The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 04, 1988, Image 7

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    Wednesday, May 4, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7
*Texas officials allege cattleman
falsified tests from infected cows
■NACOGDOCHES (AP) — An
■st Texas sale-barn owner allegedly
Hp-eed to buy four sick cattle from a
CJ»te livestock inspector posing as a
rancher trying to dispose of stock in-
c&tecl with brucellosis.
E.V. Hamby, owner of the Nacog-
tfoches County Livestock Sale Barn,
allegedly substituted blood samples
Of a healthy cow for an infected one
and registered the sale under a ficti-
■us name in the transaction last Oc-
jjtpber, inspector Joe Kelsey said.
■Kelsey had driven four cattle to
rhom
the sale barn and included one in
fected cow to see if it was possible to
sell a cow with brucellosis, called a
“banger,” Kelsey said.
Hamby assured Kelsey that bru
cellosis-infected cattle could be sold
without notifying the state and with
out quarantining the rest of his herd,
as required by law, Kelsey said.
“They encouraged me to come
back,” Kelsey recalls. “They just said,
‘Bring all your cows back, and we’ll
make sure the state does not know
you had any (bangers) or that they
were your animals.”’
Officials allege that Hamby, his
barn manager, Emmett Case and the
veterinarian, Dr. Raymond Fowler,
conspired to falsify blood tests from
infected cattle.
Kelsey alleged that when he ar
rived at the arena, Hamby instructed
an employee to register tne cows un
der a fictitious owner’s name, and
when the blood tests were run, work
ers substituted blood from a healthy
cow for the banger’s sample.
T5 T0K%,
HAVE AN'f
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: tires,..
A&M professor creates program
to increase alcohol awareness
tort m
amuel
LERIDGL
By George Watson
Staff Writer
■n an effort to prevent minors from driving while in
toxicated, a Texas A&M professor has helped develop
an alcohol awareness program aimed at minors who
have been arrested on alcohol-related charges.
■)r. Maurice Dennis, professor of industrial educa
tion and director of safety education, said he hopes the
program makes an impact on the minors before they
risk driving while intoxicated.
■‘We have statistics that show minors are more likely
to he killed in alcohol related accidents than older driv
ers,” Dennis said. “We’re just trying to keep that from
occurring.”
In the five-hour class, emphasis is placed on identify
ing the effects of alcohol on the body, the reasons that
an individual chooses to drink and the penalties asso
ciated with DWI and MIP (minor in possession) arrests.
Bob Wiatt, director of University Police, said he fa
vored the program’s goal of educating and rehabilitat
ing minors to teach them the penalties of alcohol-re
lated crimes, and said the program might become a
requirement for convicted MIPs.
“I am not familiar with the content of the classes, but
I have spoken with Dr. Dennis and a few judges about
having tne class become part of some sentences involv
ing MIPs,” he said.
Of 120 alcohol-related arrests made on campus be
tween September 1986 and August 1987, Wiatt said, 26
were for DWI. Since last semester, the UPD has made
88 alcohol-related arrests — 27 for DWI, he said.
The College Station Police Department made 229
DWI and 257 MIP arrests in 1987. The Bryan Police
Department arrested 491 people on DWI charges in
1987. The number of MIP charges was not available.
Registration for the alcohol education program is in
the industrial education office in Harrington Tower.
Two weeks later, Kelsey picked up
a $1,000 check for the four cows,
completing Texas’ first undercover
operation aimed at exposing an al
leged brucellosis fraud conspiracy.
The Texas Animal Health Com
mission began the inquiry last sum
mer, then the Texas attorney gener
al’s office, the state Board of
Veterinary Medicine and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture joined
the probe.
Brucellosis, once a health threat to
animals and humans, is mostly an
economic menace to ranchers. Peo
ple may contract the disease from
unpasteurized milk or goat cheese,
but face no risk eating meat from an
infected cow.
Lawyers in the state attorney gen
eral’s office went to court Jan. 21 to
get a temporary injunction against
the sale barn and veterinarian.
