SAY (ER, >CALl ^CF WET. State/Local Committee finds litde need or A&M day care services The Battalion Monday, Oct. 17, 1988 Page 3 By Susan B. Erb Staff Writer Texas A&M University does not pro- jde campus child care for faculty, staff students. The results of a child care id-assessment committee indicate that versity day care is not likely to be- ie a reality at A&M in the future, but "TMedical school lets renamed it ceremony E$, By Holly Becka Staff Writer Jlhe Texas A&M Medical Sciences |uilding officially was renamed for H. Reynolds, vice chairman of Board of Regents, during a cere- my at the building Saturday. Ilhe building was renamed after Ifteynolds in recognition of the role he payed in founding the medical ■ool — Texas’ newest — and for p support of the University’s medi- ;ca! program during his Regent terms. am very proud of this school and (he students who have been here and peir contributions,” he said. “Sue is wife) and I thank you all. We’re illed. We really appreciate this enceittflcat honor.” In addition to his position on the iard, Reynolds also is a member of Executive Committee, the Com- ttee for Academic Campuses and Corps Enhancement Committee, eynolds, a native of Tyler, served iWorld War II and the Korean War an officer in the Marine Corps. He iduated first in his class at Baylor |w School in 1947 and is a partner the Houston law firm Reynolds, mningham, Peterson and Cordell, e also is active as chairman of the d of visitors for Texas Southern diversity School of Law and chair man of the Texas State Bar Commit tee for the Federal Judiciary. •avid G. Eller, chairman of the rd, thanked Reynolds for all he done for Texas A&M and for al- |pmg his name to be put on the ►. He also announced that Reynolds’ friends and colleagues are missioning an oil portrait of him |)be placed in the building. niversity President Dr. William HjMobley, Dr. Richard A. DeVaul, dean of the College of Medicine, and idt! I er mem ers of the Board also at- fflded the ceremony. rous i senior f g pagee' that communications between parents and providers may be strengthened. The Child Care Facility Study Com mittee, organized at the end of March at the request of Chancellor Perry Adkis- son, conducted a two-month study on child care services available in the Bryan-College Station area and assessed child care needs of University System staff and students. Committee chairman Patricia Chap man, assistant vice chancellor of budgets and human resources for the System, said based on excess facility capacity, general acceptance of costs and no major dissatisfaction with services offered by local child care facilities, the committee does not see a need to offer campus child care. “We found that at this point in time there doesn’t appear to be a mandate for the TAMU System to provide child care,” Chapman said. Chapman said Adkisson has endorsed the recommendations of the committee, including the formation of a Child Care Provider Council to serve as a conduit for communications between parents and child care providers. “This is just a means by which the chancellor feels like he can assure that the needs of the employees of the TA- MUS components headquartered in Col lege Station are being met,” Chapman said. In a memo to chief executive officers of the System, Adkisson said the purpose of the council will be to provide a means by which concerns can be expressed and resolved, open communications can take place and through which educational programs can be offered to both parents and care providers. Adkisson asked Vicki Bienski, his ad ministrative assistant, to establish the council. Bienski said the System, the University and the local child care com munity will be represented in the coun cil. “We have invited all of the System parts that are located on campus to par ticipate,” Bienski said. “And the Univer sity has been asked to provide the names of an undergraduate student and a grad uate student as well as a faculty and staff representative. Some people from the lo cal child care community will also be on the council.” Rachel Kennedy, founder of Students with Children, a Texas A&M group or ganized to give support to students who are raising a family while going to school, said she believes the formation of the council is a positive move, but publicizing its services could be diffi cult. “I think it’s a step in the right direc tion,” Kennedy said. “The problem is to get the staff and student body to know they are there and to use them.” Travis gives local patrons outstanding performance By Shane Hall Staff Writer Randy Travis showed why he has received so much praise from the country music world by giving an outstanding performance Friday night at G. Rollie White Coliseum. The nearly sold-out crowd greeted Travis with a chorus of whoops and cheers as he walked onto the stage and began his show. Enthusiasm remained high as the award-winning country singer per formed many of the hits that have made him a star. Backed by a sextet of musicians, Travis sang such country hits as “Dig ging Up Bones,” “On the Other Hand” and “Forever and Ever, Amen.” The latter of the three was espe cially well-received, as dozens of fans, most of them young women, swarmed at the foot of the stage, many of them bearing cameras and looking for a good shot. Others sought autographs and held out items ranging from pictures to cowboy boots in hopes of getting them signed. Adoration from the females in the crowd continued throughout the show. During one song, a voice from somewhere in the Coliseum yelled, “I love you, Randy.” Randy Travis “Thank you,” Travis responded, inserting his response into the song. Travis demonstrated his sense of humor at one point in the show, doing a short parody of “Digging Up Bo nes” called “Digging Up Jones.” On the more serious side, another memorable moment in the show was Travis’ rendition of “Broken Prom ises.” During the song, the lights dimmed and a spotlight focused on Travis alone as he performed the bal lad solo, with his guitar as the only musical accompaniment. It made for an emotional and remarkable perfor mance. After telling his audience that he was raised listening to country sing ers such as Hank Williams Sr., Travis paid homage to his roots with a med ley of songs by the legendary singer beginning with the classic “Your Cheatin’ Heart.” With that medley, Travis showed why he