c. I I features Battalion/Page 1 March 3, Warped by Scott McCullar fAAD6EL, DARLING, YOU'RE- THE NEARLY PERFECT WIFE. YOU KEEP THE CHILDREN AND I SO HAPPY... YOU'RE ACTIVE SOCIALLY AND STILL WORK AT YOUR CAREER, AND EVEN N\AKE /ACRE MONEY , THAN I DO... a T ...BUT ALL OF THAT CAN'T OVER COME THE FACT THAT YOU'VE SHAMED OUR FAMILY NAME BY BUYING THE WRONG BRAND OF . TOILET PAPER! \r— Restoration begins on dinosaur mural United Press International NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Rus sian-born Rudolph F. Zallinger, 63, is back working on the mons ter work of art he started 40 TISINS PLIRPOSes. IT POES A/or occur, in real LI Ft AVD is DESIGNED TO PCAt UPON THE VIEWER^ social fears, do MOT ATTEMPT THIS IN YOUR OWN HONVE... .. IT IS DANGEROUS, STUPID AND INSENSITIVE, AND CAN SET YOU AN ENTIRE ROLL OF PAPER STUFFED UP YOUR NOSE. Jobs in the year 2000 years ago. “The Age of Reptiles,” the world-famous mural in Yale UniversityPeabody Museum of Natural History, has helped popularize dinosaurs for gener ations of youngsters. The 110- feet long, 16-feet high mural also won Zallinger a Pulitzer Prize. The Peabody’s roof sprang a leak recently, and a small por tion of the mural — about one square foot — was damaged. Zallinger, now a professor at the University of Hartford art school, was invited to do the necessary restoring. Zallinger was a young gradu ate of Yale’s School of Fine Arts when museum director Dr. Albert Parr asked him to do a series of drawings for a book Parr was writing. In 1943, Parr offered Zallinger a commission for “The Age of Reptiles." The mural in the museum’s Great Hall of Dinosaurs huge l>easts heaving tin 200 million years of flon fauna in the primeval forest. Zallinger said the painili t ftf faded at all. Aside fromrt ing t he damage due to strc and mottling, all he had was vacuum 35 years of lated dust from the mural “The Age of Reptiles larized dinosaurs for m kids in the 1950s and still does todav. Biomedical ethics studied f f f f f f f f f f f t f f f jy F r F F F :L F The Harman Kardon Cassette Deck Celebration at Push the calendar ahead to the year 2000. Jane or John Doe, job- hunting, Fill out the application at the chemical plant, then sub mit to a required check aimed at spotting genetic abnormalities. The laboratory test deter mines if the applicant is genetic ally suitable for a job. If the lab finds a bum gene that predisposes the aspiring worker to grave sickness when exposed to chemicals in the plant, that applicant will be turned down. This is not happening on a large scale today, but it could be in the future and the question is: Will such procedures, meant to protect the susceptible person from an ailment and the com pany from liability, be accept able from an ethical standpoint? Is it right to screen out work ers because of genetic makeup or even, as in the case of one company today, a lifestyle habit such as smoking cigarettes? Scenarios along that line were among those discussed at a Hast ings Center symposium on ethical issues in occupational health. From its founding in 1969, the center, in Hastings-on- Hudson, N.Y., has devoted its attention to ethical issues that have emerged as a result of the biomedical revolution. Dr. Willard Gaylin, president and clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia Univer sity’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, said the issues include informed consent, the defini tion of death, behavior control, human experimentation, and the allocation of scarce medical resources. Typical questions: When is a person dead? Who gets artificial hearts if the technology becomes approved and the supply is li mited? Who gets the kidney dialysis if funds for providing the treatment are limited? Gaylin said that by 1979 it was apparent, “We had neglected a question of profound social and biomedical significance — the question of occupational health and safety. “While we had concentrated on examining the moral issues involved in the practice of medi cine, we had failed to examine the moral issues raised by the medical consequences of work,” he said. Estimates of damage Gaylin cited: —Chemical and physical hazards in the workplace may kill as many as 100,000 Amer ican workers a year. —Some estimates suggest that between 20 percent and 38 percent of all cancers are work- related. “Faced with the enormity of this problem, the Hastings Cen ter in 1979 began to devote a considerable portion of its re search to the study of issues in occupational health and illness,” Gaylin said in his “Overview of the Hastings Center Project on Occupational Health.” He said the study centered on the ethical and moral problems raised by corporate policies that sought to: —Screen out workers thought to be genetically suscep tible to workplace hazards. —Prohibit the employment of workers whose personal life styles were thought to enhance their vulnerability to occupa tional disease. —Bar all fertile women from jobs that were believed to pose a risk to their capacities to bear healthy children. Among questions probed by Center experts during the past three years are these: —Should industry be permit ted to screen all potential workers? —Should industry be permit ted, even obliged, to monitor the health status of workers already employed? “Central to our work on occu pational health and safety has been an interest in social justice and attention to the questions of freedom, autonomy and per sonal dignity,” Gaylin said. HOMECRAFT ELECTRONICS r-TSK, The Q ••090 0-«H harman/kardon CD401 Cassette Deck for 749 00 The.Harman Kardon CD401 cassette deck offers serious stereo shoppers: rSCHULMWi THEATRES $1 off adult tickets 1st Matinee Sat. & Sun. Mon.