Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, March 2, 1984 Will talking tractor be farmer’s backseat driver? By DAINAH BULLARD Reporter A farmer’s best friend is his tractor — and one day soon it will be able to talk to him, giving him advice on how to better op erate the machine. A team of agricultural engi neers at Texas A&M is devel oping the talking tractor to help save fuel and money on the farm. The talking will be done by a microcomputer that tells the driver how to operate the tly. tractor more efficiently. “Our main objective is to doc ument how Texas farmers use tractors,” said Dr. Bill A. Stout, professor of agricultural engi neering. “Our second objective is to conserve fuel.” Studies by the Texas Agricul tural Extension Service predict the microcomputer system may cut farm fuel consumption as much as 25 percent. “The microcomputer mon itors or reads what the tractor is doing,” Stout said. “It tells the operator what his work load is (heavy, light, etc.), and suggests a travel speed and work gear to get the most out of fuel.” Stout said tractors perform several levels of work, ranging from heavy (plowing), to light (planting). Fuel is wasted when a power ful tractor designed to perform heavy work is used for light work, unless the operator ad justs gears and speeds correctly. The computer monitors trac tor speed through sensors con nected to the tractor’s front and back wheels. Stout said. Other sensors measure the amount of pull the tractor is using to move its load. The tractor used in the pro gram is a John Deere 4440, loaned to the University by the Deere company. “Our budget wouldn’t allow the purchase of a tractor,” Stout said. “That tractor is worth $40,000 to $50,000. We sought help from John Deere and they loaned us the tractor and gave us some financial support.” The tractor program is sup ported by three groups: the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, the Center for Energy and Mineral Resources, and John Deere. Stout said a “bal lpark figure” of about $100,000 has been spent on the program since it began three years ago. “We use the money mainly to buy equipment, like computer equipment and other kinds of sensors,” Stout said. “It also goes to supporting the grad stu dents v^ho work on the pro gram. There are five grad stu dents working on it now.” Stout and his associate, Dr. Stephen W. Searcy, assistant professor of agricultural engi neering, have been involved in the program since it began. Stout is in charge of the me chanical aspects of the project; Searcy, the microcomputer work. ods for speech synthesis in th l A&M scientists to go to sea for ocean drilling tests microcomputer. ThouglH computer is not yetspealiB is measuring efficiency,k \Voul « In fact, the tractor andB son outer system were farm last fall. Ron Ca > “ I he microcomputer [Hissing mentation worked beautHr cas« which was what we wpfiBat de. know," Stout said. "We’r jjjblecan being fully operational B^y. Out microcomputerrepra Briati a major investment of tut jdences. money.” Igai nsl Binty the ; his namt cause Of! ing appl By SUZY FISK Reporter Texas A&M scientists will head out to sea in January 1985 to begin a 10-year ocean drilling project its director says is the biggest ever. Texas A&M officials are ex pected to sign a $124 million contract today to direct “the largest ocean drilling project in the world,” said Dr. Phillip Ra- binowitz, director of the Ocean Drilling Program. The contract designates the University as the science opera tor for the program, which is sponsored by the National Sci ence Foundation. Responsibili ties of the science operator are providing logistical and techni cal support for a team of scien tists, managing each two-month cruise, drilling and distributing core samples and the coordinat ing, editing and publishing of the final research product. Rabinowitz said the program will help scientists study what the ocean floor is made of and how it’s formed. Other studies will be on the evolution of the ocean basins and how they are formed, the evolution of passive and active type continental mar gins and paleo-oceanography — the study of the environment of the ocean including plant and animal fossils. A new tech nique on the development of bare rock drilling will be also tested. The ship selected for the in- ternatonal program will be the SEDCO-BP 471, “the finest drill ship in the world,” Rabinowitz said. The 16,000 ton ship, owned jointly by SEDCO and British Petroleum, was selected to drill at various sites around the world. The ship can drill to depths of 30,000 feet, but the deepest drilling during this program will be 27,000 feet. There are 55 crew members and the ship will accommodate 50 scientists. Scientific direction will be provided by the Joint Oceano graphic Institution for Deep Earth Sampling, who will also select scientists from U.S. oceanographic institutions and those from other participating nations, Rabinowitz said. The international members are from Canada, Germany, France, Japan, England and the European Science Foundation. Each cruise will have a different team of scientists who will be re sponsible for information gath ered during each two-month period that the ship is out. Additional funds will be pro vided to convert pan of the ship into a “four-story house” for the scientists to live in andu other 12,000 square feetc oratory space. The shij have a computer system keeps the ship in position lime of drilling and willa low direct contact will headquarters here at anyi The University will bd drilling operations cenj core repository in the' A&M Research Park to off 1 lighway 60. Rl THE UNDERGROUND Sbisa Basement Canned Soft Drink Special Friday 3/2/84-Thursday 3/8/84 $1.99 6 pack OFFER GOOD TO