Page 6 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1980 nation Prison finishes relocation United Press International SANTA FE, N.M.—Warden Jer ry Griffin said Monday the major re location of inmates in the aftermath of last week’s uprising at the New Mexico State Penitentiary had been completed. ‘We sent a total of482 out of state, and we have 538 remaining here now,” said Griffin. “At the present time we are not planning to take any more out of state. There may be some minor changes, but no more mass movement of prisoners.” The relocation of prisoners was re quired because of the devastation of the prison during the 36-hour upris ing. Rampaging inmates set fire to the building, smashed windows and destroyed fixtures during the takeov er — making much of the building uninhabitable. Officials said 33 inmates died dur ing the rioting — many of them tor tured in grisly reprisal slayings. At least 89 persons were injured in the bloody uprising, some of them the 14 guards who were held hostage dur ing the ordeal. Clean-up operations continued in side the prison, Griffin said. “We are trying to get things back to near normal,” he said. “The kitch en is pretty well cleaned up now, but we have to run stress tests to see if it was badly damaged by fire.” Since the uprising, inmates have been fed from makeshift kitchens op erated by the National Guard. Griffin said three of the least dam aged cellblocks, five dormitories and the prison hospital were being used to quarter the inmates while cleanup continues. In the Legislature, the Senate got its first look Monday at Gov. Bruce King’s plan to reconstruct the prison and build a new 500-bed maximum security prison adjacent to it. The measure — appropriating a total $82.5 million — won unanimous approval in the House Sunday. Lawmakers debating the bill were reluctant to lay blame for the up rising. “There is a lot of talk about T€RCH€RS LEARN! USE YOUR SKILLS AROUND THE WORLD . REPS ON ISk campus today Industrial ■■IZSHL Rrts INFO BOOTH: MEMORIAL CENTER PEACE CORPS/VISTA A fine pickle for laws United Press International ST. LOUIS — William R. Moore says the best way to reduce the flood of federal laws and regulations is for Congress to pass his “Proposition Pickle.” Simply stated, Moore says the proposition requires that for every new law enacted, three other laws must be repealed. Moore, executive vice president of Pickle Packers International, ex plained his proposition in remarks prepared for a meeting of the Nation al Food Processors Association. “Congress in the past three years has passed a total of about 821 public laws,” he told the group. “Based on our proposition, that would have re sulted in the repeal of2,463 old laws. 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FREE MAINTENANCE PROGRAM Skeptical? FREE CONSULTATION CALL NOW... 846-1727 BRENDA LATHAM I lost 52 lbs. on this program. My husband loves the new me. IT CHANGED MY LIFE! r ■n HOUSTON ? MEDICAL WEIGHT LOSS CLINICS 4340 CARTER CREEK PARKWAY Scientists cultivate S ‘super shrimp’ crop r blame, said Rep. Russell Autrey. “But this is not the time for laying blame on anyone. “Right now, the most important thing is to deal with the aftermath of this tragedy.” Investigators returned to the pris on Monday to seek more evidence and interview additional inmates who may become witnesses in the trial of instigators of the riot. Assistant District Attorney Dick Baker said he was not certain how soon the cases would be prepared for presentation to a grand jury. “Our cases will be carefully and diligently prepared,” Baker said. “We are going to take our time and do it right.” United Press International PECAN ISLAND, La. — At the sprawling Rockefeller Wildlife Re fuge in southwest Louisiana’s coastal marshland, where scientists have been working for several years on “Super Gators,” a new animal is undergoing study — a Super Shrimp. The shrimp, actually the giant Malaysian freshwater prawn, (Mac- robrachium rosenbergii), holds potential in a few years as a crop that could provide a secondary income for Louisiana farmers and a secon dary source of seafood for shrimp lov ers around the state and the nation. There are, officials stress, a lot of ifs. But experiments will continue this year on freshwater pond cultivation of the prawn, which can grow to one- quarter pound in tropical climates. They taste sweet, something like lobster. “I know for sure that it can be grown in the state,” said fisheries biologist Guthrie Perry, who has been conducting experiments for the Louisana Wildlife and Fisheries De partment. “A landowner that would want to try to raise them for recreational value, with no real profit motive, could raise them (now) with no real problem,” he said. “We have by no means found that commercial pro duction would be economically feasi ble to attempt in Louisiana. I think in the next two or three years we’ll know where we re going.” Perry conducted experiments on the prawns in 12 freshwater ponds on the refuge last summer, without feeding the shrimp, to determine stocking requirements and growth patterns. He plans to conduct similar experiments this summer, based on last year’s results. At Louisana State University and Southern University in Baton Rouge, scientists James W. Avault Jr. and Jay V. Huner are also ex perimenting with the prawns in ponds, checking their growth pat terns when fed. Roadblocks to commercial pro duction include the necessity of im porting the shrimp larvae, maintains critical water temperature zones de velopment of proper feeding reje. ens and stocking plans and pr#t dures for harvesting the shrimp Perry said they might eventaL make a good crop to be cultiviij! along with crawfish or catfisl;, ponds and might even be prod*/ in rice fields. “Catfish farming is already t, tive, and something like this cml ; be equally successful,” said Has Pierce of Battistella Sea Fooi i large dealer in New Orleans, “Freshwater shrimp culture if never replace the Gulfshrimpfisk man,” he said. “Instead, thereii definite need for something to li the pressure off them. Shrimpcati es are going down and demand; going up.” In Huner’s experiment at Socti ern University last year, shric: yields reached 400 pounds orjl,® an acre. A good crawfish pond nut yield 1,000 pounds, but becaiis crawfish are cheaper, the vain would be only $600. “It’s like raising tomatoes-\n always do better the second year Huner said. Florida prosecutors say they denied killer’s bargain United Press International a complicated plea bargaining agree- Bundy had come to court last \ United Press International ORLANDO, Fla. — State pro secutors have revealed that Theo dore Bundy was ready at one time to plead guilty to three sex murders in exchange for 75 years in prison with no parole. Instead the law school dropout now faces two death penalties for the deaths of two Florida State students and may receive a third sentence to Florida’s electric chair for the death of a 12-year-old girl. It was Bundy’s constant com plaints about his legal counsel that persuaded state prosecutors to reject a complicated plea bargaining agree ment that would have put Bundy, 33, in jail for at least 75 years. Bundy’s plea bargaining attempt was made public by prosecutors Bob Dekle and Jerry Blair. They had just been released from a judicial gag order after a jury Saturday recom mended Bundy be sentenced to death for the murder of Kimberly Diane Leach, 12. Circuit Judge Wallace M. Jopling, who is not bound by the jury’s re commendation of the death penalty, is to sentence Bundy today. Dekle and Blair told reporters Bundy had come to court last M; carrying a signed legal docuoM acknowledging guilt for the murdtn of the Lake City girl and Flonii State University students Margarei Bowman and Lisa Levy two yean ago. Dekle said Bundy spent mudnf the hearing complaining aboutk legal counsel, and he decidedBmA was laying the groundwork for a lain appeal that would claim thatMichae Minerva — his public defender- coerced him into pleading guilty. “That was when I decided I coeH pull the switch — a feeling I havelt this day,” said Blair. MSC OVERSEAS LOAN FUND NOW AVAILABLE! 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