The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 01, 1979, Image 6

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    Page 6
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, MAY 1, 197S
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Animal handling
key is experience
MONDAY EVENING
TUESDAY EVENING
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL
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Your Choice of
w/chili
Choice of one other
One Vegetable
Mexican Rice
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter I
Coffee or Tea
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
Coffee or Tea
One Corn Bread and Butter
By STANTON RAY
Battalion Reporter
When a veterinarian is handling a
tiger or a mamba snake, the most
important tool is knowledge of how
to handle the beast, according to
Dr. Murray Fowler, a veterinarian
from California who specializes in
zoo and wild animal medicine.
Fowler gave a two-hour presenta
tion, titled “Non-domestic Clinics
and Zoo Animal Problems,” to a
public meeting of the student chap
ter of the American Association of
Zoo Veterinarians at Texas A&M
University Monday night. His slide
show was devoted mainly to various
techniques of handling and restrain
ing animals.
Fowler said that of the thousands
of species of animals on the earth,
there are only about 35 that are
domesticated, including two insects:
honeybees and silkworms. But man
keeps more than just those 35 in
captivity, and the veterinarian must
be prepared to deal with the others.
Fowler, who said that he has
learned much of what he knows
from hard experience, said that suc-
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cessful restraint of animals requires
three things: knowledge of the
specie’s biology, proper use of the
correct tools, and self-confidence,
which comes with experience.
“There is no such thing as com
mon sense,” Fowler said. “Common
sense is experience. It may be direct
or vicarious, but it is experience.”
Respect also plays an important
role, Fowler said. The veterinarian
must have respect for an animal’s
strength, speed, reach and agility.
Animals defend or attack by biting,
clawing, striking, goring, bunting,
squeezing, crushing, spitting and
regurgitating.
Fowler said that four factors must
be kept in mind, in the proper or
der, when a veterinarian is selecting
a restraining method:
— Safety for the veterinarian and
his or her coworkers.
— Safety for the animal.
— The possibility of the use of the
procedure in that situation.
— The successful recovery of the
animal.
A veterinarian’s hands are two of
his most important tools; therefore
the veterinarian must be keenly
aware of the danger of an animal’s
teeth.
“There is not one adult carnivore
with a full set of teeth that can’t bite
through a leather glove,” Fowler
said.
Many veterinarians think of
chemical restraint with dart guns as
a catchall, but Fowler said that such
procedures require special care for
the safety of all involved, including
the animal.
Thatcher candidacy
doesn’t faze Britons
United Press International
LONDON — Even if Britain’s
Thursday election makes Mar
garet Thatcher the first woman to
head a government in the West
ern world, there won’t be much
dancing in Britain’s streets on
that account.
There are many reasons.
Britain, after all, has had a
queen on the throne for 27 years.
The reality of a woman run
ning the country goes back at
least as far as the first Queen
Elizabeth, an absolute ruler —
literally with power of life or
death — 400 years ago. England
has had many queens before and
since.
Nor are women political lead
ers in Thatcher’s own time all
that novel.
Any random poll before this
campaign probably would have
found as many people mention
ing Jennie Lee, Barbara Castle
or Shirley Williams as Thatcher
in that category.
Furthermore, Britain’s long
and intimate involvement in the
wider world has left a solid
awareness of precedents.
Voters here know about earlier
woman prime ministers within
the British Commonwealth, like
Indira Gandhi of India and
Sirimavo Bandaranaike of what
was then Ceylon and is now Sri
Lanka, and outside it, like Golda
Meir of Israel.
The hit musical “Evita and its
razzmatazz publicity has even
given many Britons some idea of
Eva Peron’s role in Argentina,
though that of Gen. Juan Peron’s
widow Isabel, who succeeded
him as president, is much hazier.
Besides all this, the British
still cherish the idea that it is par
liament which rules, not a prime
minister. Thatcher herself
stressed that “we are not electing
a president.” For most British
voters, the party matters more
Unit
ASHL
etary Jan
oday the
asoline r«
than the person.
