%ARCH 1988 The Student Body U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 21 ~ARCH 1988uThe Student Body U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 21 Bridge Continued From Page 19 cameras, directing him to take shots of his walk down the cable. "This was the biggest challenge of my trip. Someone asked me to save his life Oy walking across a bridge," Qadeer said. Although thoughts of death raced through Qadeer's mind, he did not lose his sense of humor. "For the first time in my life I didn't know if I would be dead or alive in the next 15 minutes," he said. "The last thingI thought was, 'If I die, at least the Daily Cal will have an in- eresting story,'" Qadeer said. Without a safety belt, 700 feet above the water, 450 feet above six lanes of freeway and with 20 mph winds swaying the cables, Qadeer descended the bridge cable. After nearly half an hour, Qadeer got to the roadside and security guards res- cued Whalen from the elevator. "As far as I know," said Whalen, who has been a bridge technician for the past ven years, "no person has ever walked e entire cable with (no safety belt)." Of the 12 longest suspension bridges in the country, Qadeer has only one left-the.Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Washington. After that, he hopes to con- quer suspension bridges all around the world. Flu ntinued From Page 19 ory loss and lack of coordination. Other symptoms include low blood sugar attacks, panic or anxiety attacks, sleep disturbances, hair loss, depress- ion, mood swings and personality changes. Many people with these symptoms are misdiagnosed, labelled as hypochondriacs or told "it's all in your d." "It has just been in the last two years hat it's really coming to the attention of he medical professionals," Zanella said. Some symptoms can be relieved with prescription anti-depressants, anti- inflammatory drugs and analgesics. Dr. Nabih Abdou, a researcher at the U. of Kansas Medical Center, found that atment with a massive dose of im- ne serum globulins, injected month- ly and lasting six months, may elimin- ate the severe symptoms of the disease, according to the Kansas City Kansan. Though still debating its cause, many esearchers believe it is related to Ep- stein-Barr virus-the herpes virus causing mononucleosis-exposure, she -aid. report from the National CEBV drome Association said that "nearly (95 percent of the public) is exposed to the common Epstein-Barr virus, which stays in the body for life. In most people, it remains dormant... But in some people, the virus either stays active from the moment of infection or flares up later. (In those cases) chronic illness sometimes results." CEBV is not contagious, and the Ep- in-Barr virus is found all over the orld. Whether someone develops EBV depends on how his or her body eals with the virus, the Association aid. Some researchers believe the virus merges from its latent state because of s reaction with a new virus, environ- ental pollutants- or even stress fac- ors. Underwater hockey surfaces in college pools By Melissa Murphy See photo on front page. using teamwork, speed swimming a U. of Minnesota, Twin Cities quick passes. Players coming up for clutch a 12-inch hockey stick and splash circle ack to nla defense on the d nd air les- First one head surfaces, then two more pop up, as underwater hockey buffs sputter and gasp for air. Soon all heads appear and fans real- ize a goal has been scored.The players, smiling and panting, resolve which team scored the goal. Underwater hockey may never be re- corded in sports annals as a spectator sport, but that doesn't bother its players. To the casual observer, a puzzled look dcn'fntit n i, +iiAncni Ci'inia onn into the pool. It may look like they're searching for the pool's filtering system. Actually, they're mining the bottom for a three- pound brass puck in an attempt to score a goal. At the call of"Sticks up. Go," one play- er from each team races underwater to the puck and the others follow. "We want a constant rotationofthree, four fresh players underwater," player Gary Christiansen said. "We can't have everyone underwater at the same time." The obiective is to beat the defender pll VU VPly U 1o iit1 F cent. Bottom-time and surface recovery are important aspects of the game. "The challenge is to see how long you can stay down (called bottom-time)," captain Ben Erickson said. "You don't want to stay down more than 20 seconds or you'll get burnt out." Surface recovery ranges from five to 10 seconds. The game runs continuous- ly for two 15-minute halves and stops briefly after a score. Like ice hockey, underwater hockey has a referee, timekeeper and desig-