Tuesday, November 17, 1987/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local its Dee . \ thii irco: Heavy storms add to damage in East Texas, Gulf Coast areas 60 oz Pitcher $1 00 Mall of Fame FM 2818 North of Villa Maria, Bryan 822-2222 Must be 21 years of age Thursday & Saturday with coupon expires Nov. 28 PALESTINE (AP) — Heavy rains land more storms hit East Texas and jthe Gulf Coast Monday, stalling Idean-up efforts and causing more damage in the aftermath of more ^^than a dozen tornadoes that killed 10 people and injured more than 160. Brutal thunderstorms pounded coastal areas Monday, killing a Tex aco Inc. worker in Bay City, who fell from a drilling rig when high winds toppled it, Mike Cox of the Depart ment of Public Safety said. The National Weather Service’s UHiSFort Worth office tracked the storm r fn Sunday. Buddy McIntyre of that office ividt sa ‘d’ “Most of the time you see se vere weather during the spring months, April, May and June. But there is a second peak in the fall.” Damage from Sunday’s tornadoes ate IT was estimated in the millions of dol lars, with Palestine City Manager Warren Driver reporting damage of $8 million to $12 million in that city alone. “It could go as high as $15 million,” Driver said. More than 200 residences in Pal estine suffered tornado damage, Driver said. Gov. Bill Clements will visit Pales tine and Jacksonville Tuesday, said Reggie Bashur, the governor’s press secretary. DPS spokesman David Wells said at least 16 counties reported damage from an estimated 20 tornadoes over a two-day period. In southeast Texas Monday morning, winds ripped the roofs off an elementary school in Santa Fe and a Wal-Mart in Dickinson, but authorities reported no injuries. More than 80,000 Houston Lieht- ing & Power Co. customers were without service, mostly in an area be tween Houston and Galveston, spokesman Geri Konigsberg said. At the utility’s South Texas Nu clear Plant near Bay City, a guard’s shack was blown over, and the guard was checked at a hospital but was not injured, Konigsberg said. About 90 miles south of San Anto nio, a twister cut a mile-long swath through the western side of Beeville, and an elderly woman was slightly injured when her mobile home was hit, Bee County Sheriffs Deputy Ronnie Olivares said. On Sunday, the storms killed nine people in towns across East Texas and injured more than 160. In Palestine, a city of about 16,000, officials said 86 businesses and at least 128 homes were dam aged. One person there was killed Sun day and police estimated 59 were in jured, with about 32 of those seeking treatment at the local hospital, offi cials said. Mayor Jack Selden estimated a few dozen people were homeless Monday. “We’re looking for temporary shelters,” he said. “They’ll find it with relatives. Most people stayed at their house. We saw them out there, and there’d be plastic over the open areas, but for some I don’t know how much good it would do.” Of the damaged businesses, he said, “I’m not sure they’re going to recover.” With about 50 national guardsmen standing by, some busi nesses reopened Monday despite heavy damage. Gov, Clements appoints five to judicial panel AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Bill Clements has appointed five of the 15 members of the Joint Select Committee on the Judi ciary. The governor’s appointees are attorneys W. Mike Baggett, who is from Dallas; Carol Dinkins and Albert Ebert Jr., who are both from Houston; Dixon Holman who is from Arlington; and Dee Kelly who is from Fort Worth. The panel was created by the 1987 Legislature to review the state’s judicial system. “Texans have lost faith in their judicial system,” Clements said. “We must correct that. “A review of the entire process is in order.” Professor: Election of board won’t affect quality, duties By Todd Riemenschneider Reporter Even though the failure of Propo sition 1 in the Nov. 3 general elec tion will allow the state board of edu cation to be elected rather than appointed, the change probably won’t affect the workings of the board, said Dr. Harvey Tucker, a Texas A&M political science profes sor. Tucker said he is not sure the quality of the board will improve if the mertibers are elected instead of appointed. Because of the nature of the board’s job, it usually isn’t in the public eye, he said, and this situation will not change. “They are still going to be invisi ble, even after they are elected,” Tucker said. He said that since the board is not a full-time job, the members act more like a board of directors for a corporation. “In theory they (the board of edu cation members) have the ultimate power, but in reality they choose who the top managers will be and they review the performance of these managers,” he said. Tucker said people want to have an elected board because they have been taught the virtues of democ racy. “Americans, all their lives, have been taught democracy is good, vot ing is good and what is bad is when interest groups make decisions,” Tucker said. However, Tucker pointed out, re leased voting figures were for peo ple who are registered to vote, not who are eligible to vote. “Only 15 percent or fewer of the people eligible to vote chose elected boards over appointed boards,” Tucker said. “When we have the elections in the future for these posi tions, the turnout rate for those elec tions will be between 10 and 15 per cent.” ^ Because of small turnout rates, Tucker said, the election results may not reflect how the people actually feel. “It doesn’t matter how many peo ple vote,” Tucker