WESTERN* BEVERAGES 10 GIG AGGIES! BEAT OSU NEI JOSE CUERVO w Css Tequila sisj 750 ml. 80° CAPTAIN MORGAN PARROT BAY Rum 750 ml. 70°/48° JIM BEAM Flavored Vodkas 750 ml. 70° V lob Search U se your college degree in a science or mathematics field, and be on the cutting edge - teach. Leaving You Hanging? • Complete flexibility - instruction available 24/7 on the Internet • On-site Mentors provide support during the internship • Grants available to help with expenses • Free help finding an internship (all internships are paid) "Accelerate Online Transition to Teaching Register online at: http://accelerate.tamu.edu/battaIion a]m Texan A&M University Tuesday Buy Regular or Large Sandwich Get 22oz. drink and chips FREE Dine-ln and take out only. Check out our new menu Sandwiches starting at $ 1.99! I 10 College Main • 846-7000 Mon.-Sat. 10:30am-10:00pm Sun. 11:00am-10pm This store not affiliated with Texas Avenue location. GOT A TICKET? INSURANCE RATES TOO HIGH? DON'T WANT TO SPEND ALL DAY IN A DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS? HOME DEFENSIVE DRIVING AVAILABLE AT PARTICIPATING STORES ON VMS OR DVD. OR TRY OUR NEW ONLINE COURSE AT WWW.TAKEH0ME.COM JUST THINK; state approved defensive driving, TAKEN IN THE COMFORT OF YOUR OWN HOME. STOP BY YOUR LOCAL BLOCK BUSTER VIDEO STORE OR VISIT US TODAY ON THE WEB: www.takehome.com TAKE HOME DEFENSIVE DRIVING Monday, October 20, 2003 THE BATTah Turning up the heat on yoga Bikram yoga school works bodies in rooms set at 105 dew By Sandra Pedicini KRT CAMPUS WESTERN * BEVERAGES 701 University Dr. East (979) 846-1257 2205 Longmire (979) 764-9577 Major Credit Cards Accepted Hours: Monday - Saturday 10 am to 9 pm Prices Goodl 0/20/03 to 10/25/03 In case of printing error, store price prevails ORLANDO, Fla. _ Skip Wolfram is about to give new meaning to the phrase “warm ing up.” Clad in black spandex shorts, he steps to the front of an exercise room that four glowing space heaters have heated to more than 100 degrees. Fourteen students stand ready to sweat. For the new ones, there comes a warning: “You may get dizzy,” says Wolfram, the class instructor. “Don’t panic. Don’t freak out.... This is not a race. This is not a competition.” This is Bikram yoga, an exer cise routine that’s hot in more ways than one. Flamboyant yogi Bikram Choudhury introduced his yoga style to the United States more than a quarter-century ago, but only in the past few years has its popularity exploded. Students stretch, kick and bal ance themselves in rooms heated to temperatures as high as 105 degrees. Such intense heat, Choudhury says, allows muscles to stretch better. Fans swear by it, but many yoga enthusiasts, such as James Greenberg, say they see no benefit from this extreme exercise. Greenberg, who has written for Yoga Journal, calls Bikram “some weird macho manifestation.” Leigh Crews, a Reebok mas ter trainer and spokeswoman for the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Council on Exercise, sees no advantage from the extreme heat. And if exercisers are obese or don’t replenish the fluids they lose, she said, they could experi ence symptoms from heart fluctu ations to muscle cramps. Instructor Stephen "Skip" Wolfram leads a yoga class at Bikram's Yoga College of India in Longwood, Flo ' extreme form of yoga is practiced in a room heated to 105 degrees. Doctors also dispute some of Choudhury’s medical claims about the benefits of Bikram yoga. Still, as yoga has become more mainstream, so too has the Bikram brand. Choudhury has established a chain of Bikram’s Yoga College of India studios, offering a uni form product. Just as people know their cafe lattes will taste the same at any Starbucks, Choudhury says teachers at Bikram studios should repeat the same sequence of 26 poses, recite the same dialogue, have the same expertise. Choudhury has threatened legal action against anyone who teaches his style of yoga without first paying him $5,000 for train ing and certification. “Bikram’s done some great stuff for yoga,” said Jim Harrison, a Sacramento-based attorney rep resenting smaller yoga studios fighting Choudhury’s copyright registration, which he obtained last year. “He’s a wonderful pro moter, but he’s doing things that aren’t good for yoga in general.” Choudhury, 57, a native of Calcutta, began studying yoga when he was 4 and brought his style to the United States in 1971. He’s now a wealthy celebrity, leg endary for his collection of Rolls- Royces, his brash style and his Hollywood followers, including Raquel Welch. Some love his intensity. Others, such as DeLand yoga instructor Buffy Williams, prefer a little less perspiration. “For me, personally, I have seen so much more benefit in a gentler, kinder way of doing : yoga,” she said. But