Rudder Theatre Complex Needs Student Workers For Stagehand and Spotlight Work. To Apply Come To: Rudder Auditorium Wed. Sept. 5 7 p.m. CONE SIGN UP! Page S/The Battalion/Friday, August 31, 1984 SOUTHER! LITT, EATRES -TUES.-WED.-THURS.-OPEN 0:45 CINEMA 3 $2.25 TILL 1ST FEATURE STARTS Tues. Disc. All Shows (rftcspt holidays) SaniOf CltUens over 06 anytlma. Fast chase Warped ends with collision United Press International CORPUS CHRISTI — A Loui siana teenager trying to elude police in a stolen luxury car drove it at a high speed up the wrong side of the city’s highest bridge and was killed in a head-on collision with two other vehicles, police chief Bill Banner said. Glen Hawlett, 15, of Gretna, La., was pinned in the late-model Lin coln Continental and was pro nounced dead at the scene of the wreck that backed up traffic for nearly an hour over the Habor Bridge. The bridge connects Corpus Christi and Portland. Banner said a stolen pistol was found lying between the dead teen ager’s legs. Hawlett’s companion, teenager Randy Kirk, was among four people injured in the wreck and was treated at Memorial Hospital. No one was seriously injured. Also hurt were Johnny Bustillo, driver of a van, and his passenger, Roy Soliz, both of nearby Simon, and Raymond Villarreal, who was driving a pickup truck involved in the collision. Banner said the chase began when Patrolman Richard Garcia spotted the Continental in downtown Cor- E us Christi not long after the car al- ■gedly was used in an aggravated assault and theft at a central gasoline station. Garcia reported that the Conti nental, which had Louisiana license plates, sped away and entered the exit ramp onto the bridge going against traffic. The officer said he did not imme diately pursue the fleeing car be cause he had to stop and allow a ci vilian passenger to get out of the cdr. by Scott McCulloi Surveying by satellites cuts down cost, tedium United Press International AUSTIN — A new satellite tech nology promises a savings in money, and often cuts out weeks of drudg ery as well, in the boring but impor tant task of surveying that must be done by the Texas Department of Highways and Public Transporta tion. The highway department is the first state agency in the nation to use satellite surveying, says Roger Mer- rell, an engineer with the depart ment’s automation division. “Satellite surveying is simply the use of earth-orbiting satellites to de termine one’s position,” he said, adding that the state does about 800 miles of mapping and 1,200 miles of traverse surveying each year. Texas is using two satellite systems in the project. The Transit System, which has been in use since I960, orbits about 600 miles above Earth, and the sec ond, Navstar GPS, orbits 12,000 miles above Earth. As the satellites sail over, they transmit signals that include data about the location of the satellite and information from extremely accu rate clocks on board. Ground positions are determined by measuring the distance between the satellites and the instruments on the ground bv listening to the signals from the satellite. “If you hdve ever listened to a train passing you with the whistle blowing, you have heard the Dopp ler effect,” says Merrell. “As the train comes down the track toward you, the pitch of the whistle changes. “It’s that sort of thing, in simple terms, that we are measuring as the satellites move across the sky.” The highway department crews measure the change in the signal phase angle to compute their posi tions, making hundreds of such measurements in a matter of a few minutes. Merrell said it is possible to deter mine positions with only one re- mgt .als. the range vectorai but additional re ceiver measunn periodic interva ceivers are best. “With a single receiver, you miglii get your position down to within, say, one meter,” he said. “With more receivers, you can get it down to, say three millimeters ... at a distanced! one-half mile or so.” Merrell says the department! crews, using the satellite surveying equipment, normally get mea surements ranging in ratios of preci sion of from 1:200,000 to 1:500,000 The major drawback to the satcl lile surveying is that with onlysixsa- tellites aloft, the state has only a sis- or seven-hour window in which to receive signals. The window move about four minutes a day, meaning crews often must work at night. But Merrell says studies thus fat have determined that with satellitt surveying, work crews can accompl ish in one hour what it previously took six hours to accomplish. CHULMAN $1 OFF ADULT TICKET 1»l Show Sat A Sun BEG. SEPTEMBER 28th-THE BEAR THEATRES 775-2463 NIQHT MONDAY 775-2468 823-8300 rfi Volunteers clean up Texas lakeshores SCHULMAN6 MANOR EAST III E a St MON-FRI 7:30 9:50 SAT-SUN 2:50 5:10 7:30 9:50 BO DEREK An Adventure &A CANNON FltM (S»tfwmiv fANHta rnmnaioHS n.v in Ecstasy NO ONE UNDER 17 mtt BE MMfTTED MON-FRI 7:20 9:40 :40 5-00 7-20 9-40 MON-FRI 7:25 9:45 SAT-SUN 2:45 5:05 7:25 _9;45 ( Cannibalistic. Humanoid. Underground. Dwellers.) © 1984 New World Pictures All rights reserved new, would mciuRts All rights rese MONTafTitS ' 4:45 SAT-SUN 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45 7:20 9:40 *AT-SUN 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40 The experiment that should never have happened 41 years ago.. b «dH going on. The Philadelphia Experiment rp _ % MON-FRI 7:25 9:45 SAT-SUN 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45 Enter a world beyond your wildest ’W..