Monday, November 16, 1987/The Battalion/Page 5 State board approves cuts in school aid AUSTIN (AP) — State aid to schools will be cut by an average of about $9 per student this school year because of a legislative budget re duction. The State Board of Education on Saturday gave initial approval to a plan to cut school funding by an esti mated $26 million, the amount lost when the Legislature cut state agency funding across the board be fore approving the budget for the two-year fiscal cycle. The board, which will consider the formula again after enrollment figures are updated in January, ap proved a plan that takes the local property tax rate of school districts into account when cutting state funding. An alternative proration plan that would take the largest amount of state money away from districts with the lowest tax rates was turned down by the board, over the objection of some members. The formulas voted on by the board were among four alternatives, ranging from a minimal to a sub stantial reliance on local tax effort. I' 1 wlf wk the otk tk jrotf kit iacti o f wte ”16 / a» iy[ vay ealti idds o tt'k [shot s tli milt- 'his maf iss. i tk es» non!' ifaJ' 1 ant hurt J Warped by Scott McCullar wo'fcjj 4 Contact Lenses <|tv Only Quality Name Brands A (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $79 00 $99 00 $99 00 C STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $39*° STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $49®° STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR Waldo by Kevin Thomas MEANWHILE, WYLBUR CONTIN UES WORKING AS the science OFFICER Oti THE ENTERPRISE.. CAPTAIN’S LOG, STARDA... [ THAT'S STRANGE... MY LOG TAPES ARE MISSING/ I SIR, I SAW \ WYLBUR TAKE THEM/ V rAY loss' you're BURNING THEh\l ^ 4' MY WHOLE LIFE... YEARS OF WORK... UP IN SMOKE- NOW, NOW... YOU'LL FEEL BETTER AFTER WE HARASS SOME WOMEN— j Spare PR at V2 price with purchase of first pr at regular price! Call 696-3754 For Appointment Sale ends Dec. 30,1987 Offer applies to standard Bausch & Lomb, Clba, Barnes-HInds lenses only. CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY Eye exam & care kit not Included 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University A&M gets research laboratory to examine space technology Group will study artificial life support in waste recycling By Janet Goode Staff Writer Long, leisurely moon trips, space colonies and life on Mars. These are things dreamed of by astronauts, space engineers and children alike. Now this dream can come true with the help of the newly dedicated Texas Engineering Experiment Sta tion Regenerative Concepts Labo ratory — a space research laboratory that will be used to study an artificial life-support environment in recy cling waste materials. The lab was presented to Texas A&M Friday at a dedication cere mony as a gift from the General Electric Co. Peter Kujawski, a gen eral manager in the astro-space divi sion of GE, said the system was given to A&M because of its research ef forts. “We looked around and we saw what was going on here at A&:M, and in recognition of the efforts, we were pleased to donate the RITE engi neering model and associated equip ment to the regenerative concepts laboratory,” Kujawski said. Frank Borman, a former astro naut, attended the dedication. Bor man was the command pilot on Gemini 7, which had the first ren dezvous in space, and Apollo 8, which was the first spaceship to orbit the moon. Kujawski, speaking at the cere mony, said space missions have been held back because of the inability to reuse essential resources — such as air, waste, water and food. “What we see in the future is an involvement in the industrialization in space . . . vastly expanded space travel, colonization and sending a “What we see in the future is an involvement in the in dustrialization in space . . . vastly expanded space travel, colonization and sending a man to Mars. ” — Peter Kujawski, general manager at GE man to Mars,” Kujawski said. “And for those missions to be a success, it’s important to be able to recycle our resources.” The laboratory is being used by an interdisciplinary team of research ers, including biologists, chemists, plant scientists and engineers of ag riculture, mechanics, chemistry, in dustry and biosystems — all of whom are interested in the different aspects of life support. In introducing the various team members and the research they rep resent, Oran Nicks, director of the Space Research Center at A&:M, ex plained how each group’s research was tied into the life-support systems laboratory. The soil and crop sciences are in terested in lunar soils, he said, and in how to make things grow on the moon in what would be one of the first closed systems there. Nicks said researchers in the area of knowledge engineering are inter ested in artifical intelligence. Biologists, he said, are interested in ways of making algae into food products and ways to reprocess the atmosphere. They are working on turning carbon dioxide into oxygen, he said. Nicks said chemists are working on ways to convert