RESEARCH INFECTED WOUND STUDY VIP Research is seeking individuals with infected cuts, scrapes, or sutured wounds for a 3-week research study of an investigational antibiotical cream. Qualified participants will receive free study medication, study supplies and medical exams. $100 will be paid to qualified volunteers to enroll and complete this study. HERPES VACCINE STUDY VIP Research is seeking couples to participate in a 19 month research study of an investigational herpes vaccine. To be considered for study participation, one partner must have genital herpes while the other partner must not carry the virus which cause genital or oral herpes (cold sores/fever blisters). $500 will be paid to each qualified couple that enroll and complete this study. VIP Research, Inc. For more information call ^ (409) 776-1417 J Page 6 • The Battalion CHEAP AEROBICS! ‘D/t'nes soevs'i'ty ocr> GENERAL MEETING WED. JULY 5TH 7:00 P.M. READ 268 Aerobics class immediately following You don’t have to come to the meeting to join! Come by Read 268 Mon. - Thurs. before 7:00 p.m. to sign up and join the fun !!! Questions: Call Jen at 693-7733 GGO J CONTACT LENSES ONLY QUALITY NAME BRANDS (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hind-Hydrocurve) Disposable Contact Lenses Available $11 Q00 L X O TOTAL COST.. .INCLUDES $ EYE EXAM, FREE ALCON OPTI-FREE CARE KIT, AND TWO PAIR OF STANDARD FLEXIBLE WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES. 149 00 TOTAL COST.. .INCLUDES EYE. EXAM, FREE ALCON OPTI-FREE CARE KIT, AND FOUR PAIR OF STANDARD FLEXIBLE WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES. SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES. Call 846-0377 for Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 505 University Dr. East, Suite 1^1 College Station, TX 77840 4 Blocks East of Texas Ave. & University Dr. Intersection ■ any aia. .!> goverm. : ,.-ncy tracks the na yionv( “ / ms an nidi the mate of tr lerst last things / out here Jh air and * JH iktkm den- milll ■^till here 7* people ^lem." said La 10-year Is, drawn I cllffslde on one trlch wet- bay.. / way to ' scenic ; Call- I It's a earbara .a 23-year _ad bartender a ley's Schooner \\ Hotel many of her "" ^wnsfolks, she wel- 'The ^been hit- etty hard ; Tm cnn- slnesses ople to bor bar trudf -nelgK dp In your.- Ir’s'yard you and ... apiH,,... ments, after-school care and walks In the Advertisers Who Want High Visibility And High Impaq Are Finding It In An Interesting Piace. The Battalion The pcwer of newspaper to reach a wide segment of your market is a powerful tod, indeed Couple that pcwer with the natural interest your customers have n the newspaper and what >ou\e got is. wfl, results Big-time results Because when people turn through the pages of a newspaper they've turned their attention to finding nformation. entertainment and prices. So. if you're looking for customers, we knew a place where your customers are looking fa you. In the newspaper ,r teftootrd >statet. Bon not to overdo^ e scheduling, n care too ant to do too r your child,’’ » ncan said. “I me kids Phoe- ; that you can’t / ay date with.’ alread every f reek with ; r lessons, ac* toring.” [he rnfitertlur lldren may i mded candu for the Ivy school of the! But for mar , the ectlvi. unrealistic id up bumii Id Susan Ne\ ithor of "Do Y. A Teen-f to Handll. Anxiety A D. ul The symp- irst IdentiT, cades ago > red baby hot now showb*. (heir children, shifting" ma alk among pa bhtifin man; thefts children iv^ntHver,,. ologlst iWelvy “lOSnS#: eallAit.thi i ln ^-Hurried Child Syn^ down. — New’tJTSinpahlre to thrWti* norida;'" Indiana' w Vlfglnla, angered l;'-drome. #by local*, cetrea I mlllloo trym afAdr'er .'brdtibaali vfof’'""tfCA lot of parents ar of the out-Of-state ga.- > ^“*>/a i tragt.>h-dnllk. pushed saylng.- 'Weil. Fve got I 'd*glslatlcr- / ^'^n'off the tost.-track non^' *9*: The Battalion 845-2696 City State Monday • July 10, 199) New Miss Texas lives day to day with disease □ Carly Jarmon, a student at Texas Tech, has been diag nosed with a potentially fatal blood disease. FORT WORTH (AP) — The new Miss Texas wasn’t just making small talk when she said after receiving her crown Saturday night that she takes life “one day at a time.” Carly Jarmon, a blonde 19-year-old Texas Tech student from the Dallas sub urb of Mesquite, suffers from a potential ly fatal blood disease. “You just have to take one day at a time. We don’t know the future. You have to go step by step. My steps right now just hap pen to be going to Miss America,” said Miss Jarmon, cradling a dozen yellow roses. The new Miss Texas, who came to the pageant as Miss Oak Cliff, won a $15,000 college scholarship, a fur coat and use of a Cadillac for a year. She suc ceeds the 1994 Miss Texas, Arian Archer of the Amarillo area, and will represent