The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 07, 1979, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 14
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1979
Russian
researches
cancer
United Press International
SAN ANTONIO — A Russian sci
entist has been doing research at the
Southwest Foundation for Research
and Education in the worldwide
search for one of the causes of cancer,
officials said Thursday.
Dr. Zinaida Vsevolodovna Shet-
sova will be at the biomedical re
search center until Sept. 22 as part of
the United States-Soviet Scientific
Exchange Program, then will spend
a week at the National Cancer Insti
tute at Bethesda, Md.
She is working in San Antonio with
Drs. S.S. Kalter, director of micro
biology and infectious diseases, and
Richard L. Heberling, a scientist at
the foundation.
Mom asks court
not to unplug son
&LQh\cxy
3109 Texas Avenue
Bryan, Texas 77801
RESTAURANT
presents
Happy Hour 4-6
(7 days a week)
2 for 1 per person
10% discount for all A&M students with current I.D.
Mon.-Thurs. only.
Sorghum
reserves
released
Disciples
You are invited to lunch following worship Sunday Sept. 9th
at the First Christian Church, 900 Ennis, Bryan.
9:30 Church School led by Dr. John Hoyle.
10:50 Morning Worship with the Rev. Michael Miller
preaching.
Lunch following worship. For transportation call 823-
5451
PRESBYTERIANS
You are cordially invited to LUNCH following morning wor
ship on September 16th at First Presbyterian Church of
Bryan.
Come early for the Life Planning Hour at 9:30 with Book
man and Pat Peters Topic “The Search for a Personal
Faith.”
WORSHIP AT 11 A.M. WITH PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS MINISTER AT
A&M MICHAEL MILLER PREACHING.
LUNCH WILL FEATURE SINGING BY RECORDING ARTIST JIM GILL
OF BEAUMONT.
Call 823-8073 for transportation.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — For the sec
ond time this year, grain sorghum
prices have increased to a level so
that farmers have an option of selling
their sorghum reserves, the Agricul
ture Department said today.
Farmers may remove their sor
ghum from reserve by repaying gov
ernment loans on the crop. They
may sell the grain once the loans are
repaid.
Agriculture Department official
John Goodwin said a five-day aver
age of market prices for sorghum was
$4.33 per hundredweight on Wed
nesday, which was 9 cents above the
$4.24 price at which Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland may release
sorghum from reserve.
United Press International
PUEBLO, Colo. — From her
room at the Colorado State Hospital,
the mother of a 17-month-old boy
hospitalized with brain damage has
asked the Colorado Supreme Court
to prevent her son’s life-saving de
vice from being unplugged.
The woman, Rosalie Lovato, 20,
was taken into custody for investiga
tion of child abuse two weeks ago and
now is in protective custody at the
state hospital.
Tuesday, District Judge Donald
Abra ruled the boy, who began show
ing signs of severe brain damage
Aug. 23, could be removed from a
respirator, but he gave the mother’s
attorneys 10 days to appeal to the
state Supreme Court.
Lovato’s lawyer, Carl W. Gellent-
hien, said he met with his client
Wednesday and she asked him to
stop doctors from taking her child off
the life-saving device.
“It’s the mother’s opinion that she
wants every medical and legal test
and remedy possible before the life
support system is pulled. I will have
an appeal or an original writ into the
Supreme Court by Monday or next
Tuesday,” he said.
Gellenthien said a court-
appointed guardian for the child, at
torney Mickey Smith, also wanted to
appeal. The boy, Jerry Trujillo, has
been kept alive by a respirator since
Aug. 23.
Colorado has no law declaring
death by lack of brain activity, al
though three physicians have tes
tified the boy’s brain is dead, there is
no possibility of recovery and the
youngster should be removed from
the machine.
Abra made his decision after
physicians said there had been no
brain activity since last Friday and
said the youngster had not re
sponded to pain or verbal stimulus.
Sun to block transmission
NASA to turn off Pioneer
United Press International
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Pioneer 11 was readied today fora
shutdown of its instruments preparatory to a pass behind the sun.
The spacecraft has been investigating Saturn and its moons, on the
other side of the solar system from the Earth.
The sun will be between the Pioneer and Earth, and will blocl:
communications between the spacecraft and NASA’s Ames Research
Center for seven to 10 days, probably beginning Friday.
As Pioneer closed its angle with the sun and earth, background noise
from solar radiation escalated. As a result, the data bit rate, which was
1,028 per second last week, was dropped to 64 a second, a level tha!
carries little information.
