i. 4 45-: 5 can said, ilism col- He je in :h is- )ved s’sa )w," irt is ialty )niic new Fri- mits >let- All iay, s to id. rail ^ou out EYKO [SCO ’ nee pf| 21 to reli" ; wotll: ; 5 id cs ofbi; WHAT’S AFTER GRADUATION} WE OFFER THE KEY TO EXCITING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BI OLOGY. IF YOU ARE MOTIVATED AND BRIGHT WITH A KEEN INTER EST IN MODERN BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH, WE WANT YOU! GRADUATE STUDIES IN THE DEPARTMENT OF CELL BI OLOGY AND ANATOMY AT TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER FEATURE TRAINING WITH A YOUG, ENERGETIC FACULTY DOING CUTTING-EDGE RE SEARCH IN MODERN FACILITIES AND USING STATE-OF-THE- ART INSTRUMENTATION. WE OFFER $10,000 PER YEAR FOR GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH ASSISTANTS. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT DR. GARY VAN ZANT, GRADUATE ADVISOR (806/743-2707), OR DR. HARRY WEITLAUF, DEPARMENT CHAIRMAN (806/743-2700), OR WRITE TO US AT THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS: TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER DEPARTMENT OF CELL BIOLOGY & ANATOMY LUBBOCK, TX 79430 Summer Employment Opportunities} for Liberal Arts Major’s Wednesday, April 11 5:15 p.m. 302 Rudder Presented by the Placement Center and Cooperative Education Office. Moving Out? Don't Let YOUR Deposit Become Money for your Manager Submit Your 30-Day Notice Of Intent to Vacate TODAY! Brought to you by Off Campus Aggies and the Off Campus Center. CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS STUDIES MITSUI & CO. (USA) SCHOLARSHIPS * 10 Scholarships are available for the 1990-91 academic year for juniors and seniors in the College of Business Administration with a demonstrated interest in international business. * Application forms can be picked up at the Center For International Business Studies, Room 505 Blocker Building. Phone: 845-5234. * Application Deadline: Wednesday, April 11, 1990. SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $1 oo TOTAL COST... includes eye exam, free care kit, and std. daily wear, ex tended wear, or tinted lenses. Ask About Our New Bifocal soft lenses SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Sale ends April 27,1990 Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 Monday, April 9,1990 The Battalion Page 5 MHMR helps retarded adults find friendship ABILENE (AP) — When Donald Baird sinks his teeth into a juicy bur ger, his face has that familiar look of hunger finally satisfied. When his mother is hospitalized with heart problems, Donald Baird’s eyes betray his worry. And when Donald Baird meets someone new, he has that slight, stomach-quivering feeling that ner vously mixes with the excitement and anticipation of potential friendship. Normality? Yes. But Donald Baird is mentally re tarded. Robbye Wilde is the coordinator of volunteer services and public in formation for Abilene’s Mental Health and Mental Retardation Cen ter. Without denying Donald’s men tal disability, she’ll affirm Donald’s normality with an emphatic “Yes!” Then, with combined sadness and anger, she’ll tell you about the ste reotype — the one Donald is lumped in, ironically, by people who don’t even know him. The category is assigned by adjec tives such as “strange,” “not-with-it” and “dangerous.” The image the word “retarded” conjures people with major intellect loss and no con trol of bodily functions. “Ninety-nine percent of people with mental retardation are just like you and me,” she says. “And the needs are the major things we sha re.” One of those very basic needs often denied to the retarded she says is simple friendship. “And to deny them friendship is to deny them the dignity of being a human being,” she says. MHMR finds volunteer friends for its clients, friends that bestow dignity. Just ask Donald Baird. Baird, 35, and Michael Holley, 18, sat shoulder to shoulder, Baird clearly excited at the prospect of be ing interviewed. “You see, I’m the biggest,” Baird jokes, elbowing Michael. “I’m a spe cial friend to him since I’m the old- Baird’s attitude sobered as he be gan shaking his head and reflecting on the days before Holley. While adequate, life in his providership home, where trained citizens look after him, and work on a janitorial crew did not foster the development of any close friendships. As the void began to take its toll, Baird’s behavior began to change — unprofitable and unacceptable changes. Robbye Wilde sensed the need for friendship. Holley, a freshman Bible-society major at Abilene Christian Univer sity, sensed something else. Some thing Wilde might call a spiritual overflow of goodness. Holley acted on it in September 1989. “I felt like I had a lot of time and resources to give,” Holley says. He thumbed through the yellow pages and called MHMR. “I mean, it was like God sent him (Holley),” Wilde says. “It was that quick.” Baird displays a similar sentiment. “I thought he was the person God had sent my way,” he says. “It just touched my heart when I first saw him ... I was kind of depressed. “When I see him — it just makes me feel like I’m somebody special to have a special friend like him.” Every week and a half or so, Hol ley plans something — eating at the mall, video arcades, miniature golf or a concert. And talking all the while. “Our friendship — it’s an equal friendship,” Holley says. “It goes both ways. I can tell him anything. In return I’ve received much more than I’ve given.” Sherry Griffin, 34, works with the mentally retarded every day as spe cial populations supervisor for the city’s she Recreation Department. But stepped outside her job and vol- ;ered her friendship. Darlene Benton’s unteere< She became hero. “I tell her my problems, and she solves them,” a laughing Benton says. Benton, 32, has a simple view of friendship. She calls it “being around someone you like.” “And I like being around Sherry,” she adds. The two like to