4 Che Battalion Vol. 68 No. 99 College Station, Texas Thursday, Apr. 1, 1976 lesolution lowers ^PR requirement ?r two hours of debate, the Student } passed a resolution last night to the grade point ratio requirement for ifficer.positions. The GPR was low- •om 2.5 to 2.25 same resolution was passed by the Thursday night, but based on t’s Rules of Order that meeting was ted. There had not been enough prior ^ersity regulations require thatoffic- bfficially recognized student organi- t have at least a 2.0 GPR overall. The resolution will affect only write-in candidates in this election, but will affect all the candidates for future elections. Roger Harvey proposed the resolution because he said some of the senators felt they had made a mistake by raising the requirement from 2.0 to 2.5 last October. The resolution stated that the 2.5 require ment is too high because class officer posi tions are not as time consuming as execu tive positions. The executive requirement remains 2.0. Sen. Scott Sherman said the 2.25 allows a safe margin. “I’m for the 2.25 — but not for any elitist reason—just incase you goof up,” he said. Just before the meeting was adjourned, Wesley Harris, President of the Judicial Board addressed the group. He said that the J-Board was tired of ruling on assanine election requirements for student offices. He said that unless the requirements were changed, the Senate would soon be im peaching J-Board members for not uphold ing the requirements. — Cissy Auclair udicial Board objects o campaigning rules By GALE KAUFFMAN ( lent Senate members applauded il Board Chairman Wesley Harris le spoke out against the Judicial at a specially called Senate meeting lesday night. with upholding asinine regulations,” he said. Harris presented his views to the Senate after a Judicial Board met to reconsider the disqualification of junior Kim Schaefer for campaign violations. human error and forgetfulness. “I’m interested in serving the students and to deprive me of this chance was really bad,” she said. “It’s a case of going by the rules or bettering student involvement and activities.” International talent This group of Venezuelan musicians performed activities. There will be a roundtable discussion Wednesday night as part of the International Week tonight in rm. 601 of the Rudder Tower. Teamsters strike ILi will have to impeach the entire f l Board because they will blindly, gly and openly allow election viola- said Harris. - laddressed the Texas A&M Student ft and recommended that the Senate sider the student campaign regula- jat the next regular meeting. “The rd is getting thoroughly disgusted Schaefer, who was running for Resi dence Hall Association presidency, was disqualified by the Student Election Commission for putting a campaign sign in a tree. Schaefer appealed the decision to the Judicial Board, basing her appeal on “the grounds that the penalty was too severe for the crime. Schaefer said it was a matter of fhese flowers, with many others, can be found in the floral test [ardens of the College of Agriculture. The gardens, located on fouston St. across from KAMU, have plants at all times. Nationwide walkout result of benefit, wage dispute After one and one-half hours of delibera tion, the board ruled in favor of Schaefer’s disqualification by a 5 to 3 vote. “If it is determined that a violation took place, the board is required to follow the prescribed punishments,” said Harris. Ac cording to university Regulations hand book, no campaign signs may be placed on any trees or shrubs. Any candidate who violates the election regulations, in this or any other area, will be disqualified. After the meeting. Judicial Board member Shannon Walker said, “The rule (of disqualification for any violation) is not in the best interest of the student body. It’s too restrictive and it’s the student body who is being hurt by this particular legisla tion.” In his address to the Student Senate, Harris said that these harsh punishments restrict the number of qualified candidates for student offices. Harris later stated that it should be left up to the Judicial Board to decide what penalties go with what of fenses. Associated Press ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. — A nationwide Teamsters trucking strike began today with thousands of drivers on picket lines and the nation’s economy fac ing a crunching shutdown in the interstate flow of goods. Union and trucking industry officials said negotiations, which failed to bring about a settlement in time to avert a walkout, would resume at 9:30 a.m. after a recess. Wages, fringe benefits and a cost-of-living clause remain in dispute, they said. Labor Secretary W. J. Usery, Jr. and other federal officials had no comment early today, and there was no immediate indication that the Ford administration would seek a Taft-Hartley injunction to keep the nation’s trucking pipeline from drying up as the strike spread. Picket lines appeared at freight yards and truck terminals from Connecticut to Georgia to Colorado. Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsim mons said three hours after the midnight strike deadline that Teamsters were “on record if we didn’t conclude an agreement by 12:01 midnight that our people weren’t going to work .... There is a strike. Our people have walked off.” The strike, Fitzsimmons said, covers “the entire United States of America. Of the possibility of a federal back-to-work or der, Fitzsimmons said, “It’s entirely up to the government.” “We haven’t reached an agreement, he added. “At one point we were very op timistic. Unfortunately, we came to this point.” But, he also said, “We re in the ball park.” The Teamsters leader refused to elabo rate on the latest industry offer. Earlier, though, Willian G. McIntyre, chief negotiator for Trucking Employers Inc. — the trucking firms’ bargaining agent — told reporters its offer had been improved sub stantially. How many firms would be forced to keep rigs off the road remained uncertain as local Teamsters around the country continued a push begun Wednesday to pressure indi vidual companies to sign interim agree ments. This strategy, seen by union sources as a means of breaking up the employers’ sol idarity, would guarantee the Teamsters demands until an agreement is reached. Before the midnight deadline, more than 160 firms had adopted the agree ments, in return for assurances that their trucks would continue to operate without Teamsters’ interference in event of a strike. Fitzsimmons said he did not know how many companies had signed the agree ments. The union lists 400,000 members. McIntyre, who