With 27 women in theo[lip u gh he
ing parliament, more wohould hav
than ever before — some 2feTh e a drn
them —are fighting for seatdi* issuing
time. In Rochester, one w.'ehicle wa
candidate battled anotbienate agri
newspaper interviewed wal devel
woman candidates and all‘gainst a
voter choice “has everythii&erica.
do with her politic^ and notlpchlesinj
to do with her sex.’ W' n ^ ^ arrI
For all these reasons,
issues are playing little paqL in ^
Britain's election campaign || h
parties deliberately play |lf f
down ' ilt (the j
That was easier to do
there is no really milj
feminist movement here.
is not to say that there
feminists.
get
"It is so terribly importai
t a woman really to thetl
Unite
said one. “Women will nevtfln a pair <
cjuite so looked down ona.ited cases,
[liana anc
Carter, Soviet dissident
attend worship services
letal
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
Eddie Dominguez '66
Joe Arciniega '74
Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad /
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
ii!i
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Attending
church services with a newly freed
Soviet dissident, President Carter
said Sunday it is not treason to ob
ject to government injustice in the
United States or elsewhere, but it is
“sinful to be silent.”
Georgi Vins, one of five Russian
activists released a few days before,
came to Washington from New York
to worship with the president and
attend the Bible class Carter taught
at the First Baptist Church of Wash
ington.
The president called Vins a
courageous man who was perse
cuted “because of his belief in
Christ.
A Baptist leader in the Ukraine,
Vins was accused of “defaming the
Soviet state” in 1975 and sentenced
to five years in a labor camp and five
years of internal exile.
He was released Friday, along
with four other political prisoners,
in exchange for the freedom of two
Soviet spies convicted last year of
trying to buy U.S. Naval secrets.
Carter, telling the group Vins said
he was being transported across
Siberia on a cattle train only four
days earlier, said people have an ob
ligation to speak out when they see
their government doing wrong.
Noting that some equate the
words “My country, right or wrong
with patriotism, Carter said “I
doubt that God would approve of
that statement.
“The first time we had to face that
in my lifetime was in the Vietnam
War,” the president said.
Describing the public attitude
during the war as being: “If my pres
ident says bomb Cambodia, so be
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
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FILET w/TARTAR
SAUCE
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
SATURDAY
NOON and EVENING
SPECIAL
Chicken &
Dumplings
Tossed Salad
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
■“Quality Firsf’i
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
ROAST TURKEY DINNER
Served with
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Roll or Corn Bread - Butter -
Coffee or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And your choice of any
One vegetable
If you want the real
thing, not frozen or
canned . . . We call It
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Dallas location:
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Sun Theatres
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The only movie in town
Double-Feature Every Week
Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun
No one under 18
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BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS
KKsible mt
jfcoroner
'Otith Bend
Biains of
Kind by a £
Bs near tf
Ttb three
ltd Saturdc
it,” Carter said "My countrBpd Sunda
not he right. He told the 1%^ womai
people attending the class tl)l Bar Percy,
an obligation "to try to cha^pattered si
“This is not treason,” hesMciab said
"A human being has theiBe. Foul
question the law and sometim® death,
the consequences. Carter si^fashroo
“The accumulated inflii’Blead acti'
courageous human beings i
rect defects in government <
rty,” Carter told the group,)
sinful to be silent in the faced
tice. ”
Carter avoided direct attj
I he Russians \\ ho kfl
peatedly jailed Vins —but did
tion the "pressures inflietedK
him by the state. P Unite<
Vins, dressed in a dark suitBNDIAN7
the second pew, directly in Wlion ham
Carter, as the president co u I'S of cof
the class in the balcony at thefind left i
the church. Briburger
He stared directly at Cartijfonday.
his head tilted slightly to hey he turre
words of the interpreter at l j ut: let on
Vins closed the regular reW vn town I
service with a prayer. fi rs f ban
^ug. 6, 192
ause the “b
Police leari“ : We are
rt, super
01 <
clo
crime acts ! ‘ ,apolisN
MANOR EAST 3
naasiM
1—1 846-6714 fU/S-l 1
846-6714 & 846-1151
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTEf
istle said
| >4sly operat
Fagin schfc^
United Press International p the Stand
WASHINGTON — The g|Kh a loyal
ment is financing a "Fagin” faces i
teaching students to laundyrs and yt
ganized crime money, pick pr We esti:
by telephone, make successli
deals and fence stolen goods.
But unlike the evil geniusi
kens “Oliver Twist,’’ the g
ment’s effort is legal.
The students are police ol
investigators, prosecutors ar
ditors, learning new skills
Dade County (Fla.) Institute:
ganized Crime at Biscayne C
in Miami.
The Law Enforcement Assi
Administration’s chief Henry
said past training for fighto
ganized crime was expensivi
duplicative.
“Through training centers lil
one in Florida, we offer val
training, new techniques, at
sights in the fight,” he said.
Dogin said one course on
puter techniques shows ho
write a check and, “figurat
speaking, pick a pocket by
phone, through the illegal tfi
of bank funds from one accou
another.’
The I
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