Monday, April 16,1984/The Battalion/Page 13 lh eneai as Vi rari d Vi'asi he resort v >00111 F,j| •onion si; fornia ibreviated r Around town 1 rtf! was the | iza to i gan. n Aggie Blood Drive held this week Aggie Blood Drive, sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega. Omega Phi Alpha and Student Government will be con ducted this week by the Wadley Central Blood Bank. Bloodmobiles will be parked by the Blocker Building and by the fish pond. Blood will be collected from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the Commons Lounge Monday through Thursday, and in 224 MSC Monday through Wednesday. Chairmen applications available Class of ’85 chairman applications are available in 216 MSC. Class officers will be interviewing those interested for the Ring Dance, class gift, senior banquet, sales, executive aids and public relations committees charmen. For more in- Irs. Bate; gettings > has rectu support (i itions arts Chemistry students honored » descri t-filled Pc rants to 4 oy until .11 ie won't be; ally to hit: n in New I' lead. I'm ading at i a roll, i Several students were honored at the Chemistry Depart ment Undergraduate Awards Banquet April 12. Senior Laurie Kilbourn was named outstanding undergraduate in the department. Juniors John P. Casserly, Cheryl A. Cook and Brian R. Miller and seniors George S. Mill and Philip D. Strucely received outstanding achievement awards. Frank E. McDonald, a senior, received the American In stitute of Chemists Outstanding Senior Award. The Merck Index Award, which is presented an outstanding graduat ing senior going to medical school, was awarded to Paul Vandevyver ami the Hugh McLean Jr. Award, which is pre sented to an outstanding senior who has overcome financial difficulties in pursuit of a chemistry degree, was awarded to senior Gary P. Shrum. Nine students received George C. Bauer Memorial Scholarships. They were sophomores, Molly Barlow and Norman Johnson, juniors, Ronald Slusher and DerekS. Ng Tang and seniors, Leigh Campbell, Robert Glenn, Samuel Hanna IV, James Judice and David Ramsey. he New Is 08. of New Zi ng with id, need! first ill r. Istart of si first quarlf entertain that a sini 1 contin il quarter. Museum hosts summer nature camp The Brazos Valley Museum will host a Summer Nature Camp beginning June 4 and continueing through Aug. 17.' Children ages 3-4 can attend from 9 a.m. to noon and chil dren ages 5-12 can attend from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Participants will spend the mornings outside and the afternoons doing arts and crafts. For more information, call 779-2195. Underclassmen compete in math The annual Freshman and Sophomore Mathematics Contest will be April 17 from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. First place winners will receive $100, second place winners will receive $60 and third place winners will receive $40. No cal culators will be allowed. Test material will he provided. The prerequisite for the freshman contest is knowledge of calcu lus through Math 151 or the equivalent and for the sopho more contest, knowledge of calculus through math 253 or the equivalent. The freshmen contest will be in 216 Milner and the sophomore contest will be in 201 Milner. mbryo transfer search makes abies possible 4 niversity News Service he successful attempt to uce a baby from frozen bryo, kept secret from the Id until Tuesday, can trace roots to interdisciplinary k by animal scientists, bi- edical investigators and vet- 1 laty researchers who tested liniques on animal models -/says a Texas A&M scientist performs research on fro- catlle embryos. he same can be said for the cess of “test-tube baby” clin- said Dr. Duane Kraemer, tknown as a pioneer in em- 'o transfers. ustralian reseachers from University of Mqmash, who lounced the world’s first fro- embryo infant, worked with izen animal embryos before ending the technique to hu ms, Kraemer said. Dr. Alan Xtnson, senior scientist of Monash research group, is animal scientist by training. for “test-tube” work, the liversity of Pennsylvania ist be credited with the exten- sin vitro or “test-tube” ferti- llion work in rabbits that >1(1 be applied to human vol- leers at the same research Her—and even later to cattle explained Kraemer, a Texas cM veterinary physiologist. The animal work did form a id basis for performing the He or similar tasks in hu ms," he said. With in vitro fertilization, js from the female are ferti- d outside the body with mm from the male, giving rto the test-tube nickname, fn Kraemer’s field of embryo nsfers the eggs are fertilized idethe body, then the result- embryo is flushed out of the tus and placed into a “host” Hher where it matures until th. Work n which reseachers Hved that embryos could be levered directly from the ovi- ctsof rhesus nionmkeys and inferred successfully to the mb of other monkeys — thus couraging such attempts tn earlier in pregnancy than Author researching murderer Lucas called innocent this time United Press International AUST IN — A man who is writing a book about confessed mass murderer Henry Lee Lu cas says he does not believe Lu cas is guilty of killing the woman for whose murder he has been condemned to die. “I don’t know how many peo ple he’s killed, but I don’t think he did this one by any stretch of the imagination,” said