Football team gets `psyched`

Thursday, September 27, 1984
TCU Daily
China signs
Hong Kong
agreement
Skiff
Political speech
v^
Dan Kubiak says the Reagan
administration is bankrupting
the administration. See Page
By Richard Glass
Staff writer of the TCU Daily Skiff
In the movie "Caddyshack," Chevy
Chase advised Danny Noonan, played by Michael O'Keefe, to "see your
future, be your future."
Head Football Coach Jim Wacker is
apparently following that advice literally. This year, for the first time ever,
the TCU football team is using sports
psychology to improve its performance.
TCU psychology professor Richard
Fenker is conducting the program.
Fenker uses visualization to help the
players. "Basically all it refers to is you
imagining yourself doing something,
or feeling something," Fenker said.
During the training session, Fenker said, the players are asked to relax
for a few minutes. Then they focus on
three things: concentration, readiness
and imagination.
Fenker said the concentration techniques help players keep their minds
from wandering. "If their concentration is wandering, they realize that it's
wandering and (they) get back on
track," he said.
There are many things an athlete
can do to prepare himself to play well,
Fenker said. One way is "to imagine
what it feels like to be performing at
your best, or to imagine, say, a past
performance," he said.
"The idea is to get in touch with
what you did to feel great, what those
Britain's chief negotiator termed it
a "solemn" event, while his Chinese
counterpart said it was "worth celebrating."
The agreement follows two years of
hard bargaining in which Britain at
first refused to concede sovereignty,
and then sought a residual administrative role after the expiration of its 99year lease on the so-called New Territories-92 percent of the colony.
After 22 rounds of negotiations in
Peking, Britain agreed to hand over
all of the colony to China, including
Hong Kong Island and Kowloon
peninsula, which were ceded to Britain under the Opium War treaties of
1842 and 1860.
In exchange, Britain obtained
assurances that Hong Kong would remain largely self-governing and retain
its traditional freedoms and socioeconomic svstem for 50 vears after
1997.
Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping has
boasted that no nation in history has
so generously adopted a "one country, two systems'' policy within its
borders, a plan it also offers the
Nationalist Chinese on Taiwan.
The agreement requires the
approval of the British Parliament and
China's National People's Congress
and will be officially signed before the
end of the year, both sides said.
Hong Kong television stations
broadcast the signing ceremony live
from the Chinese capital, and many
offices and factories suspended work
briefly to allow their employees to
watch the historic telecast. Crowds
gathered outside electronic appliance
shops to watch the event on television.
At home and around the
Students should quit littering
and learn to keep their campus beautiful. See Page 2
Football team
gets 'psyched'
PEKING (AP)- China and Britain
Wednesday initialed a historic agreement that will put Hong Kong, the
world's third largest financial center
and Asia's busiest port, under Communist China's control on Julv 1,
1997.
The end of a century and a half of
British colonial rule of the thriving
capitalist port of 5.5 million people
was signaled by a formal 30-minute
ceremony in the Great Hall of the
People at Peking's Tiananmen
Square.
In Taiwan, the Foreign Ministry
said the Nationalist government
would refuse to recognize the draft
agreement. The Nationalists, who retreated to Taiwan from the Chinese
mainland in 1949 after their defeat by
the Communists, maintain that they
are China's legitimate government
and that Hong Kong's future should
have been negotiated between them
and Britain.
Under a 12-lamp chandelier at the
Great Hall of the People, Chinese
Vice Foreign Minister Zhou Nan and
British Ambassador Sir Bichard
Evans initialed a "joint declaration"
on the change of sovereignty, three
annexes and a memorandum. The
texts of the documents were to be released Wednesday night, simultaneously in Hong Kong, Peking and
London.
The official Chinese news agency
Xinhua said the three annexes dealt
with China's basic policies on Hong
Kong, the establishment of a SinoBritish liaison group to monitor implementation of the pact, and a commission to deal with land leases.
Litter bugs
feelings were like and to practice
creating them in your mind."
One thing the players do in all practices, Fenker said, is use imagination.
"They imagine themselves whether
doing correctly something the
coaches were working on in practice,
or visually rehearsing what they're
going to do in the game," he said.
Fenker said that too often, an
athlete focuses on winning, which
only puts additional pressure on him.
"We all like to win," he said, "but they
can't expect to be better than their
best."
Wacker said the program has had a
positive effect on the players. "When
you mix the mental along with the
physical, I think you're going to do
better in whatever you choose to do in
life," he said.
Wacker and Fenker said that
visualization started about 15 years
ago with Olympic athletes. They said
when the Olympic athletes discovered that there was a good deal of
image work going on in eastern
Europe and Russia, they carried it
over into the United States.
Only a few other schools-such as
the University of Texas at Austin-are
using this type of program for their
football teams, Fenker said. He
speculated that some California
schools probably use similar methods.
Please see PSYCHOLOGY, page 3
Jordain restores
ties with Egypt
"ym^tn*:^, jin^Bi
REMINDERS OF A SUMMER GONE:Two bicycles
chained to lampposts in front of Dan Rogers Hall serve as
remembrances of warmer weather. The number of cyclists
will soon be rare as the weather continues to cool.