-Family Night Sch. 6 Tue.-Family Night M.E. 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(PG) 7:15-9:25 United Press International PEORIA, Ill.:— Inside the un pretentious walls and within the almost dowdy laboratories of the Northern Regional Research Center, discoveries have in cluded technology to produce penicillin on a large scale and the discovery of Super Slurper, a corn starch product that can absorb up to 2,000 times its weight in distilled water. The Peoria facility is one of four such regional centers oper ated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, seeking new uses for crops. The others are located in New Orleans, Beltsville, Md., and Berkeley, Calif. So far, researchers have escaped any serious damage by President Reagan’s budget knife. While most domestic programs have been cut, USDA funding for agricultural re search remains stable. In Reagan’s proposed budget for fiscal 1984, the centers actually would get about a 4 per cent increase in funding, according to figures from the USDA. The center’s industrial coor dinator, Roger Eisenhauer, an employee for 25 years, said there is a sharp contrast between the center’s treatment by the Carter administration and the for agricultural commodities and their by-products. They also have worked on projects to in crease crop yields and decrease losses both before and after har- work with corn starch. Scientists have found a way to make a biodegradable plastic-like mate rial. i MANOR EAST III ; Manor E. Mall 823-8300* vest. Other work has sought ways to reduce processing costs and energy consumption and to en hance food safety and quality. While research is done on a variety of crops, the center has gained an international reputa tion for research on corn. It was an accident which led to the development of Super Slur per, which now is used in every thing from fuel filters to body powder. The uses seem almost limitless, Eisenhauer said. “It’s tremendous how it clears up diaper rash,” he said. There also are numerous agricultural Uses for the pro duct. Researchers have found that by coating seeds with Super Slurper, farmers get quicker germination, a better stand and higher yields. “Coating works best in fields where there is stress from drought,” he said. “If you have optimum rainfall, it probably won’t do you much good.” Another major breakthrough at the center also is the result of Such a material could solve the problem of petroleum-based plastics that don’t break down and remain for a long time in the environment, Eisenhauer said. The Peoria scientists also have come up with a water soluble plastic made from corn starch that is used in many hospitals for laundry bags that dissolve in the wash, he said. * THE MAN FROM * * SNOWY RIVER J 7:25-9:45 * THE DARK CRYSTAL 7:15-9:35 * * TRAVEL SKI CRESTED BUTTE * * R-mmm *210 THE ENTITY 7:20-9:40 * .* Unlv. CAMPUS * * TRAIL OF THE PINK PANTHER 7:15 9:30 * * * Uncover the Lie “LORDS OF DISCIPLINE’ 7:45 9:50 * 51- SKYWAY TWIN } DRIVE-IN * 2000 E. 29th 822-3300 * Jf The Man of the Century * “GHANDI” T 8.00 * WEST * FIRST BLOOD J 7:1510:55 * THE CHALLENGE * 9:10 4- t 4 T ONLY 4 SPACES LEFT SIGN UP NOW! For more information call 845-1515 or come by Room #216 MSC CINEMA III POST OAK MALL 764-0616 * 14- EAST ‘LOVE SICK” (PG) 7:30 9:45 Dustin Hoffman “TOOTSIE” (PQ) 7:25-9:40 ”49 HOURS” (R) 8:00-10:00 THE TOY 7:15 STRIPES 9:15 34- * * * * + ★★★★★★★ present one. During the Carter adminis tration, he said, the centers nev er would know what to expect: Proposals would be made to cut the funding, and Congress might or might not have re stored the cuts. “It shook up a lot of people and we lost several prominent scientists as a result,” he said. “Morale was low because it kept happening over and over again.” Under the Reagan adminis tration, the center has been able to maintain the status quo. The facility was established in 1938 because of large surpluses of cereal grains. “We seem to have come full circle because, again, we have another surplus situation,” Eisenhauer said. Research has been done on corn, wheat, sorghum, oats, soy beans and horticultural and spe cialty crops. There are about 310 staff members at the Peoria facility — about two-thirds of them with technical degrees. Through the years, scientists have been looking for new uses MSC RECREATION AND THE TAMU BILLIARD CLUB WILL BE HOLDING A ® 9-BALL TOURNAMENT SAT., MAR. 5 at 10 a m. IN THE MSC BOWLING & GAMES AREA ENTRY FEE IS $5; CLUB MEMBERS $2.50 PRIZES AWARDED FOR 1ST, 2ND, & 3RD PLACE SIGN UP NOW AT MSC BOWLING & GAMES DESK GUN SHOW Saturday & Sunday, March 12-13,198 at THE BRAZOS CENTER GUNS — GOLD — SILVER — JEWELRY — WESTERN ARTIFACT & ART 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sun General Admission $ 2 50 For information contact Sontliern States Arms Collectors P.O. 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