Hugh Aynesworth, an author who has spent 25 hours interviewing Lu cas. Lucas, 47, was convicted of capital murder and received the death sentence in San Angelo Friday for the killing of an un identified woman whose body was found near Georgetown in 1979. Along with sometime com panion Ottis Toole, Lucas claims to have brutally killed 360 people in a spree that be gan after he murdered his mother in 1960. Although Lucas confessed to the killing in Georgetown, Ay nesworth said there is a lack of evidence to link Lucas to the crime, and there is evidence Lu cas did not strangle the woman. “There are some of these cases Lucas has confessed to that he didn’t do, including a couple he’s been indicted for,” he said. Aynesworth, the co-author of a book on convicted triple mur derer Theodore Bundy in Flor ida, made his comments in an interview published Sunday in the Austin American-States- man. Lucas is “street smart, but his IQ is in the 70 to 80 range. You have to ask the same question in many ways. He repeats every question. If you mention 373 E eople he’s killed, he’s say 373,” e said. “He’s lied to me already on a couple of murders,” added Ay nesworth. Last week’s conviction was Lucas’ fourth for killing a woman. He served 15 years for stabbing his mother to death in Michigan and is currently serv ing life in Texas for the death of his 15-year-old common-law wife. He pleaded guilty in the kill ing of a Ringgold woman and was sentenced to 75 years in prison. Aynesworth says it was Lucas’ remorse over the killing of his common-law wife, Freida “Becky” Powell, that prompted Lucas to agree to his biography. “The only two people who ever looked up to Lucas were Toole and Becky,” he said. Aynesworth said he is less in terested in verifying and chro nicling specific murders than in “getting to Lucas psychologi cally.” “The psychological apsect is virtually untapped — why he did this, how he felt, who he likes and doesn’t like,” he said. “I think people will want to know if Henry killed more peo ple than anybody in the world. People are going to wonder what happened to him t, 9 Klcmsmen, Nazis found innocent in rights trial United Press International WINSTON-SALEM, N.G. — Nine Klansmen and American Nazis were found innocent Sun day of violating the civil rights of participants in a 1979 “Death to the Klan” march during which five communists died. An all-white federal jury of six men and six women deliberated three days before returning the verdict at 5:08 p.m. EST. Five members of the Communist Workers Party died Nov. 3, 1979, shortly after a caravan of vehicles driven by Klansmen and Nazis arrived at the staging area for the communist-sponsored anti-Klan march. The defendants, five of whom had been cleared of murder charges in state court, main tained they were attacked by a communist mob and acted only in self-defense. Prosecutors claimed the Klansmen and Nazis drove to the rally with seven dozen eggs and nu merous guns, eager to pick a fight and avenge the communists’ disruption of a Klan rally four months earlier. The Greensboro shootout was filmed by tele vision news crews and the videotapes became the key pieces of evidence in the three-month trial. Defendant Virgil Griffin, the Grand Dragon of a Ku Klux Klan faction, raised his arms straight over his head when the verdicts was read by William Ivor, court clerk. Defendant Edward Dawson, who served as an FBI informant while a member of the Klan, cov ered his face with his left-hand and sobbed as he realized all of the defendants were being found innocent. Dawson turned to reporters and said the ver dicts were a “clean sweep —just like I thought it would be the day we walked in here.” “I just think I died and went to heaven,” he said. The verdicts came at the end of the third day of deliberations. Jurors, deciding not to take a break for church, began deliberations at 9:40 a.m. Sunday. Outside the jury room defendants and their families — some dressed in their Sunday-best — waited for the jury’s decison on the 25 charges against the men. Sunday marked the beginning of the 15th week of the trial. Jurors showed no emotion as they walked into the courtroom with the verdict. The panel had returned to the courtroom twice earlier Sunday, both times with questions about a charge against Griffin and Dawson of conspiring to obstruct a federal investigation. The first time, the jurors wanted to know whether the obstruction had to deal specifically with federal officers or whether the jury also could consider an attempt to obstruct the work of state and local law enforcement agents. District Judge Thomas A. Flannery said the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt there was an attempt to delay or prevent communications to federal investigators. He said an attempt to prevent or delay communcations only to state and local police would not be grounds for a conviction on the charge. The second time, the jurors wanted to know whether the two men had to know beyond a rea sonable doubt that they were evading federal law enforcement agents. Flannery replied the gov ernment must prove only that the defendants conspired to keep other people from giving in formation to the FBI. Flannery noted the Klansmen were not ac cused of evading arrest. On trial, in addition to Griffin and Dawson, were