first announced the im passe, said the talks would continue and “hopefully, sometime we can produce a contract that will stabilize the transporta tion system of the country. “If I thought that the continued efforts of TEI were hopeless, I would be on my way back to Washington at this time. I intend to stay here as long as there is any move ment .... We ll continue to be here.” 4 Remember to vote on Saturday Index The Battalion makes recommenda tions for the city council positions and the charter revision issue. Page 2. The transportational development of Bryan-College Station is recount ed in “100 years.” Page 5. Tampa and Seattle now have play ers to fit into those new uniforms. Page 8. Sportfolio takes a look at “Dear Abby”. Page 9. THE FORECAST for Thurs day and Friday is fair and mild becoming partly cloudy tomor row. Today’s high, 78; tonight’s low, 51; Friday’s high, 83. Heartache: Vets aid dachshund with weight problem By MARILOU WOMACK Gunther could have been an overweight American. He might have suffered the humiliation of always bringing up the rear on playful romps with the boys, the heartache of having the new little girl on the block pass him by without so much as a sniff, the discomfort of having his stomach scrape the as phalt every time he wanted to cross the street— not to mention the utter degradation of getting stuck under a fence. Gunther has a hypo-thyroid condi tion. He has no way of seeking help for himself because Gunther is a dachshund. Fortunately, he belongs to Dr. Dan Hightower, Doctor of Veteri nary Medicine and professor at Texas A&M University’s College of Vet erinary Medicine. Dr. Hightower is engaged in the study and clinical application of nuc lear medicine. At the veterinary Ford to make Texas campaign visit in April Associated Press Texas, considered a key state in the Re publican battle for the presidential nomina tion, will be the object of some courting by President Ford this month during two quick visits to the state. White House sources Wednesday said only that “there are reports” that Ford will come to Texas around the second weekend in April, but other sources in Texas said that the President will be in the state April 9-10 and again April 28-29. Ford’s visits will be political campaign affairs designed to store up defenses in the state to meet the challenge of former California Gov. Ronald Reagan in the May 1 primary. “It is a campaign trip and the whole thing is being coordinated by his campaign head quarters,” said Texas GOP chairman Ray Hutchison. Reports published in Dallas said Ford will first come to Texas on April 9 for a speech at the Alamo in San Antonio and then will fly to Dallas for a political rally. The next day he will hold a news confer ence and then go to Abilene and Amarillo for speeches there and then return to Washington. The tentative schedule for the second trip has Ford landing at Fort Worth for a speech and then flying to Houston for a fund-raising dinner. The President will visit Lubbock on April 29 and then will fly East to Tyler and possibly Longview. school nuclear medicine largely in volves a technique called imaging. “We give a radio-pharma ceutical,’’ Hightower said. “We know what behavior is supposed to be. At some time after administra tion, we look at how the radioactivity is distributed. Then we can compare it with what it should look like and make a diagnosis.” Dr. David Hood, an associate pro fessor at the veterinary college, is currently working with lung imaging and brain imaging. Dr. Hightower said that at pre sent, veterinary nuclear medicine is primarily important in diagnosing illnesses, as in Gunther’s case, rather than in curing them. “There are a few applications in therapy, such as internal radiation therapy for chronic leukemia,” Hightower said. “However, most of its applications are diagnostic. Nuc lear medicine doesn t replace any thing, but it gives us additional in formation which would be either dif ficult or impossible to obtain with other methods.” Hightower cited the example of kinetic studies — finding the rate at which, things are going on in the body. “In glomerular filtration for in stance, we study the rate at which plasma is filtered by the kidneys,” he said. “The old method required that we measure the urine over a period of time. This works fine with people, but unfortunately animals don’t cooperate very well.” He said that with nuclear medicine techniques, a radio pharmaceutical can be injected into the animal’s blood. The plasma clearance through the kidneys can then be followed without taking periodic urine samples. Dr. Hightower received his de gree in veterinary medicine at Texas A&M in 1946. Since then, he has taken courses in radiation biology at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, and received a master’s degree in applied physics from North Carolina State. Ten years ago he returned to Texas A&M to teach. He has since been engaged in the research and practice of nuclear medicine in addition to teaching and treating patients from the veterinary clinic. Hightower also works closely with Dr. James Smathers of the nuclear engineering department at the A&M Cyclotron. Smathers works with M.D. Anderson Hospital on the treatment of cancer patients. Dr. Smathers said that because experiments and treatment with the facilities involved are very costly, most of the work done with animals is used to probe the frontiers for treat ment of humans. At the cyclotron, Dr. Hightower conducts experiments with swine, studying the effects of high energy neutrons on skin and the fat layers beneath it. Before Dr. Hightower began his work, veterinary nuclear medicine had already been underway for some time at A&M under the direction of Dr. W. C. Banks. Dr. Banks, headof the radiology department at the Col lege ofVeterinary Medicine until his death in December 1975, was one of the first veterinarians to work with nuclear medicine. “There are other veterinary col leges involved in nuclear medicine, including Cornell and the University of Missouri,” Hightower said, “but by no means are all veterinary col leges working with it. “For one thing, it’s very expen sive. We are probably one of two schools in the country with an anger camera, the device used to look at the distribution of radioactivity in imaging. “Another thing in our favor is that A&M University is tremendous in the field of nuclear science, he ad ded. Dr. Hightower said the study of veterinary nuclear medicine at Texas A&M is not aimed at producing startling discoveries. “For us, it’s more a question of slowly but surely going about our jobs,” he said.