is considered one of the lead ers in the trend toward traditional country music. The medley, and the remainder of the show, received a deafening enthusiastic response from the audience. The audience also enjoyed Gene Watson, the show’s opening act. Watson has been on the national country music scene since the mid- 1970s, but has never achieved Travis’ level of stardom. However, Watson has had his share of hits and he per formed them Friday night, including “Love in the Hot Afternoon” and “Paper Roses.” Watson, a Houston native, also performed some new material that was well-received by the audience. Especially impressive were “Dreams of a Dreamer Gone Blind” and “So mewhere Over You.” Hormones may improve poultry By Doug Evans Reporter Injecting chicken embryos with growth hormones may breed larger and healthier chickens, Dr. Pam Hargis, A&M associate professor of poultry sci ence, said. Hargis said experiments by the poultry science department of Texas A&M’s Ag ricultural Extension Service show great promise. “We have seen an increase in body weight from 50 to 100 grams by the time chickens reach market age,” Hargis said. Skeletal growth also is affected by the hormone injections. Dr. Sam Pardue, one of Hargis’ co-re- searchers, said that longer leg bones have been observed in male chickens. “What is exciting about this is that a single injection of a very small quantity of growth hormones significantly affects the physiological development,” he said. Chickens vaccinated before they hatch have a better chance of a healthy life. Pardue said the immune system in chickens is not active when they hatch, so the unhatched chicks must rely on maternal antibodies found in the yolk of the egg. “There is some evidence that we can improve protection against diseases if we immunize the embryo directly,” he said. Pardue said embryo experimentation is necessary to achieve positive growth results. “Chickens grow so rapidly that we can’t significantly change their genetic composition after they hatch,” he said. “Unlike cattle or swine, we must give the hormones directly to the embryo to get results.” Hargis said that growth hormones also can control the amount of fat in chick ens. > According to Pardue, less fat will please consumers. “We see some consumer resistance to excessive abdominal fat,” Pardue said. “As a consumer, you pay for that fat. We now have a product that is lower in total fat.” The research is a response to growing health awareness, he said. He said they are very much aware of the consumer’s desire to have a wholesome product. Growth hormones also provide eco nomic advantages, he said. . . we can improve pro tection against diseases if we immunize the embryo directly.” Dr. Sam Pardue “A single injection is altering some very basic systems and processes that have the economic potential to produce a better bird,” Pardue said. “We can pro duce birds that gain more weight on the same unit of feed. That is a cost sa vings.” Hargis said the purpose of the research benefits the entire poultry industry. “We are not doing this just to exploit the bird,” she said. “We are doing it to maximize their growth potential and to understand what makes them grow.” Pardue said that consumer demand has initiated much of the research. “This year is the first for poultry con sumption to exceed beef,” he said. The majority of the research is still ex perimental. “We will wait for approval from the Food and Drug Administration,” Pardue said. “We don’t want to produce poultry for the consumer that has any suspicion of being tainted.” The research is funded by a grant from the South Eastern Poultry and Egg Asso ciation, an organization of producers of poultry products, Pardue said. The Texas A&M Auxiliary Fund also has contrib uted to the project. Hargis said that application of the re search is still to come. “We have not yet come up with any thing that is going to revolutionize the poultry industry,” she said. “But we have changed how fat tissue and skeletal growth develops. Now it is a matter of refining the hormones and the time of ad ministration.” Police arrest 45 protesters of abortion SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Police arrested 45 people who blocked en trances to an abortion clinic during an anti-abortion protest organizers said was one of the largest ever staged here. “We don’t want to telegraph our punches, but we want people to know this isn’t a fleeting fad,” said Jack Devault, head of Life Support Serv ices and one of the coordinators of Saturday's demonstration. Catherine Stannard, administrator of the Reproductive Services Inc, clinic, praised the courage of some patients who were able to make it in side the cl i nic despite the protesters. < All those arrested outside the clinic were charged with criminal trespass, a Class B misdemeanor punishable Y by up to six months in jail and a fine* up to $1,000. 77#/ T A103 Art and reason When Mark and I decided to spend the weekend at his mother s house, I never imagined I would be walking into a mouses nightmare.There were eats everywhere. Cat plaques, eat statues, eat clocks, even a eat mat. I couldn't begin to dupli cate her collection of kitty litter if I spent a vear at a garage sale. Conspicuouslv absent, however, was a real cat. Strange, I thought, and began to fear that a weekend with cat woman could be a lot less than purr-feet. But then she came home, and Mark introduced her. She was - dressed surprisingly well—no leopard pants. In fact, you could say she was the cats meow, but Id rather not. She offered me a cup of Dutch Choc olate Mint. Now that was something I could relate to. Then she brought it out in the most beautiful, distinctly tin feline china Id ever seen. As we sipped, I found out that Mrs. Campbell has my same weakness for chocolate, loves the theater as much as I do, but, incrediblv, never saw “Cats." So Mark and I are taking her next month. General Foods International Coffees. Share the feeling. 846-5273 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • 6&M Steakhouse 108 Colteg? Main Announces a Dinner Special! 5-9 pm Cheeseburger Platter $3. 49 V 1/2 lb patty, fries, tea 16 oz Blue Bell Shake 990 Malt $1. 19 (bring this coupon) Expires 10/24 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • OVERWHELMED BY READING ASSIGNMENTS? ? 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