DONNA LEMONS/TCU Daily Skiff
Ralston offers men solution
By Lauro Munoz
Staff writer of the TCU Daily Skiff
A man who is not self-centered, and
who does not rely on his outward
appearance or materialistic things to
get him places is what 15,000 women
are looking for.
These findings, obtained through a
nationwide survey, were the subject
of a Tuesday night talk by Campus
Crusade for Christ speaker Ron Ralston. During his speech, entitled,
"What 15,000 Women Look for in a
Man," Ralston discussed results of the
survey, in which he questioned
15,000 college women.
During his speech, Ralston said
that sometimes men are selfcentered. He said many women feel
that problematic relationships and divorce are attributed to a man's selfcenteredness.
"In today's society everything is
directed towards the individual," Ralston said. He gave examples of media
emphasis in such commercials as,
"You deserve a break today," in which
the word "you" is emphasized.
Ralston next discussed man's
tendency to rely on his outward
appearance and materialistic things.
Most of Ralston's information came
from the survey, which asked respondents to describe their ideal man, he
said.
"Most women want a man with intrinsic qualities," Ralston said, "but
men fail to see this. Most men think
that what a woman wants is a body.
That is why a lot of men lift weights,
drink liquid protein and eat gravel."
Ralston said men take the picture
that media create of males and feel
that the superficial qualities present
are what people want in them, so they
are not themselves.
Women want men to be themselves
and not to hide in the clothes they
wear and the cars they drive, Ralston
said. "In today's campuses, if you strip
away the clothes and the cars from the
RON RALSTON
people, you are left with nothing."
Ralston then provided an answer to
men's problems, which is to "open
their hearts to Jesus Christ and let
him in." He offered the audience
more information on getting to know
Christ by having them voluntarily
leave their names and phone numbers.
UMILMAW Jordan
1....1.,. (AP)/IPL Jordan's
i..,,l,,,\
AMMAN,
decision to break ranks with 16 other
Arab nations and restore diplomatic
ties with Egypt after a five-and-onehalf-year gap was denounced
Wednesday by Syria, which
threatened to "punish" Jordan with an
Arab boycott.
Jordan was one of 17 Arab countries
that severed relations with Egypt
shortly after the late President Anwar
Sadat and former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin signed a peace
treaty on March 26, 1979.
None of the other Arab countries
have restored formal ties with Egypt,
and one of them-Syria-denounced
Jordan's action Tuesday as
"dangerous."
Wednesday, Syria's governmentcontrolled daily Al-Thawra said in a
front-page editorial that Syria "will
not tolerate Jordan becoming the center of espionage and aggression
against Syria. We will confront this
new situation.
"Deterrent measures must be
adopted against Jordan, including the
application of Arab boycott measures," Al-Thawra said.
Jordan's Foreign Ministry said the
decision to resume relations with
Egypt was made at a Cabinet meeting
and was based on Egypt's "current
role, and the support it gives to the
Palestinian, Iraqi and Lebanese
causes."
The decision was seen as a diplomatic triumph for Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak, who had insisted he
would not give up the peace with
l«ra*»l as the price
nrice for a return to Arab
Israel
diplomatic ranks.
Palestine Liberation Organization
leader Yasser Arafat arrived in Amman Wednesday for talks with senior
Jordanian officials, the state-run radio
announced.
A Jordanian official said Arafat
would meet with King Hussein and
other government officials to discuss
"the latest developments in the Middle East."
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State
Richard Murphy also arrived in Amman Wednesday to talk to Hussein,
said the Jordanian official. Murphy
has visited Lebanon, Syria, Israel and
Egypt during a tour that began with
an investigation into last week's U.S.
Embassy bombing in Beirut.
U.S. Embassy spokesman John
Wilcox said Murphy and Arafat would
not meet and described their simultaneous visits to Jordan as "coincidence."
Arafat has been trying to convene a
meeting of the Palestine National
Council, but Syrian-backed factions of
the PLO have threatened to boycott
such a meeting if Arafat does not first
step down as PLO chairman.
The Syrian-backed faction was
angered by 1983 talks between Arafat
and Hussein about a Middle East
peace settlement based in part on
President Reagan's proposals. Reagan
called for creation of a Palestinian
homeland, in association with Jordan,
on the Israeli-occupied West Bank of
the Jordan River, which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 war.
World
■Texas
■National
Two free movies tickets for perfect attendance Auto workers review tentative contract
HOUSTON (AP)- School officials in Houston will try a
new incentive-free movie tickets for students and a trip to
Mexico for a principal-to boost school attendance and state
funding.
Each student with perfect attendance in October will
receive two movie tickets, district officials announced
Tuesday, and Superintendent Billy Reagan has said he 11
give a free trip for two to Mexico to the principal whose
school has the highest attendance level that month.
The plan is designed to encourage attendance during
one of the two months the state will use to determine
school funding, officials said.
