter. 5-
mlnute guarantee applies 1130 AM to 130 PM
1 to our two selections on orders of 5 or less per ta-1
" ble or 3 or less per carryout customer.
1 ©1983 Pizza Hut, Inc.
102 University
Good at both Locations
<
University
501 University
‘Couch potato hypothesis’
explains overweight youthsP®
Par
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Young
Americans are more overweight than
ever, a “fattening of America” that one
researcher blames on a generation of
couch potatoes that spends as much time
watching television as in the classroom.
Rates of obesity among children and
adolescents went up an average of about
45 percent between 1960 and the early
1980s, said Steven Gortmaker, associate
professor and acting chairman of the De
partment of Behavioral Sciences at Har
vard University.
A key factor in explaining the rise are
1983 studies that show children spend an
average of at least 25 hours a week in
front of the television, said Gortmaker,
who speculated that the actual number of
viewing hours is higher.
“Television viewing for children is
now practically a full-time job equal to
the time spent in school,” he said, add
ing that television viewing is up from an
average of 18 hours per week in 1968.
Diet, a general decline in physical ac
tivity, and TV commercials that re
inforce the appeal of high-calorie foods
contribute to the dramatic increase in
overweight youths, said Gortmaker, who
explained his “couch potato hypothesis”
last month at an American Dietetic Asso
ciation meeting.
The link between TV-watching and
obesity rates holds true for adults, too,
he said. One study showed that adults
who watch an hour of television a day or
“Television viewing for
children is now practi
cally a full-time job equal
to the time spent in
school.”
— Steven Gortmaker
associate professor in the
Department of Behav
ioral Sciences at Harvard
University.
98 percent in the same age group.
Among youths aged 12 to 17, obesity
went up 39 percent and super-obesity
rose by 64 percent.
Obesity and super-obesity were mea
sured with a skinfold test that does not
readily translate into percentage of body
fat or other measurements, he said.
The greatest increase among males
was between the ages of 6 and 11, and
the biggest among females was in those
aged 12 to 17. Obesity was less prevalent
among blacks than whites, but that gap
has narrowed recently, he said.
Obesity is equally prevalent among
wealthy and poor children, Gortmaker
found. The greatest number of obese
youths are found in the Northeast while
the fewest are west of the Mississippi
River.
Obese children face health risks 1
eluding hypertension, psycho-soa
damage, respiratory and orthopei
problems. They also tend to bee®
overweight adults, Gortmaker said,
To counter the trend, he recommei
individualized programs to target ovi
weight youth, and school and comt
nity-based nutrition programs.
In another presentation, John Fore
an associate professor at Baykr Coli ientary clcctions
tons parties
ower.
hoh
less have a 3 percent chance of being
obese, compared to a 25 percent chance
of obesity among adults who watch three
hours per day.
Specifically, Gortmaker found that be
tween the late 1960s and 1980, obesity
rates went up 54 percent among children
aged 6 to 11. Super-obesity rates went up
Houston woman
vows fight to keep
700-pound pet pig
HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston
woman who has bowed to pressure from
city officials and agreed to move her pet
pig out of town is calling for friends to
march on City Hall in a campaign to
“Keep Jerome at Home. ’ ’
The 700-pound pig known as Jeffrey
Jerome has been used as an attraction at
charity events by owner Victoria Her-
berta Ziesig, who believes the animal de
serves special treatment as an exception
to city ordinances.
“As far as I’m concerned, he is instru
mental to the work I am doing as ambas
sador to the needy, ’’ Ziesig said.
have been feeding street people for four
years out of my own pocket.”
Jeffrey Jerome appeared on the porch
of Ziesig’s home Sunday in a “Vampig”
costume at a gathering that drew about
1,000 people, who donated a pickup bed
full of food for Jerome’s last appearance
as a Houston resident.
“They agreed to let me keep him for
his Halloween party today, but they said
after that, they want him out of the city
limits,” she said.
“We have parties for him and . . . ask
people to bring canned goods,” she said.
