The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 7, 1978-Page 5 'Baboon Six' saved; experiments halted 'UOEE EIUEKII (Continued from Page 1) a Committee to Save the Baboon Seven, there would be six more baboons on the sleds," Smith said. BUT SMITH also said she had mixed feelings about the new development in the matter. "I certainly don't feel vindicated about it. I'm very suspicious of the reasoning behind it. I feel some per- sonal defeat in that there's no way those six baboons are going home intact," she said, referring to the fact that no specific plans have been released for the future of the test animals. Robbins said he couldn't predict the baboons' future use for other research, saying only that "it's not really in our (HSRI)hands." THOUGH THE "baboon seven" con- troversy may be resolved, both Gaede and Smith agree that their committee has just begun its battle against cruelty to animals. "This is only one incident of many experiments that have been going on for a long time. We want to meet with University officials. We . want to establish an overview committee on experiments on animals." Smith also insists the committee is. here to stay. "I think they (the resear- chers) intended to stop the issues by stopping the testing. Most of us who've been involved know that this is just the tip of the iceberg." University researchers used 23 baboons in similar experiments two years ago. Melvin said all information to be gathered for this project will be collected within the next few months. BIRD SAVER WASHINGTON (AP) - Bluebirds, once in danger of extinction, are in- creasing their numbers thanks to the efforts of Dr. Lawrence Zeleny's pro- gram of conservation, according to the National Geographic Society. Zeleny has sponsored the place- ment of nesting boxes along trails in the United States and Canada since 1966, when he retired. There are now hundreds of the boxes, including those on a 2,000-mile trail in Canada. Eastern bluebirds have declined in population as much as 90 per cent over the past four decades because of threats from rival birds like starlings and house sparrows and because humans have destroyed their natural nesting places - wooden posts and dead trees, Geographic reports. The mountain and western blue- birds have also suffered declining populations over the years. 4 Bertoia: Four years of Council frustration Yy (Continued from Page 1) The major issues that Bertoia thinks have been lost by the wayside amidst the on-going Republican-Democratic feud include the housing problem, and the relationship of the city and, the University. The University sprawls across Ann Arbor soaking up acres of tax-free land, and the debate still rages as to whether the 'U' supports its own weight in paying for city services, like police and fire protection. "WE'VE NEVER reached an agree- ment regarding the amount of support they should be giving us," says Bertoia, who is known on Council as the member with an axe to grind against the Uni- versity. "That's a vendetta that the University officials and I have had for a long time." Bertoia says he recognizes the unquantifiable values the University of Michigan adds to the city of Ann Arbor. "But there are still some costs that the taxpayers have to bear, and I think some of that should be alleviated." Bertoia says getting the University to pull its own weight "is one of the things I leave unaccomplished, and Irsuspect it will stay unaccomplished for a long time.", DESPITE THE frustrations imposed by partisan deadlock, Bertoia does look with favor on his accomplishments over the last four years. He cites such inno- vations as natural ice rinks in neighbor- hood parks - "That was one of my pet projects and I got it," he says. Bertoia says he is glad to see theafire department better equipped now than it was four years ago, and he takes pride in expanding neighborhood recreation facilities. "I'm very interested in neigh- borhoods," he says. Bertoia admits the irony in that his major accomplishments have all been on the smaller scale - neighborhoods. He says that as the only area where a councilmember can make progress, even while the larger problems like housing go unfinished, are small projects. IT IS CONCERN for neighborhood that led Bertoia to introduce the ill- fated pornography ordinance that went down to a crushing defeat last summer.' Bertoia still recalls the pornography bill as "a disappointment." Summing up the last four years, Ber- toia says, "The part that's really enjoy- able has not been the Monday nights (Council meetings), it's been the other six days. I average twenty to thirty calls a week from people with problems, and that's the fun part of it." 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