The Battalion Number One in Aggieland SHORT ON CASH??? Sell your BOOKS at University Book Store Northgate 8c Culpepper Plaza Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, November 30,1987 WE HAVE CLIFFS ■ NOTES Cliffs Notes answer your questions about literature as you study and review. Each is designed to help improve your grades and save you time. Come in and see our Cliffs Notes display. Available at: 845-8681 Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) & $79 00 $99 00 $99 00 STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $39®° STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $49 50 STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR m 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, Ciba, 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 —rm r, iiimr». , aew ■nwas Mighty Mouse. m § $88.00 Logitech C-7 opto-mechanical mouse, no pad or power supply required, high resolution (200dots per inch), 3 high quality tactile feedback switches, connects to any serial port, Microsoft compatible. Sale ends December 12, 1987. More bytes, less bucks. CO/MPUTER 268-0730 403B University Dr. (Northgate) STUDY ABROAD Be an Exchange Student Study In Denmark, Mexico, Scotland, or Germany for TAMU Credit! Find out how YOU can be chosen! Informational Meeting: Tuesday, December 1, 11:00-12:00 251 Bizzell West Panel urges lowering BAC limit allowed drivers of heavy trucks By Deborah A. Haring Reporter A Texas Research Board has rec ommended that the legal blood-alco hol concentration limit for Texas commercial truck and bus drivers be lowered from 0.1 percent to 0.04 percent, a Texas A&M professor who served on the board said. “A lot of people have strong feel ings about this because they are at greater risk with large trucks,” said Dr. Olga Pendleton, a researcher for the Texas Transportation Institute. “They’re like time bombs rolling down the road. It takes a lot more skill and a lot more alertness to drive one of those heavy pieces of machi nery.” After a year-long study that ended in August, the majority of a Texas Research Board committee recommended the 0.04 percent level as the point where fixed penalty structures called for by the Commer cial Motor Vehicles Safety Act should be applied, Pendleton said. Pendleton, a statistician and visit ing associate professor in Texas A&M’s statisrics department, was se lected as a member of this panel of experts because of her past research with alcohol-related accidents. The panel was convened by the National Academy of Sciences through the board to study the ef fects of alcohol on commercial truck and bus drivers. “A lot of people have strong feelings about this be cause they are at greater risk with large trucks. They’re like time bombs rolling down the road. ” — Dr. Olga Pendleton, Texas Transportation Institute researcher The limit will apply to drivers of medium to heavy vehicles (those weighing 26,000 pounds). Pendleton said the legal BAG in the past for commercial drivers driv ing under the influence has been the same as for drivers of passenger cars, 0.10 percent — which can be defined as the consumption of six beers by an average-sized man in half an hour. But the board mem bers’ opinion was that drivers of commercial heavy vehicles should be under stricter rules than drivers of passenger cars. The board-recommended 0.04 BAC limit is the current limit for pi lots and train engineers. Use of this same number for commercial driv ers should become a law within a year, Pendleton said. Although the recommended BAC limit still must be adopted, penalty structures were set before the panel began. A commercial driver could have his license suspended if his BAC is higher than .04 percent and could have his license revoked for a second offense. A majority of the panel also rec ommended that truck drivers with BACs higher than zero but less than .04 have their licenses revoked for up to 30 days on the first offense and 30 days to one year on subse quent offenses, Pendleton said. “I think people would agree with the fact that truck drivers should not be drinking,” she said. “People are surprised to find out that there is any drinking on the job. Some com panies like Greyhound and Trail- ways already have very strict rules — drivers get fired if they show up af ter having been drinking.” Part of this study included drivers’ opinions on lowering the BAC legal limit, Pendleton said. One of the drivers’ biggest arguments was the fact that it would be hard to enforce this lower figure and that drivers will keep drinking anyway. One method of enforcement dis cussed was screening drivers as part of the weigh-station process. The panel tried to take cost and feasibil ity of enforcement into account. The study’s data show that enforc ing a zero BAC level would save 130 to 250 lives a year but would cost $49 million to $54 million. Enforcing a .04 limit would cost $37 million to $41 million and would save 110 to 190 lives a year. No data had been collected on al cohol-related truck accidents and Pendleton received funding to come up with some. “It was quite an honor for me be cause statisticians usually take a backseat role,” Pendleton said. "W? crunch the numbers. It’s unusual for us to have any input in policy-mak ing. As it turned out I played a crit ical role here because they didn't' have any data for this study.” Pendleton used the Fatal Accident Reporting System (PARS), a census of all fatalities in the United States and the Texas State Accident Data, which gives