n gner Hp BTexas A&.M ine talion Serving the University community ol, 76 No. 180 USPS 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, August 2, 1983 >ut no one 11 hen ny auk tangs totwoi tal ranking; &M tries to keep pace ith technological trend by Tim Widdison rmting Loul \.ir Force's Is, Louthan that’s not the wishl with in the table, thewi ce, it was offense, with ick. But it k field and s to run andi yards andthi ty and his sttj threw for l| iteve Besselman of Houston will be gazing tard topile»;gtently at the front of the Academic hckersonandhiilding for about the next two months. abbingthe defense-not| ill to the taill - his forte e gone to tk|| >itch. Withouii ig — orthrowl itage. said in a tell ;hed in thefc ooking for am : joined theW and great ak in theoffeiM Battalion Reporter s geared foi Students someday may earn a de- ms haveago«K at T exas a&M without setting it’s difficultrf®) n campus. °ns recruiti Instead, they will take coursework ers atothti home through computer prog- \ir Force Crl'This may be just one of the influ xes technology will have on educa- country whotP' n,; he future, Dr. Charles Pinnell, >aid “His akiV ate d e P ut y chancellor for en- ikenusfroniW r ' n S at Texas A&M, said , n y >> hursday. Louthan. “ft “Universities will have to pay atten- )d runner i )n ’ ‘ n m y 0 pi n i° n » to this area,” Pin- d offense foifK sa 'T Children who are learning by com- iplishmentsoi*g r j n secondary schools and come oer of runni«||T exas a&M or other universities ne more seitf l a college education will expect mething more than what universi- Kjprovide today, Pinnell said. The "‘inputer age generation will expect a ffiputerized college education, he lid. ilp 13l'f'B esearC ^ 1 ' nto us ' n & new technolo- •IC LakC§si ne{ j ucat i on j s a l r eady underway. i i v-j rrp lykdeotape has been used for some )llingCme at several universities, Pinnell i M although Lexas A&M has not C L GOWBl it extensively. A national consor- B of universities is developing a brary of videotapes for educational 'poses, he said. Press Internal E _ When! Stepetak if| ty took “the [I got marriekf 1 dug. The coil adding vows •[ in Puget Sot| A major disadvantage of videotapes is that they provide only a programmed lecture without any stu dent-teacher interaction, Pinnell said. Computer-assisted training prog rams are another effect of technology on education. Texas A&M currently is using a program called PLATO, he said. The Programmed Logic for Auto mated Teaching Operations was de signed at the University of Illinois in the late 1960s. The system is now op erated and marketed by Control Data Corporation out of Minneapolis. PLATO is an interactive program using touch sensitive screens on videoterminals, Pinnell said. The sys tem can be hooked up to the main office in Minneapolis to obtain a wide variety of programs, he said. Advantages of PLATO include providing a self-directed education for students and interaction with the program. It is flexible enough to allow students to learn at their own pace, Pinnell said, and also can answer questions. PLATO can be used for vocational training, Pinnell said. For example, American Airlines uses the touch sen sitive screens for a program on how to start jet engines, he said. The major disadvantage of PLA TO is a shortage of software prog rams now available, Pinnell said. Cur rently, it is a time consuming process to design the programs, he said. A test project starting in September will examine the influence of PLATO as a supplementary educational tool in a few selected math and English courses, Pinnell said. The selected classes will then be compared with classes not using the computer prog ram to determine how helpful the program is. What all this means for the future of education is still speculation, Pin nell said, and long range results may not appear for 10 to 20 years. The effects on the student may be a more intense, faster paced education than what exists today, Pinnell said. Students will learn when, where and what they want, he said. Teachers may have a chance to teach students on a more personal basis, he said. They will be able to teach 100 to 150 students on a person al basis, he said. Computer programs also will re place textbooks on college students’ shelves, he said. Of course, some personal guidance for particular students still will be necessary, Pinnell said, and not all courses can be taught by computer. Questions involving judgmental or philosophical aspects of a course still should be handled through teacher- student discussion, he said. After all, no program can contain all the answers to all the questions, Pinnell said. inside ssified 6 :al 3 le wore b)uf®* n ' on s 2 hofpinkan^B rts 1 ;rs in her haiip te 5 was in a tra% lit. Temony wa! judge who it . He held u| aring the n* ic signatures ten in watf [ said the » ,f hout a hitdi w anxious mi 11 y water threi le bride and! ist of the forecast rtly cloudy skies today with a e happy coiffigh of 95 and a 20 percent chance v divers fom'JTisolated thundershowers. The ssed spearf |' v tonight near 73. Partly cloudy under as 20llfednesday with a 20 percent s on shore fhance of showers and a high near beach cher^B- Shuttle rollout gets late start CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The shuttle Challenger slowly made its SVk-mile journey early today to the oceanside launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center, where officials will pre pare it for its third blastoff. Stacked atop a giant land crawler, the shuttle was scheduled to move at midnight but was delayed 19 minutes because of problems with the internal communications system, space center official Dick Young said. The land crawler crept along at 1 mph on its seven-hour trip through darkness with its 12 million-pound load, he said. The Challenger’s five-man crew will have a “dress rehearsal” for launch Thursday in preparaton fo the Aug. 30 trip into space. The Challenger’s third journey into space had been scheduled for Aug. 20 but problems developed test ing a data relay satellite that will be used during the mission and the launch had to be pushed back by 10 days. The spaceplane is scheduled to blast off