The Battalion ol. 83 No. 25 GSPS 045360 10 pages College Station, Texas Monday, October 5, 1987 iarthquake’s aftershock jolts California ■ ■LOS ANGELES (AP) — A sharp Rershock from last week’s severe jolted Southern Califor- i before dawn Sunday, causing at 1st one death and dozens of inju- [s, damaging buildings, knocking power and sending jittery resi- Ints into the streets. Ilhe quake, centered in suburban isemead about eight miles north- st of downtown Los Angeles, reg- sred at 5.3 on the Richter scale of aund motion, Don Kelly of the S. Geological Survey said. At the California Institute of Technology the quake was measured at 5.5, according to a spokesman, Robert Finn. The 3:59 a.m. quake was the 22nd aftershock registering more than 3.0 since Thursday’s quake, which mea sured 6.1 on the Richter scale and caused six deaths and more than $75 million in damage. Sunday’s shock, centered about two miles west of Thursday’s, was felt 40 miles west of Los Angeles in Ventura County and 100 miles south in San Diego. It was followed by three tremors measuring 3.0 or more within four hours. 43,000 homes suffered power outages, and many residents, some in bathrobes, gathered outside apartments and houses, waiting for more shocks. Others, camped out in a downtown parking lot, said they had been there since Thursday. Mildred Robbins, 66, of Arcadia, was pronounced dead at 5:14 a.m. at Arcadia Methodist Hospital after going into full cardiac arrest, admin istrative supervisor Terry Pisenti said. Efforts to revive her failed. The cardiac arrest was accredited to the shock the elderly lady received from the tremor that shook her home. In suburban Whittier, where hun dreds of homes were damaged and 30 buildings collapsed Thursday, residents who had been in overnight shelters were evacuated to a lighted baseball field. 500 people were housed in eight of the available Red Cross shelters. California Medical Center, about a mile south of downtown Los An geles, sustained some structural damage and power to the complex was lost. The center was operating on emergency power, nursing su pervisor Elizabeth Adams said. The quake required that an “un usual event” be declared at the coastal San Onofre nuclear power plant, midway between Los Angeles and San Diego, but the two operat ing reactors were not damaged, Southern California Edison spokes man Dave Barron said. Chunks of concrete fell from a bridge over the southbound lanes of the Pasadena Freeway, closing two lanes. Small rockslides occurred else where along the freeway that runs northeast from Los Angeles. The eastbound 91 Freeway was closed due to buckling of the roadway, the California Highway Patrol reported. \&M scientists work on mind-controlled devices the parade with the visitors'®' tumble termer, j et us j n g his thoughts in- ad of manual controls to manipu- ngjaunt. pass intercepiKt ;ean a li. e [ ec ti i c on-boai d system. play - helloLe* ■’alker complete rks on first dost right up the yards on 22 cat ggies to a 30- r seniors such Thomas, Gani ichard Osborat ■ ended on he polls entemi :ontest in Littlt imiliated 31-6is vd. By Marie L. McLeod Reporter In the futuristic film “Firefox,’ int Eastwood operates a high-tech Realistically, such ideas exist only laboratories or in the imagination. Producers of science-fiction films (many of their ideas from projects searchers are working on and ose ideas are not that far off in the In fact, Texas A&M researchers e working on thought-controlled 1 "vices similar to the ones in the ovie. In a project called Advanced xhnologies: Physiological Control stems, researchers are trying to id an application of human per- rmance technology that will enable [em to produce a control system utilizes physiological variables, e half Arl»| vs D r Charles Shea, chairman of ic Elouise Beard Smith Human hformance Laboratories. iss on a playtl an inchortwooil recalled. 'Hi(| funds for the project are awarded ft a catchup oil the University from Advanced h our personneliechnology Grants allocated by the sinting game tor|e!tas Legislature in two-year sets, easaid. The research program received ■20,000 for the first year and 100,000 for the second, he said. The funds are allotted to various jeets of the research program [rough the bioengineering depart- ent’s Human Systems Engineering iboratory, he said. “The research is a set of multidis- fclinary projects,” Shea said. He and Dr. Bill Barnes, both alth and physical education pro- Issors, are working in conjunction Photo by Marie McLeod Joe Signorile, left, and Jay Williams, graduate as- partment, try to develop a robot that simulates sistants in the health and physical education de- human movement in response to a muscle signal. with researchers from a variety of disciplines. Barnes and Shea are studying the execution of simple commands to robots on the basis of eye movement and electromyography (EMG), an electrical impulse resulting from muscle movement, he said. Currently, the eye-tracking sys tems are expensive and require that the head be relatively stable or care fully monitored, Shea said. They hope to eventually eliminate such constraints. They also are studying ways of us ing eye positioning to get responses on a computer screen or to guide a wheelchair. They are in the developing stages of designing an application that will enable handicapped people to use eye movement for flipping switches or turning pages of a book, Shea said. Electromyography is utilized with prosthetic limbs and for simple con trols that would be used on a num ber of different machines, he said. The electrical activity in the mus cle would give off impulses. Then the machinery would sense it, do a signal process and transfer the im pulse to something else, such as an artificial limb, a wheelchair