Starting this year, the amount of money the state gives
the district will be based on the best four weeks of student
attendance in October and another month in the spring.
Previously, funding was based on average daily attendance.
. ,
Budget director Leonard Sturm said the district could
lose as much as $83 in state funds for each student's absence
during October, while the incentives will cost much less.
ST. LOUIS (AP)- The tentative contract between the
United Auto Workers and General Motors Corp contains
no explicit guarantees that union jobs won't be farmed out
overseas or to non-union shops, according to a copy
obtained by The Associated Press.
However, the three-year pact would provide for wage
increases amounting to $8,730 for the average worker over
the life of the contract, assuming a constant inflation rate ot
5 percent.
"There's good things and bad things in this agreement,
said Fred Meyers, a UAW delegate to the union s 300member CM Council, which began reviewing the contract
Wednesday in a closed meeting and will decide whether to
recommend it to 350,000 UAW members for ratification.
"We are going to have many, many questions, said
Meyers, president of Local 599 in Flint, Mich.
UAW President Owen Bieber has called the pact historic " saying it provides "good innovations" that will protect jobs and give UAW members a fair wage increase.
But Meyers and fellow delegate Don Douglas, president
of Local 594 in Pontiac, Mich., said they would take the
floor to ask Bieber many pointed questions, particularly on
job protection.
Peter Kelly, president of UAW Local 160 in Warren,
Mich., and a member of the bargaining team, issued a
formal minority report Wednesday morning calling for
rejection of the tentative contract.
"The contract falls far short of restoring the concessions
we made in 1982, when the companies were losing
money," Kelly wrote.
■Wall Street
M
1235
1190
Tu
W
Th
Dow Jones
closed at
1212.12
up 4.97
■Weather
Today's weather is expected to be cloudy with
highs in the mid 60s and northeast winds 10-20
mph.
■ •-.U DAILY SKIFF, Thursday, September 27, 1984/3
Campus
_
'
please ca
"
the
Artist discusses
sack drawings
Skiff office at 921-7428.
face Southern Me
itftfSM
*odist
Saturday, Sept. 29 17-30 rTnl' T' toBIn?ng to ^ the SMU
live by radio station, WBAP." 82CI AM "
^ gWne "- be
Musta
^
br adcaSt
°
■Campus Crusade For Christ announces retreat
921-6829.
V
"e ,nterested in attending should contact Scott Gray at
"SeTCU^"1 r66 t0 PreSent "The EmPire St»k« BackSept 28 at ,nS C°Tittee wi» Present "The Empire Strikes Back" Friday,
admission Ml ^h'aTCUID^ ^"'^ ^ ""^ " "** "?°" "*
"SarHriS CCol,
^H^ge eo°ff Nursin8
t0 h ,d
°
^r wash
10a m toTr'
tl , I^"ing will hold a car wash Saturday, Sept. 29, from
brill E /.Vr6 West,Berry McDonalds' parking lot. Charges will be $3
a orivl
£ f°ra W3sh a"d Vaeuum' Proceeds V »o Littlest Angels Inc.,
a pnvate non-profit corporation for care of the handicapped.
■Delta Tau Delta to sponsor keg roll for MDA
•Ju . i ?flta fra!ernity wll hold a keg roll Saturday, Sept. 29, to benefit
tne Muscular Dystrophy Association. For further details, contact the Delta Tau
Uelta house at 921-7901.
■"Muppet Movie" to be shown
in111! JCU,^ilms Comrnittoe will present the "Muppet Movie" Sunday, Sept.
JU. at 3 and 8 p.m. The movie is rated 'G\
■Texas Student Education Association to meet
The Texas Student Education Association will hold a meeting Tuesday, Oct
A at 5 p.m. in Student Center Room 204. The meeting is open to all education
majors.
■Pre-med/Pre-dent department to sponsor speaker
Veterinarian William Kirksey of the Fort Worth Zoo will speak Wednesday
Oct.3, in Sid Richardson Lecture Hall 4 at 5:15 p.m. Kirksey's lecture, "Are
Animals People, or Are People Animals?" is free, and anvone interested is
welcome to attend.
■Winners of Dallas Design Show to display works
Gold medal winners of the Dallas Design Show will display their work in the
Moudy Building Exhibition Room from Oct. 2 to Nov. 2. Exhibition Room
hburs are from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 1 to 4 p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays.
■Alpha Phi Alpha to present "Greek Day at the Flags"
The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity will present "Greek Day at the Flags"
Saturday, Oct. 6, at Six Flags Amusement Park from 10a. m. to 8 p. m. Discount
tickets may be purchased at the Student Center information desk. For further
information, please call Blake Moorman at 534-0910 or Timothy Williams at
926-3267.
■Brown Bag Series to exhibit prints and drawings
Prints and drawings by Denton artist Judy Youngblood will be on display in
the Brown-Lupton Art Gallery in the Student Center until Oct. 5.
