THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1978 h Railroads with hazardous materials [ represent potential Texas time bombf SHOP ■Texas railroads are running more ^'SMBins carrying increasing amounts e 35 )f;h<\zardous materials. ('ears pLast year, there were 8,000 de- eiinl flments in the United States. Un- a ' 1 * less steps are taken, more life and ™ ,a fcperty endangering accidents will re ’ ®ur, warns a Texas Transportation nstitute specialist. i The pattern is statistically visible, , aid Hoy Richards, a TTI research 11 ji l® om * st at Texas A&M University I * ; indan authority on rail transporta- )l idost grain exports tunneled from ttsl the nation’s midsection through mston in 1972-73. Richards said, lie said Texas led the nation in lileage in 1974 with 13,306 train- les. Derailments, the largest class of accidents other than grade isings, which rose dramatically (hose years, peaked in 1974 and jpped some in 1975. ’his is due to railway deteriora- coincident with heavy rnove- jnt of grain exports,” Richards manv The United State s massive oil imports, directed mainly to the Houston petrochemical complex for refining and processing, will con tinue to burden track systems, he said. “The same things that are being done to highways are happening to tracks, Richards said. “They are being subjected to heavier wheel loads, more and longer trains, and the lines would like to run the trains faster, too.” T feel about the railroads like I do about automobile accidents. We are fortunate — considering the number of cars on the highway, the types of drivers in them and road conditions — that we have no more fatal accidents than we do. Nationally, in 1977, there were 8,000 derailments, he said. “Of these, 500 involved hazardous mate rials. Only 140 (less than two per cent) ruptured,” he said. “But we re sitting on a time bomb.” “I would hope this administration will come up with a National Trans portation Policy, something we do not have. Perhaps it would allow in tegration of the private railroad sys tem with the public highways and waterways to form a national trans portation system.” Citing a 1977 TTI prepared report to Gov. Dolph Briscoe and the Legislature on state railway safety, he said that Texas in 1972 shipped 46 percent of the United States’ ton nage of chemicals and allied prod ucts. Texas’ share of petroleum and coal products was 20 percent. Texas ranks in the top five per cent nationally in every accident category. Possiole solutions, Richards said, should not place economic pressure on railroads that would force more cargo to highway carriers. Richards and Patrick Collins, TTI research associate, said the tradeoff would be four to six truck equivalents for each railroad tank car. “Let’s assume,” Richards said, “that (jpublic sentiment demands a fail-safe railway system. This allows no derailments, gravel, empties or anything else. With the cost borne tion Twin chimps survive in Tanzania despite hardships of wilderness by the private carrier, the price of railroad service would have to dou ble, at a minimum. “If that happens, it would drain a very large portion of hazardous ma terial cargo from the railroads to larger and larger trucks.” Other TTI specialists agree that the highway vehicle spectrum is growing at the ends. Autos are get ting smaller and tank trucks larger, hardly a life-prolonging traffic mix. Collins estimated truck movements would increase by a fac tor of four to six. Highway safety would be compromised, unless more public funds were put into highways for truck lanes. “However, the dollar comparison for that versus railroad track im provement is out of balance,” Richards said. “We re talking about improving 75,000 miles of track. ” Another approach, he said, “is to tell the chemical industry to design a container to handle and move hazardous materials safely, with the same derailment factor we now have. Cost would be significant. Still another alternative he ad vanced — admittedly unpopular — is public ownership of roadbeds, “with railways just like highways and waterways, constructed and maintained by the government. etfrf United Press International WASHINGTON — Although a nan mother with twin babies has [hands full, a chimpanzee in the ie position has even more to fie. Jane Goodall, one of the orld’s leading authorities on chim- fcees, has been watching in Tan- »ia the only known chimp twins in the wild. She is amazed the its have survived. ;“I gave them a week and they’re six months old,” Dr. Goodall Wednesday at a briefing at the Jional Geographic Society which jps finance her work. “This tother has to face the most terrific blems in handling two babies.” |E!nlike human babies, chimpan- depend almost exclusively on Ither’s milk for three years. This wherever the mother goes so I the children. rtth one infant, a chimp mother nages easily with the baby either her back or clinging to her ■nach, but “for a mother to climb hrough the trees, to jump from one I another, to keep up with big moving fast from one food to another with two babies to is a terrific problem,” Dr. 11 said. tiny chimps’ survival also was med by a cannibalistic pair of — mother and daughter — led several newborn chimps it years. The older of the two pregnant and no longer at- le young. !, as Dr. Goodall watched, ighter chimp tried to snatch ns from their mother high in tree. But the twins and their escaped when she made a leap to another tree, twins, named Gyre and !, were unusually small at Dr. Goodall said they didn t i their mother very well and >uld tend to hold on to the Both would fall off and start lissa, the mother, would them up then they’d start to in. She would sit down and : them and she was clearly d and bewildered and she know what to do. 1 then to make matters worse the babies hurt its foot badly, n’t know how. Every time the r moved, the baby hurt and led. The screaming of one ;t off the other twin. Melissa confused, all she could think fo was to climb a tree and a nest, a platform to lie on ig in the branches.” Goodall and her assistants at lia s Gombe Stream National Park fed the mother a few bananas laced with antibiotics, which go to the infants through the milk. The foot finally healed and now both twins are healthy, although they are still small for their age. “They’re backward in the de velopment of their behavior,” she said. “A normal 6-month-old infant is starting to walk and the twins are quite content to sit with the mother. But they’re alert, they’re look ing around and they re interested in things. They’re just unbelievable., Every time I see them I can’t be lieve they’re real. Dr. Goodall is director of the Gombe Stream Research Center and a visiting professor of zoology at the University of Dar es Salaam. Her appearance at the National Ge ographic Society opened a three- week lecture tour in the United States. HAVE LUNCH ON US ... FREE! ;> A&M Apt. Placement is giving everyone who leases through us a FREE LUNCH at T.J.’s . . . Our way of saying “Thanks Ags.” And don’t forget, our ser vice is FREE. We handle apartments, duplexes, houses ... all types of housing. 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