The Michigan Daily - Sunday, June 10, 1984 - Animal lovers raid Penn lab - Page 5 Videotapes documenting six years of research involving animals were stolen from a University of Pennsylvania laboratory last week. The tapes, which show researchers performing head in- jury experiements with baboons, were stolen when an animal rights group broke into the lab and destroyed recor- ds and computer terminals. The Animal Liberation Fund said it stole the tapes to protest the "cruel and inhuman" experiments. University of- COLLEGES ficials say the experiments are perfor- med humanely and reveal important information about human brain damage. -from wire reports Weilesley lab project explodes A student at Wellesley College un- derwent surgery for lacerations on her hands last week after a laboratory ex- periment exploded while she was mixing chemicals in the college's Science Center. Officials said Laurie-Ann Nestralla was mixing nitric acid in amino triazlole to conduct a standard chemical reaction when the unex- plained explosion took place. Six other people were treated for inhalation of acid fumes. - The Chronicle of Higher Education Auburn gets dog's inheritance The death of Muskateer, the last of 150 stray dogs who shared a multimillion-dollar inheritance from the estate of a Quaker Oil heiress, frees a $12 million fortune for Auburn University's veterinary school, college officials said. The dog, believed to have been 18 to 20 years old, died over the weekend in a Jupiter, Fla., kennel. It was the last of 150 pets owned by Elanor Ritchey at the time of her death in 1968. She willed her estate to Auburn's veterinary school, but stipulated that the fortune first be used to care for her pets for 20 years or until their deaths, whichever came first. Ritchey developed an interest in Auburn through her veterinarian, Dr. Ivan Fredrickson, whose son went to the school. Frederickson said Monday that he last saw Musketeer, a black mixed-breed, about 10 days ago. "He looked like he might go at anytime," he said. University trustees learned Monday that Musketeer had died of old age. "We ought to declare a school holiday," said R.C. "Red" Bamberg, the trustees' vicechairman. -The Associated Press Va. students protest going co-ed Students at Washington-Lee Univer- sity in Lexington, Va., recently sat-in at the university president's office to protest a plan to accept female un- dergraduates into the all-male in- stitution. A survey by one of the school's sociology classes indicates that, while 82 percent of the faculty members would like to see the school turn co-ed, 53 percent of the students oppose the idea. The university's trustees have asked several committees to consider the admittance of women. They are ex- pected to reach a final decision next month. - The Chronicle of Higher Education OSU student plans video yearbook Ohio State University senior Jamie Guttman is trying to turn his Marketing 751 project into reality. He did a project on the production of a video OSU year- book, and now he wants to create VIDEOSU, a 40-minute video cassette which would sell for $39.95. Guttman is working with a Duke University graduate who has produced similar tapes for Duke. Robert Levitan founded the Duke video in 1982 and is now working on the third annual Duke tape. An associate photography and cinema professor has agreed to let students do the OSU tape as a class project, and Levitan said his Video ven- tures company would handle the production, sales, and advertising. University officials like the idea but say they are concerned about the expense involved and whether the there would be a demand for the product. - The Lantern Fla. paper wins $70,000 suit The Alligator, the student-run daily newspaper at the University of Florida, was awarded $70,000 in University finds by a judge last week to cover the legal fees incurred when the paper sued the school in l980 and 1981. The state supreme court ruled in favor of the paper in both cases. The journalists charged that the university had violated the state's sunshine law by closing the proceedings to the public when they selected two new deans for the school. The supshine law requires that governmental decision-making processes be open to the public. Under an agreement approved by the court, $50,000 of the money won by the paper will be given back to the university for a scholarship program designed to teach students about open government. It will be matched by $50,000 in university funds. "The reason we decided to make the donation was that we didn't feel the lawsuit should be harmful to the university," said former Alligator editor Tom Julin, one of the lawyers in the case. "We thought it should be something beneficial." - The Independent Florida Alligator Spanish King addresses controversial Harvard graduation King Juan Carlos of Spain, ad- dressing the Harvard University com- mencement Thursday, called for a "dialogue between the two Americas," telling students, "we all suffer on seeing the present tragedy of Central America." Saying he represented all Spanish- speaking people and nations, Juan Carlos said solutions must be sought to the political and economic problems of Central and South America. Juan Carlos, who attended Harvard but never graduated, was honored by the university with an honorary doctor of laws degree. "Through democratic institutions he brings new hope to an ancient land," the presentation accom- panying the degree said. Harvard officials had faced criticism for holding the outdoor ceremony at Harvard Yard on Thursday, the second day of the Jewish holy day of Shavuot. One quarter of the school's 7,000 un- dergraduates are Jewish. Students submitted 2,200 signatures on a petition asking the date be changed, but the administration held firm on the schedule, which traditionally calls for commencement the first Thursday after the end of exams. Special arrangements were made for Jewish students and their parents, in- cluding a special religious service Thursday. Because religious Jews can- not travel by car on Shavuot, the school opened dormitory rooms near Harvard Yard. - The Associated Press Smith delays first lady's honorary degree Smith College wants to honor one of its 1943 graduates but will have to wait until her husband finished his re- election campaign. Mary Callahan, a school spokeswoman, says the college wants to cite Nancy Reagan "just for the type work she's done as first lady - the work she's done with drug rehabilitation and foster care." However, Smith will wait until after the November election so the event cannot be interpreted as political. Callahan said a published story was inaccurate in implying there had been pressure put on the college to award Mrs. Reagan an honorary degree. Mrs. Reagan earned a theater degree from the 113-year-old Massachusetts college, the largest privately endowed liberal arts college for women in the country. - United Press International Lab rat bites student A 54-year-old college student got rat bite fever after being bitten by a laboratory rat, the national Centers for Disease Control has reported. The woman, an undergraduate studying psychology in San Bernardino County, Calif., was bitten on the finger Jan. 9, the CDC said Thursday. She had the wound cleaned and got a tetanus shot, but within 12 hours, her finger was swollen and throbbing. She developed fever, chills, nausea, rash, and headache. She was hospitalized for five days and given an- tibiotics, and recovered. - Associated Press Senate debates military spending bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate debates major items in its $291 billion Pentagon spending bill this week, with sparks likely to fly over the MX missile, anti-satellite weapons, and Central American policy. The Senate, which put in two days on the measure last week, returns to it tomorrow, but votes on the top items are not expected until later in the week. The bill provides money for 21 MX missiles without any of the restrictions imposed by the House. The strongest restric- tion would tie missile production to the Soviet Union's return to arms reduction talks. Sen. Alan Dixon (D-Ill.) served notice last week he plans an an attempt early this week to push for a cut of about $6 billion in the Pentagon budget bringing the growth rate after in- flation down 2 percent to about 5 percent, roughly the same figure in the House's $284 billion bill. There also may be a Democratic attempt to force debate on Central American policy. Republicans adroitly stole the Democrat's thunder Friday by a quick voice-vote approval of an amendment taking from the bill $4.4 million for the construction of two permanent supply depots in Honduras, one near an infiltration route used by Salvadoran guerrillas backed by Nicaragua. Democrats, upset their plans to force a policy debate had been co-opted, indicated they would offer an amendment this week restating Friday's move and demand a roll call vote to put each member's position on the record. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) whose Honduran amendment was taken over by Republicans Friday, also contemplate an amendment that would keep the administration from spending any money for covert actions against Nicaragua. Kennedy plans an amen- dment similar to one adopted in the House limiting the cir- cumstances U.S. troops can be sent to Central America for combat without congressional permission. Kennedy ... opposes current Latin policy