at 1:15 a.m. — the first night launch in the shuttle program — and is slated to land at 2:45 a.m. Sept. 4 at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Congressional panel United Press International WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will be able to produce nerve gas for the first time in 14 years under an agreement reached by Senate and House conferees working on a $200 billion military spending bill. A congressional source said Mon day the negotiators agreed in a closed session to lift the moratorium on nerve gas production on the condi tion that one old nerve gas weapon be destroyed for each new one made. The conferees are expected to meet all week to resolve remaining differences in the overall legislation, and it is still possible the agreement over nerve gas could be changed be fore the final bill is sent to the full gallery trains simulation Mobile by fire by Karen Schrimsher Battalion Staff Texas A&M fire fighting students Can train in a situation similar to that of a real house fire, thanks to the loan of a mobile training gallery by the National Draeger, Inc. The company loaned the $ 100,000 worth of equipment to the Oil and Hazardous Material Control division of the Texas Engineering Extension Service. The gallery will be on loan for an indefinite period because Texas A&M is considered the foremost fire training school in the country, said Draeger sales manager David W. Thomas. The gallery is composed of three rooms: the control room, the exercise room and the training room. The control room is a small cubicle where the training sessions are con trolled and viewed by the use of televi sion monitors. Infrared lights allow the controller to see the action inside the training room even when the training session is held in total dark ness and the entire session may be recorded on a video recorder. The exercise room contains a weight pulley and a laddermill. The weight pulley consists of a rope with a handle and a weight attached at the opposite end. While wearing brea thing apparatus, trainees are re quired to complete a specific number of cycles on the weight pulley. Climbing on the laddermill causes the rungs to move in a downward di rection. The climbing speed and the total distance are adjusted on the con trol panel. In the training room, a maze is set for trainees. The maze itself is made of screened side panels and particle board floor panels and is three tiers high. The modular componentsof the maze may be rearranged to produce different patterns and degrees of dif ficulty. The atmospheric conditions, such as heat, smoke and darkness are con trolled and used to make the course more difficult. The training room can be heated by three 2,000 watt heaters to simulate the hot environment en countered in a burning structure. Tom DeLallo, the designer and builder of the gallery, said the gallery does not need to be heated here be cause it is hot enough in Texas. A smoke generator uses an electric ally-heated head and carbon dioxide gas smoke by atomizing a special fluid. An irritating gas containing amyl acitate also can be used in the training room. Obstacles such as tunnels and hatches, and fire sounds such as screams and sirens are used to create anxiety and stress. The training room is used for improving orientation, practicing maneuvers and sharpen ing reactions with the use of a brea thing apparatus under conditions similar to those encountered in real life. U.S. Stone returns to United Press International U.S. special envoy Richard Stone returned to Washington today after a two-week tour in Central America, saying his first meeting with a rebel chief from El Salvador was followed by “very useful” talks with Nicara guan leaders. In Honduras, President Roberto Suazo Cordova was hospitalized for what government officials termed a routine medical check-up. Sources outside the government said he had suffered a heart attack. Stone’s plane set down at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland at 12:20 a.m.. Earlier, he wrapped up his trip by meeting for two hours Monday with Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel d’Escoto, junta leader Daniel Ortega and the head of the Foreign Ministry’s department on U.S. rela tions, Saul Arana. “The Nicaraguan leaders inter preted my visit in a very useful man ner and turned my desire to visit Nicaragua into an invitation,” Stone said before leaving Managua Airport. “I can only tell you the talks were very useful.” Nicaragua’s Sandinista rulers were expected to comment today on Stone’s visit, his first since President Reagan sent an aircraft carrier battle group to Nicaragua’s Pacific coast and organized maneuvers involving up to 4,000 American troops in neighbor ing Honduras. Stone also voiced optimism about his meeting last Sunday in Bogota, Colombia with Ruben Zamora, a lead er of the Salvadoran guerrillas’ poli tical arm, the Democratic Revolution ary Front. photo by Sally Schwierzke Shake it up Tyler Nilson, 2, of College Station cooled Bryan-College Station area has been off Friday with a milkshake from the having, the creamery has been doing a creamery. With all the warm weather the booming business. OKs nerve gas production House and Senate. If it does reach the floor of both chambers, it is sure to face another tough fight. The House narrowly voted June 16 to continue the unilateral U.S. ban on nerve gas production. On July 13, in a dramatic vote that saw Vice President George Bush break a 49-49 tie, the Senate authorized resumption of nerve gas production. Rep. Ed Bethune, R-Ark, who has consistently fought the plan in the House, predicted it would be defe ated again. The conferees, working on a spending bill of about $200 billion for the 1984 Pentagon budget, accepted the Senate language that prohibits final assembly of the weapons before Oct. 1, 1985, congressional sources said. It also would require presiden tial certification that such production is in the national interest. The United States and the Soviet Union are signatories to a 1925 pro tocol that outlaws first use of chemical weapons, but both sides have stock piles and defensive equipment in case the other party breaks the treaty.