State & Local Page 2 The Battalion Tuesday, July 20,1993 Ben Aggie Public Relations plans operation Agency to serve A&M campus, B-CS By GENEEN PIPHER The Battalion A student-run public relations agency operated by Texas A&M public relations students will be gin operations this fall. The executive board of the Texas A&M University chapter of the Public Relations Student Soci ety of America (PRSSA) is putting together the agency, tentatively named Aggie Public Relations. All students interested in working for the agency must be members of PRSSA. The group hopes to attract and do work for actual clients from the University and Bryan-College Sta tion communities. Dr. Marilyn Kern-Foxworth, adviser of Aggie Public Relations and professor of journalism said there are a number of student-run agencies around the country. "They are just like real public rela tions agencies, she said. "The stu dents will be totally responsible for going out and finding ac counts, negotiating fees, meeting deadlines and signing contracts — just like a real agency." Grace Montemar, a senior jour nalism major and president of PRSSA said, "It will be just like a real job. We want people that are professionals, conscientious and have a working knowledge of public relations." Kern-Foxworth said she be lieves there are many departments on campus and small Bryan-Col lege Station businesses that can benefit from the services of Aggie Public Relations. "There are all those mom and pop organizations who can't af ford to pay a lot of money to get brochures, fliers or public service announcements on TV," she said. "Many don't even know to do these things." The student-run agency will have many benefits over other agencies in town, she said. "There are many businesses in town that need to have a cam paign that is designed and execut ed by public relations staffs," Kern-Foxworth said. "If they hire a professional to do the job it could be quite expensive. The stu dent agency's prices will be con siderably lower than those of oth er agencies in the area." Kern-Foxworth said students will learn a great deal from Aggie Public Relations. "This agency is going to let stu dents see what it's like to actually own and operate a public rela tions firm," she said. "It will teach them skills in terms of sales. The students are going to have to go out there and sell themselves; let people know what they are ca pable of doing." Montemar said the students have many incentives to do a good job. "This is one of the best ways for a public relations student to build a portfolio and get clips," Montemar said. "Students need to start get ting clips now because you can't do it once you graduate." Opportunities to get experience are slim for A&M public relations students, Montemar said. "There is a lack of opportuni ties for public relations majors," she said. "Writers and photogra phers have The Battalion or the Aggieland. I guess this firm kind of fills that big hole, that lack of opportunity for PR majors." Although some think a stu dent-run agency could not do the job as well as a professional agency, Sandra Singler, a junior journalism major, disagreed. "We will have the innovative edge," she said. "The things we've learned are still fresh in our minds. I think we will have a fresh, new perspective that others don't." Montemar said, "Our profes sors aren't just professors, they've worked in the field, they aren't going to let us go wrong. PR is about communication. We are go ing to find out our client's needs and give them what they want. We'll give 110 percent." Trial Continued from Page 1 "I was real concerned about his safety in the community," Jackson testified. "Dante seemed to be the one they (members of the Squab Mob) were directing their hostili ties toward." But District Attorney Bill Turn er tried to show Greenwood was physically capable of holding his own in a fight and liked to fight. In an essay written by Green wood last year, he described the joy he got from playing football because of the "crushing hits and hand-to-hand combat." "I was real concerned about his safety in the community ...Dante seemed to be the one they were directing their hostilities toward." -Ronnie Jackson, principal In fact. Greenwood testified he had been in three fights, but he had never fought with Williams before March 26. At a track meet held the night before Williams was stabbed, the Tip Toe Posse and the Squab Mob confronted each other and ex changed words. Greenwood testified that he and some of his friends were go ing to use a phone after the track meet to get a ride home. They were cut off and confronted by members of the Squab Mob who threw rocks and sticks at Green wood and his friends. Greenwood said. A member of the Squab Mob who was also in the cafeteria on the day Williams died threw a stick at Greenwood after the track meet and hit him in the arm. Greenwood testified. Greenwood said this boy then told him he was going to shoot him. When Esparza asked Green wood why he decided to take a knife to school the following day, he said "I was thinking they were going to kill me." When Greenwood entered the cafeteria with a friend who is in the Tip Toe Posse, his friend spoke to two members of the Squab Mob and to Williams. The friend, who also testified Monday, said one of the member of the Squab Mob then instigated the fight when he asked, "What are you m f looking at?" Greenwood said two members of the Squab Mob were moving all around and cussing at Greenwood and his friend. Greenwood said one of these members of the Squab Mob then approached him and said, "I'll beat your little poof ass." After a verbal