The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 13, 1997, Image 6

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Are you a fun person?
• Do you enjoy working with kids?
' n i i . T V college station
• Looking for valuable work experience?
• Are you available Mon.-Fri., 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.?
• If you answered yes to any of these questions,
we may have a job for you.
Applications are now being accepted for the Kids Klub After School Program
at Central Park Office until November 1 7 A
For more information call:
764-3486
The City of College Station is an Equal Opportunity Employer
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For more information: l-flOO-fl t l t l-SELF
yeah, the library's pretty good, but
first try 4.0 & Go! -George Bush*
The week of November 16-20
§ Acct 229
Financial
Statement
Analysis
Tuesday
November 18
9nm-12ant
Tickets Go Or
3:0
Sate Sunday At
0 p.m.
located next to
ed Chicken and
ure across from
McDonalds on
rkway and Texas
"OR (846-8886)
1 Acct 230
1 Test Cram
Tuesday
November 18
3r>m-f>i>m
4.0 and Go is
Kentucky Fri
Lack's Furnit
| Acct 230
I Test
1 Review
Test Review
Sun Nov 16 r
Spin-Spin ^
Test Review
Pi Mon Nov 17
8pm-IIpm
Kroger's and
Southwest Pa
Call 846-TU1
1 Acct 315
Part 1
Sun Nov 16
8pm-Unm
Part il
Mon Nov 17
5nm-8pm
Part Ill
Tue Nov 18
6pm-9nm
1 Bans 305
Test Review
Sun Nov 16
lOnm-lam
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Sun Nov 16
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Part 11
Mon Nov 17
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Part III
Tue Nov 18
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or
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Part IV
Wed Nov 19
5pm-7pm
or
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I Fine 341
Part 1
Sun Nov 16
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Part II
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Tue Nov 18
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Wed Nov 19
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Review-
Sun Nov 16
4pm-7pm
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I Math 142
Part I
Mon Nov 17
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Part 1
Mon Nov 17
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Part 11
Tue Nov 18
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Part III
Wed Nov 19
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Part IV
Thu Nov 20
Question:
R,C. will tie and break
whose "win record"
when we beat the hell
outta Okla. and t.u.?
(First 5 to call with ans
wer get free review!)
Last week's answer: A
spermologer collects trivia.
Answer appears Thursday
846-TUTOR (8886)
t/j:
a os
S2U TiafiJuunjf. -
- (SjLAtip*. RuA/l
Look for our ads
in the Batt on
Mondays
ScThursdays
* Please note: This Is the best time for 15! and 152 to
come, even though It Is way early, because the next
week’s reviews will be cut In half by Thanksgivingl
Problem
Continued from Page 1
“Alcohol problems are hard for young people to un
derstand,” she said. “Students are into taking risks be
cause they believe they are young and invincible. We
do what we can with enforcement and crime preven
tion education to help students understand the affects
of alcohol and help them make better choices.”
A&M groups including Aggies Against Drunk Dri
ving, Students Teaching on Prevention and Peer 1 Ed
ucators in the Department of Student Life aim to in
crease the awareness and prevention of alcohol
abuse on campus. The Bonfire Alcohol Awareness
Committee promotes an alcohol-free Bonfire and al
cohol abuse safety to the campus and Bryan-College
Station community.
The Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse
Columbia University in New York City reported that!
cohol is associated with missed classes and low
grade-point ratios. Researchers at the center said ale
hoi is a factor in about 41 percent of academic pro 1
lems and 28 percent of cases of student dropout.
The center also said alcohol can lead to crimiit
problems on college campuses including rapes, va
dalism and suicide. The study said 90 percent of rap
occurred while either the victim or attacker wereu
der the influence of alcohol.
According to the Texas Department ofTranspon.
tion, alcohol is the prime contributor to motorvehii
and other unintended deaths.
Nearly half of all traffic deaths in Texas each year:
related to alcohol. More than 1,400 people were kill
in traffic crashes last year due to drinking and drivir
the department said.