Coleman Blair Pridmore, 40; David Wayne Matthews, 29; Jerry Paul Smith, 36; Roy Toney, 36; Roland Wayne Wood, 39; Raeford Milano Caudle, 42, and Jack W. Fowler Jr. The defendants could have receive sentences ranging from five years to life imprisonment if they had been convicted. THE UNDERGROUND Sbisa Basement Bread Special Friday 4/13/84 — Thursday 4/19/84 All Bread 49c a Loaf OFFER GOOD TO THE LAST LOAF The Best Food. The Lowest Price.” EXCITING CAREER AND SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES In Houston Or Austin For Students & Teachers Lexington Andrews, a division of a major N.Y. educational publishing firm is now recruiting students & teachers for child development & reference material field sales position. If you are tired of typing, warehouse jobs, pumping gas, or working in fast food restaurants, & convenience stores for minimum wages, we offer qualified applicants the opportunity to gain meaningful business experience through accomplishment. You will work with young men & women with 1 thing on their mind! If you are 18 yrs or older confident of your learning abil ity, enjoy sleeping late & then working hard, we offer these following: 1. Potential for high income based on productivity, comm. 2. Oppty for students to win cash scholarships. 3. Excellent awards & prizes. 4. Travel. 5. Oppty to win 1 week vacation to HI. 6. Possibility rapid advancement into management & part time work all year round. Some of our top summer students have earned over $10,000 in incentives, comm. & cash scholarships in 1 summer! Some have gone on to be top level managers in our com pany! See your career counselor or call for appointment. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY WE TRAIN YOU! 713-820-9063 512-458-6196 was believed possible — stood as an important milestone during reseach to produce the world’s first test-tube baby in 1978, Kraemer said. Kraemer’s own research teams performed the world’s first successful embryo treansf- ers in non-human primates (ba boons), cats and dogs. “Again we see the enormous contribution of studies on ani mal models that has been car ried out by a variety of biomedi cal researchers in various disciplines,” he said. The first embryo transfers, in fact, wre carried out in 1891 at Cambridge University on rab bits. In 1932 and 1933, Texas A&M scientist R.O. Berry —one of Kraemer’s early professors — carried out the first success ful embryo transfers in goats and sheep. A year ago, Kraemer’s em bryo transfer training program offered to veterinarians was recognized by the National Uni versity Gontinuing Education Association which presented Kraemer with its Creative Pro gramming Award. Kramer noted that nonsurgi- cal transfer of a new human embryo from one mother to an other might even prove saver and more convenient than the more widely known test-tube programs for couples unable to have a child. ’ Women with a history of mis carriage, couples with sterility problems, or women with li gated fallopian tubes who change their minds and want more children all are prime ex amples of the kind of clients who could benefit from embryo transfer in humans, he said. The first successful embryo transfer in humans was recently carried out by UCLA reseach ers. Freezing and storing the re covered embryos with liquid ni trogen takes the process a step farther by allowing scientists to bend time limits normally asso ciated with how long embryos can survive outside the body, he explained. really fine eats Dominik Drive College Station-BYTHE-SEA OF COURSE.. I M TAKING COURSE 481 ! MANAGEMENT OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS COURSE CONTENT The content and organization of the seminar will emphasize practical application rather than theoretical concepts. Instruction will cover such topics as: Principles of leadership Goal setting Communication skills Motivating student members/volunteers Running a meeting effectively Publicity and public relations techniques PARTICIPANTS While the seminar is intended primarily for leaders, potential officers, or officers of student organizations, it is open to any Texas A&M student interested in learning more about working with student groups. COURSE OBJECTIVES The seminar has been carefully designed to provide an overall picture of operation of a student organization. In addition to a survey of the management principles involved, students will gain functional knowledge of the various activities involved in success fully leading a student group. The class setting will also provide students with the opportunity to interact with fellow students and professional staff on a routine basis. INSTRUCTORS The course will be taught primarily by the professional staff of the Student Activ ities Office. The instructors will utilize various guest speakers in addition to a team teaching approach in order to provide the most effective presentation of course material. REGISTRATION Due to demand, this course will be offered twice in the fall. Students inter ested in taking the course should register/ add " Seminar in Management " 481 C, Section 505 (meeting on Tuesday) or Section 506 (meeting on Thursday) to their fall 1984 schedule. Each class will meet at 2:00 p.m. in Room 205, Agriculture Bldg. The course is worth one credit hour. Questions? Call 845-1133. i tU: i\* J