“GUARANTEED TO BOOST THE PULSE RATE! ‘The Hidden’ is a thriller with substance! If you thought ‘Terminator’ was cool, then go see ‘The Hidden’!” Thundentona ■ Druxle Freezing JUii i and the inter'j iated frontal S grain from rn flowfromllij la\ foriheBrw] agrees and wnfi degrees and :ureof81 Charlie Brentt . iff Meteorolof ent of Meteorolw iiirdei • on part of the ti Ranch in Man , north ofStanffi protruding from hen we removed en burned and h rid. "The ashes sh used to bur JE -Ron Givens, Newsiraek on Campus THE u 37 peop'e. robbed 6 ban' 15 ' 2 Wquor stores, a record shop andsVole 2feua'' s ' N oin tbe tun starts. \\ \ust tooK ov/er a pohce station. u % W A new breed ot criminat. sszsssmT Pro4uttd't'l«« Pro4u« 4t "' WU - 5 . it'"" otsiuic-'e 0 OPENS FRIDAY OCTOBER 30th AT A THEATER NEAR YOU CELEBRATE RESPONSIBLY & . o'—. MOCKTAIL PARTY! UEm BLOCKER RUDDER FOUNTAIN SBISA DINING HALL COMMONS DINING HALL THURSDAY OCTOBER 22 10AM-2PM SPONSORED BY OMEGA PHI ALPHA. ALPHA PHI OMEGA. FOOD SERVICES AND THE RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION. For Mora lit for mot loo coll 846—5826 DIAMONDS MAT" mm w ■ m Largest Stock in Area ROUND Our Price Our Price 2.87 $8275 .78 $1095 2.05 $7280 .75 $950 2.04 $4850 .75 $1145 2.03 $4785 .73 $1175 2.02 $7650 .72 $1145 2.01 $5675 .71 $1045 1.83 $2900 .71 $895 1.55 $3675 .70 $775 1.26 $2525 .69 $760 1.17 $1395 .67 $815 1.16 $1345 .65 $975 1.10 $2250 .63 $715 1.08 $1975 .62 $775 1.06 $2375 .61 $715 1.02 $2685 .59 $930 1.00 $1950 .37 $695 1.00 $1345 .55 $865 .96 $896 .54 $695 .87 $1275 .50 $795 .84 $1025 .48 $695 .80 $995 .20 $165 .10 $63 .05 $35 This is only a partial listing. 30 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE (excluding lay-a-ways, labor mounting) We have a wide selectloaof fine |ewelry. Cr, . ’ *-*■ A 404 University Dr. East • College Station • 846-8905 Since 1958 one of Texas’ oldest Rare Coin Dealers Store Hours; Mon-Frl 9am-5^0 pm Sat 9*3 prt» Behind Shellenbeargera Thursday, October 22, 1987TThe Battalion/Page 5 What’s up Thursday ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 12:15 p.m. Call 845-5826 for meeting location. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BLACK ACCOUNTANTS: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 204 Harring ton. The meeting is open to all business and economics ma- jors. PHI ETA SIGMA NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY: is ac cepting applications from qualified students until Oct. 27 in 216 Pavilion. MEXICAN-AMERICAN ENGINEERING SOCIETY: will have a speaker and have pictures taken for the Aggieland at 7 p.m. in 501 Rudder. NAVIGATORS: Blake Purcell will discuss “Do You Have an Eternal Career Plan?” at 7:45 p.m. in the Corps Quadran gle Lounge B. GREAT ISSUES AND POLITICAL FORUM: will present “Alcohol and the Law” at noon at Rudder Fountain. KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNITY: will host “Thrash For Dia betes Bash” to benefit diabetes at 7 p.m. at the Parthenon in the Woodstone Shopping Center. AGGIE PLAYERS’ ASSOCIATION: will take pictures for the Aggieland at 8 p.m. in the MSC main lobby. TAMU CYCLING TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in 305A-B Rudder. UNIVERSITY ART EXHIBITS: Dr. Walter Horn will dis cuss “The Plan of St. Gall: A Master Plan for Monastic Set tlements of the Ninth Century A.D.” to open the exhibit “The Plan of St. Gall” at 7:30 P-m. in 201 MSC. A reception will follow at 8:30 p.m. in the Rudder Exhibit Hall. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 145 MSC. COLLEGIATE FFA: will host Fall Fair Fun Fest at 6 p.m. at Pearce Pavilion. YOUTH FUN DAY: will have an informational meeting for those wanting to be a coach or counselor at 5 p.m. in 501 Rudder. ZEN MEDITATION GROUP: A Zen Priest will speak at 7 p.m. in 301 Rudder. PRE-LAW SOCIETY: will host “Law School: How to Write a Personal Statement” for seniors applying to law school at 7 p.m. in 116 Blocker. THE ASSOCIATION OF GRADUATE WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES SCIENTISTS: Stanley Temple, Ronald Ches ser and Eric Pianka will discuss “Fragile Communities: Eco logical Perspectives in the Americas” at 1 p.m. in Rudder Theater. INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS: Matt Michel will discuss “The Impact of World Changes on Industrial Engineering” at 7 p.m. in 203 Zachry. TEXAS ORNITHOLOGICAL SOCIETY: Registration for the fall meeting begins at 1 p.m. at the Aggieland Inn. ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: will meet at 6 p.m. in 145 MSC. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working days be fore desired publication date. HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL SANTA TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH 1212 LUCY STREET, BRYAN, TEXAS MEXICAN & AMERICAN FOOD 5:00 PM COSTUME CONTEST, 6-8 FOLKLORIC DANCE 6-8 SPOOK HOUSE MEXICAN MUSIC, GAMES, FOOD, BOOTHS ALL DAY LONG!! 9:00 AM to 8:00 PM DATE: OCTOBER 25,1987 NOW IT'S THEIR TURN TO BEG! Alright, girls, start scamming now be cause it's your turn to do the asking. Tired of taking a lighter to Midnight Yell and going to the game with ’’the girls”? Well, get on the ball and ask that perfect guy to SWITCH-OFF FOR KICK OFF For the Louisiana Tech Game OCT. 31 DON’T WAIT ’TIL IT’S TOO LATE! ASK NOW! Sponsored by Traditions Council - Student Government FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE r . CRACKLE , S I \ ' v BEAT THE @#*%l OUTTA RICE A&M helps design system programs to advise farmers By Deborah A. Haring Reporter Artificial intelligence computer programs to help farmers with va rious aspects of farming are being developed at Texas A&M, says Dr. Robert Coulson, an entomology pro fessor. The programs are being devel oped at the Texas Agricultural Ex periment Station’s Knowledge Engi neering Laboratory, where Coulson works with the industrial engi neering department’s Knowledge Based Systems Laboratory and the Texas Engineering Experiment Sta tion’s Knowledge Systems Research Laboratory. Artificial intelligence computer programs mimic human thought processes, Coulson says, and each farming program, called an expert system, deals with a different farm- operation decision. A farmer has to do three basic things to make a profit, he says. He has to produce a crop, market that crop and take advantage of various farm policies, he says. Though expert systems help with decisions in these areas, they can be combined to make integrated expert systems, which are more effective. “Integrated expert systems allow you to effectively and efficiently uti lize the available information rela tive to a particular subject domain,” he says. “With an enterprise as com plicated as agriculture, there is so much information to choose from that it is difficult for an individual to keep track of everything. So part of what the systems do is serve as ar chives for information.” The systems use information from a combination of expert opin ions gathered from farmers, techni cal information from research and simulation-modeling technology. Simulation models are mathemat ical models and representations that show how a complex biological or ecological system works. They can be used to project what kind of a yield a farmer will have on a certain amount of land with a certain crop, he says. Farmers are working with people knowledgeable in the area of artifi cial-intelligence expert systems and domain experts, such as agricultural economists and pest management specialists, in designing the pro grams. Involving farmers in the devel opment of the systems is important, Coulson says, because in the past, re sults of research done for farmers rarely reached them. Specialists and farmers team up to identify problems in farming and find available information, then or ganize it and write computer pro grams that copy the human decision making process, he says. “Since most farmers are growing multiple crops, an important advan tage of integrated expert systems is “With an enterprise as complicated as agricul ture, there is so much in formation to choose from that it is difficult for an in dividual to keep track of everything. So part of what the systems do is serve as archives for infor mation. ” — Robert Coulson, entomology professor the ability to find out which blend or mix of crops is the most profitable for the certain amount of acreage you have available to you,” he says. These systems will be available for affordable microcomputers and be simple enough to encourage farmers to try to use them, Coulson says. “The systems are farm-size inde pendent,” he says. “Any size farm, from a small family farm to a large corporate farm, will be able to use the systems. “A farmer would initialize the model for his specific farm opera tion. That would include entering data on how big the farm is, what kind of crops he grows and his de gree of indebtedness.” The system could then be used to predict factors such as crop yields and losses for that farmer, he says. Though still in the developmental stages, several programs are almost ready to be delivered. One of these, the “rice-weed adviser,” a herbicide recommendation system for . weed control, will be finished in early 1988, he says. Similar systems for both rice and cotton farming, as well as pest man agement systems, also are being de veloped, Coulson says. dj.D a m c SERVANTS OCT. 22nd # 8:00 pm (after yell practice) THE GROVE SPONSORED BY: MSC TOWN HALL & ALCOHOL AWARENESS WEEK FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE TAMU SUMMER’88 STUDY ABROAD Come find out about exciting opportunities! MEETING OCTOBER 23 701 RUDDER 1:00-2:30 p.m.