* * * Not a follower. File for candidacy in the Spring Student Body Elections February 28 - March 3 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. MSC Foyer Student Body President, Senior and Junior Yell Leaders, Class Council Positions, RJHA, Student Senate WED. NIGHT SPECIAL I 6-lOpm ONLY @ Bryan Location 3610 S. College (Bryan) 846-4275 NATION Page 10 THE BATTALION Wednesday. March IJ Six-year-old killed by first-grade classmat! MOUNT MORRIS TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) —A6-year-old girl was shot to death by a 7-year-old classmate at an elementary school Tuesday morning, au thorities said. A single shot was fired during a first- grade class at Buell Elementary School, Police Chief Eric King said. It was not immediately clear if the shooting was ac cidental or intentional, he said. The girl died about 10:30 a.m., said Hurley Medical Center spokesperson Stephanie Motschenbacher. That was about a half-hour after the shooting. The 7-year-old boy was in custody. King said. About 22 pupils were inside the class room when the shot was fired. “We don’t know if it’s an accident or what,” Beecher School District Superin tendent Ira A. Rutherford said. “There is no evidence of animosity or vengeance or a motive.” Third-grader Corey Sutton, 9, said he heard a bang. “1 thought it was a desk or something falling,” he said. “The principal came over the PA sys tem and told teachers to shut their doors and lock them. The teacher told pupils to line up and get their coats on, Corey said, and then “she told us what happened. A girl got shot, and the teacher started crying.” Police closed offnearby streets and sent parents across the street to a church to await the release of children from the school, which has an enroll ment of about 500. Crystal Watson, 8, who was in her third-grade class, said she did not know anything had happened until she heard sirens. “ We were told to stay in our class and stay calm,” she told The Flint Journal. “A couple of boys were crying, but everyone else was staying calm.” “We’re interested in how the little boy came into possession of the weapon,” Genesee County Prosecutor Arthur A. Busch said. “We’ve had oth er schoolchildren take guns to elemen tary schools before ... but it never went this far with it. It’s a sign of our times where we have a fully armed society that doesn't take its responsibility to se cure its weapons seriously.” A fourth-grader, Christopher Burch, 9, was scared because he has relatives in the first grade. “My teacher told me a first-grader shot another first-grader, and I started cry ing because I thought it was my cousin or Lake CANAOI /. Superior ‘'Ax Jr $ \Y2>—" ; c ■ £ < # I MICH. WIS. \V / in Mount Morris U I Township •Fh School O Lansing, shooting h 100 miles 100 km IND - OHiO sister,” he said. He found outrainutesl er that neither of his relatives was sk Mount Morris Township is sotwl miles northwest of Detroit E. coli bacteria infects nation’s cows WASHINGTON (AP) - Up to half the cattle in the na tion’s feedlots, far more than previously thought, are infect ed with deadly bacteria, the government said Tuesday. Researchers using new testing methods found E. coli 0157:H7 present in rates varying from 1 percent in the winter months to as much as 50 percent in the summer. Pre viously, government scientists had thought the infection rate to be no more than about 5 percent. Cattle are exposed to the bacteria from manure in feedlots. The new figures were de veloped by the Agriculture Department’s Agricultural Re search Service and presented at a public session sponsored by USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service. The study concluded that chances of E. coli getting into ground beef could be reduced by testing cattle hides and carcasses before the meat is processed. Testing now is done after the beef is ground. Consumer groups agree that the government needs to require more extensive testing of cattle and beef to prevent people from being exposed to the germs. “The prevalence figures are much higher than we ever heard before,” said Caroline Smith DeWaal of tlie Center for Science in the Public Interest. Research done at a dozen packing plants last fall found the bacteria on 3.56 percent of the hides that were sam pled and 0.44 percent of the carcasses. All the bacteria on the sample carcasses were even tually removed through steam pasteurization, hot water or or ganic acid rinses, the treat ments typically used in pack ing plants. “It is our hope that this data will encourage USDA to re-evaluate its ground-beef sampling program,” said James H. Hodges, president of the American Meat Industry Foundation, which sponsored the research: “A carcass testing pro gram for E. coli 0157:H7...wiII help ensure that the safest and most wholesome product possible enters commerce.” Samples in the industry study were taken at a rate of 1 per 300 carcasses. E. coli 0157 can cause