Texas in the Miss America contest on Sept. 16 at Atlantic City. Miss Jarmon revealed last week that she had been diagnosed with chronic idio pathic trombocytopenic purpura, which is characterized by a low platelet count and a propensity to bleed. Although the disease is in remission, she said she also has chronic mononucleo sis and must have her spleen removed to improve the filtering of her blood. She takes steroids to control her condition. She said she discovered her disease in 1991 after she was severely bruised when her friends handcuffed her to a chair as a birthday joke. When she won a swimsuit contest in a pageant a year later, she presented the award to the doctor who diagnosed her. “I’ve learned as a young girl how im portant life is,” Miss Jarmon said. Miss Jarmon, who was Miss Teen Texas 1992, has been a youth educator at the Southwest Organ Bank in Dallas. "I've learned as a young girl how important life is." — Curly Jarmon Miss Texas “I have seen firsthand the ability to renew lives through organ transplants,” she said. Promotion of organ donors is her only way of giving, since her condi tion will not allow her to be a donor, she said. First runner-up was Miss Lubbock, Eve Johnson, 22; Miss Hurst-Euless-Bed- ford, Vanessa Hunt, 22; Miss Mesquite, Reagan Hughes, 20; and Miss Lake O’ The Pines, Julie Tisdale, 23. Scholarships of $8,000, $6,000, $4,000 and $2,000 went to the four runners-up. Austin battles Portland for computer business l. 101, I s □ South Korea's Samsung Semicon ductor Inc. has narrowed its search to the two cities. AUSTIN (AP) — Competing efforts to lure a new computer chip factory is highlighting what is becoming a duel between the Austin area’s “Sili con Gulch” and a developing “Silicon Rain For est” in the Pacific Northwest. Portland, Ore., and Austin are competing the distinction of being the latest hot spot for pansion in high-technology industries. South Korea’s Samsung Semiconductor Inc. the world’s largest maker of memory chips, narrowed its search for a U.S. factory site to the two cities. At stake is more than just local bragging rights. The semiconductor industry is expected to double in size to $233 billion in sales between 1994 and ’98. Samsung’s proposed first phase of construction alone could mean an investment of up to $1.5 bil lion and up to 1,600 jobs. Also, the city selected by Samsung could claim to being the semiconductor industry's hottest spot, business analysts have said. South Korean news reports said Friday that Samsung decide by the end of the month. Portland is the hub of a high-tech boom area that extends from just north of the Columbia Ri’ er in Vancouver, Wash., to the college town Eugene, Ore., 110 miles to the south. In little more than a year, the area has at tracted nine big chip factories and support com panics that total nearly $8 billion in investmem and projected employment of 5,500 people. 'he Animal >eek resid DIVERSITY: Representatives share ideas Continued from Page 1 and perspectives,” Schmidt said. “Everyone i mst understand that people possess their own cultur al identities.” Polk said people tend to disre gard anything that has to do with cultural diversity. “You diversify your finances by investing in different ways,” he said, “so why wouldn’t you want to diversify yourself?” The program offers partici pants insights and resources, in cluding techniques for group in teraction, manuals, videos and activities, which will enable them to start their own diversity education programs. Participants in the five-day in stitute noted the need for diversi ty education on their campuses. Todd Allen, director of multi cultural development at Geneva College in Pennsylvania, said that because he works at a small school with an enrollment of 1,200, diversity education is of ten a touchy subject. “People automatically think that if you set up an office or program for diversity there is a problem,” Allen said. Stephanie Hill, graduate and minority programs coordinator for the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas in Austin, said a diversity education problem esdsts on the UT campus. “Ice breakers, which enable people to understand different cultures, should help spread knowledge of diversity,” Hill said, “not only students, but also administrators. ” Polk said the institute not only would allow administrators to better understand cultural diver sity, but give stu dents the oppor tunity to broaden their horizons. “Students who are know!' dge- able of di\erse cultures will not be just a law er or just 5 ductur, Polk said, “but a healthy under standing of di verse cultures helps you to be come a better lawyer, a better engineer or a better doctor.” Allen said he will return to Geneva College with a grasp of the skills neces sary to perform his job better. “If I