esday, November 21,2000 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Page 5 A THE BATTALION EERing into youthful minds iy Noni Sridhara r/je Battalion A $1.7 million grant from the National Insti tute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) I Has been given to Texas A&M’s Center for En- I Hironmental and Rural Health to begin a project I Balled Partencrship for Environmental Education I flnd Rural Health (PEER), aimed at improving | Bcieoce education for middle school students in lural areas. Larry Johnson, a professor of veterinary Inatomy and public health, said in a press release ^■hat the program targets rural schools because |J§hey are less likely to receive current informa- [ion on scientific subjects. Johnson said these students need this type of ducation the most. “There is an increased concern for environ- lentally related diseases in a rural setting, such s lead poisoning, birth defects and other condi- |ions caused by expasure to chemicals,” he said. Johnson said for a long time he has been in- erested in promoting science among youth. “ I grew up on a farm, and ever since then, two )f my childhood goals were to perform public ork as a scientist and also to be an inventor,” ™ie said. He said another reason for targeting this age ange is because the highest dropout rate occurs in the ninth grade in these underprivileged areas. “Prior to this time, the students are extreme ly malleable,” Johnson said. “This is when we want to jump in and stimulate the students’ in terest in the biologically related fields.” Johnson said three main factors helping make this program effective—the faculty at the Cen ter for Environmental Education and Rural Health, the College of Education and contacts with schools within the rural system initiative. “The College of Education helps package the curricula in a way that is very palatable to the students,” he said. Johnson said faculty at the center ask heads of schools in rural areas, if they would like a sci entist to make a presentation at the school. Johnson said he fondly recalls his trip to Hereford in West Texas this week. “In our center we have a lot of anatomical specimens, which makes the students’ eyes open and jaws drop,” he said To coordinate with Quit Smoking Week and teach the students that smoking is bad for their health, Johnson said he brought half a dead dog with a tumor. He said the dog looked like a reg ular dog until he turned it over and all the stu dents stared in awe. “This little blind girl came up to the front of the classroom, and she felt the tumor in the dog. I asked her to guess what it was, and she said it was a tumor which was indicative of cancer.,” he said.“When I told her she was right, she had all the determination she needed and said she would go become a scientist to help treat animals and humans.” Johnson said the girl’s statement shows the need for more programs to encourage science ed ucation ^ Marisa Cervantes-Flores, a former teacher in the Rio Grande Valley and Class of ‘95, said al though she has not seen a similar type of pro gram ,she feels would make the students more valuable to society. “Many of these students do not feel they have the potential or opportunity to pursue jobs in the scientific field, so they just settle for blue-collar work and act satisfied with their positions,” she said. The majority of the presentations deal with environmental issues because the students some times live in polluted environments and can un- ■ derstand the importance of the situation better. “There are many times when students want to jump out there and do calculations to solve wa ter runoff problems or take on the role of a con gressman to fix the state of their environment,” Johnson said. By the end of this year, Johnson and other Texas A&M professors will have spoken to more than 5,000 students. lu vaccines reach companies first irpo ration, TILL SET im w/eou(W; S. Toas fe, in.TXTTM 9) 696-7250 o Tom'i WASHINGTON (AP) — Dr. aymond Scalettar is angry: He has o send elderly lung-disease patients o nearby supermarkets for a flu hot. Why? Some huge grocery hains received thousands of vac- ine doses before manufacturers hipped them to many private doc- ors whose patients are so frail in fluenza could kill them. The sick standing in store lines is not doctors’ only frustration. Manu facturers acknowledge shipping shots to large corporations for em ployee-vaccination programs ahead of many doctors. “We have patients on cancer ■ chemotherapy, who have chronic ■ bronchitis and obstructive lung dis- lorder, and immunodeficiency — ■ people who really need the protec- "‘p ^ soqn, as .possible’” said Itllettar, a prominent Washington physician who eventually will get the vaccines but does not want his sickest patients to wait. “It doesn’t make sense for corpo rations to give it to healthy people and we can’t give it to sick people.” Doctor after doctor reports being cornered by healthy 30-somethings [demanding vaccination. Tempers flared at a recent South Carolina vac cine fair that temporarily ran out of shots and turned away 100 