A trial on a permanent injunction
against the sale barn is pending in in
Nacogdoches County, where the
case was transferred.
Lawyers said Juanette Ellis, 42,
Fowler’s former assistant, volun
teered to testify after realizing she
had been infected with the human
equivalent of brucellosis, apparently
while testing cattle under Fowler’s
supervision.
Case and Fowler both denied be
ing involved in a conspiracy.
Hamby said that on the day of
Kelsey’s sting there was an accident
in the laboratory, and an employee
substituted blood from a healthy cow
for the cows Kelsey brought in.
Abuse
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(Continued from page 1)
lice and press charges. These men
sion, leads to an episode of violence
and normally ends in a “honeymoon
period,” during which the man is
apologetic for his behavior.
KKeyes and Tamburello plan to
continue the program, which is now
in its first 10-week session. In the fu
ture, they said they plan to start a
program for women at A&M who
are involved in violent relationships.
illv, and . Ke .y es sa id * l ’ sn t eas y keeping the
g home men * n AVALE.
sinessande , , . . , , ■ n
unider i ^‘ us 18 a treatment of,choice for
.stigation ^ ese men >” he said. “It works best
empire oi ^ or ^e men who volunteer.”
ianks, nunfl
n Shrever Tfie graduate students said they
nvicted' hope for more voluntary partici-
sinessAdrP at ‘ on i n their next session, which
movedtoL’ffh start sometime in June, but they
said men referred to them by the lo
cal courts also will be involved in
their counseling program.
[T Keyes said the courts refer men to
mtinental! the program whose wives call the po-
> First Sad|
ailed last
to the fe
nto Saving
thrift’s
Corp. oft
o Vernon'
■ Savings
Lubbock
d Loan.
I insurant;'
probably will be reluctant to partici
pate in the AVALE activities.
In addition to the weekly counsel
ing sessions for abusive men, the
children of the women who stay at
Phoebe’s Home are counseled each
week by Dee Yates, a graduate stu
dent in educational psychology.
Yates said these children necessar
ily are not beaten by their fathers,
but if they hear or witness the abuse
of their mother, there is at least
some psychological abuse.
“Not too many of these kids have
been physically (abused), but psy
chologically (abused) by watching
their mothers.”
Yates conducts counseling ses
sions at the shelter in two groups.
One of the groups is young children,
Graphic by Carol Wells
ranging in age from 3 to 8 years old,
and the second group consists of
pre-adolescent children.
Yates said the younger children
participate in “play therapy.”
“Playing is their natural mode of
communication,” she said. “Some
times yotK$ge the anger and fear . . .
one example is that they might draw
monsters.
“(Play therapy) is a way that they
can get in touch with these feelings.
They do it (express themselves)
when they’re playing.”
The counseling sessions with the
older children concentrate more on
discussion similar to the program
the men go through. Yates said dis
cussing family situations helps the
children become more open and bet-
’) — Final
States Ui
tesday eart
rter of 131
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are coni
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earnings!
3 cents pf
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te period
subtract:
ferred diii
i are beic
he compar.
of $7.31
tare, accoit
an Gilley.
Utility Cot
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cost, Gil
riod lasts l|
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ilf States ij
ounted pit
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15
ter able to deal with memories of vio
lence:
The only problem Yates said she
sees in the program is that she only
gets to work with most of the chil
dren one or two times because of the
high turnover rate at Phoebe’s
Home.
She said she doesn’t have high ex
pectations because the program isn’t
a permanent form of counseling for
the children. However, she said, “If
at least they’re having one positive
experience with someone in the
helping profession, maybe it will
help them.”
Jackson said she is interested in
getting more people involved with
the children because Yates will be
leaving in the summer. She said the
children’s program is something she
would like to continue at Phoebe’s
Home, but eventually she wants to
see more intense, long-term counsel
ing.
“It (the counseling) makes them
feel like they really count — that
they’re important enough to get
counseling,” Jackson said.
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