am better prepared to □ Change proved b and the C Teaching By Katherin The Battali Stew Milne, The Battaiiw Student representatives from other universities participate in a stereotype exercise during the Di versity Education Institute Sunday afternoon. handle diversity education prob lems, then I will be better equipped to teach others about diversity education,” Allen said Provisional: Students have more time to prepare for colleg ;e Continued from Page 1 problems with allowing provisional students to enroll for only the first summer session. “There were many complaints from stu dents about not being able to leave home for college,” Fernandez said. “Most of them had to work, could not afford it or felt it was just too soon out of high school to have to go to college.” Engelgau said one of the benefits from changing this procedure is that some of the students do not have to attend both summer sessions. "It may actually work out better than what we’ve done previously,” he said. “We don’t know yet, but we will see.” This is the first time the department has made a formal organized effort to give all provisional students a choice, Engelgau said* though exceptions have been made in the past to allow individuals to enroll at a later time. “We were not able to give every provi sional student the choice to which semester they would come in,” he said, “If we thought they needed a lot of help to adjust to the University, they would be required to attend both summer sessions.” The decision to change the procedure was made by Dr. Sallie Sheppard, associ ate provost for Undergraduate Program and Academic Service, with the advice of General Academic Programs and Admis sions and Records. While the students are in the provision al student program, they receive careful academic advising and are assigned their courses. Kriss Boyd, General Academic Programs director, said provisional students are re quired to attend monthly advisory meetings. “We need to make sure the students are taking basic courses of studies,” Boyd said. "All this is done to keep them out of trouble.' Engelgau said students do not anticipate the level of work college courses require. “Most of them may have breezed by high school and think they can do the same here,” he said. “But the truth is they don’t know what they have gotten them selves into until around the time they get their first exam.” Once students have completed a full loab of classes with a 2.0 grade point ratio and with no failing grades, they are free to de clare a major and choose their own classes without any obligation to the provisions; student program. The standards are met by 75 percent of provisional students. “If you can make it to your sophomore year, you are more likely to make It to grad uation,” Engelgau said. ,|| Of all college freshman, 86 percent pass to the sophomore level and 65 percent grad uate within five years. 8 L: The Fat mended chi education program yc give studen teaching in The chai ing the reqi cation, cha course desc el teacher changing tl dent teach nine-12 hoi Overall have been Course reqi Stan Ca ator for thf ; feaid the ch ncation sys ing society “We ha^ riculum ir other colic “it’s a new and we net in different William Sk©teh By Quatro Seminar Continued from Page 1 In The Buff By VfiLERIE Look. SuH, +h 15 is IU lx><— C. -h\ €. d ,-i-l—«_ 5 4L0H4,3/LBCS y Ctxp'rr C^un ycrSontxlly £c.y\.-{- er\<. -fa Ip 6 you*' 'fov*'' yuiAc. SL'H 11 be flOri'fl'TJ in Tkc, IiVtiO . -fo-egot ^ 'S* — s+u*Js Bo-f-ki , +KoJ rt\o-r\ wixSrV-f yjeA<\»Vj undev wcix*'' undeY Jhoul' 3 catalysts, not just referees.” Corrigan said A&M has thf privilege and responsibilityo! shaping education Texas leaders “We’re preparing the leaded of other universities through this program,” he said. “It ere ates a network of people who art graduates of the program. The) have tremendous loyalty tc A&M and to one another.” Ashworth, a former semina' speaker, said seminar partici pants benefit from the informs tion and training even if the) do not step into an administra tive role. “The seminar is an effort te take middle management andt make them more efficient,” h' said, “or to help them rise tot higher administrative level.” Ashworth will explain th' role of the Texas Higher Educs tion Coordinating Board at# year’s seminar. The coordinating board’s # sponsibility is to maintain a; appropriate mission for eacf Texas higher-education instit# tion, he said. In order to keef each institution uniquely sp e cialized, all degree program must be approved by the board 11 «i ■ i ^ le^ Co □ Fund the col lowing family By Javier I The Batt. A $1 n will allov increase and expa: in Temph The ci Over the freshmen Enroll 256 in thi Janice College o tors felt i the col leg The C were mac Becauc and othei and the g Dr, Ke of Medic will allo-v family m