^ imagination where anything can happen. MON-FRI 7:20 SAT-SUN 2:40 Cute. Clever. Mischievous. Intelligent. Dangerous. Gremlins ^ MON-FRI 7:15 9:35 SAT-SUN 2:35 4:55 7:15 9:35 The music [jpg] By KAREN BLOCH Reporter Even the possibility of being fined up to $200 fails to keep some people from littering area lakes. Volunteers collected more than 17 tons of trash from the shores of lakes Sam Rayburn, Grapevine, and Lewisville this summer as part of the Texas Conservation Foundation’s First Annual Texas Lakeshore Cleanup Project. “The corps of engineers at Lake Somerville is planning a similar cleanup project for next year,” Guy Hopson, reservior manager at Lake Somerville, said. Several area bass clubs have al ready begun efforts for park im provements. “Habitat improvements which will aid the spawning of small fish have already been made,” Hopson said, “and plans for general cleanup and individual park improvements are in the works.” Hopson said the official project probably will take place each year in the spring “when the weather is cooler and it’s less humid. That way more people may be willing to par ticipate.” Plans to expand next year’s pro gram across tne state will be com pleted only if corporate sponsors and local volunteers are found. “The success of the Lakeshore Cleanup Project is almost completely depenaent on the public’s interest in the program and their willingness to work,” said Ben Fulshe, spokesman for the Boating Trades Association of Texas, the major source of fund ing for this year’s project. The Texas Conservation Founda tion estimated the volunteers — members of various bass clubs, con servation groups, scout troops and trade associations — who partici- E ated in the program this year col- :cted an average of more than 80 pounds of trash per person. Compliments of the Boating Trades Association of Texas Volunteers pick up trash at Lake Sam Rayburn. B-1 crash investigated; program to continue SKYWAY 822-3300 United Press International EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.— Investigation into the first crash of a B-1 bomber began Thurs day, and the secretary of the Air Force said the program would con tinue despite the death of a test pilot and injury of two crew members. In Washington Thursday, Air Force Secretary Verne Orr said Wednesday’s crash of a B-1 A proto type “was most unfortunate” but that the new version of the plane called the B-1 A would be unveiled Tuesday as scheduled. Killed in the crash was Tommie Douglas Benefield, 55, of Marshall, the chief test pilot for Rockwell In ternational, manufacturer of the bomber. Benefield died in the ejec tion capsule, an Air Force spokes man said. “We grieve with the family of Doug Benefield and the families of those Air Force officers who were in jured,” Orr said in a statement, but added, “We anticipate no impact on the projected first flight of the B-1B in October or the overall project.” A half-mile area surrounding the charred wreckage was sealed off for a military board of inquiry that be gan arriving hours after the plane went down about 10 miles nortneast of the sprawling Southern California base. “Because it’s the first time a B-1 has crashed, they will be writing the book all over again,” said Master Sgt. Gerry Ditchfield, an Air Force spokesman. The accident occurred on the 127th test flight of the bomber pro gram. Investigation results are not expected for 40 to 60 days. Master Sgt. Wally Ross said all three crew members were in an ejec tion capsule that was carried to earth by parachute. The new version the plane will have individual ejection seats. The injured airmen were in stable condition at a hospital in Lancaster, Calif. They were Maj. Richard V. Reynolds, 35, of Hoquiam, Wash., and Capt. Otto J. Waniczek, 30, of Seattle. Lt. Col. Alan Sabsevitz said the jet, which Ohio Sen. John Glenn, a for mer test pilot and astronaut, flew in last week,* was the first B-1 bomber to crash. The B-1 bombers, costing up to $40 million each, have been contro versial since the first contract was awarded in 1970. Critics contend tl plane would be obsolete before was deployed. , Sabsevitz said the pl ane ^ crashed was the second of four ® bombers built and was being used study handling characteristics < the new B-IB. The plane was built in 1974 first flew in 1976 until Preside' Gaiter scrubbed the program. dent Reagan resurrected t [ ie L gram that Carter scrubbed m ^ and ordered production or more jets. Funds await congress' 0 approval. • The B-1, with a 136-foot ^ span and a maximum speed ot i mph, was designed to re P* a u ce r larger B-52, backbone of the Force’s strategic bomber fte et the 1950s. Is Something Missing From Your Life? Are Your Walls Bare? The MSC Fall Film Calendar is Coming Stay Tuned Chanello’s Pizza! and the Spirit of the 12th Man every 12th pizza FREE! Fri. Sat. Sun. every 12th order we take during the U.T.E.P. football weekend is FREE! (2 cokes inc.) Two Locations: N orth South 696-0234 -I Supreme <| or Favorite + 2 cokes Off 16 any 2 o 0 r .. | one coup, per pizza | no doublers accepted ” ^,| 1 A ■ I ■ an y or any | 12''3-item or more pizza 16” 3-item or more one coupon per pizza, please!