3 he Battalion STATE & LOCAL •t l thesf '•ngto uesday, September 25,1990 TCLU changes structure, reates independent group ducat )rt$o( te-o\d never. htthi tem.fl 4USTIN (AP) — The Texas Civil iberties Union has undergone a najor restructuring that, includes he formation of’ an independent rroup called the South Texas Pro- ect. The project, which until now was major part of TCLU’s mission, will , Riclitie governed by its own board of di- ectors and will operate indepen- lently of TCLU, an arrangement hat one civil libertarian predicted ould kill the project. “This proposal will mean the end argettftf a civil liberties project in the (Rio rande) Valley, at least for the time jeing,” said Beth Crabb, who is now ull-time attorney for the project. Crabb, who will remain on staff in he project’s Rio Grande Valley of- ice, said the project and the TCLU vill not be able to raise enough money to survive separately. Representatives of the Commu- ncations Workers of America and he TCLU negotiated for 14 hours his weekend before deciding that he project would organize its own ion-profit foundation. The TCLU’s reorganization, com peted Sunday. was part of a set- lenient arrangement with Jim Har- ington, the former TCLU legal lirector dismissed last week by the xasSt atm. in the ri. >?Isit ’emlif tferik ■s m I actui tcaiit® king is, tton :her aarene irivatt iyof vide' thjob ngby pressm ace. St- Jr. group’s state board. Harrington, who is to become le gal director of the South Texas Pro ject and operate out of Austin, did not agree. “I think that we certainly have in place the ability to raise the money that we need,” Harrington said. “1 am bound and determined ... to see that this organization becomes a vi able civil rights organization that will take the place of the divorce that oc curred today.” The agreement calls for Harring ton, who had served as legal director of TCLU for 17 years, to complete work on his pending legal cases. Volunteer attorneys would pro vide legal services until TCLU can hire a new executive director and le gal director, officials said. Jay Brim III, attorney for TCLU in the settlement talks, said that TCLU would give the Sputh Texas Project $85,000 pledged to it as well as $85,000 agreed to during negotia tions. Also, the two groups initially will have joint fund-raising efforts. Under die agreement, most em ployees of TCLU and the South Texas Project will be represented by the Communication Workers of America. BATTIPS Anyone with story suggestions call BATTIPS. The Battalu can phone line designed to improve communication between the news paper and its readers. The BATTIPS number is 845- 8515. Ideas can include news stories, feature ideas and personality pro files ofinteresting people. ii In Advance Health and Wellness Fair to be held Wednesday The Texas A&M Health and Wellness Fair will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday in the MSC. More than 40 community and student groups will provide health information and screen ings, most of which are free. Information to be covered in cludes blood pressure, coronary risk, scoliosis and weight. Cholesterol tests will be avail able for a small fee. Baseball head coach Mark Johnson will speak at 12:15 p.m. in the flagroom. Minority Liberal Arts Society will meet tonight All students in Texas A&M’s College of Liberal Arts are in vited to attend the Minority Lib eral Arts Society s first meeting. The meeting w ill be tonight at 7 in 401 Rudder Tower. Mem bers will organize a constitution and vote for officers. Darnel Fallon, dean of the Col lege of Liberal Arts, also will speak at the meeting. Police seek shooting details Brazos County Crime Stoppers is seeking information about an early morning shooting Aug. 18 in Col lege Station. College Station police say a w oman was shot once in the lower back at about 4 a.m. as she and an other woman walked northbound on Eleanor Street near the Lincoln Cen ter in College Station. The women were walking down the street when they passed a group of men standing near a curb. As the women passed the men, they were verbally and physically harassed. One of the men shot at the women with a .22-caliber rifle. Witnesses described the suspect as a large African-American man with short hair. Detectives believe there were several witnesses to the crime, but few have offered information. This week the College Station Po lice Department and Crime Stoppers need