people. Influenza is not threatening yet and plenty of doses are coming. Federal health officials are urg- doesn't make sense for corpora tions to give it to healthy people and we can't give it to sick people” — Raymond Scalettar physician ing healthy people to wait until late November for vaccination. “We want to make sure that high- risk people get vaccinated first,” stresses Dr. Keiji Fukuda of the Cen ters for Disease Control and Pre vention. Other people “are anxious, and we recognize that. But know that more vaccine is on the way and it’s pretty quiet right now on the in fluenza front.” Contrary to earlier fears, the CDC insists there is no impending shortage. Some 75 million flu shots ultimately will be distributed. Typically, doctors finish vacci nating most high-risk patients, and lots of healthy people, by late Octo ber. This year, vaccine shipments only recently began and just two- thirds of doses will be sent out be fore December. November or December is not too late to vaccinate healthy people, the CDC insists. While some flu strains typically start circulating by then, in 14 of the last 18 winters, large outbreaks did not begin until January or later. It only takes two weeks after vaccination to reap full protection. The flu typically kills 20,000 Americans annually, mostly the el derly and chronically ill. Thus, they need the earliest protection. Capitalism means high-volume corporations that placed early orders may get their vaccines before many private doctors. Manufacturers like Aventis Pasteur are helping the CDC publicize the high-risk recommen dations, but no one can enforce them. So the CDC, receiving physician complaints like Scalettar’s, is asking corporations to offer the first shots only to employees who are high- risk, and vaccinate healthy workers later. —Science in Brief— Physicist accepts position in Asia HOUSTON (AP) — Supercon- ductivity physicist Paul Chu, a sci entist at the University of Hous ton, has been appointed the next president of Hong Kong Univer sity of Science and Technology. Chu will lead the institution for “a few years” starting in July 2001 and then return full time to UH, according to Monday’s edi tions of the Houston Chronicle. “I really had no desire to be a president, but this was such a unique situation it was too good to turn down,” said the 58-year- old Chu Chu will retain his en dowed faculty chair at UH but not be paid for it. Chu has been UH’s most prominent professor since his 1987 discovery of a compound that allows electricity to flow with out resistance at a temperature higher than the boiling point of ni trogen — high-temperature su perconductivity. Considered the Holy Grail of the field, it is ex pected to lead to better ways to store energy, propel trains and transmit electricity. The discovery earned Chu a host of awards and honors, in cluding the National Medal of Science in 1988. m artist 31, menl >n it 575 tiofl /N! utfj Rd CHINA UGHT Special Htfianksgiving ^Buffet ‘Turkey • Jiam • Hoast‘Beef &> [All the Trimmings Tins Ckinese Tiisfies All you can eat only $ 7. 25 - with this ad receive $ 1 off Open llam-Spm Thanksgiving, Christmas & New Years Day Orders to go - 696-8045 404-Z University Dr. East College Station Travis B. Bryan III, Attorney at Law Former Brazos County District Attorney Certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization in Criminal Law TAMO Class of 1969 Craig M. 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Huntley Class of ‘79 313 B South College Avenue College Station, TX 77840 (979)846-8916 SCHOOL OF ALLIED HEALTH 3601 4th Street ♦ Lubbock, Texas ♦ 79430 ♦ 8 0 6-743 - 3223 Department of Rehabilitation Sciences Master of Athletic Training ■ Preparation for NATAB0C Certification exam & Texas Licensure exam ■ Hands-on exposure to a wide variety of Athletic Training settings ■ Involvement of experienced and diversified faculty and practicing Athletic Trainers ■ Access to state-of-the-art research and educational equipment Master of Occupational Therapy ■ Accredited 3 + 3 program offered at Amarillo, Lubbock, & Odessa ■ Strong clinical, business, & community health focus ■ Emphasis on service learning in the community ■ Opportunities for interdisciplinary study with other Rehabilitation Sciences students Master of Physical Therapy ■ Recognized faculty on the cutting edge of research, technology, and practice / ■ State-of-the-art motion analysis, gait, and balance research laboratories ■ A strong Rehabilitation Business and Management component ■ Accredited West Texas program with a solid academic and clinical reputation in Texas and Nationwide Master of Vocational Rehabilitation ■ Preparation for CRC certification Examination * Distance based program that enables students to study from anywhere in West Texas, or indeed the world! ■ Particularly suitable for working professionals who wish to acquire or upgrade their skills in vocational rehabilitation ■ Applicants may be admitted with advanced standing that reduces the number of hours needed to complete the degree. 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