f HE LAST PACK “The Best Food. The Lowest Price.” Measle cases drop to new low United Press International AT LANTA — Measles cases have reached their lowest level in 71 years, representing a 99.7 percent reduction from the pre vaccine era, federal health offi cials said Thursday. The national Centers for Dis ease Control said a provisional total of 1,436 cases of measles were reported in 1983, a record Schooner’s Landing Seafood Restaurant Univ. 1 29th Schooner’s vc. N Tarrow Unique Atmosphere Orders taken at the boat! Try our daily specials 606 Tarrow (off Univ. East) Open ll-10Tue-Sun 764-7439 low incidence rate of 0.6 cases per 100,000 population and the fewest cases since the nation be gan keeping records on the dis ease in 1912. “This is a 99.7 percent reduc-. tion from the pre-vaccine era, when from 1950 to 1962, an an nual average of 525,730 cases were reported ...,” the CDC said. Dr. Robert Aimler of the CDC’s immunization division said measles “is no longer a ma jor public health problem but it remains a public health concern because we have not eliminated indigenous measles (non-im- ported) entirely.” Most of the 1983 cases oc curred in college students and in children under age five who are not directly affected by state immunization requirements. The 1983 total represented a 16.2 percent decrease in mea sles cases from the 1,714 cases in 1982, which also was a record low year. Foui stales accouH more than 77 percent ofii digenous cases — Indian: nois, California and Flohdi Federal health offtcials hoped to eliminate thitc hood disease and laundi education and vaccinatkxK paign to accomplish that a But they failed to achiotl Oct. 1, 1982, eradication« line. Judge “We do know that when the effort to control measles is re laxed the disease returns. If it is not eliminated, the opportunity exists for measles to re-establish itself in our population.” Of the nation's 3,139 coun ties, 3002 or 95.6 percent, re ported no measles cases during the entire year and every county was free of measles for at least six consecutive weeks in 1983. Zc Unitei HOUS Executive explains expectation By LISA PEDERSEN Reporter An executive for Tenneco Inc. discussed what his com pany expects from engineering graduates who are first year employees with the company Thursday night. Joe B. Foster, executive vice president for Tenneco, began his lecture, “What do you call an Aggie five years after Gradua tion?”, with anecdotes on bus stations. “The reason for the bus sto ries is to give you a clue on what you can do early in your career to avoid missing the bus and take off like a rocket instead,” Foster said. The bus stories were jokes. Foster’s outline on what it takes to start the countdown toward success was no joke. Tenneco is looking for engi neers who can think clearly, get the job done, communicate their ideas, provide leadership and show professionalism, Fos ter said. “You can’t play in the major league if you can’t get a curve,” AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823 8051 Foster said. “You can’t lx? an en gineer if you can’t think.” The risks are too high, the consequences are too great for mistakes by engineers, so they have to think clearly, Foster said. Tenneco is also looking for engineers who can get the job done right the first time, Foster said. “We are looking for people who will go the extra mile,” he said. “I’ve seen people come early and stay late if that’s what it took to get the job done.” Thinking clearly and getting the job done won’t do the young engineer any good if he can’t communicate his ideas, Foster said. “There are people who have good ideas but are not good communicators,” Foster said. “Those who don’t use the En glish language correctly or can’t spell are not good engineers.” In addition to being able to communicate, Tenneco is jjeople with i The CDC said althoughtij ination of indigenous mol had not bee 1 'eved, thti ease’s attack pattern and a of transmission had been si stantiaily altered. 250-poun last mont has been i || Houstc more tha entry. : H Marjor “I’ve seen alol of peoplt old Housi because they were toowraBitted t up in themselves,” Fostersn^me-th “As a boss or leader, empailsponsorec essential.” station at and won Furthermore, Tenneco prizes. Sh looking for people with iBme fro: ership potential, someonetname ant has the drive and dedicatio: she once c get the job done, Foster said lea looking for thy. ader decides what he wane The in happen and does whatisibor n Feb essary to do it," he said. Mama pa Finally, Tenneco is loofl for someone dedicated to fessionalism, someone whot \^|Q it like it is, but with in(« Foster said. |L A Unite Summarizing his speech,tj sl ory and ter concluded with, “As ®ferred i Rogers once said, ‘Even if'Employee Union m Pci. A r. fexas A& IF organi a,1 d cited ? ta te: Th I Saw The Wind A live presentation by Never Summers Productions A multimedia extravaganza featuring the narration and photographs of Bob Jameisonand the singer/songwriter talents of Mark Thompson. LOCATION: In the heart of student living on University Oaks, Cripple Creek is on the shuttle bus route and is popular because of its closeness to restaurants, clubs and shopping. Investors can enter their condo in a lease pool and be assured of profes sional management. PRICE.' Starting as low as $39,950. Cripple Creek is affordable for even the most discriminating budget. VALUE: A large part of the cost of an Aggie's educa tion can be returned through tax benefits and equity. Friday, March 2 SHOT 8 pm Rudder Theater $3.00 per person Sponsored by the MSC Outdoor Recreation Committee in conjunction with Outdoor Horizons. 904 University Oaks #56 (409) 764-8682 (409) 846-5741 Models Open Daily Developed by Stanford Associates. Inc.