Pioneer, moving at 21,000 mph, was 2.6 million miles away from
Saturn, which it visited Saturday. Most of its 11 instruments alreads
were turned off, but the spacecraft continued to send informatics
about Saturn’s urge magnetic field.
John Wolfe, chief Pioneer scientist, was mildly surprised thatinits
retreat from Saturn, the spacecraft had left and reentered the magneti;
field four times, the last time Wednesday at a distance of 2.3 million
miles.
A NASA spokesman said the signal today was “one tenth with 21
zeroes behind it of a watt. It’s like looking at a match on the moon.
Missiles, prison, power sought
Dying town looks for new life
United Press International
ELY, Nev. — Most city folks turn
up their nose at the idea of a prison or
a giant power plant in their bac
kyard.
But when you re down and out,
any new industry looks good.
Ocean-air relationship studied
United Press International
SEATTLE — It may not seem
likely that ocean currents and tem
peratures and the anchovy harvest
off Peru have much to do with the
European livestock industry or the
poultry business in the United
States.
But strong evidence supporting
just that kind of interrelationship is
one bit of the mass of information
coming from studies into how the
oceans and the atmosphere interact
to make and change climate in one
region or another.
Among the scientists working on a
global basis in such studies is Dr. D.
James Baker Jr., chairman of the
University of Washington oceanog
raphy department and former re
searcher for the National Oceanog-
raphis and Atmospheric Administra
tion.
Baker says it has long been sus
pected that energy contained in
oceans may be the major force in
determining why a region will get a
stretch of extremely cold winters or a
period of drought.
“We know less about the ocean
than the atmosphere,” he says, ex
plaining why research into ocean-air
interaction now is concentrated in
the depths of the seas more so than in ^
the atmosphere.
“When we get the answer, it will
have a big impact on agriculture and
fisheries.”
Baker says scientists look forward
to the time when they will be able to
tell a farmer the kind of moisture and
growing season to expect a year or
more in advance, or to tell a fisher
man when he can expect an abun
dant harvest.
Most of the important questions
remain to be answered, he says, but
researchers have come up with some
major findings.
One example: In the fall of 1976,
the Northern Pacific was one to three
degrees Celsius below normal. At
the same time, water off the west
coast of North America was a degree
or two warmer than usual. To the
south, the equatorial Pacific for
thousands of miles west of Peru was
one to two degrees above normal.
The following winter brought se
vere cold, record snowfall, droughts
and crop failures in many parts of the
United States, but Alaska was so un
usually warm that the Yukon River
didn’t freeze for the first time in any
one’s memory.
Off Peru, the warm surface water
acted like a barrier preventing the
usual nutrient-carrying upwelling of
cold water from the ocean floor. The
anchovy fishery, largest in the world,
all but disappeared.
In a good year, the Peruvian an
chovy harvest amounts to 12 million
tons. Many of the finger-sized fish
are processed into fish meal to help
raise European livestock or U.S.
poultry. The “anchovy drought oc
curred at about the same time as a
world short-fall of grain and the price
of meats soared.
Scientists have been increasing
studies of this phenomenom off
Peru, known as the El Nino (the
child), since the 1950s and have
found it occurs about once every
seven years.
Baker says stronger trade winds
have served as a barometer in fore
casting the El Nino, indicating the
relationship between air and water.
That’s the plight of Ely, a small
eastern Nevada city which has been
supported by its copper mining in
dustry during most of this century.
The ore supply has run out and the
work force of 1,450 has dwindled to
less than 150 persons at Kennecott
Copper Corp.
“Were facing some deep trou
ble,” says newly hired Economic
Development Director Mike Bourn.
In the last year, the county popu
lation of 10,500 has dropped by an
estimated 2,000 persons, mostly be
cause jobs are scarce, and some mer
chants are starting to feel the pinch.
Two ideas the townspeople have
come up with to replace the mining
operation call for convincing the
Nevada Legislature to build a $25
million prison on the outskirts of the
city and also promoting construction
of a $1.5 billion electricity generat
ing plant which would transmit 50
percent of its power to Southern
California.
“I tell these people these things
won’t get them the reputation the
Mayo Clinic brought Rochester,
Minn.,” says state Sen. Rick Blake-
more, whose district includes Ely.
“But these people don’t care. They
are 100 percent behind these
projects.
If help isn’t forthcoming, Blake-
more estimates half the population
will leave for greener pastures.
Remote Ely, 250 miles from Salt
Lake City and 300 miles from Reno,
has experienced the boom and bust
periods associated with mining- , ,
always it has weathered the sta evei 7 a y.
