Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, May 6, 1986 Panel scrutinizes A&M use of genetically altered virus DALLAS (AP) — Texas re searchers who used a vaccine con taining a genetically altered virus on pigs will have their action scru tinized by a special committee later this month. The panel of scientists, ap pointed by the National Institutes of Health, will decide whether re searchers at Texas A&M Univer sity violated federal rules involv ing genetic alteration. The vaccine in question was used on 1,400 pigs on a Lometa, Texas, farm two years ago under the direction of the Texas Animal Health Commission and re searchers at Texas A&M. The vaccine was developed by removing a gene from the virus that causes a form of herpes that affects one in 10 pigs. Sale of the vaccine was halted last month by the U.S. Depart ment of Agriculture to assess its environmental impact. Sales resumed after a review. The USDA action was prompted by concerns raised by Jeremy Rifkin, president of an organization seeking stricter gov ernment control of genetically engineered organisms. Rifkin, of the Washington- based Foundation on Economic Trends, said he objected to licens ing the vaccine because it had not been reviewed by the Agriculture Department’s Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee. Rifkin said he then learned that animal tests of the vaccine hadn’t been reviewed by the counterpart committee at the Na tional Institutes of Healths Federally funded researchers, before beginning Field tests of a recombinant DNA product, must submit their plans to the NIH, which decides whether to ap prove the tests. Texas A&M’s Institutional Bi osafety Committee, after public ity about Rifkin’s initial objections to the vaccine licensing, sub mitted a “report of a potential vi olation” to NIH, said Dr. Bernard Talbot, adviser to the NIH Re combinant DNA Committee. Saul Kit, head of biochemical virology at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who devel oped the vaccine, contends the vaccine didn’t need NIH appro val because it wasn’t created with recombinant DNA. Railway cars carrying acid dert TULIA, Texas (AP) — Four tanker cars carrying sulfuric acid de railed Monday near this Panhandle town when a freight train of the Santa Fe Railway Co. hit an empty tank car, a company spokesman say^. Crew members on the train suf fered only bumps and bruises in the collision about 60 miles southwest of Amarillo, said Robert Gehrt, direc tor of public relations for the Santa Fe Railway in Chicago. Initially, Gehrt had said the empty car may have been moved in front of the train by vandals. But FBI offi cials say railway spokesmen said it was an accident. FBI spokesman U.H. Specht said, “The railroad’s saying it’s accidental. We have to go pretty much with what the railroad tells us.” Company spokesman Richard Hall said, “We are not directly blam ing that incident on vandalism.” He added that high winds may have pushed the empty car ontij line. Gerht said that the tanka by the freight train had! with potentially explosives ammonia before being over the weekend. James Hart, dispatcher! Tulia police departme:! cleanup crews managed rtj the acid that had run bed and that no evacuationij essary. c< Re nomii Mont Mark genet need Oil predicted to stabilize at $20 per bam HOUSTON (AP) — Oil prices should stabilize at about $20 a barrel by the end of the year, but continued low prices could mean doom for many energy-related companies, Pennzoil Co. President Richard J. Howe predicted Monday. “I seriously hope our forecasts are too bearish, but only time will tell,” he said at a news conference at the annual Offshore Technology Con ference. Crude oil prices were less than $15 per barrel Monday, up from even lower $12 levels of a few weeks ago but well off the $28-per-barrel range at this time last year. “I think it’s obvious the longer it stays at this low level then] cult it is going to be,” HotJ don’t think anybody known tainly wouldn’t ventureag to how many companies mip the boards. But if it (the pit goes into the low teens; there, there will be a lotdl nies leaving or not survivinn First Time Ever Video Aggieland AUS (ent I tan gu k'hat it The will be available in the Fall of 1987 oercen )ov. M Cleri Dr gam 200,00 Jour yt Vears. He Sign up at Registration ceagai ling ad Jions. He . The approximately 2-hour tape (both Beta and VMS will be available) will be like the world’s largest and best yearbook, AGGIELAND, in that it covers the whole year-full of activities and interests for all Aggies, present and past. But it will be more than that, too. 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