exchange, Green wood said "What's up?" which means that someone is ready to fight. When Esparza asked if he could have gotten out of the cafe teria, Greenwood said there was no easy way out. "They were trying to to box me in," Greenwood testified. "I was scared they were about to kill me." One of the members of the Squab Mob who was talking to Greenwood in the cafeteria testi fied that Greenwood swung the knife at him before Greenwood turned around and stabbed Williams. As he was exchanging words with this member of the Squab Mob, Greenwood said he saw Williams coming at him from be hind. Then Greenwood said he lunged at Williams because "I thought he was coming to get me." The member of the Tip Toe Posse testified that after Williams was stabbed he said "I wasn't go ing to touch him." Greenwood said he did not mean to kill Williams and was try ing to protect himself. "I just meant to defend my self," Greenwood testified. "If I SCOTT & WHITE CLINIC, COLLEGE STATION Announcing Weekend Clinic Hours for Urgent Care 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Scott & White Clinic, College Station, is now offering weekend Clinic hours for urgent care by appointment only! The Weekend Clinic is conducted from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the Clinic Annex building located across the street (Glenhaven Dr.) from the main clinic. By Appointment Only (409) 268-3663 ▲ Scott & White Annex S&W Clinic UNIVERSITY DRIVE EAST Scott & White Clinic, College Station 1600 University Drive East "I just meant to defend myself ...If I hadn't used a knife, maybe they would have killed me." -Sherron Greenwood hadn't used a knife, maybe they would have killed me." Greenwood said school offi cials had gathered the two groups together for a meeting in an effort to stop the violence between them; however, members of the Squab Mob would not agree. "They wanted it (the fighting) to go on," Greenwood testified. Jackson said he had advised Greenwood to ignore comments from members of the Squab Mob and to avoid fighting with the Squab Mob. Jackson said he thought the Squab Mob was the more violent of the two groups "mainly be cause of their numbers." "They seemed to be much more intimidating," Jackson testified. Greenwood said he had repeat edly avoided confrontations with members of the Squab Mob by walking away when they ap proached him from behind. But when Turner asked Green wood why he didn't just stay home that day. Greenwood said, "It was going to happen sooner or later." Lawsuit Continued from Page 1 official publication that posts pub lic meeting notices, still ran that the meeting was to be held. But Hutchens said it is the re sponsibility of A&M to send a re vised agenda to the secretary of the state, and he said this was not done. Bond said even though the judge may rule the regent's March 5 meeting invalid, he or she can not disenfranchise the regents and force them to take action. He said if it is decided that the meeting was invalid, the Board will probably just re-vote on the name change issue. Hutchens said A&I alumni are not only upset that they did not have sufficient notice of the March 5 meeting, but that the decision to change Texas A&I's name was made with little input. "Before they change the name of the institution, at the very mini mum they should have held a pub lic meeting on campus," Hutchens said. "They never held a public hearing at the institution involved to hear input from students, faculty and the community." Bond said the regent's meeting Women Continued from Page 1 and treatment of these diseases has been derived from studies of men merely applied to women with the supposition that there are no differences. The result is second-class health care for women." A recent publication from the NIH concluded that "overall, women have worse health than men." Recently a large study done with a group of nurses showed that fat intake does not increase risk to breast cancer. In the past, doctors have warned women to watch their intake because it was thought that too much fat in a diet led to cancer. "Some things are being adver tised as if research has been done but in reality it has not," Tsutsui said. The Office of Research on Women's Health recently an nounced the distribution of $625 million in research grants to help fill the gaps in medical knowledge about women's health. "We are finally getting money for research on women's health, however it will be several years 4r exciting 4r NEWS AUGUST GRADUATES OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENT ORDERS ARE HERE !!!!! THEY CAN BE PICKED UP BEGINNING TUESDAY JULY 20, 1993 MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER ROOM 217 8 AM TO 4 PM EXTRA ANNOUNCEMENTS WILL GO ON SALE Wednesday July 21, 1993 FIRST COME —- FIRST SERVE Authorities confirm death by 'killer' bees Researchers say not to bother nests THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HARLINGEN — Three years after moving into South Texas, Africanized "killer" bees have claimed their first U.S. victim, au thorities confirmed Monday. Bee researchers said the fatal swarming of Starr County rancher Lino Lopez demonstrates that people should call pest-control ex perts rather than trying to dispose of bee hives themselves. "Don't be trying to deal with them unless you know what you are doing," said Horace Van Cleave, an entomologist at Texas A&M University. Lopez, 82, died Thursday after trying to flush an Africanized bee hive from an abandoned house at his ranch about 30 miles north of Rio Grande City. In a preliminary ruling, pathologist Ruben Santos said Lopez died from an acute fluid buildup