waste products into something useful. The mechanical engineers are mainly interested in the aspects of life support, which is the basis for the laboratory, he said. Mike Rabins, head of the A&M mechanical engineering department and host of the ceremony, said the RECON team is made up of 20 indi viduals from eight departments and four colleges at A&M. The team has been working together since 1985. “We’re delighted to bring all of these different disciplines together in working on such an exciting pro ject,” Rabin said as he unveiled two plaques recognizing the dedication of the TEES lab. “Although the lab has just now been dedicated, it is already putting out data,” Rabin said. Hasan Chowdhury, a graduate student in mechanical engineering, was at the ribbon-cutting ceremony to explain about the laboratory and its experiments. “The two main problems in space are with the water supply and the waste products,” Chowdury said. “The water, food, air — are all lim ited — and that limits the time that can be spent in space. And what can be done with the waste products in space? They can’t just throw them away.” Chowdury said this system will help solve these problems through substance recycling and water purifi cation. The water is purified and then stored for reuse, he said. Experi ments have shown that the water be ing recycled is perfectly pure, he said — purer than the typical drink ing water. “The ultimate goal of all of this is to someday have a station in Mars or on other planets,” he said. “With this system, they (the astronauts) could stay as long as they want in space without having to communicate back and forth and without having to get more water and food. “This type of experiment was never open to students before. There are a lot of things that can be learned from this.” This basic system, donated by GE, called the RITE system, is only a start, he said. “There are a lot of parts left to be added,” he said. “We are putting units together one by one. We are in a learning process right now.” The RECON team’s research ef forts have been funded from NASA since 1986. Herbert H. Richardson, dean of engineering and director of TEES, said more funding will come if a new proposal is awarded to A&M. The lab is in room 314 of the En gineering/Physics Building and is operated under Mike Rabins. Richardson said this lab is part of the growing space research at A&M and may be furthered with the re cently passed space-grant university program. If A&M were to become a space- grant university, he said, it would definitely mean more money for re search such as this. CociA LIGHT. COMEDY COMMANDOS 4r MSC Town Hall Presents A Live Night Before a Dead Week Featuring Tim Settimi and David Master Friday, Dec. 4,1987 8 p.m. Rudder Theatre Tickets $2 5 ° Available at MSC Box Office 845-1234 Murmur "^Reckoning ^ Fables Of-The Reconstruction ^ Lites Rich Pageant 4^ MSC TOWN HALL PRESENTS \ S /D O C U M E N T R.E. M. ‘America’s Best Rock-n-Roll Band” - Rolling Stone San Antonio youth gang blamed in cor thefts SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Members of a vio lent, wide-ranging youth gang called “the Klan” are involved in more than a quarter of San Anto nio’s burgeoning auto thefts, police said. Adult criminals are paying the young thieves $200 for each car or truck delivered, police Capt. Jimmy Kopeck said. Auto theft has increased 73.5 percent to an es timated $44 million annual business in San Anto nio, with 3,600 more vehicles already stolen this year than were taken in all of 1986, he said. Dur ing the first nine months of the year, 10,152 vehi cles were reported stolen. The Klan’s members, who attend at least four high schools, also have been linked to assaults of younger teen-agers, police said. Last week, the Klan was named for at least the 12th time in the past six months on a police re port when three older youths assaulted a 13- year-old boy and a friend as they were walking home from a neighborhood convenience store. “They use bats, knives and some of them carry firearms,” Ernest Urbanoweiz, security chief at a high school attended by gang members, said. In the past three weeks, four students at his school have been arrested for possession of sto len cars, Urbanoweiz said. “Kids steal cars because they know nothing will happen to them,” Kopeck said, noting that juve nile offenders are treated more leniently than adults by the law. “One 16-year-old kid came in here the other day and told me, ‘Hey, I’m going to steal as many cars as I want to and have a good time while I can before I turn 17.’ ” with special guest the dB’s Thursday, November 19th, 8 p.m. G. Rollie White Coliseum Plenty of good reserved seats still available Tickets $10 - On sale at TAMU Box Office 845-1234 E. L. Miller Lecture Series November 18, 1987 • Rudder Theatre, 8 p.m, Admission Free Sponsored by Texas A&M University MSC Political Forum Committee For more information, call 845-1515 FishCamp FISH CAMP ’88 CO-CHAIRMAN APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE NOV. 16-25 PAVILION 213 AT SECRETARY’S DESK