eat out together and enjoy going to movies. “I really really enjoy being around Darlene,” Griffin says. “It’s just like with any other of my close friends. “I do think there’s something within you that you understand and realize about these individuals. I have that understanding that these individuals are just like myself,” she said. Charles Way, 37, acknowledges IMMIGRATION WORK VISAS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS PERMANENT RESIDENCE ALL OTHER IMMIGRATION MATTERS BARBARA HINES, pc Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization 1005 E. 40th (512) 452-0201 AUSTIN, TX 78751 Come by Today! Offering Summer Rates • 2 Bedroom - One Bath • 24 Emergency Maintenance • Water & Sewer Paid • On Shuttle • Fireplaces • Washer-Dryer Connections • 1034 sq. feet 1 779-3d37 E 1005 A Venje Dr. Bryn. )REST CREEl ( APARTMENTS^ K “I I It just touched my heart when I first saw him ... I was kind of depressed. When I see him — it just makes me feel like I’m somebody special to have a special friend like him.” —Donald Baird, MHMR buddy his shyness. “I’m a quiet person,” Way says slowly, looking down at his hands. But Way’s volunteer buddy, Kee nan Wynn, says that comes in handy when you’re trying to fish. And that’s what the two like to do. “We went out to Nelson Park, but we won’t talk about that now,” says Wynn, 27, smiling. Apparently, the two have yet to make that one big catch to brag about. Wynn, who is stationed at Dyess Air Force Base, answered Wilde’s ad in the base newspaper, looking for a volunteer friend who liked to fish. “It’s just people getting to know people —just another person to talk to — a friend to fish with,” he says. “And a popcorn eater,” he joked, adding that the two plan to take in a lot of movies together. Terry Brooks and volunteer friend Scott Todd — another Air Force man who responded to Wilde’s ad in the Dyess newspaper — lift weights together at Abilene’s Power Shack Gym. Todd, 27, who works with the base bomb squad, ranks fifth in the nation in his powerlifting divison. “The good Lord gave me the abil ity to do what I can do,” he says. “The least I can do is share it.” Brooks, 33, is convinced that Todd can do a lot more than lift weights. “He’s a good man,” Brooks says. Todd has encouraged Brooks to quit smoking, promising him a pair of stretch pants if he can go without a cigarette for two months. The two clearly are buddies. Their conversations are peppered with laughter as they continuously joke with one another. “He’s just like anyone else in this gym,” Todd says. Except, he adds, Brooks has more drive than the av erage weight lifter. “If some guys took the heart that he had for lifting, they could go a long way,” he says. Brooks will test his skills this sum mer when he and Todd and their wives travel to Galveston for a weightlifting meet. Brooks will com pete in the Special Olympics divi sion. “Terry is a part of this gym,” Todd says. “He’s a part of all of us.” New cable program spotlights Texas musicians, songwriters 1 block South of Texas & University SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE AUSTIN (AP) — Texas musicians are featured on a new, national stage on cable television’s The Nashville Network’s newest program, “The Texas Connection.” The weekly series showcases Texas musicians and songwriters, said Cathy Lehrfeld, spokeswoman for Group W Communications. “There’s so much terrific country music coming out of Texas,” she said. “It’s such a vital scene that has a broad appeal across the country. “We felt this would be a good time to explore it in depth.” The half-hour show, which tapes before a live audience in Austin, is being produced by the team of Bill Arhos and Terry Lickona of PBS’s “Austin City Limits.” Arhos is exec utive producer and Lickona pro ducer of the PBS program. “Terry and Bill have such a great track record with ‘Austin City Lim its,’ ” Lehrfeld said. “They have the wherewithal to tap into this whole great scene. “Austin is kind of the hotbed of the Texas music scene, and we felt that there were a lot of different fields that TNN would like to look into — to show a presence that rep- country. resents different parts of the coun try. “You’ve got rockabilly, Texas swing, country rock, folk influences ... It runs the gamut.” Lehrfeld said TNN plans 26 in stallments of “The Texas Connec tion” in the first year. The shows air Saturday evenings, with several re- E eat performances during the fol- >wing weeks. Among artists scheduled for the program are Robert Earl Keen Jr. and the Austin Lounge Lizards, Lyle Lovett and Austin veteran Jerry Jeff Walker. San Antonio native Tish Hinojosa is scheduled to perform songs from her debut LP “Homeland” on the program in late April. May shows are slated to include singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt, Steve Fromholz, and Guy Clark. Austin blues singer Marsha Ball is scheduled for June. “We want to show a broad range of styles,” Lehrfeld said. “TNN’s viewers have told us they love coun try music and want more of it. “This gives them more, and it ze ros in on one real, vital area of the 2 Weeks Unlimited Tanning $21.00 846-6843 Northgate 1 989-90 AggieVision Option 23 * AM/PM Clinics • Minor Emergencies clinics • General Medical Care • Weight Reduction Program 10% Student Discount with I.D. Card (Except for Weight Program) 846-4756 693-0202 779-4756 3820 Texas 2305 Texas Ave S. 401 S. Texas (next to Randy Sims) (next to U Rent M) College Station (29th & Texas) SUPERIOR AUTO SERVICE ALL technicians are ASE certified MASTER technicians. 12 month / 12,000 mile limited warranty Free local shuttle service WHERE SERVICE RE ALL Y IS SUPERIOR! 111 Royal Street « Bryan * 846-5344 Book Fair Date: Time: Location: Sponsor: April 9-13 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Harrington Tower Rm. 110X Texas Student Education Assoc. 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