■Photographer to lecture
Susan Grant, whose photographs are on exhibit in the Moudy Building
Exhibition space through Sept. 28, will present a slide-lecture today at 7:30
p.m. in Moudy Building Room 132N. Admission to the lecture is free.
SIGNATURE EXPERT: Thistle Hill, one of Fort Worth's historic
homes, was the setting for an autograph party sponsored by TCU Press for
Ruby Schmidt. Schmidt edited and revised the book, "Fort Worth: A
Historical Guide." I50NNA LEMONS/TCU Daily Skiff
Psychology: used on team
Continued from page 1
Psychology in football is not as wellknown and advanced as it is in other
sports like golf, tennis, gymnastics
and swimming, Fenker said. But football, he said, is just as mental as other
sports, even though it is more
physical.
"All that physicalness is wasted if it
is not directed in the right place, if the
concentration is not there to hear the
snap count," he said.
Last year, the TCU football team
lost to UT and Southern Methodist
University, both ranked in the Top 10
for most of the year, by a total of 10
points. Fenker thinks that visualiza-
tion will definitely help in such pressure situations, because the players
will know how to maintain their concentration and a high level of performance.
Fenker said that he will be on the
sidelines during the games because
he wants "to have a good sense of
exactly what the players are going
through in the meetings leading up to
the game, what it feels like to be in a
game situation, and what takes place
after the game."
He said, "The better educated I am
about these things, the more likely
this program will succeed."
Bv Cathv
Chanman
By
Cathy Chapman
Staff writer of the TCU Daily Skiff
Judy Youngblood may have her
career as an artist in the bag.
In fact, she has chosen bags as the
subject for an exhibit that will be on
display in the TCU Brown-Lupton
Student Center Gallery through Oct.
5.
During an informal lecture at the
gallery Monday, Youngblood told a
group of 20 students and professors
about herself and her art. She also
presented a slide show of some of her
earlier etchings and drawings.
"My earlier work was more time
and space specific," Youngblood said.
"I wanted to get away from that."
Her newest set of prints and
etchings of semi-transparent bags are
intended to make the viewer question
what is in them.
"I wanted objects in the bag that
were not clearly recognizable as a
given thing, but yet give off a feeling
of something familiar," Youngblood
said. "I am interested in giving limited visual information. I want to
force the viewers to draw their own
conclusions. It relates to the way that
people relate to others."
Sometimes other people's conclusions about the contents in the bags
are surprisingly different from hers.
"I've been accused of having murdered bodies in my bags," Youngblood said.
**-?
She admitted that some of her
prints, like "One More is Never
Enough," which is on display here,
"have gotten me in trouble. People
basically think that there is a dead cat
in one of the bags, but there's not,"
she said.
The artist said the titles of her
works are very important to her, and
that most have a direct reference to
her life. Some titles, she said, even
heighten the ambiguity of the prints.
Other titles in the bag-picture display include "Emotional Breakdown"
and "Boxing with Shadows."
The question of what really is inside
Judy Youngblood's mysterious bags
was left unanswered Monday.
"I'm really not supposed to have to
tell you these things," she said. "I'd
be sort of embarassed to tell you;
some of them are very ordinary like
bananas, but others are sort of s> ,TIbolic."
Youngblood is presently an associate professor at North Texas Stite
Univeristy. She holds two degrees
from the University of Wisconsin at
Madison and was a Fullbright Scholar
in Paris in 1978-79. She has lectured
throughout the United States and I >r
works are included in the permam •«
collections of numerous museums.
Brown-Lupton Gallery is open
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays end
from 1 to 4 p.m. on weekends.
TCU CAMPUS SPECIAL!
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1 large drink
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4/TCU DAILY SKIFF, Thursday, September 27, 1984
Kubiak blasts Reagan
By Andrew M. Kinney
Staff writer of the TCV Daily Skiff
Sixth District Congressional
Democratic candidate Dan Kubiak
blasted the Reagan administration,
calling it the "Babe Ruth of deficit
spending" and implored students
to participate in the political process in a speech he delivered
Wednesday in the Woodson
Room, Student Center Room 207.
Kubiak, whose polls show he has
a commanding 43-to-19 lead over
Republican candidate Joe Barton
in the race to fill the seat left vacant
by Phil Gramm, was in Fort Worth
as part of his district tour.
"They (the Reagan administration) are giving to you a bankrupt
nation, and as a result we are giving
our children the worst possible future," Kubiak said. He added that
the $200 billion deficit is equivalent to borrowing $386,000 a minute.
Kubiak supports the BradleyGephardt bill, which is a modified
flat tax rate that will reduce taxes
from 14 to 30 percent. According to
Kubiak, the bill will reduce or
maintain the current amount of
taxes paid by four out of five
citizens.
He said that the current bill
proposed by Republican Jack
Kemp is favorable only for those
people who make over $100,000 a
year. "If you make under $100,000
a year your taxes will be increased
by three to five percent," said
Kubiak.