said. “The deci sion is made.” T ucker also speculates much of the turnout for this election can be attributed to the pari-mutuel refer endum being on the ballot. “While voters were in the polls, they decided to vote on some of the other issues as well,” Tucker said. Volunteer network rescues animals found stranded along Texas coast i rstatf lespis i wlii atestf e ao‘ By Tom Eikel Reporter The Texas Marine Mammal Stranding Network is an organiza tion of volunteers responsible for rescuing or salvaging dciphins, por poises and whales found stranded along the Texas coast. The network, formed in 1980 and headquartered in College Station, is divided into seven regions, from Sa bine Pass to South Padre Island. Each region has a group of volun teers, headed by an area coordina tor. The volunteers respond to any type of marine mammal stranded in their area, said Greg Schwab, co coordinator of the network. Time is crucial when a live animal is found, Schwab said. “Once the animal is out of its envi ronment, factors such as gravity and heat lessen its chances of survival, so it’s important that we begin caring for it as quickly as possible,” he said. When members of the Network arrive, they administer first aid and attempt to transport the animal to one of two treatment facilities, Schwab said. Live strandings along the upper coast are moved to Sea Arama Marineworld in Galveston, while those along the lower coast are taken to the University of Texas Ma rine Science Institute in Port Aran sas, he said. “Caring for live mammals is a very “Once the animal is out of its environment, factors such as gravity and heat lessen its chances of survi val . . — Greg Schwab, Texas Marine Mammal Stranding Network co-coordinator time-consuming process, because the animal is immediately placed un der 24-hour medical observation,” Schwab said. The animals are given antibiotics and other medications to fight infec tion and relieve stress, Schwab said. Their bodily functions constantly are monitored and various cultures and samples are taken to find out what is ailing the animal, he said. “If the animal survives the first 24 hours, we offer it food,” Schwab said. “If it does not respond then we begin force-feeding.” Unfortunately, most mammals found stranded are either dead or too weak to survive the ordeal. But, dead or alive, these animals provide information valuable to both educa tion and research, Schwab said. “We look for anything and every thing,” Schwab said. “Because there is so little known about marine mam mals, their habitats and things like that, any type of data we can get is valuable.” If the deceased animal is in fairly good condition, the body is saved and transported to a laboratory at Texas A&M for a necropsy (autopsy), where a pathologist works to discern the cause of death, Schwab said. A great deal of information is col lected on all strandings, particularly on those animals not transported for necropsy. Besides recording things such as size, weight, sex and location of the stranded animal, network vol unteers pull teeth to determine age and take over a dozen tissue samples including muscle, liver, kidney and lung, Schwab said. “Right now, we’re storing these in hopes of getting toxicological analy ses done on them to use as an indica tor of pollution in the ocean envi ronment,” Schwab said. “The dolphin is one of the highest marine animals on the food chain, and basically what a dolphin eats is what you eat from the sea,” he said. “So if it’s directly affecting their health, in theory, it could also be af fecting us. “Data collected along the coast comes here where we process and store it. We send copies of our data to the Southeastern Regional Stranding Network headquarters in Florida and they in turn send this in formation to the Smithsonian Insti tution in Washington, D.G.” The Smithsonian is the top of the stranding network hierarchy and is the collection point for data on strandings from all over the United States. “There are many different rea sons why these animals strand,” Schwab said. “Pollution has been a cause for a few strandings. “We actually had a mammal (a pygmy sperm whale calf) that in gested plastic bags, which plugged up its stomach causing a peritonitis infection which killed the animal.” Various parasites, as well as viral and bacterial infections also are believed to weaken mammals, causing them to become stranded, Schwab said. Whatever the cause, network vol unteers are on call 24 hours to deal with reported strandings, Schwab said. Since 1980, this non-profit or ganization, w'hich gets most of its money in the form of private dona tions, has responded to 517 strand ings. Fifty percent of these have oc curred in the last three years, he said. “This can be attributed to greater public awareness,” Schwab said. “People now know more about what to do if they come upon a stranded animal.” THE BIG SLEEP Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall Philip Marlowe (Bogart), Raymond Chandler's tough, cynical private eye, is plunged into a world of blackmail. The Bogart-Bacall dialogue is bristling with verbal sparring as the pair match wits in this classic thriller. TUESDAY 11/17 7:30 pm $2.00 with ID RUDDER THEATRE KH cut along clotted line and present at time of purchase ALL YOU " ! $1.00 OFF! c.., NO-WAIT LUNCH BUFFET $2.99 • Pizza • SpaGatti • Salad Bar Served 11 am to 2 pm every day. Not valid with any other coupons or special otters. Good only at participating Mr. Gatti s. Price shown is per person. 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