“This helps me because sometimes my
demand gets past what I can supply. I
“In other words, I’m going to cooper
ate with the city in the hope they’ll let
met get a special permit and let me con
tinue my work with street people and the
needy,” Ziesig added.
of Medicine in Houston, reportedthati
eting has become the norm amongAt
ican women and has become comm
among young children
“We have become a nation obses
with body shape, body size. Women
particular are not satisfied with theirko
ies today, either size or shape,” hesa^, e l po f the religiol
But Foreign Iv
Election buttons
tell political story
n
i
JERUSALEM (/
ikud bloc and lef
ueled head to heai
Likud leader Yi
o have the edge i
ilition and said
:ould stay on as p
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Behind
every campaign button is a story.
And every dedicated collector is a
storyteller.
Put the two together and what have
you got? Life, piercing what Charles
Cotrell, St. Mary’s University aca
demic vice president and political sci
ence professor, terms “dead” his
tory.
This particular story begins with
1,000 political buttons dating back to
the 1896 William McKinley-William
Jennings Bryan presidential cam
paign that recently found their way to
St. Mary’s University, thanks to a lo
cal anonymous collector whose de
ceased brother once attended the col
lege many years ago.
The political Americana, which
will be on display at the university
through Nov. 9, ranges from the
somber McKinley photograph to
“Drive Carefully — the life you save
may vote Republican (Gold water
’64).” Although the collection has
yet to be appraised, Cotrell said the
button bearing the likeness of McKin
ley, the 25th U.S. president who was
assassinated, is one of the most valu
able buttons today.
The McKinley button was the first
of the type of campaign buttons used
today. Earlier buttons were made
from lithographs on steel and more
recent ones are made of paper with a
celluloid covering.
“A button really expresses the
First Amendment,” Cotrell said. The
professor pointed out that symbolic
speech is protected by the First
Amendment, a ruling made in the
1969 U.S. Supreme Court case of
Tinker vs. Des Moines School Dis
trict. The case arose when the school
district forbade its high school stu
dents from wearing black armbands
to protest U.S. involvement in the
Vietnam War.
“So much of political science is
symbols,” Cotrell said. “Buttonsare
Fixed imagery that goes back before
the turn of the century. They afford a
concrete touch with history in an age
that almost depends on a flickering
image (television) of reality.”
David Frost, a paratransit coordi
nator for VIA Metropolitan Transit
Authority, began his button collec
tion 30 years ago and has amassed at
least 1,000 assorted buttons.
“Buttons tell where we have been
as a nation and how we got to where
we are now,” he said. One of his
most prized items is a George Wash
ington campaign token. “I found it in
an antique store In South Carolina,"
said the 43-year-old history buff.
The Student Chapter
EL PASO (AP
’atrol’s El Paso se
ast month for m;
:ials said Tuesday
Border Patrol
0,622 pounds ol
96 separate sei
nonthly record
narijuana seized
Woodruff said.
April and Octc
zesting seasons ir
;en increases in e
,018-pound hai
April, while last
seizures of 12 t
,000 pounds of
n October 1987.
“I think we’i
oming across, ai
fighting the prot
Vina, deputy ch
vast El Paso se
southern New Me
To underscore
noted the amount
October eclipsed
trol sector’s figu
1986 - 6,594 pc
U.S. Custom
agents have beet
years that the El
more and more p
glers, especially
Some drive drug;
the
international
toms can’t check
the tremendous
makes El Paso-Ji
the U.S.-Mexica
Other smuggle
THE
AGGIE
CLUB
The Aggie Club
w
Student Chapter
vc
fre
By Al
Sen
Wednesday Nov. 2
5:30 p.m.
Meet at the Indoor Pool (DeWare)
(watch the last half hour of swim practice)
Guest Speaker
The free flov
tial to the effor
societies aroun
of the Voice o
said Tuesday at
Information
world,” VGA 1
said. “How out
advantage in i
ership role in
going to deten
sence of demo
over the next ce
Carlson wa:
Reagan in 19
which broadet
million people
wide.
“Voice of
providing trutl
public interes
which in so mi
free flow of in
Mel Nash
Swim Coach
“The Voice
glamourize c
State’s accom
ach democrai
other governn
ic.” he said,
v job is, within
frailty, to tell
“. . . to of
■ on a variety <
give a balano
United States
prises the Uni
For more information call the Aggie Club
The intends
fort, Carlson
such as the fr
participatory
ing to people
I lions.