Saturday
John Daws*
It will be
defensive se
ilson and
Wilson le
pionship in
and 24 tone
a knee injui
McMahon,
WAG title ;
Wilson, <
paarterbacl
ie’11 go hig
“There’s
jail,” said I
the H<
now i
capabilities
just has all
But what
appendiciti:
time Mond
Wilson'
time for a program to all out thrown
additional tourists. But Elvis
ahead with one.
To help, the Four Corners
gional Commission, an organa
of five states in the West, has!
neled $100,000 into VVhite
County for economic develop!
Kennecott Copper has dor
$48,000.
normally bt
“My mail
play the
If Wilsor
McMahon,
season. But
It also has produced someproi
citizens since World Warlfii
ing two governors and a Nevads]
preme Court chief justice.
At several public meetings
the past few months, hundred
residents have voiced enthusa re)
support for a prison. There hasli oc ,
no dissent.
Bourn says Huntsville, Texas,
put on the map by its prisonal
prison rodeo and the same
could happen here.”
The 600-inmate prison could
as many as 300 persons after thei
struction is completed.
And city officials have inters
the Los Angeles Departmenl
Water and Power in the possi
constructing a 1 million kik
coal-fired generating plant,
that’s a long-range project thati
need approval from the Ni
Legislature and other govern
agencies.
With the current gasoline si
age, it also appears to be the*
talented as I
e BYU p<
“BYU ru
every possi
throwing to
them from
It has be
noway, in a
against BY!
Steen wil
at strong sa
Brown will
“Carl twi
ered,’’ Wil:
Brown.
I feel go
playing bet
played stro:
can do the
The ques
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦I
PHOTO TECH’S
ONE DAY GUARANTEED PICTURE PLEDGE.
Your Pictures On Time Or You Get
FREE KODAK FILM
rumth
*on roll developing of 110, 126 and 35mm color
C41 print film (C-41 processing only) excluding holidays.
TECHI
assasssssssfi
813 S. TEXAS
COLLEGE STATION
0PIVE IN CONVENIENCE AT EVERYDAY LOW LOW PRICES'
(Next To Pasta’s Pizza)
PASTA'S
PIZZA
□
£
TEXASAVENUE
TAMU
DISCOUNT
Yz PRICE
The Houston Chronicle
YOU NOW HAVE CHOICE ON YOUR MORNING NEWSPAPER DELIVERY. THE
HOUSTON CHRONICLE WILL BECOME A MORNING PAPER EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER
1.
YOU NOW CAN HAVE THE SOUTHWEST’S LEADING PAPER WITH ITS GREAT DAILY
SPORTS COVERAGE, THE MONDAY SPORTS SPECIAL, THE THURSDAY COOKBOOK
AND WEEKEND PREVIEW, AND THE BEST SUNDAY PAPER AVAILABLE — DE
LIVERED IN THE MORNING — SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.
FOR TEXAS A&M STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF
1/2 PRICE
Sept. 1-Dec. 31
Sept. 3-Dec. 21
$005
$8 is
693-2323
Just Call — 846-0763
Now Morning Delivery
WELCOME AGGIES
BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SUPER SUNDAY
LIVE OFF CAMPUS?
OFF CAMPUS AGGIES
FIRST MEETING
SEPTEMBER 10 6:30 225 MSC
this Sunday, the 9th at
ALL OFF CAMPUS STUDENTS INTERESTED
BECOMING A REPRESENTATIVE FOR OCA ARE
INVITED TO ATTEND.
Saturday ni
“Were g
weaknesses
try to force
“Since tl
different att
gamble as i
The Aggi
Dickey at L
Gary Kubia
Earnest Jac
“A lot has
|lot,” Wilson
Aday is a sc
Junior Dr
Missing fro
Woodard st
suffered a y
‘George
d. “He h;
every down
games until
Kickoff a
BEACON BAPTIST CHURCH
2001 VILLA MARIA RD. BRYAN
(Up from Manor East Mall near St. Joseph-Bryan Hospitals)
Hear Preach at 11 A.M.
Bobby Tucker — Senior at TAMU
'78-79 Student Body President
of TAMU
Hear & See Missions Slide
Presentation
at 7 P.M. By —
Ronny Stephens —
Senior at TAMU
’79 ABS Summer Missionary to
Bolivia, S.A.
ie Houstor
yones havi
to come
as A&M sti
reason,
lets to Sati
iiist BYU in
As of noon 1
:ets had bee
dents, accor*
® Director \
h far below
ent had t
We were
M tickets 1
SUNDAY SCHOOL
Groff s
be blame
ig arounc
AT 9:45 A-M.
icharc
Join us for this time of Bible Study
utout