Kubiak, who served on the
Education Committee of the Texas
Legislature, emphasized the importance of improving education
on a national level. "The recent report of the National Commission
on Excellence in Education has
told us in no uncertain terms that a
rising tide of mediocrity threatens
our very future as a nation and a
jMivyBciimTt'
' fcliwvlysh (link
4
people," Kubiak said.
Kubiak calls for a revamped Department of Education that would
initiate a nationwide study to determine the technology appropriate to the nation's schools. He said
that school boards are going to have
to spend a great deal of money over
the next ten years on computers
and other hi-tech devices.
The candidate said that students
today have more to contribute to
the political process than ever before but that they lack the drive to
contribute what they know.
He urged the students present
to go door-to-door to register
potential voters.
He mentioned a phrase that he
used when he was a high school
teacher, "If it is to be, it is up to
us," stating that participation is a
crucial element in the political process.
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SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)Walter Pidgeon, the dignified romantic actor whose films included the
classics "Mrs. Miniver" and "How
Green Was My Valley," was mourned
by his leading lady Greer Garson as a
perfect partner who loved a funny
story just before a serious scene.
Pidgeon, who made more than 100
films, died Tuesday, two days after his
87th birthday, said St. John's Hospital
and Health Center spokeswoman
Terri DeLange. The actor had been in
the hospital since Sept. 19.
His attending physician, William
$2500
$2500
292-1680
5049 Trail Lake Drive
PRE-LAW FAIR
ATTENTION PRE-LAW STUDENTS:
TCU is presenting a pre-law fair with approximately fifty law schools' representatives
attending.
The event is being sponsored by the Southwest Association of Pre-Law Advisors and the
Law School Admissions Council.
The fair will be held on October 2nd from
10:00-3:00 in the Student Center Ballroom.
For more information call 921-7468
Pidgeon's stage, screen and television career spanned six decades and
was highlighted by two Academy
Award nominations in films opposite
Garson-"Mrs. Miniver" in 1942 and
"Madam Curie" in 1943.
"I've beaten all the odds," he said in
an interview six years ago. "I escaped
from a bank career, a brokerage
career, some roles that would have
poisoned a Borgia . . . and from re-
gret. How many men can say as
much?"
The Canadian-born Pidgeon
started out doing musical comedy in
the 1920s and made his first film in
1926. But he didn't achieve stardom
until the late 1930s when he was cast
opposite the British-born Garson in
eight films.
"He was the kind of character on
screen and off screen that everybody
admired-pleasant, handsome, gentle,
funny, a great sense of humor," Garson, a Dallas resident, said. "All these
things made him good."
Traffic Citations
DANIEL'S RESTAURANT
Ft Worth
for full or part-time
night-time kitchen personnel
host
By Appointment Only
The Sculptured Nail Specialist
Skinner, said a series of strokes before
and after Pidgeon entered the hospital caused his death.
Is now taking applications
■Expires 10-4-84
Mon., Tues., Fn., Sal. 9-6
Wed., Thur». 8-9
group of students in the Woodson Room in the Student
Center Wednesday. M. RIKKI CONNELLEYH-CU Daily Skiff
Walter Pidgeon dies at 87
^asy
TCU SPECIAL
Sculptured Mails
TALKING POLITICS: Dan Kubiak, democratic candi
date for the Sixth Congressional District, speaks to
ffioney
Traffic citations defended Tarrant
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*l°
By Bill Hanna
fUgurtfr
the TCU Dad*
Daily Skiff
Suffer of
oftheTCV
TCl's House of Student Representative kept its agenda to a minimum during its third meeting of the
year Tuesday.
There was some discussion on the
progress of the Ad Hoe Committee
formed last week to study the possibility of a late- night study area on campus. John Kessert, chairman of the
committee, said his group has done
some research and knows where to
begin its study.
TCU DAILY SKIFF, Thursday, September 27, 1984/"
discusses late-night study area
■—■
Weve determined the starting
^V",
point for looking at this project and
«>e way we're going to approach it,"
Kessert said. "First of all, (we must)
look at the areas on campus now and
determine whether there exists at
present adequate areas for late-night
study. '
J
>
___
'We've determined the starting point for looking at this project
and the way we're going to approach it'
-JOHN KESSERT, house member
that need to be done, and the male
members of the committee can't do
them.
Some questions and suggestions
were made by House members concerning the committee's study, but
House President Sara Smith said it
was still too early to go into any indepth
discussion.
...
j.ui>ii.iMn,iim
He said such factors as security and
the closing times of buildings would
be checked as well. He added that the
lack of women on the committee is a
problem because there are some studies in the women's residence
halls
„w^ MMM
"We don't need to discuss the proposal yet," she said. "I think there are a
lot of steps you have to consider."
In other business, two people were
appointed as new committee chairmen. Lynn Corson was named to
chair the Student Concerns Commit*»-t
ivicssuiger was
tee WIIIIC
while jcu
JeffMessinger
was ppicked to
Strategists blamed for heckling
DESM_OINES,Iowa(AP)-A«.m.