or a com puter screen, he said. A lot of their research is done through the use of teleoperated ma chines, Shea said. “A teleoperator is a general-pur pose, dexterous, man-machine sys tem that augments man by enhanc ing and projecting his neural- muscular capabilities across distance and through physical barriers,” Shea said. A simple example of this type of machine is an automobile, because man must use his senses and cogni tive abilities to react to any given sit uation, he said. On the other hand, the auto mobile aids man with its strength, power, speed and endurance, he said. “A robot can be much stronger or it can be 1,000 times smaller than man,” Shea said. Machines can function in adverse conditions because they are stronger, steadier and adaptive in size, he said. Therefore, they may be valuable in microsurgery or in exte- mely adverse conditions in which man can not survive. Others involved in the research include Dr. Gerald Miller of the Hu man Systems Engineering Labo ratory. Miller and the lab assistants are concerned with the use of voice con trol, Shea said. A computer can detect and make use of words enabling it to elicit some sort of response such as ma nipulating a computer screen and hopefully, someday moving a wheel chair, the researcher said. Finally, Drs. Bill Klemm and Ste ven L. Peterson of the College of Veterinary Medicine and the Col lege of Medicine, respectively, are studying the electrical impulses elic ited from the brain during interac tion with a control device, he said. Through the use of an electroen cephalograph, a machine that re cords brain activity, they are able to determine a person’s thought proc ess and cognitive state of perfor mance, Shea said. A computer program is limited to repeating only functions that it has been programmed to do, he said, whereas, with the use of physiolog ical electrical acitivity, the robot can be watched and movements can be altered. “Man needs the machine’s size, strength, endurance and resistance to hostile environments, while the machine is brought to life by man’s perceptual and cognitive ability to provide flexible and adaptive con trol,” he said. “It’s a symbiotic rela tionship.” )tudy provides statistics on enrollment Student numbers rank highest at A&M By Lee Schexnaider Staff Writer Texas A&M had the state’s largest icrease of enrolled students from 977 to 1986, according to a report leased last week. The report, presented at the exas Higher Education Coordinat- Board meeting Friday af- moon, shows that between the fall If 1977 and the fall of 1986, 21 |exas universities had an increase in rollment, while 10 universities ex- rienced a decrease. A&M’s enrollment increased 21 rcent over the nine-year period — om 28,848 in 1977 to 34,940 in 86, These figures do not include rollment in the veterinary and edical graduate programs. The growth of 6,092 students at !&M represents the largest number crease in the state, but not the larg est percentage increase. The largest rcentage increase was 71 percent rLamar University at Port Arthur, here enrollment increased from Ip to 1,448 students. ■ Enrollment at the University of iexas increased from 41,660 to 46,140 in the nine years — an in- Pease of 11 percent. The average Icrease for universities was 28.3 Icrcent, according to the report, ihich was presented by Dr. Bill San ford, the board’s assistant commis- Pner for university and health af fairs. Universities that showed only a small increase or decrease were clas- trends that we could observe in the sified as stable, said Janis Monger, enrollment patterns in higher edu- the Coordinating Board’s director of cation,” Sanford said, public information. Monger said the board’s staff also “As a preparation for doing that (enrollment caps), the board asked us to first report to them on the trends that we could observe in the enrollment patterns in higher education. ” — Dr. Bill Sanford, assistant commissioner for university and health affairs The “stable” figures included six universities, where increases ranged from a 5 percent increase for Texas Tech University to 1 percent de creases for East Texas State Univer sity at Texarkana and the University of Houston at University Park. Of the 10 institutions classified in the enrollment decrease category, Texas A&M at Galveston had the smallest decrease at 8 percent — its enrollment dropped from 572 to 524 students. Sanford said the study was done because of provisions in House Bill 2181 that indicate the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board may put enrollment caps on senior insti tutions in Texas. “As a preparation for doing that (enrollment caps), the board asked us to first report to them on the is going to contact other states with capped enrollment to find out how they went about it. “In the near future the Commis sion of Higher Education is going to appoint an advisory committee with representatives from the different institutions of Texas,” Monger said. “They will recommend to the board what criteria to consider and what timetable to consider when ap proaching the whole issue.” Sanford said he has received in formation regarding enrollent from Massachusettes and Maryland but has not yet analyzed the informa tion. “We will be definitely talking to those folks and find out how they did it,” he said. “We want to see if our plans or our thoughts about how we might do it track their experien ces.” He said studies on enrollment forecasts are done every few years and the present figures he is using are from 1986 and will be updated in 1988. “We will have up-to-date fore casts, which I suspect will change somewhat since the economy has changed,” he said. Sanford said many Texas institu tions are probably going to grow rapidly, while at the same time oth ers