The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 05, 2004, Image 2

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694-0800
The Battaeion
To read about the benefits of grassfed beef:
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BREITLING
1884
Ag dept, to require more tests
before confirming disease
Graduates
Continued from pagel
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government is
setting more stringent standards for when it will
announce that an initial screening test for mad
cow disease has yielded a suspicious result, the
Agriculture Department said Wednesday.
The department is now requiring additional pre
liminary test results before the public is informed. A
leader of the beef industry hailed the new procedure,
while a consumer advocate expressed skepticism.
The change comes after two cases in which
the department announced that screening tests
could not rule out that animals had the fatal
brain-wasting disease. More exacting tests later
showed the cattle were free of mad cow.
The new system, which took effect Wednesday,
uses the screening tests as they were designed to
be used — with analysis of three samples of
tissue, said Jim Rogers, a spokesman for the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
A carcass is considered suspicious if an initial
sample indicates the possible presence of the mis
shapen protein blamed for mad cow, also known
as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE.
Under the new procedure, the results of two
more samples would then be examined, Rogers
said. If either additional sample yielded incon
clusive results, the findings would be announced
publicly and definitive tests would be conducted
at the department’s National Veterinary Services
Laboratories in Ames, Iowa.
Under the screening system the department had
used since June, the public was informed when
the initial sample yielded inconclusive results,
even if the next two tests were both negative.
Laughlin is a 1
graduate and his son, Bri;
scheduled among thedegtis
didates to receive a bacielt:
political science.
A&M Student Body Pro
Jack Hildebrand said L
have a special connection»r|
graduates.
“He understands the exp fcccupyi
Starr
A set
latest a*
ight SI
itchco
The 1
•ast to
I:
Foundation
Continued from page 1
hydraulic fracturing.”
Holditch said the Lucas
Gold Medal is the top award
given to petroleum engineers.
“We have to keep our focus
on achieving multiple outcomes
simultaneously,” Holditch said
of the petroleum engineer
ing department. “Our faculty
needs to be really good at both
teaching and research.”
Holditch, who has worked
for companies such as Shell Oil
Company and Schlumberger,
has done his recent research
while also serving as depart
ment head.
“Our department has always
been ranked as the best petro
leum engineering department,
and we plan to improve upon
our past success,” Holditch
said. “We are focusing our
research efforts in the depart
ment to develop an ‘industry
directed’ research effort. This
means that our faculty and
graduate students are develop
ing solutions for the problems
that are of most interest to the
oil and gas industry.”
Darla-Jean Weatherford,
communications specialist
for the petroleum engineering
department, said receiving an
award from the SPE is spe
cial, but receiving one from
AIME also, as Holditch will,
is prestigious.
Sue Kindred, board liaison
of SPE and awards program
manager, said the award will
be given to Holditch at the
Annual Technical Conference
and Exhibition in Dallas in
October 2005.
Holditch, who earned three
degrees at A&M, said “1 think
receiving the award is an
honor for me and for Texas
A&M University. Much of the
work that I have done over
the years has been in coop
eration with graduate students
and faculty members at Texas
A&M University.”
Gerardo Jimenez, a
senior petroleum engineer
ing major, said he believes
that Holditch receiving this
award can be an encourage
ment to current Aggies in
their pursuit of success.
“Dr. Holditch’s achieve
ments in industry research
and his long career as a stu
dent at A&M can help moti
vate us the in petroleum engi
neering department because
he has been a solid profes
sional role model,” Jimenez
said. “He is most deserving
of this award, and it is a privi
lege to be his student.”
es the students have
while attending A&M,”HiM n habit
said. “He should haveasa |rj]i a ino
comfort while addressing)!
of fellow Aggies and 1 hopei
be glad to be back on campisj
short while.”
Political science gradual
tant lecturer James Cottnii
Armitage and Laughlin have;,
tial to inspire students tok
more involved in law andJ
aware of what governmentfc]
“These two can really pul:
to what students have studieaa
in political science classes,"Cd
said. “They are people wiioi
played very important roles 11
nation’s political process.”
Hildebrand said it is ali
inspiring to listen to speaker;
have experiences that studenti!
imagine having.