DESMOINES,
Iowa (AP)-A campaign worker for an Iowa Democratic
congressional candidate says Republican strategists at a seminar in
Washington last month coached
young conservatives on how to disrupt Democratic campaign events
His allegations follow Democratic
charges that Walter F. Mondale and
Oeraldine Ferraro have been victimized by organized protests in recent
campaign appearances-charges denied by conservative groups and
Reagan campaign officials.
David Schauer,
24, „a ..v.,^
field uorganiz
—, _.,
,s<,ii.i-
«fel—«~n
.-«.
er in Iowa for Democratic
U.S. House .^....
the attention of.....
television crews and
candidate Joe Welsh, said he were given model chants to shout in
attended a seminar Aug. 4-5 in order to disrupt speeches.
Washington where officials of a priThe chants, "Four More Years" and
vate group called the Leadership In- "No More Carter," the later designed
stitute taught campaign tactics to con- to link Mondale to former President
servatives.
Carter, are similar to those used by
Schauer said conferees were taught protesters this fall.
techniques of organizing young conTold of the allegations, the instiservatives-particularly on college tute's head, Morton Blackwell said in
campuses-to attend Democratic an interview, "I've never heard any
events carrying signs attacking such thing taught or said."
Democratic policies. In addition, he
Blackwell said the institute consaid, they were told methods of plac- ducts seminars on such campaign subing
within crowds to draw jects as designing literature, recruit.uS themselves
uicmseives wimm
ROXZ & Q-102
ing workers and preparing press releases.
Blackwell left the White House last
January after a stint as Reagan's special liaison to conservative groups, "to
go out and increase the level of grass
roots activism around the country,
he said.
The New York Times reported today that Reagan campaign officials
said they suspected seminars conducted by the Leadership Institute
might have stimulated the heckling of
the Democratic ticket on college campuses.
puses.
Sect held responsible for 88 deaths
COLUMBIA CITY, Ind. (AP)(APV- El.
Elizabeth Leach blames the death of her
daughter in childbirth on the
teachings of the Faith Assembly, a
faith-healing sect that took root in
northern Indiana about 10 years ago.
Out of curiosity, Leach said she
attended about a dozen Faith Assembly meetings with her daughter,
Alice, but never joined the closed
society whose members believe that
medicine is evil.
Alice Rebecca Rodgers was a young
bride-23 years old and married less
than a year-when she bled to death.
Hemorrhaging was apparent during
the early part of her pregnancy, Leach
later learned, but her daughter never
sought medical attention.
Instead, fellow Faith Assembly
members knelt in a bedroom beside
the woman-four
wnma„-f«,„1L.«
„»„.- she
.fc- was
„-.
the
hours after
dead-and tried to pray her back to
life.
The death of Rodgers in 1976 is one
of at least 88 deaths among Faith
Assembly members documented by
the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel. Many
of the deaths are said to be of infants
whose mothers refused medical care
during pregnancy.
The newspaper said followers who
had treatable illness or injury have
died as a result of shunning medical
help in Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky,
Ohio, Michigan, Missouri and Tennessee. Estimates of the number of
Faith Assembly adherents range from
1,500 to 2,000.
This week, a state judge sentenced
a Faith Assembly couple to five years
in prison for refusing to seek care for
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their 26-day-old son, who a coroner
said died of pneumonia for lack of a
few dollars worth of medicine.
David and Margaret Hall, who are
expecting their fourth child, were the
first members of the sect to be convicted on criminal charges for withholding medical care from a dependent. The couple said they would
appeal their sentence.
Whitley Circuit Judge Edward J.
Meyers, in sentencing the Halls on
Monday, said, "Certain societies have
now reached a point where we can't
tolerate human sacrifice in the name
of religion. I don't feel you can justify
this kind of behavior."
Hall, 27, told the court before her
sentencing that she would again refuse medical attention for her children.
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TCU
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Two afternoons a week to care for my oneyear-old son. Am flexible as to which afternoons Transportation necessary. $3 per
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Seminarv South
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IMPORTED FURNITURE
FROM THE FAR EAST! Mother of pearl inlaid on pure black lacquer chamber closer,
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TCU STUDENTS!
Start a part-time job now Part-time openings for retail sales in a Fort Worth based
clothing store Flexible hours Five minutes
from campus Call Tim, 294-0411
FILM
2 rolls 35mm Kodacolor film. $2 Send
check to SFW. 113A Wettermark, Nacogdoches, Tx 75961
Dependable female roommate wanted to
share 2-bedroom apartment with same
Four blocks from campus $150/month
no bills Call 332-2945 Leave message
and phone number for Sue.
Both sides. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths. $365 1
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WRITEOFF vs. RENT
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Call 923-3777 or 732-8833.
DEBBIE SCHERER.
TRAVEL ENTHUSIAST NEEDED!!!
Campus Rep„ to sell Ski Trips to Midwest &
Colorado & Beach Trips to Caribbean
Earn cash & free trips Call (312) 871-1070
today! Or write: Sun & Ski Adventures,
2256 N. Clark, Chicago, IL 60614
FOR SALE
'In Tailoring it's a matter of quality in fit, fabric, and design."
