11 spill parks are in the oil's federal government's to prevent this dam- nt, this (the oil spill)is Harbor,” declared us, president of tilt ine Conservation ina [he pollution in Bos- ame a campaign issue sh sought to gain an on mental issues over aael Dukakis, gover- usetts. it said Friday that Er /ere inadequate and Duard would take in- of the cleanup. rave been personnel have riled environ- , most notably die james Cason, a con- ior Department off- ant secretary of agn- ing the U.S. Forest senior Interior De al in the Reagan ad- as been accused of king a pro-devel- n public lands issues xhitect of variousef- ears favoring mining alist rail; v of fomenting unrest is, who are demand- lie where authorities o quell disturbances were taken to quell lies of Armenia and e unrest, the Soviet tree making it illegal at. It also mandated bo call for the over- her things, ist estimated 10,000 soldiers moved in at tion came from her trdia, a member of bilisi, who witnessed aome several hours > lor tte >e DC ner, ter, are d does not motion at The Battalion LIFE 11 Monday, April 10,1989 Shriners " helping kids By Stacey Babin ENTERTAINMENT WRITER They are the men in the red-tassled hats. They ride motorcycles and march during parades. They sponsor circuses and carnivals to raise money. Theirs may sound like a fun, carefree organization. But these men are Shriners, and they contribute thou sands of dollars each year to burn treatment institutes and children’s hospitals across the nation. Activities “We have a Hospital Benefit Day in the fall, around October, and the money we collect then goes directly tothe hospitals,” said Jerry Nance, immediate past pres ident of the Brazos Valley Shriner Club. Nance said the Shriners go out on the streets that day, “panhandling” for donations. The Brazos Valley Shriner Club sponsors an annual fish fry and a carnival to raise money for the organiza tion itself. The Shriners’ Mighty Thomas Carnival was held in in Bryan last week, but those proceeds go to the organi zation and not to the hospitals. Johnny Oates, first vice-president of the club, re membered an incident in Florida that made the Shrin ers more careful in publicizing their fundraising events. “They were having a circus there, and an ad indi cated that the money raised went to the hospitals and it didn’t,” Oates said. “Many people were upset.” Shriners now specify clearly whether the money they raisewill be sent to hospitals or burn institutes, he said. Nineteen crippled chil dren’s hospitals and two burn in stitutes in the United States re ceive funds from the Shriners. The hospitals closest to the local Shriners chapter are Galveston’s Burn Institute and the Crippled Children Hospital in Houston’s downtown medi cal center. “The Burn In stitute operates strictly on charita ble donations,” Oates said. “The Crippled Children Hospital treats children from birth to 18 years for any type of reparable illness. They don’t treat kids for things like epilepsy because there is no cure. “If anyone knows any children that need help, they should just get the word to us and we can get help to them,” he said. “We just sent a child with a clubfoot to the Crippled Children Hospital to have it rebuilt.” The hospitals do not use much of the money col lected on the benefit day for administration, he said. “Ninety-eight to 99 percent goes directly to the pur pose,” Oates said. The Burn Institute also treats children up to 18 years old. Many of the burn victims are there for corrective surgery, he said. “There is no charge for the families and no restric tion on who will be treated,” he said. “A child is a child, regardless of birthright.” Origins The Shriners date back to before the turn of the cen tury, Nance said. “Some doctors in New York wanted to have fun, but also wanted to do something good,” he said. “The group has kind of evolved since then.” Oates said he believes the founders, because they were professionals, saw a need to help children and knew they needed to raise money. The Shriners are a branch of the Masons, and as an auxiliary group, they are able to solicit donations and raise funds. The Masonic Lodge is not allowed to have fund-raising activities, Oates said. Nance, who has been a Mason since 1981, said Ma sonic members must go