eatures THE BATTALION Page 11 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1980 V i 1 cl animals rehabilitated eorgia s nature center takes in injured, abused animals iropertv United Press International govern'' ATLANTA — Pompey was hit by a truck and |j on to was shot. Banchi was stolen from his home ■the woods. Ell three are patients in the wild animal rehabi- a speojEtion program at the Chattahoochee Nature litigatioiEter, where new things are being learned ab- I ’ le panelj how injured animals can be treated and suc- ^ na l settle. iS f u liy returned to the wild. ) 0 mpey is a red tail hawk. Lefty is a bam owl Banchi is a red fox. liff Kevill, a supervisor of the rehabilitation gram, says Pompey’s chances of returning to woods are 50-50. Banchi will make it back to natural surroundings after he grows up. Jntraltot®! [he prognosis for Lefty, however, is not good. lost his left wing as a result of a gunshot und. He probably will live out his days at the ure center, a poignant reminder to the usands of children who see him each year of need to protect wild creatures, said Kevill. [he wild animal rehabilitation program has operating for three years. Each year the fnber of patients doubles. Publicity about the igram and the continuing destruction by man wild animal habitats are the reasons for the base, according to Kevill. die is the first in Georgia and one of mt 150 in the United States, most of them in lifomia. Last year the center took in more than I animals. PProximatelj onrailbyf pending rt Iroads. •vemment, 3 restructiii re ’ f the pul on how 0 ask nextsei 3. mother Mi I. Last su: ; to need ring the nffi The wild animal rehabilitation program has been operating for three years. Each year the number of patients doubles. Publicity about the program and the continuing destruction by man of wild animal habitats are the reasons for the increase. Most of the injured or orphaned wild animals brought to the center are birds; followed by mam mals, such as squirrels, rabbits, opossum and rac coons, and reptiles. The center has 15-20 volun teer workers, some of whom take the patients home and care for them, Kevill said. Ninety percent of the animals we get are in jured by man or are injured as a result of man’s intrusion into the animal habitat,” said Kevill. “They are hit by cars, injured by dogs or cats, or they fall out of trees. Or, in the case of birds, they fly into the windows of houses.” The injured are kept in boxes and cages and nursed back to health. When they are strong enough, birds are placed in a wire enclosure out side. After a while, the enclosure is left open and the birds eventually fly away. Raccoons, skunks and foxes also have this sort of “hallway house, ” where they are kept until released. The center, supported by donations and mem berships, is located on 30 acres of county-owned, heavily wooded land on the banks of the Chatta hoochee River. Some rehabilitated animals are released there but others are taken to more re mote locations and set free. Many children visit the center and they see animals that have been badly injured. “We are trying to develop an appreciation of nature,” said Kevill. “We want to teach people about animals that live in their own backyards.” Kevill sees a growing interest in nature, espe cially among children, which he believes started with the first Earth Day. After working with rehabilitation of animals for nearly 3 years, Kevill says he has come to realize that this aspect of his job really is not as important as “getting people to come here and become edu cated about the environment.” He and his associates get about 100 phone calls a week from people seeking advice about wildlife — woodpeckers hammering on gutters, squirrels gnawing on the eaves of homes. idents ‘Discover’ careers )n Computers give counseling il Washinet ! United Press International rehisfirstp SAN FRANCISCO — Students White Hot isidering the future can now con ns of the Kit t a computer. I shortly i iy his haul- fhe computer counseling system, led Discover, can provide a bliz- [d of information on a college or a ct to see agan thee international Business Machines Is the service to high school dis- , .,_vts and colleges. Larry Blasch, an k Kcputi;. i^i eX p er t w j) 0 demonstrated the |tem for educators here, used a Jeo screen with a keyboard under- leath and a light pen which the user ches to the screen to call up infor- tion. Surveys have shown the average naking the master o( tasteful to ible opposi narks coil k off from sj h school student gets four hours of iationswith mseling in four years,” Blasch 3. Overworked high school coun ts can hardly be expected to pro- eall the information a curious stu nt might want in that time. Die Discover system allows a stu- it to delve as deeply as he or she its into the prospects for a future for example, nursing. Schools offering nursing training, fit I (prospects on graduation, wages different parts of the country as 1 as drawbacks of the profession all be called up on the television een for study and a hard copy ntout of the information can also made. Hasch said school districts, irged $900 a month, have access to IBM databank in Los Angeles itaining information on more than nd landed £ 500 four-year colleges, 1,000 two- AF Sea Kit ar colleges, over 600 types of jobs, 'military training programs and man was«’ ne 1,000 technical and specialized straps ofth tools. >ince IBM began marketing the torn 18 months ago, 30 high J 00 } a nd college districts have ped up. ^he system was developed by 3f collided ovt 5 drowned i -escue him. ; injured, b ng a trainiii iffolk, totk un both iK- ’s cable nto theses, jlicopter"* ml nan reach' ; to piece there," L; jdofinq® :s before* d one repos hospital fc sclosed ; first intro irial collis® 1 July 7, edfordshire »••• ies LE lies I career counselors JoAnn Bowlsbey and James Boyd, along with IBM ex perts. Bowlsbey, now a counselor at Western Maryland College, said, “The system supplements the work of the guidance counselor but it doesn’t replace the counselor.” “It’s intended,” said Boyd, tech nical director of the Discover prog ram at the College of Du Page in Glen Ellyn, Ill., “to do four things: help a student help himself; help him understand the decision-making process; help him understand the world of work and his relationship to it, and help him to identify training paths related to occupations.” In some districts, students who might feel shy or confused in front of a counselor can sit down at the com puter screen located in the school library or learning center, and day dream about the future with no pressure. Blasch said the system has proved especially helpful to middle-aged mothers and housewives entering the job market for the first time. In some areas, local jobs currently available are also listed. 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