The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1990, Image 6

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THE
ANDSTONB
CENTER
(409) 690-3030 OR 1-800-42 1-6322
Eating Disorders?
Depression? Stress? Anxiety?
Relationship Problems?
Drug or Alcohol Problem?
Free
Confidential Consultation
24 Hours Every Day
4201 Texas Avenue South, College Station, Texas 77845
JORDAN FELLOWS LECTURES
MARCHS, 1990 7 P.M. MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER, ROOM 145
Randy Stevenson: The Swadhyaya Movement in India
Deidi Strickland: Spain and Germany: a Cultural and Historical Education
MARCH 22, 1990 7 p.m. RUDDER TOWER, ROOM 510
Laura Moore: Paraguay: a Study of Latin American Culture and Politics
Roderick Anderson: Kenya and Tanzania
These presentations relate recent student experiences of
research and study in preparation for careers concerned with
international affairs.
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Page 6
Event
(Continued from page 1)
Station, he said. The event’s target
areas are the Lincoln Center neigh-
borhood in College Station and
along Martin L. King jr. Drive in
Bryan.
Peggy Calliham, public relations
and marketing manager for the City
of College Station, said city staff re
searched the problems of high
weeds, rubbish, dilapidated struc
tures and junk cars in the Lincoln
Center neighborhood.
This year’s Big Event will include
a Special Olympics softball tourna
ment at the College Station Central
Park and a Brazos Food Drive,
White said. This is the first year for
the tournament.
The mg tv
a.m. March 24 on Kyle Field. Activ
ities are scheduled to run all da*
with the majority of work performec
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
AU students are encouraged K
participate, White said. Individual!
can sign up to volunteer, as can or
ganizations. Students can reques
specific tasks to complete.
Forum
tn.
lo
(Continued from page 1)
when they return home,” Stout said.
He said many international stu
dents who attend large American
universities work in laboratories
equipped with sophisticated comput
ers and electronic equipment. Many
of these students are frustrated
when they return to their home
countries and aren’t able to work
with such technology, Stout said.
Dr. Bill Harris agreed that the
lack of technology in many countries
creates problems for international
students enrolled in American uni
versities.
He said many countries need edu
cational institutions equipped with
the latest technological advances.
However, Harris said education is
not a cure-all for any country’s prob
lems.
“Without intellectual freedom
there is no possibility to utilize the
concepts of science and put them to
work on behalf of a better, or richer
or more complex life,” Harris said.
Dr. Dean Corrigan said many
countries that are recently becoming
more “intellectually free” are
looking to the United States as an ex
ample.
“I wish we could be what they
think we are,” Corrigan said.
He said Americans take their free
dom for granted, while people in
other countries are willing to give up
their lives for freedom.
“It’s not how you get it (freedom
it’s w'hat you do with it that counts
Corrigan said.
Corrigan said Americans shouli
learn how to use their freedom
benefit fellow human beings.
He also said people should useei
ucation as it was intended.
“Education is more than jus
learning how to make a living,"Coi
rigan said. “Education is learnii
how to make a life.”
Tonight at 8 p.m., to end Intent
tional Week, a talent show and trai
tional dress parade will be in Rudds
Auditorium. Tickets are availafc
for $3.50 at Rudder Box Office
Breakup
(Continued from page 3)
breaking the relationship, and there
fore they are not as likely to come to
counseling.”
The following are five stages peo
ple go through while getting over a
broken relationship:
• Manuevering — trying to figure
out how to handle it by blaming oth
ers.
• Concluding — forming beliefs
about the situation, like thinking the
opposite sex is not trustworthy.
• Letting go — taking a close look at
how they are clinging and then fi
nally letting go.
• Objectifying — looking at the
relationship objectively and trying to
understand how and why it hap
pened.
• Re-emergence — getting on with
their lives and trying new
relationships.
Stachowiak said the counselors
hope students can recognize what
stage they are in so they can gain
hope from understanding that there
will be an end to the pain.
Rabinowitz said the counseling
service is part of the division of Stu
dent Services and is created only fa
students.
The program has had students#:
all ages and situations, such as mat
ried students, older students
turning students and young St#
dents, she added.
“I know there are more peopt
that are in the situation of beingbr#
ken up (from) a relationship and
hope to get more of a response fro#
students,” Rabinowitz said.
If anyone is interested in
relationship group program, tfa 1
can contact the Student Counsel^!
Services office.
ik
The MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness presents
"A Black Man's Experiences
in the Caribbean"
Dominican
Republic
Lecturer: Mr. Bias Jimenez, former student, poet, and
successful businessman from the Dominican Republic
Tuesday, March 6 7:00 P.M.
Room 206, Memorial Student Center
For more information, please call 845-8770.
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