The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 16, 1982, Image 6

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    MBMm
state-local
Battalion/Page S|
September 16,
Officer
killed; 3
others fired
United Press International
ARLINGTON — Two police
officers and a civilian jailer were
fired Fuesday after the acciden
tal shooting death of a fellow
officer, police officials said.
Police Chief H.C. Perry fired
Christian Scott Nussbaumer, an
officer in training, officer Doug
las Swantek and jailer Keith
Arterburn. They were charged
with violating state and city laws
following an internal affairs di
investigation into the
29 death of William
vision
Aug.
Slaughter Jr.
Police officials said Slaughter
and Swantek, Arterburn were
riding in a jeep driven by Nuss
baumer when Swantek’s .357-
caliber service revolver acciden
tally discharged and the bullet
struck Slaughter in the head.
The four were returning
from a rabbit-hunting trip, offi
cials said.
o
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A&M ‘colony’ breeding
marmosets for research
Unitei
MARSf
lexas bar
by Janet G. Joyce
Battalion Reporter
University researchers are
working on new and better
ways to raise cattle, horses —
and marmosets: small, South
American monkeys.
At the Texas A&M mar
moset colony, research is
being conducted to determine
the best methods for raising
marmosets in captivity, thus
making them readily available
for research.
Because of their size, mar
mosets make ideal research
animals. Weighing barely a
pound, adult marmosets are
only about 16 inches long —
half of which is tail. They’re
easier to handle and less ex
pensive to maintain than
rhesus monkeys.
The marmoset colony here
is one of only a few in the na
tion and the only one funded
by the National Institutes of
Health. A pilot colony was
established in September
1975 with 12 pairs of breeding
animals, said Dr. Franklin J.
Stein, associate professor of
veterinary anatomy and the
director of the colony.
Continued funding from
the NIH has supported the
colony since then with the cur
rent funding period ending
next year. The colony has ap
plied for further funding
from the NIH, but it will he
the beginning of next year be
fore any decision is made. If
the application is turned
down, the colony would still
exist but would have to be re
duced in size, Stein said.
The colony has 90 breeding
pairs of marmosets and their
young. Marmosets are mono
gamous (one mate) and are
more prolific than most pri-
feaced to e
Isifying
jn in loa
and busin
| Henry
day plead<
bill of infc
of falsifyii
$127,000
I Fagan
the Guar;
mates, breeding twice a year
and almost always having
twins or triplets..
. Three different species are
represented in the colony.
Most of the animals are com
mon marmosets, which are
plentiful in the wild and easily
raised in captivity.
The mystax or “mus-
tached” marmoset is exterme-
ly difficult to breed in captiv
ity. It is a valuable tool in
hepatitis research and is rela
tively rare, although not yet
an endangered species.
The other species at the col
ony is the cotton-topped mar
moset, which is on the En
dangered Species List. It is
one of the few animals that
can be used for studies of can
cer-causing viruses. Since it is
an endangered species, the'
animals at the Texas A&M
colony are being used exclu
sively for breeding and are
not made available for re
search. Stein said.
Uniu
HO US
on Wil
gisladvt
13,800 i
>r hancll
rs be tv
and June
’*1 Wilso
lan of t
Sees Con
[lost of
cced $6
hile atte
staff photos byjanelt Jol;
Ell
A family of common marmosets perch in their
TOYOTA OWNER’S ASSOCIATION
An organization dedicated to saving Toyota owners
money. Activities planned for this semester include
maintenance classes, tune-up clinics and, of course, gen
uine Toyota parts at a discount. New members welcome.
JOIN US...
Thursday, September 16
Room #321 Physics Building
Students, Faculty & Staff
All Welcome
7:30 p.m,
For more information, contact
[Lynn Slater 260-3084
Rotary group p i
helps jobless
/Student
GOVERNMENT
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
*ATTENTION*
Graphic Artists, Writers, Editors,
Photographers, Typists, or all around
P.R. Experts.
Join the
COMMUNICATION COMMITTEE
For more information on these and other projects,
STOP BY
216 C MSC
OR
CALL
845-
305 U
United Press International
GREENVILLE — The local
Rotary Club is collecting money
to help unemployed steelwor
kers in Pennsylvania since the
situation is bleaker for them
than laid-off Texas steelwor
kers, the club’s president said.
President Clide Wilcox said
he hoped to raise more than
$500 during a collection at the
101-member Greenville Rotary
Club’s noon luncheon to help a
food bank set up to aid steelwor
kers in Midland, Pa.
A specialty steel plant that
once employed 4,700 people in
that Pennsylvania town of about
5,000 has laid off most of its em
ployees and plans to shut down
Oct. 15.
Wilcox learned of the town’s
plight through Dallas newspap
er reports, which came to light
about the same time an east
Texas steel mill 80 miles east of
Greenville laid off 3,600 steel
workers.
Lone Star Steel Co. shut
down in August, eliminating the
main industry in the east Texas
community and affecting scores
of related businesses.
“I thought about Lone Star
but we made the decision be
tween the Lone Star group and
the Pennsylvania group because
of a 20.5 percent unemploy
ment rate in Beaver County, and
a very bad rate in Pennsylvania,”
Wilcox said.
“1 don’t know a soul in
Unit<
ST. LC
entifiec
sylvania and I don’t kiw ^ ,l
I’ve ever been there. 1*4A n S,
chances for re-employn
the state of Texas are so
rested
en-aget
. tainsttf
greater - • I itrhbor
“Even those towns inw s
of Texas where peoplfl , ’
been laid off. the opportiM. aesc
for employment are betteil^ a . n ’
in other parts of the coin ■ - l u '
Wilcox said he decidi
organize the collection
Pennsylvania food bank
of Rotary International^
of “Mankind is one,
bridges of friendship tl
out t he world” and a recenij
he received at South*
States Bank Card.
“Here, I thought, I’m
a substantial increase an
are people who have nol
he said. “We can’t takeiW
den of the world on ours
ders but we can help a
The food bank wasoi
by local ministers in h
aid those people who ha't !
up their unemploymeni'
ance and are without i» (
The bank considers 'each
and then issues a draft I**
employed people who cat
their groceries at a locals 11 ']
cost.
Wilcox said the
ary dub’s 12 members
try to match the Ore 0
club’s donation.
I Howe
sunder i
denied
srs of i
Inspects’
egrouj
[inner p
1 ‘TH b<
ap for
|e> a G
id in a
|f Louis
Sliwa
entifyi,
rs of
lr ganiza'
St. Lot
The
nested
noting
/.who
i 0n ditioi
Ballar
ibout 9:<
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The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation at
Texas A&M wishes the Jewish Univer
sity Community a Healthy and Happy
New Year.
Everyone is invited to services conducted by Student
Rabbi Marc Blgrade from Hebrew Union College,
New York.
Rosh Hashanah Services
Friday, Sept. 17 8 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 18 10 a.m.
Yom Kippur Services
Sunday, Sept. 26 8 p.m.
Monday, Sept. 27 10 a.m., 4:30 p.m.,
6:00 p.m. Break-the-Fast.
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation
(Jewish Student Center)
800 Jersey
C.S. 696-7313
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