se rious illness and sometimes death, especially in children and the elderly. Symptoms in clude chills and bloody diar rhea. The bacteria are de stroyed by adequately cooking the meat. The ground-beef testing program, which \vas started after tainted hamburger killed several children in Washington state in 1993, “is not systematic, and provides inadequate coverage,” De- Waal said. The federal government recently approved the use of irradiation to treat raw meat, but it is unclear yet whether consumers will react to that. Scientists are working on additional methods of treat ment. One of those is an anti microbial agent, known as lactoferrin, that is a naturally occurring protein in the milk of mammals. “The prevalence figures are much higher than we ever heard before/’' — Caroline Smith DeWaal Center for Science in the Public Interest E. coli contamination The government said Tuesday thaiij to half the cattle In the nation's feedlots are infected with deadly E coli bacteria Here is a lookathowtti bacteria can get from cattle to the dinner table. From the farm A cow that it Is carrying the E. coli 0157:H7 bacteriain its intestinal tracts chosen for slaugiile To the slaughterhouse To meat plant To your meal E. coli can escape) the intestines of infected cattle are opened during processing. The contaminated meat is mixed wit! other meat and ground for hamburger If the contaminated meat is undercooked the bacteria can cause severe food poisoning. Prevention Cook all ground beef or hamburgert an internal temperature of 160°. Use! thermometer to be sure the meal is thoroughly cooked. Send back any undercooked mealio are served in a restaurant for furthe: cooking. Consume only pasteurized milk, n* products and juices. Wash hands, counters and uteraS with hot. soapy water after theytwfi raw meat. Wednesday, NF1 T hisp Sainl Willi six hours in tosignatic Williams' b the arrestin: erence for t a source of embarrassn League (NI incident pa: TheNFI to the spate months. Mt olina Panth Ravens line minding the one of three Atlanta nigl With the Rams, Tanr Irvin, not to a Ford Bror Pro lineup i Some pe for these cri sport they p like Emmitt skins and th many qualit that more c< committed I eral, could l nal actions. Many pi actions may than playinj headlines 01 came from l Gangs and; Once they g athletic sch< M floM I ! I ! ! t ! PHOTOS IN ABOUT AN HOUR You drink. You drive. You get pulled over. You get arrested. You get fingerprinted. You get photographed. You go to jail. And that's if you're lucky enough not to have killed someone first. Drink, Drive, Go to Jail ' ass Save a Life Texas Department of Transportation . In remembrance KIMBER HUFF/Thk BatTAUOS Clayton Bassham, Christopher Young and Nancy Cisneros, sixth graders at Jane Long Middle School in Bryan display a bonfire memorial quilt. The quilt was made by over 100 sixth grade lan guage arts students to commemorate the 1999 Aggie Bonfire Collapse. Clinton considers dipping into nation’s emergency oil reserves to lower prices WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Clinton said Tuesday that he may tap the nation’s supply of emergency oil if other options fail to reduce the prices of oil. “I have not taken the pe troleum reserve issue off the table, and I certainly would n’t do that in the .event that we don’t seem to have any other options,” Clinton said before leaving the White House for a political trip to Florida. Several Northeast law makers have urged the ad ministration to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, but Energy Secretary Bill Richardson and other administration officials have repeatedly said they do not in tend to do that. The reserve is designed to ease supply disruptions and not to influ ence prices, administration officials have said. There is also the concern that if the strategic reserve were tapped it would “I have not taken the petroleum re serve issue off the table ... we don't seem to have any other options" CLINTON make it more difficult to convince OPEC oil producers to increase pro duction when they meet in March to consider future production strategies. If production goes up, “then oil prices will go down, the gasoline prices will go down, and that’s really what is needed here,” Clinton Tuesday. “We’ll see. I’m enconra? that that might occur.” Richardson visited several lead* oil-producing countries weekend but tailed to o any firm promises that Of- would agree to signified raise its self-imposed prod 1 tion cuts. The cuts have caused prices to soar, from $113 year ago to a nine-yeard 1 around $30 a barrel, andlcd 1 the highest average U.Sf line prices ever. Unadjusted for intlal the price at the pump is $1.47pet:' Ion, according to industry analyst by Lundberg. That is up 6 cents on averageh 1 two weeks ended Friday, the berg Survey of 10,000 stations tionwide reported Sunday. KI be Ur; by the Tex pus. 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