1,
Survivor
Continued from Page 1
Wachsberg said in Febru
ary 1945, he and 74 other
people were loaded in an
open cattle car on a train
that would move them to
camp Leitmeritz. During the
seven day trip, only five of
the original 75 people on the
cattle car survived.
“What we did was throw
them (the dead people) over,
we needed the space,” he said.
“Then more people died. I was
on the train for six days and
seven nights without any food
or water. We had lots of clothes
to keep us warm because
those people that died, we
kept the clothes and put them
on ourselves.”
From Leitmeritz, Wachs
berg said he was moved to
camp Theresienstadt in
April 1945. On May 9, 1945
the war was over, and the
prisoners at Theresienstadt
were liberated.
Wachsberg said the day
of his liberation was the
most beautiful day in his
life. He said he took a Russ
ian truck to Vraskow,
Czechoslovakia, where the
Citizens of the town recog
nized him as a prisoner of
the concentration camps.
The citizens burned his
clothes for him.
“If I live another 50 years, I
will never forget the name of
the village or the people in the
village,” he said. “They took
care of me better than any
mother can take care of any
baby. They brought me back to
a normal person.”
He said the citizens of the
town also gave him money and
put him on a train to Chrzanow.
Wachsberg said most of the
people that survived were
from the ages 17 to 28.
“Children never had a
chance, they were instantly
sent to the crematoriums or to
labs for research,” he said.
He said those who were
35 and older had little
chance of survival.
Task Force
Timisl
ieniM|
the hi
and nl
“Children never had a
chance; they were
instantly sent to the
crematoriums or to the
labs for research.”
SOL WACHSBERG
HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR
Flora Wachsberg, Wachs-
berg’s wife, said that her hus
band did not speak about his
experiences in the Holocaust
until 1983 when former Presi
dent Ronald Reagan asked
Holocaust survivors to tell
their stories.
“We’ve been married 33
years and he never talked to
me about [the Holocaust] un
til 1983,” she said. “He (Rea
gan) said that if they (sur
vivors) didn’t talk, their story
would be forgotten.”
Continued from Page 1
"Looking at the environment as a wholf
we really need to have an understandingi ^jes
the problems before we move to recoil ^ e i £
mendations,” she said. "We can’t say thatilx
Texas A&M environment ends with tfe
boundaries of the campus. It extends inn
the (Bryan-College Station) community."
Sayre said the task force wants to pro
mote a greater sense of self-responsibiliiij
among students who choose to drink. I;
"Prevention [of alcohol abuse] is general
ly more successful than treatment,” she said
“I think previous strengths have been anin-'
terest in taking preventative measures oi
educational issues. Texas A&M was aneark
proponent of early prevention.”
Dr. Dennis Reardon, the coordinator of.Alco-i
hoi and Drug Education programs, said that
greater efforts to prevent alcohol abuse has con-
tributed to the decline in alcohol abuse at
fire and a reduction in the number ofMinorsk
Possession (M.I.Ps) issued in recent years.
"We need to continue removing alcohol
from the traditions,” Reardon said. “The tra
ditions at Texas A&M are great. Alcohol di
minishes [the value] of these traditions."
However, Reardon said drinking remains
a problem among A&M students.
“Students say the right things,” he said.
“But I do not think that they have put that
into action completely.”
In relation to students’ health, Dr. Janet
Kreuger, a task force member and a staff
physician at the A.P Beutel Health Center,
said students place their physical health at
risk when they abuse alcohol. , |
Kreuger said moderate drinking and not p
elimination of drinking is the foundation to ||
ensuring a healthier lifestyle.
“The task force aims to reduce alcohol ’tainan
abuse,” she said. “We are not tryingfo cutout pas bac|
alcohol use.”
‘DcAWC'E c4‘RTS SOCTET}]
PRESENTS
1997 FALL SHOW
NOVEMBER 15, 1997 - 2:00 p.m.
RUDDER THEATER
$4.00 - Students $5.00 Non-students
• £
£3.9?
V
Tuesday & Thursday
Game
AAV'**:‘IL
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