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In Fort Worth and Arlington
'roissant Royale
Custom designed by
'Xercer<& OVfercer
Sfiirt CMakers, inc.
! $5.00 off your first purchase j
- present coupon with TCU I.D. Offer expires 10-31-84
Made to measure custom shirts
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FRENCH BAKERY
Come in and taste our Gourmet Breads, Croissants, Cakes
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We bake the finest assortments in the Metroplex of
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Wide Selection of Croissants, Onion Buns, and
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In Fort Worth:
MONDAY-SATURDAY
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*
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1
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Specialist? Yes! 834-0606. 277-7599 (let
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ROOMMATE WANTED
Mercedes. 1972 450 SL Excellent condition $19,000 926-4999
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335-2866
____^___
Specials All Night Long
1976 Honda 750F Good condition Luggage rack, extras $900 Call Tom. 7385554
DUPLEX FOR RENT
CMercerSt 9Aercer
5f^CMofcers,Jnc,
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Free Pizza 8-9
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FOR SALE
Sound movie camera with tripod Used
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Bartenders and waitresses, full and part
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TRIUMPH TB7 79
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North American Financial offers great
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ELMO SUPER 8
Now hiring for the newest Mindy Lu's Hot
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Thursday Night — College Night
WORK FOR A GROWING FINANCIAL
FIRM
HELP WANTED
84 BMW 3181
5 spd„ sunroof, luxus package, Pirelli tires,
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Whitley County Prosecutor John
Whiteleather Jr. said he didn't expect
the outcome of the Hall case to influence other members of the sect.
"I can only suspect . . . when a
mother facing five years indicates that
she will not comply with the law and
provide medical care, there certainly
are no signs on the horizon that Faith
Assembly members will comply with
the law," Whiteleather said.
A second northeastern Indiana couple who belong to the church were
convicted Sept. 11 on similar charges
after their son died of untreated
bacterial meningitis.
1982 JEEP CJ 5
Welcomes TCU this fall
at the ROXZ
First 102 people receive free T-Shirts
"On the basis of my convictions,
and of my fear of God Almighty, I
could not provide medical care," Hall
said.
14.000 miles Tan with brown soft top.
White spokes 12.00x 15 tires Heavy duty
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W
L^
^ B
.lrf<_. Com„
head fht>
the VnUmmi
University
Relations
House does.
mittee.
Smith said the House did not div
The House also discussed participa- cuss the bill because it was not of largtj
tion in upcoming Homecoming activi- importance.
ties. Sophomore Mike Craig was
"It's really no big deal," she said.
named to the election board and "It just switches the vote from one
several new members were sworn in. side (of the residence hall) to the other
House members did not discuss the for fall and spring semesters, because
only bill introduced in last week's the ZTAs couldn't be here because of
meeting. The bill proposed switching their meetings."
representation this semester from
No new bills were introduced at the
Zeta Tau Alpha to Delta Delta Delta, meeting. Smith said the House will
because Zeta Tau Alpha conducts its not be able discuss very much busisorority meetings at the same time the ness until the committees gear up.
*
$1.50 OFF
|
$5.00 purchase
I
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(one ( oupon per pure
pun ha*e)
Expires
OCT. 06 1984
|
SUNDAY
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$9.00 purchase
(one coupon per pure hjsei
Expires OCT 06 1984
Tickets here,
may be last,
1,700 on sale
orts
Contrary to popular belief, there
are still tickets available for the TCUSMU game. Ticket manager Tommy
Love said that SMU sent over 1,700
tickets yesterday that will go on sale
this morning.
6/TCU DAILY SKIFF, Thursday, September 27, 1984
Tennis renewal,
'84 women strong
By Grant McGinnis and Brent
Cnesney
Staff writers of the TCU Daily Skiff
Tut Bartzen s tennis teams have
been higher than a lob and lower than
a double fault in the last decade, but
in 1984 their aim is center court.
Bartzen has coached men's tennis
at TCU since 1974, and has seen a lot
of players come and go, but none better than David Pate. Pate led the
Frogs to their eighth place national
ranking in 1981, bringing TCU a
National Collegiate Athletic Association doubles title and helping Bartzen
become NCAA Coach of the Year in
1982. Pate turned pro after achieving
All-American status that year and
Bartzen began a rebuilding program.
With an injury to last year's number
one player and a squad of untested
recruits, the rebuilding is still in progress. Bartzen's attitude toward this
year's team is cautiously optimistic.
"We think we can be pretty good,"
Bartzen said, "but the new guys are
going to have to contribute and the
old guys are going to have to mature
and play better."
Craig Boynton, a sophomore, is
currently TCU's number one player.
He agreed with Bartzen's predictions.
"Last year was a rebuilding year for
us," he said. "Hopefully, this year we
can finish in the top three in the conference. "
Bartzen ranked John Baker, Fred
Viancos and Otis Allmon as the top
three Frogs, followed by Scott
Meyers, Garry Betts and Tom Mercer. Rounding out the team are Jose
Marques-Neto and Doug Gleason.
