THE BATTALION FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1981 Page 9 State by Dave Ei e donated' on duriii! rs > days to c will first onrmvnp governed h ether uei Forenii I if HusLi decision, ig to do cm hearings if there isa lence, lie 'cti er jver metai ease. She know she ill living, family,’ sh same chart miise tha kbyfi in thenesi wo girls im as Her faro oat the » riding am ’aging."! she said. Research shows vitamin E fights childhood blindness United Press International BOSTON — High doses of vitamin E given to premature babies can help prevent a prim ary cause of childhood blind ness, Texas medical researchers said Thursday. Researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Texas found vita min E given orally in high doses to 50 premature infants within 24 hours of birth and daily for at least eight weeks thereafter prevented blindness. These in fants suffered from retrolental fibroplasia, researchers said in the New England Journal of Medicine. RF is caused when extra ox ygen given to premature infants to prevent brain damage and death causes blood vessels in the eye to branch more thickly than normal. This can result in an opaque tissue forming be hind the lens or in detachment of the retina — separation of the innermost lining of the eye. RF damages vision in about 1,500 children yearly in the Un ited States and blinds 500 more, said Dr. Helen Mintz Hittner, coordinator of the study at the Texas Children s Hospital in Houston. In its mildest form, it causes such visual impairments as nearsightedness or lazy eye. The vitamin did not, howev er, reduce the numbers of in fants affected by the disease. About 65 percent of each group — 50 infants received high doses and 51 low doses of the vitamin — contracted milder forms of the disorder. “It’s not a panacea,” Hittner said. “It certainly could de crease the incidence (of blind ness) significantly, and, com bined with some of the surgical therapies available, can belp wipe it out. ” An earlier study to pin down oxygen dosages that would not cause RF failed, and newborn specialists have had to “walk a very fine line” between provid ing enough oxygen to keep the infant alive and providing amounts that would cause blindness, Hittner said. Vitamin E combines with ox ygen left over from the amount needed to sustain life and neut ralizes it, Hittner said. The vita min tends to concentrate in the retina. The vitamin is used as a diet supplement and is being stu died for other uses, but has not been approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration for eye disorders, she said. But she said because the therapy is “a technique whose time has come,” the obstacles will probably be removed soon. And now the land is his • • • Cyanide poisoning still baffling Houston officials United Press International HOUSTON — A 32-year-old housewife, one of 10 people whose blood tests have revealed traces of cyanide from an unknown source, says she feels like a character in a science fiction novel: “Now it’s happening to me.” City health officials said they were baffled by the nonfatal poisonings that have struck 10 people in a 15-block area of the Heights, about four miles from downtown. The source of the poison remained unknown Wednesday night. Linda Rassinier, 32, said blood tests conducted while she was being treated for bronchitis last week revealed the presence of cyanide. “It’s frightening,” she said. “How often do you hear the word cyanide, let alone find out you have it in your blood?” The tests showed Rassinier had eight micrograms of cyanide per deciliter (about 3.4 ounces) of blood. Tests on the other patients have shown their blood contained between 2 micrograms and 28 micrograms per deciliter. Dr. Tim Oesch, a general prac titioner who discovered the poisonings, said: “There’s not a whole lot of material available on the cyanide or its lethal dosage. But it appears that the tests are significant to the extent that 25 percent of the lowest lethal dose is present.” He said lethal doses of cyanide have been recorded between 100 micrograms and 1,500 micro grams per deciliter. Symptoms, including dizziness, fatigue, nausea and depression, seem to disappear when the pa tient leaves the area, indicating the body rapidly excretes the poison, Oesch said. Rassinier said the cyanide left her bedridden last week, but she STUDENT Y FISH CAMP ’82 'Applications are now available through December 11 for chairman, sub-chairman, and recreation coordinator in Room 216 MSC. For more information call 845*1626 Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.19 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. 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FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH 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 Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Salad) Mashed Potato w gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SUNDAY SPECIE 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 United Press International AUSTIN — A relieved Jesse Johnson greeted the news that he had passed the last legal hurdle in obtaining clear title to his proper ty by working the land he and his wife have owned for 53 years. “I got to stay here now and try to work it, ” said Johnson, who was born 81 years ago and reared U/z miles from the 120 acres. “I got to keep making a living at it now. Yes sir, I’m sure glad it’s over.” The Leon County farmer said he had been out working the land when a telephone caller notified him the governor had signed a pa tent, an official document granting him clear title to the property. “I wish he was here, ” Clements said in Austin. It took passage of a constitu tional amendment by Texas voters in the Nov. 3 election to give John son and two other families clear title to their land. “I think justice is done,” Cle ments said. “It’s a good feeling to know that these kinds of circumst ances can be reconciled and those people are given their just due. ” Johnson raised nine children on the land, and then learned he did not hold clear title. W.Q. Barrett, who owns 107 acres, and Marion and Glenn Toal, who own 67.2 acres, also learned they did not hold clear titles. The problem arose from a grant of 640 acres of land to a soldier for the Republic of Texas, Thornton P. Kuykendall, who was given the right to claim the property as pay ment for his service in guarding the baggage during the Battle of San Jacinto. Kuykendall properly claimed 320 acres of land in Leon and Freestone counties, filed survey notes on 320 acres in Leon County which includes the Johnson farm, and later filed a claim for title to 221 acres in Young County. Re cords in the general land office show Kuykendall failed to file proper documentation with his second 320-acre claim in Leon Johnson bought his 120-acr County, and the state never legal- tract for $2,000 and paid for it wit ly surrendered title to the proper- wages he earned as a 26 cent-ar. ! ty. hour section hand for the railroad The Best Pizza In Town! Honest WE DELIVER 846-3412 Mr. Gatti's Pizzamat AFTER 5 P.M. — MIN. $5.00 ORDER felt better this week. “It’s an intermittent thing,” she said. “Last Wednesday, I was terr ibly depressed and cried for six hours straight. I was hysterical. I didn’t even know about the cyanide then. Rassinier said blood tests for her husband and 12-year-old daughter were negative. The family plans to stay in the Heights unless there’s a death or lethal level found, she said. “Then I’d consider leaving, ” she said. Dr. Herbert McKee, a city health official, said epidemiolog ists were interviewing the 10 vic tims and testing other people, hoping to discover the source of the poison through a common link among the victims. “We re asking them about occu pational experience, life style, re creation, food, medicine, a lot of things, trying to establish a pat tern,” he said. NOW OPEN GesiciSie. iJtaLian duLs-inz OPEN: FOR LGNCH 11:00-2:00 P.M. FOR DINNER 5:00-10:00 P.M. 404 E. UNIVERSITY ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA & PHI ETA SIGMA CHRISTMAS DECORATING PARTY Date: Friday, Dec. 4 Time: 2:45 p.m. Where: Brazos County Geriatrics Center Bring enough decorations to decorate doors &: cafeteria. Also, bring Christmas cookies & fruit. 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