your help in identifying the person responsible for this aggra vated assault. If you have information that could be helpful, call Crime Stop pers at 775-TIPS. Crime Stoppers will assign you a coded number to protect your identity. If your call leads to an arrest and grand jury indictment. Crime Stop pers will pay you up to $1,000 in cash. Crime Stoppers also pays cash for information on any felony crime or the location of a wanted f ugitive, pas*tra*mi \po- s stram-e\ n 1: highly seasoned smoked beef prepared especially from shoulder cuts. 2: served at Schlotzky’s on our famous fresh baked bun with lettuce, tomato, onion and mustard. r 75C OFF medium or large pastrami sandwich Schlotzsky's L 100 S. Texas Av. (Next to Comfort Inn) 846-8933 Park Place Plaza (next to College Station Winn Dixie) 693-0861 j Origami folds fun with science if :m *•; I Hi >jr Phelan M. Ebenhack By JOE FERGUSON Of The Battalion Staff Helping students learn is what Dr. James Yao is all about. Yao, head of Texas A&M’s De partment of Civil Engineering, says he enjoys teaching and working with young people and seeing them de velop — what he calls intangible re wards. “It’s a great joy to have students remember me (after they graduate) and come back and say I helped in some way,” Yao says. One of many reasons Yao will be remembered is because of his fond ness of origami — the art of paper folding. His creations are used as class examples and just for fun. One of Yao’s paper designs is a bird, which flaps its wings when he holds on to the neck and pulls on the tail. Up to that point, the paper is folded just for fun. But after flap ping the wings for a period of time, the bird becomes an illustration to his classes about structural fatigue and tensile stress. The example helps Yao present material about an airplane as its wings fluctuate. But there’s more. Hold on to the other end and pull on the head, and the wings flap the other way. The bird’s standby redundancy is thereby utilized and the wings can flap about twice as long, he says. Not all of Yao’s creations, how ever, are examples of structural properties. Each desk in the civil engineering office is adorned with paper won ders like dogs, horses, swans, sea horses, baskets and rockets. Most of his creations just stand there, but like the wing-flapping bird, another office favorite is the hopping frog. Touch its little tail and it hops as far as two feet. Besides the paper toys in the de partment head’s office, Yao also likes games, particularly volleyball. Hanging from the ceiling is a vol leyball signed by the women’s volley ball team from Purdue University, where he once was a professor. Yao says his favorite game yell is “One more!” He says just as only one point can be scored at a time in a vol- Dr. James Yao time can be accomplished in life. His desk is used as an example. “If I looked at the mess on my desk and tried to clean it all at once, I’d find myself overwhelmed and probably would quit,” he says. “Then the mess would only get larger. But by cleaning it one pile at a time, it will get done slowly, but it will get done.” He encourages students to take the same approach. Other advice he gives to students is to have the right aim in shooting for education and career goals. “Don’t put the cart in front of the Academically, he encourages stu dents to learn as much as possible, and grades will follow. But Yao warns against choosing a career for the prospect of making money. “Study what interests you the most,” he says. “Life is too short to study what is hot at the moment. Un derstand what you’re getting into. Collect information, analyze it and make an intelligent decision.” Yao says he takes his own advice. He says he always tries to learn be cause it keeps him enthusiastic about his job and it makes him a better tea cher. That way, he says, both teacher and student improve. leyball match, only one thing at a .horse,” he says- MAKE YOUR CAREER MOVE NOW! Mobil Corporation Cordially Invites ALL GRADUATING AGGIES Along With Underclassmen Seeking Summer Internships IN THE FOLLOWING FIELDS: ENGINEERING: Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Environmental, Mechanical, and Petroleum GEOSCIENCES: Geology, Geophysics SCIENCE: Chemistry BUSINESS: Accounting, BANA, Finance, Management, Marketing, MBA To Join Us At The 1990 MOBIL CAREER WEEK October 2-5, in the M.S.C. 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