Wolfram, an avid suit said the intense yoga ‘‘really my personality as far as neat to work hard physically to gen mental effect. I really enjoyedi way that it made me consequently, the subsequa effect was that I felt more mem serenity, peace or whatever)! call it.” The 37-year-old was i inspired that he spent nine wed in Los Angeles, training foraki 500 hours with Choiidhiij before opening his Longwi Fla., studio in 2001. Instructors recommend tali: the classes three to four week. At the Longwood stul students pay $12 a session, mi discounts available for classes. A year’s worth of eta costs $875. NEWS IN BRIEF Woman jailed for intercepting e-mail DENVER (AP) — A judge has sentenced an Arizona woman for intercepting someone else’s e-mail, saying the penalty is a warning to others who might be tempted to do the same. On Friday, he sentenced Angel Lee to 60 days home detention for intercepting e-mail sent to her husband’s ex- wife, Duongladde Ramsay. Matsch said the case was a vicious divorce dispute about children. Lee, 28, pleaded guilty in March, and admitted accessing at least 215 e-mails sent to Ramsay last year. Officials said she fraudulently obtained confidential user name and password information for Ramsay’s e-mail account. Trial begins in childrens' deaths BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) — The capital murder trial of a South Texas man accused of decapitating three chil dren, two of them his own, is set to begin Monday with opening statements. John Allen Rubio, 23, and his common-law wife Angela Camacho, 23, both of Brownsville, were arrested March 11 and charged with capital murder, after police were alerted to enter the couple’s squalid downtown apartment. The couple confessed to repeatedly stabbing and decap itating 3-year-old Julissa Quezada, 1-year-old John Esthefan Rubio and 2-month-old Mary Jane Rubio. Julissa was Camacho’s child from a previous relationship. One twin off ventilate DALLAS (AP) -— Once con joined Egyptian twin Mohamed Ibrahim was taken off a ventilator and was breathing on his own Sunday, a week after doctors suc cessfully separated him from his brother Ahmed. Dr. James Thomas, chief of critical care services at Children’s Medical Center Dallas, said in a update released by the hospital that he is cautiously optimistic that doctors will not have to place Mohamed back on a ventilator. Thomas said that if Ahmed con tinues to improve, he may be ready to come off the ventilator Monday. “Once each twin is breathing on his own without respiratory distress, his condition may be upgraded from critical to guard ed,” Thomas said. The hospital said the twins continue to make small gains, including motion in theiumaw legs and improved response I verbal cues from the family mi medical team. They are incriiicl hut stable condition in the atric intensive care unit. “The neurosurgical and mei' icai teams are very pleased wi the twins’ progress so far Thomas said. Thomas said Ahmed has ad had any repeat of a seizure he so! fered Friday night. A lumbardrai was removed Sunday after C scans showed no accumulation( spinal fluid. Mohamed’s lumfe drain remains in place. The twins, joined at the topi their heads when they were to in Egypt on June 2, 2001, wti separated Oct. 12 during a 3* hour operation. The hospital said the boyseff tinue to run a low-grade fever, don’t appear to have an infecto a prestig Connect with the high sch high 13C Student straight 20 point: Both stu panic ipa One rece turned a' Thed Student ( tion from between Wesleyar with the preferenc Almo include 1 Accord ir to share an optioi tion, it p Sons: rates of < rate of 1 applicant percent c cent of a Furtht Michigai under its children bonus po these poi the right Ur You've Got News w Get The Battalion in your Inbox Register now on our Web site and automatically receive an E-mail Edition of the paper with each new issue. Headline News • College Sports • Campus Calendar Local Weather • Daily Horoscope It’s the best way to stay informed...and it’s free. www.thebattal ion. net MSC ill IS Today, October 2! Avpeness w All Week Long Creation Table @ Rudder Fountain Big Banner @ Web net & Rudder 12pm “Noon-Time Concefl Mariachi @ Langford Atrito 12pm Lunchbox Conctf Live @ Rudder Fount/ 7pm “Carpe Diem” film/guest speak 1 @ MSC 20 Brought to you by MSC ALOT, MSC Film Society, MSC OPAS, MSC Town Hall & MSC VAC Texas A&M University Pre-Law Society We are hosting a lawyer forum featuring Becky Placke, Genevieve Stubbs, and Patrick Gendron on Tuesday, October 21. Please join us at 7 p.m. in Koldus 110 to hear these practicing attorneys provide us with some of their insights into the field of law. The Pre-Law Society hopes to see you on Tuesday! 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