in his lungs due to an allergic re action to more than 40 stings. "Africanized honeybees aren't out looking for victims ... so if you don't go bugging them, you have less of a chance of them bugging you." -Kim Kaplan, U.S. Department of Agriculture Lopez had emphysema and a heart condition, but neither prob lem appeared serious enough to have caused his death, Santos said. "Our lab has confirmed that the bees are Africanized," Kim Ka plan, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's re search arm in Greenbelt, Md., said Monday. Africanized bees look like the more common European honey bees and carry the same venom, but they are much more likely to swarm invaders of their nests. "If a person is hypersensitive to bees, it is somewhat immaterial how many stings they get," Van Cleave said, recalling an incident in which a man died from one sting by the European variety. Added Kaplan: "Africanized honeybees aren't out looking for victims. They aren't out hunting. So if you don't go bugging them, you have less of a chance of them bugging you," The genetic migration was found to have reached Texas in the small town of Hidalgo in October 1990. Since then, the variety has been found in 58 South Texas coun ties and continues to spread. was rushed. "It was an urgent meeting be cause the legislature was in ses sion and they sent a strong mes sage that they would change the names if the regents didn't do it first," he said. Video linked the regents in College Station to people in Cor pus Christi, Laredo and Kingsville, Bond said. "It was one of the best meetings I attended where there was open debate," he said. "Everyone had a say in this difficult decision." Hutchens said the regents could moot the entire issue and lawsuit if they re-evaluate their previous decision. "They could cure this before the preliminary hearing by voting," he said. "Maybe they are just going to see what the judge does." The hearing on the temporary injunction barring any name change for A&I is scheduled Aug. 6 in Travis County. Although several of the plain tiffs have said the ultimate goal of the lawsuit is to remove Texas A&I from the A&M System, Hutchens said this is not part of the lawsuit. He said it would take an action by the state legislature to accomplish this. Bond said, "It is not legally possible through this lawsuit, and nothing in the suit hints at that." before any preliminary data is re turned," Tsutsui said. Assistant Professor in Medical Physiology Dr. Cynthia Meininger said, "I think that the issues are getting into the public, people are realizing that men and women are not the same." Dr. William M. Chilian and Dr. Meininger recently submitted a grant to study heart disease in re lation to women at A&M. Tsutsui thinks college cam puses should teach an under graduate course specifically about women's health. "Women need this class be cause we are in charge of our own health, our doctors are not," Tsutsui said. "Health issues are only getting more complicated; recent medical studies on menopause, estrogen and fat in take in relation to breast cancer are proving this." Former director of NIH Berna- dine Healy was very supportive of women's research, and she has re quested more money for research. The issue turned controversial and Healy was asked to resign. "Due to her leadership, all of these programs are beginning to happen," Tsutsui said. Meninger said, "In my opinion, she ruffled too many politicians feathers', she was disillusioned by the politics." The Battalion JASON LOUGHMAN, Editor in chief MARK EVANS, Managing editor DAVE THOMAS, Night News editor MACK HARRISON, Opinion editor BILLY MORAN, Photo editor STEPHANIE PATTILLO, City editor ANAS BEN-MUSA, Aggielife editor KYLE BURNETT, Sports editor SUSAN OWEN, Sports editor Staff Members City desk — Jennifer Smith, James Bernsen, Reagan Clamon, Michele Brinkmann, Jason Cox, Lisa Elliott, J. Frank Hernandez, Janet Holder, Carrie Miura, and Geneen Pipher News desk — Lisa Borrego, Joe Holan, Lance Holmes and Denise Wick Photographers — Mary Macmanus, Nicole Rohrman, and Stacy Ryan Aggielife — Jacqueline Ayotte, John Bayless, Margaret Claughton and Jennifer Sake Sports writers — Roy Clay, Matt Rush and Mark Smith Opinion desk — Matt Dickerson, Tracey Jones, Frank Stanford and Robert Vasquez Cartoonists — Boomer Cardinale, George Nasr, Joe Reyes, Sergio Rosas and Paul Stroud Graphic Artist - Angel Kan Clerks- Grant Austgen, Alishia Holtam and Lisa White The Battalion (USPS 045-360) is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods), at Texas A&M University. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battalion, 230 Reed McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. News: The Battalion news department is managed by students at Texas A&M University in the Division of Student Publications, a unit of the Department of Journalism. Editorial offices are in 013 Reed McDonald Building. Newsroom phone number is 845-3313. Fax: 845-2647. Advertising: For campus, local and national display advertising, call 845-2696. For classified advertising, call 845-0569. Advertising offices are in 015 Reed McDonald and office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-5408. Subscriptions: Mail subscriptions are $20 per semester, $40 per school year and $50 per full year. To charge by VISA or MasterCard, call 845-2611. blu< beir When 1 agreed to the job of sports edi The Batta: it was my derstandi that I just to report < sports, no them. So can imagi my surpri when Iw; suddenly in charge ganizing; rec softba team. I thoug deal. Afte tie organ! 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