“For the students that arek
ning new lives outside Ai!
hope there is importance gk
the power we have asAmerici
influence our society,” Hilde! 1
said. “These two menhaveti
ed much of their lives tor
public service, andweneedi
strong leaders to makethisi
mitment as well.”
those 1
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ome b;
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girl wit
Jrody),
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once wi
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success
with “T
indulge
of these
leading
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[novie c
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““oving
The;
Expedition
Continued from page
- J
Fire
Continued from page 1
northwest of Abilene.
Everyone escaped except Colton Blain
Dentler, 6, and his sister Ryann, who was res
cued by Russell Dentler and revived by Amy
Dentler, Patsy Teague told the Reporter-News
at the time. But the family was unable to find
Colton, Teague has said, adding that the home
burned in seven minutes.
The five surviving children are “being
taken care of,” Moore said, declining to com
ment further.
The grand jury returned 28 indictments,
seven on each person. Each has been charged
with one count of capital murder, one count of
second-degree attempted murder, one count of
third-degree possession and transport of anhy
drous ammonia, and four counts of child endan-
germent, a state-jail felony, Moore said.
Anhydrous ammonia is used in making meth-
amphetamine.
The four were jailed in Jones County, each in
lieu of $177,500 bond.
Oil
Continued from page 1
The main reason for soar
ing prices nowadays is that
global demand has risen faster
than producers had expected,
leaving the market with very
little cushion in the event of
an unexpected supply problem,
terror-related or otherwise.
PFC Energy, a Washington-
based consulting firm, estimates
that total global production will
average 82.1 million barrels a
day in 2004, or just 100,000 bar
rels a day above consumption.
“OPEC is putting out
a lot of oil, but the market
is absorbing it,” said Jamal
Qureshi, an oil market analyst
at PFC Energy.
On Tuesday, US. light crude
for September delivery to a
closing price of $44.15 — an
all-time high on the New York
Mercantile Exchange. Oil
prices also hit new heights in
London on Tuesday, closing
at $40.64 on the International
Petroleum Exchange.
Recent geopolitical uncer
tainty in countries such as
Russia and Iraq has made
energy traders edgy, raising
fears that the supply-demand
balance could tilt further in the
wrong direction.
In Russia, the concern is
over the fate of troubled oil
giant Yukos, which produces 2
percent of the world’s oil but is
under pressure from the gov
ernment to come up with bil
lions of dollars in back taxes.
Fears of an immediate drop
in output abated Wednesday,
sending global oil prices
lower, after Yukos said Russian
authorities will allow the com
pany to use its bank accounts
to “continue financing produc
tion activities.”
the Institute of Nat
Archaeology evQry year,
Donny Hamilton, presidents
Institute of Nautical Archaeot
The Institute of Nai
Archaeology is a private noiv;
it entity, not part of
System; however, the
closely together with A&M pis
ing facilities and the INApro'
research, Hamilton said.
“The INA is the most rail
of all entities that conducts
archaeology, we do more reseat
anyone else in the field,” Halt
said, “really this is the centers
world of nautical archaeology,'
As an additional benefitK
A&M campus, all theexcavaK
the Institute, includingWachs®
teach in the anthropology dt!
ment at A&M.
Junior biology major andts
enthusiast Faegen Lee is ei
about the implications
tute’s research,
“I think the INA is a
zation in that it allows us tom
stand ourselves by looking atW
from another perspective,” Lee
The Aegean expedition
renew its study next year. For’
the team plans to widen itsse
to include sites from a Persiani
sion of Greece in 480 B.C
erving
f Shy;
for the
in the tl
)f scari
Why bother with parking
when you can walk
to TAMU?
- New LOWER prices
- Only 2 blocks from TAMU
- Now preleasing for summer/fall
a Del Sol
696-3455
aggie.inn@verizon.net
Texas A&M
Univers
ty Dr
n
o_
Church
St
n>
CfQ
n>
CO
s
qo_
rt>
CO
£
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n>
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p
Cross St
Casa Del
Sol
The Battalioi
Joshua Hobson, Editor in Chief
Elizabeth Webb, Managing Editor
Brian Cain, News Editor
Julie Bone, Aggielife Editor
Jordan Meserole, Sports Editor
Sara Foley, Opinion Editor
Lauren Rouse, Copy Chief
Ruben DeLuna, Graphics Editor
JP Beato III, Photo Editor
Kendra Kingsley, Radio Producer
Yen Hai Cao, Webmaster
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