Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 4, 1968 THE BATTALION flU mim Blue Con vertible Provides Answers ■ - ‘i m ,.. 5 v ' ; ' : ' A ' —- -HHH ' ' "V"" ' t/* x ... V ■ ^ ^ - .. ' ^ ' ' ' wummi MOTORIST’S NIGHTMARE A rear-end collision involving two tractor-trailers resulted in this mess along 175 near Flint, Mich. One of the trucks spilled part of its cargo of nails on the highway and traffic was held up until peril to tires was cleared away. There were no serious injuries. (AP Wirephoto) Pre-Med Junior To Attend Air Force Medical Program A Texas Aggie plans to take on a tough job along with medi cal school studies. Richard K. Newman of San Antonio, an A&M pre-med stu- Land Is At Your AGGIELAND FLOWER AND GIFT SHOPPE North Gate • Cards • Party Goods • Baby Albums • Invitations • Personalized Stationary SHOP JOY C E'S Maternity Infants Ladies Petites Girls Boys JOYCE’S 608 Texas Billards Jointed Cue Sticks Pinball Wildwest Ray Gun Shocker Machine Gripper Machine Magazines Magic Supplies Bumper Stickers Decals Novelties Comic Cards Sundries Also AGGIE THEATRE AGGIE DEN “The Home of the Aggies” (Next to Loupot’s) 8 a. m. til midnight 7 days a week dent who marches in the Aggie Band, says he will sell A&M at the University of Texas. Newman, a junior Air Force ROTC cadet at A&M, is one of 50 students across the U. S. se lected to participate in the Air ,F° r ce Medical Education Pro gram of Reserve Officers. The 20-year-old Distinguished Student was accepted by UT’s San Antonio Medical School. He learned of the Air Force medical training program, applied and was selected by a board of offi cers. To take advantage of pre-train ing’ commissioning, Newman will forego his senior year in the Aggie Band. He enters med school next Sep tember. “I get my Aggie ring this sum mer and may buy senior boots just to say I had some,” the cadet remarked. The 2.32-grade average pre- med student said he is interested in surgery and flying and may make a career of the Air Force. “Newman is a very good stu dent,” commented Dr. Howard L. Gravett, A&M faculty advisor of pre-medical and pre-dental stu dents. “Being in his course of study and the Aggie Band re quires ability to plan ahead.” Richard has never posted below a 2.0 grade average. In the A&M scoring system, 3.0 is straight A’s. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Newman, 262 Nash, San Antonio, has attended A&M on thi’ee schol arships, from the San Antonio Optimist Club, Air Force and medical program. He plays the bass clarinet and was the Maroon Band’s best drilled sophomore last year. A 1965 Highlands High gradu ate, he was class president three years and member of the schol astic honor society. “The Air Force medical pro gram is a fine thing for a guy interested in the service and med ical studies,” Newman added. “It is going to be a long but profit able obligation.” The Aggie said several bud dies have joked about whether he will buy the A&M or UT ring. “Those are fighting words,” he declared. “Should anybody ever need selling on A&M, I’ll be available if a graduate isn’t.” Fifty thousand dollars will get you a baby-blue convertible with a gold steering wheel and an ar ray of electronic gear. The gadgety car is not the answer for the man who has everything, but it is providing answers for highway researchers who want to know everything about driver reactions. Engineers at Texas A&M’s Texas Transportation Institute are currently using the Ford Motor Co. test vehicle to study driver behavior in freeway ramp merging studies. From the outside, the car looks like any other Mercury convert ible. Inside, however, it’s loaded with electronic pulsers, counters and other devices capable of re cording 450 bits of information per second regarding body re action to stresses. All the equipment, explained TTI Engineering Research Asso ciate Milton Radke, is connected to a 20-channel magnetic tape recorder in the car’s trunk. The recorder is programmed so the tape can be fed directly into a computer. The equipment, Radke con tinued, measures, records and stores for computer analysis im portant characteristics of the driver controlling the car and the motions of the car on the road. “It can measure both physio logical and mechanical character istics of drivers during various stresses of traffic, road and weather conditions,” he observed. By merely holding the gold steering wheel, the driver’s heart beat and breathing rate are con tinuously monitored, Radke noted. A gold-plated steering wheel is used in the vehicle because the precious metal is the best con ductor for test purposes, the TTI researcher pointed out. The slightest movement in the steering mechanism or touch of the brake or accelerator also is noted by the monitoring device. The gear could even be rigged to determine diffences in a driver when he is smoking a cigarette. Radke said the Ford prototype will be used at TTI’s Safety Prov ing Grounds for a phase of the extensive freeway merging re search project being conducted for the Department of Trans portation’s Bureau of Public Roads. Specifically, TTI is investigat ing the feasibility of a moving vehicle merging control system which will aid freeway drivers in the ramp-merging maneuver with out requiring them to stop. The Ford test vehicle will be used extensively in various pri vate, governmental and institu tional research throughout the nation. 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