will decline in enrollment. That pattern, he said, causes the state some problems. “Institutions that are growing rap idly ask the state for a lot of additio nal money, millions of dollars in ad ditional money, for new buildings and resources to support those new students,” he said. “At the same time those (institutions) that are declining are having to mothball existing buildings and get rid of faculty members and other folks they can’t support.” Sanford said he does not know all the reasons for changing enroll ments, but not enough information is available to decide on how the Coordinating Board should act. “We have something of a jump in enrollment on a lot of campuses this year, which is probably related to the. economy,” he said. “Because it is a traditional pattern that when the economy is bad and people are out of work, many of those folks will go back to college. But that doesn’t mean they will stay there . . . we don’t know if the numbers are going to be a trend.” A few reasons why some of the schools are losing students is simply because of where they are located, Sanford said. Population shifts in the state have shuffled college stu dents away from some campuses and toward others, so some institutions are straining at the seams. “There has been a lot of growth in campuses in the state over the last several years and we are over grown,” Sanford said. The problem of the disproportio nate enrollment in universities was addressed by the Select Committee for Higher Education, Sanford said. “The Select Committee for Higher Education was the blue rib bon committee that operated in the interim period between the last two legislative sessions,” he said. “They took a very hard look at that (enroll ments). But when they proposed to close some campuses, the political and citizen response was so strong against it they backed off from that and did not take to the Legislature any recommendations to close any specific campuses. “So I would have to guess it is very difficult to close a campus. I person ally would predict that they probably will not be closed. If they are closed it will probably not come from ac tions at the state level because the pressure is simply too great.” fudge acquits 97.7 percent of accused drunken drivers | HOUSTON (AP) — During a six-month riod this year, a judge acquitted 97.7 per- nt of all the accused drunken drivers who appeared before him after opting to waive ■ial by jury, records show. I Forty-three defendants chose to be tried by the judge alone and 42 of them were found ijinocent in proceedings the police call “mock ■ials,” the Houston Chronicle reported. II In many of the 43 trials, prosecutors were denied the option of calling witnesses, the newspaper said. Intoxilyzer tests, regardless of how strong the findings, were disregarded by the judge, whose verdicts are based almost exclusively on videotapes made of defendants after their arrests. In September, County Court-at-Law Judge Bill Ragan not only acquitted a man who flunked an intoxilyzer test after leaving the Astrodome, he criticized the arresting offi cers for “killing (the) American tradition” of drinking beer at a ball game, the Chronicle reported. Criticism of Ragan’s novel approach to set tling DWI court trials doesn’t faze the judge. He has faced considerable heat on numerous subjects during his 22 years of presiding over such misdemeanor cases. Of 72 people who opted during the March- August period to be tried by juries in Harris County’s 14 misdemeanor courts, only 10 were convicted. No other court-at-law judge comes close to Ragan’s record. Compared to his 42 acquit tals, only Court-at-Law Judge Don Hendrix approached the record with 18 acquittals and no convictions. The Houston Police Department’s 14- member DWI Task Force calls Ragan’s court proceedings “mock trials” and “moot court competition.” The breath-test strikes Ragan as such an odious instrument that, he said, he tries to disregard it altogether at DWI trails, pre ferring instead to rely on videotaped images of the defendant’s actual behavior. Congress: Publicity jobs for Contras were illegal WASHINGTON (AP) — An office within the State Depart ment engaged in an illegal, covert “white propaganda” effort to generate support for the Reagan administration’s policies in Cen tral America, according to con gressional investigators. Since it was created in 1983, the department’s Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean at times arranged news media interviews for leaders of Nicaragua’s Contra rebels and generated opinion articles oppos ing Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinista government for placement in ma jor media outlets while carefully concealing its own role in the publicity effort, according to in vestigators for the General Ac counting Office, Congress’ inves tigative arm. For example, a March 11, 1985 opinion column in the Wall Street Journal on the offensive threat posed by Soviet attack helicopters in Nicaragua was attributed to Rice University Professor John F. Guilmartin Jr. GAO said Guil- martin’s status as a paid consul tant to the public diplomacy of fice and the office’s collaboration on the article apparently were not disclosed to the newspaper for the article. The GAO concluded that the activities “were misleading as to their origin and reasonably con stituted ‘propaganda’ within the common understanding of that term,” and violated a legal ban on use of federal money for propa ganda not authorized by Con gress. The six-month GAO investiga tion also turned up documents seen by investigators as relevant to Congress’ Iran-Contra probe, but which were not turned over by the White House under a sweeping request for all docu ments that could have a bearing on the Iran-Contra investigation.