through certain steps before being able to become a Shriner. “A person just has to ask to be a Mason, because we don’t solicit members,” he said. “We’re looking for good people over 21. We’re still a male society, but we do have the Eastern Stars, which are the women’s groups.” Nance said the Shriners’ beliefs come from the Bi ble. Members must only believe in a supreme be ing and are not required to follow a particular reli gion, he said. “There are Ma sons all over the world,” Nance said. More than 900 Masonic lodges are in the United States alone. “We are often thought of and referred to as secre tive, but we have no secrets,” he said. “We have only one basic belief: An educated populace can never be domi nated by a handful of people.” Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack Seven-year-old Adam Retburn rides the ca- Texas A&M’s recreation and parks depart- rousel at the Mighty Thomas Carnival in ment. The carnival is an annual fundraising Bryan. Adam’s mother, Sandy Sabo, works for event sponsored by the Shriners. Show proves A&M has ‘a mess of talent’ From pocket protectors to muscle shirts, exhibit celebrates men V fashion By Chuck Lovejoy ENTERTAINMENT WRITER After Class, the act that per formed last, placed first Friday night in the MSC Variety Show, one of the first major events of Parents’ Weekend. The barbershop quartet, made up of Texas A&M students Jon Gardner, Greg Gorman, Keith Richbourg and Ritchie Thomp son, won a trophy and $150 dol lars for their crowd-pleasing mu sical/comical performance. Taking the stage dressed as characters from the Lone Ranger series, the four musicians per formed three pieces that made the 2,500-member Rudder Audi torium audience scream and ap plaud louder for them than for any other act in the show. The quartet first performed the Lone Ranger theme song while one member was dressed as the Lone Ranger, one as Tonto, one as a bear (thrown in for good measure) and the fourth (clothed in silver lam6) as Silver. Following a quick costume change that took place onstage, the vocalists performed two more songs dressed in normal bar bershop quartet attire. For their second number, the members each vocally imperson ated a musical instrument. The last song told the story of an auctioneer, complete with fast passages sounding like an auc tioneer’s call or bids. Placing second in the show was guitarist and vocalist Hank Townsend, who performed three songs, including “It’s Up to You,” which he wrote. Townsend won a trophy and $125. In Motion, a dance team made up of Stephanie Grogan, Jana Fuhrman, Shellie Kammer and Keli Weeren, was awarded third place for their energetic routine, receiving a trophy and $ 100. A fifth member of the group, Audrey Hold, was awarded the honorary Hard Luck Award, as she sprained her ankle during dress rehearsal and was unable to compete. The Texas A&M Revellers, a jazz vocal group, performed the staple jazz selections “Mack the Knife” and “Just in Time.” Flamenco dancer Roxanne Cuellar performed a dance called “Triana,” which was named after the famous dancer Luisa Triana. Hal Mueller played two tradi tional Irish folk songs on a ham mered dulcimer. The group Throw Up juggled balls and clubs, threw knives around an assistant called Ms. Throw Up and even flirted with severe injury by juggling cordless electric razors. Pianist Stephanie Eiswirth played an original work called “Lament,” which she wrote while she was in high school. The 18-member Kappa Pickers sang a medley of Aggie songs in a style similar to that found on Hee Haw. None of Your Business, a six- member rock band, performed Guns N’ Roses’ “Sweet Child O’ Mine,” Led Zeppelin’s “Rock and Roll” and the Eagles’ “Seven Bridges Road.” Comedian Chris Rand received whoops from Corps members in the audience by wearing Army-is sue horn-rimmed glasses during part of his act, saying they were the only 100 percent effective method of birth control. Vocalist Jill Setina sang the classic country song “Change of Heart” to piano accompaniment. Four women known as the Se quins performed a version of ‘Tind Out What They Like” from the musical “Ain’t Misbehavin.’ ” Also performing, although not competing, were the Aggie Wran glers, winners of the 1989 variety show, and Amy Hopkins, the newly-crowned Miss Texas A&M, who sang “Home” from the musi cal “The Wiz.” Eric Kornfeld served as the master of ceremonies. Kornfeld, a professional come dian, has appeared at comedy clubs around the nation and on MTV and Star Search. Kornfeld kept the show mov ing smoothly with comic tidbits between acts, speaking on topics such as earthquakes, Los Angeles girls, commercials for Levi’s jeans and Michael Jackson. Kornfeld summed up the eve ning with an observation he re layed to the crowd before the an nouncement of the winners. “You know, there is a mess of talent at this school,” he said. NEW YORK (AP) — Macho mus cle shirts clash with drippy, high-wa ter pants at “Jocks and Nerds,” a fashion exhibit that celebrates and spoofs 20th-century men. The two stereotypes are among 12 categories being explored through May 16 in an exhibit at the Fashion Institute of Technology that shows “how men create images for them selves,” said curator Richard Martin. Mannequins are transformed into jocks, nerds, rebels, workers, cow boys, military men, hunters, sports men, Joe College, businessmen, men about town and dandies. A man’s clothing reflects his per sonality, although “perhaps not in a purely conscious way,” Martin said. “Someone can be a businessman five days a week, but on Saturday he puts on his safari jacket and becomes the Ernest Hemingway of Great Neck. “At night, he goes to a downtown club and becomes a rebel.” Or perhaps a jock — depicted here in photographs of Sylvester Stallone as “Rocky,” a reclining Jim Palmer pitching Jockey underwear, and a comic book outlining Charles Atlas’ rise from 97-pound-weakling to he-man. “Jocks go in and out of favor,” Martin said. “In the late 1960s and early ’70s, the anti-establishment time, jocks were portrayed as dumb.” But they are always perceived as sexy. “Indeed, the classification of men’s underwear into jockey and boxer shorts, both alluding to sports, seems to imply that the sanction of athletics is required for manly at tire,” the “Jocks and Nerds” catalog notes. Nerds have other qualities. The exhibit, noted Martin, fea tures “our ’80s nerd, complete with white socks, high-water pants and black glasses. “Their beautifully made clothing that really respects the history of the nerd: the pattern mix, the ungainli- ness, the T-shirt under the open col lar of a 1950s nylon shirt in a really icky material,” he said. A nerd, he said, might wear a short-sleeve shirt under a sweater vest, making his arms too cold and his chest too hot. “It causes a real sense of discom fort and the nerd projects that,” he said. Nerds surfaced in the 1950s — and a funny thing happened to them in recent years. “The downtown club people sud denly started buttoning their top button and wearing high-water trou sers,” Martin said. Also featured in the exhibit is a crowd of mannequins offering blasts from the past: a paisley Nehru suit; cowboy chaps made of sheepskin and skunk, on loan from the Buffalo Bill museum in Cody, Wyoming; loud pants patterned with golf tees and golf balls, once favored in Palm Beach; and a black velvet suit with bellbottom pants — donated by Mar tin, who says he “can’t believe I wore that.” And Martin pointed out a collec tion of “great, bizarre ties” with pic tures of hula dancers, Marilyn Mon roe, cocker spaniels and horses. “There are always some men who are quite conventional but who will buy the most extraordinary ties,” he said. The clothing was borrowed, gleaned from staffers’ attics and scrounged at flea markets. “We were real crazed flea-market shoppers,” said Martin. Fie said he usually hates to shop but discovered he would “go wild and become the worst sort of grabby shopper” while building the collec tion. “We’d get there the minute the doors opened,” he said. He said the display is believed to be the first exhibit of 20th century men’s clothing. “Most museums have collected great women’s clothing but have very little concern for men’s cloth ing,” Martin said. “It’s very difficult to find historic men’s clothing — men tend to wear it until it wears out.” Photo by Frederick D. Joe Eric Kornfeld, a professional comedian, served as emcee at the MSC Variety Show Saturday. Kornfeld has appeared at several comedy clubs around the country, as well as appearing on MTV and Star Search.