Although the team has no Pates or
Karl Richters, past winners at TCU,
senior Viancos said the team has a lot
of heart. He said the conference title
is up for grabs. "There may be one
team better than all the rest, but from
second to fifth they're all about the
same. It just depends on who's hot,"
he said.
On the other side of the net, the
TCU women's team is building for the
future. With no seniors on the squad
this season, Coach Roland Ingram
said the future appears bright.
"The girls are looking stronger," he
said. "We lost one girl last year from a
26 and 4 team that finished third in
'Hopefully this year we can
finish in the top three in the
conference.'
-Craig Boynton. TCU tennis
player
the conference and we're ready to
go"
Ingram said the girls have their
work cut out for them with a much
tougher schedule this year. He said
the tougher schedule was adopted because last year's weak opponents prevented the team from being ranked.
Ingram said a 26 and 4 record would
bring a national ranking for sure this
year, because the schedule includes
top 20 schools including Oklahoma
State, North Carolina, Duke and
Georgia.
Ingram is in his second year as TCU
coach. "The girl's program has lacked
continuity," he said, "but hopefully
that s going to change because I think
I'll be here for a while."
IN THE SWING OF THINGS: Sergio Becker, a member Fred Viancos waits his chance to hit the ball.
of the TCU men's tennis team, prepares to return a serve as PETERSENfTCU Daily Skiff
Motta wont penalize Perkins for camp hold out
DALLAS (AP)- Dallas Coach Dick
Motta said he's not going to hold it
against All-American center-forward
Sam Perkins or other first-year players who fail to report for Wednesday's
start of rookie camp while they work
out contract negotiations with management.
"We're holding a rookie camp, and
they're rookies," Motta said. "But I'm
also not going to hold it against the
kids. They are individual contractors.
They need to get their business out of
Ingram said the team is young and
energetic and works well together.
"They're all so close in ability that it's
tough to rank them," he said. Ingram
said Teresa Dobson and Rene Simpson, both Canadians, will play number one and two. Liza Riefkohl, Lauri
Rapp and Mamie Ochoa follow in the
Frog's lineup with Molly Hourigan,
Trieste Ries and Angie Olmedo
rounding out the squad.
The team played Tyler Junior College, the top junior college in the nation last year, Tuesday as part of a
series of warm-up matches. Simpson
said the fall schedule isn't as tough as
the spring matches, but the opponents aren't pushovers, either. "The
teams we've played so far have gotten
better with each match," she said.
"Oklahoma State is our first big
match.
The women travel to Stillwater,
Okla., next week to face the Cowboys.
The men's team will face stiff competition this weekend at the Wichita Falls
Collegiate Classic, featuring top college teams including Southern
Methodist, Oklahoma and Oklahoma
State.
Tuesday afternoon, Love informed
the Skiff that the 1,500 tickets sent to
TCU Monday would be the last tickets alloted to the Frogs. Love called
SMU Wednesday to request more
tickets and received those that are on
sale today.
"I feel that these will be the last
tickets given to us. SMU will save the
rest of the (end zone) tickets to sell at
their school and the stadium," said
Love.
TCU had sold 6,600 tickets as of 3
p.m. Wednesday. Love said SMU
officials are expecting 50,000 spectators at the game on Saturday.
DAN
the way before they come to me. than the rookies who are holding out,"
Motta said.
Then, they're my business."
"It looks like Perkins will come in
Rookie camp-a three-day orientation session where no plays are and make more than Mark (Aguirre)
taught-is more relaxed than training or Rolando (Blackman). The players
camp, which begins Saturday night, know that. They also know they're
the day after veterans report for busting their cans in two-a-days and
physicals and a two-mile run. If the the rookie isn't. I've found in that
rookies miss part of training camp, situation, the veterans usually take it
there might be some repercussions, out on these kids when they do sign."
Mavericks general manager Norm
but not from him, Motta said.
"The real problem arises when the Sonju is believed to be offering Perveterans at camp are getting paid less kins about $400,000 a season. Perkins
is said to be wanting a contract in the
range of $650,000 to $700,000.
Lee Fentress, Perkins' agent, said
Tuesday that Perkins' situation may
not be resolved by Friday.
"We've had a number of conversations, but we've got a ways to go. I
think we'll have a difficult time completing this before rookie camp and
perhaps before the veterans report,"
Fentress told the Fort Worth StarTelegram.
YOUR INVITED
This Weekend at the Movies
To The Third Annual Sportswear
Sample Sale
WHEN:
Friday Sept 28, 1984 10:00 to 6:00 pm
WHERE:
Vann Martin Hair Saloon (Upstairs)
At Lubbock And West Berry
(Behind Eckerd Drugs)
WHAT:
Famous Maker Separates For Junior
And Missie Sizes
Friday, September 28
- 5:00p.m. - 8:00p.m. - 12:00a.m.
WHY:
To Pay Half The Price Of Retail
Stores
Student Center Ballroom
DON'T MISS IT!
Tickets: $1.00
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CONFIDENT DRESSING...
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