cost estimates for acci dents as well as f atalities. “I provided most of the figures which appear in our reports,” she said. “There may be some ramifications to this study,” Pendleton said. “As one of her last acts as Secretary of Transportation, Elizabeth Dole said they should consider a zero percent BAC for pilots and train engineers.” Air Force investigator faces court martial for methods SAN ANTONIO (AP) — An Air Force investigator credited with breaking up a drug ring among crewmen serving AWACS surveil lance aircraft in the Persian Gulf faces a court martial for the tactics he used to infiltrate the ring. The military trial of Special Agent James E. Flannigan at Lackland Air Force Base could explore whether officials of the Office of Special In vestigations condoned agents mak ing sexual advances to informants. The investigator claims his superi ors approved of his relations with two women during the investigation last summer at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma. One of the women was the wife of a staff ser geant targeted by the investigation. The investigator also looked into reports that some servicemen may have been active in black market smuggling in Saudi Arabia during their frequent rotations between Tinker and the Saudi city of Riyadh, where the American-crewed AWACS are stationed. The AWACS are used as part of the U.S. presence in the Persian Gulf. When defense attorneys for two of the four maintenance technicians charged in the drug probe com plained of Flannigan’s tactics, his su periors filed charges against him, he claims. Air Force officials charged Flanni gan with becoming “intimately” and “emotionally” involved with the women during the investigation. “I’m being railroaded,” the 29- year-old staff sergeant said in an in terview with the San Antonio Light last week. Flannigan has been reassigned to kennel duty — training police dogs — at Lackland pending his court- martial. “It was obvious from the very be ginning that I was getting through to these AWACS people through these girls,” Flannigan said. As a result of Flannigan’s investi gation and a subsequent inquiry, four maintenance technicians were charged with marijuana use and dis tribution. Three will be tried in coming months and the fourth is expected to accept an administrative punish ment, Air Force officials said. The Air Force first offered to ad ministratively punish Flannigan for his alleged violation of Air Force regulations, but he turned down the offer and demanded instead a public court-martial proceeding. Capt. Ingrid K. Bradley, a spokes man for the Office of Special Inves tigations’ district headquarters at Randolph Air Force Base, said Sat urday that officials could not be reached for comment on the Flanni- John Economidy, Flannigan’s ci vilian attorney, said the unusual na ture of the case will entitle him to delve into the military’s techniques for undercover operations during the court-martial proceedings. Flannigan was formerly charged last week with dereliction of duty. He faces a maximum six-month sen tence, a bad conduct discharge and a forfeiture of two-thirds of his pay upon conviction. Economidy, a former Air Force legal officer, said he expects the court-martial proceeding to be held in January, though a precise date has not been set. Job requires couch potato for research HOUSTON (AP) — Richard Fitzpatrick has become a full-time couch potato, courtesy of NASA. Following a round-the-dock schedule of relaxation for 17 weeks, Fitzpatrick is taking part in a study to determine the effects of long-term weightlessness and the progressive loss of bone mass suffered by astronauts. For reading library books, watching television, eating snacks and taking it easy on his Her mann Hospital bed, Fitzpatrick is getting $ 187.60 per week. For NASA, the study is a vital component of learning man’s ability to adapt to space. “It’s one of the important ques tions for the space station right now,” Dr. Victor Schneider, co investigator of the study, said. “If you have astronauts up for three months, you want to know if they recover and the effects over their careers.” The longest period U.S. astro nauts have been in space thus far was during the Skylab 4 flight in 1974, which lasted 84 days. NAACP rejects Warped measure to end forced busing by Scott McCullar r r BELIEVE YP0 COOLP SCREW UP like: THAT, PAUL... AA/P you,AUEtf... I'LL G/YE L YOU FIVE BUCKS TOGO LIE IM , TRAFFIC/ Uvn...wlyj, hrir. Zone? Me. or him? BtfW of ycoV/ STUDY ABROAD OFFICE 161 W Btxxsll 845 0544 FORT WORTH (AP) — The Fort Worth chapter of the NAACP has rejected a proposal to end desegre gation busing in Fort Worth schools. The Saturday vote by the NAACP Board of Directors came hours after about 20 people criticized the propo sal as being too general and lacking guarantees. The vote was a reversal of the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People’s stance two weeks ago when its attorneys, His panic leaders and school officials drafted an agreement that would end 16 years of court-ordered bus ing. The agreement called for in creases in black and Hispanic rep resentation among faculty and ad ministration of the Fort Worth Independent School District and ad ditional money for minority schools. Ray Bell, local NAACP president, said the vote, in a closed meeting of the 31-member board, was unani mous. It means there will be no agreement among the three sides Dec. 7 when a 28-year-old busing lawsuit is to be reviewed by U.S. Dis trict Judge Eldon B. Mahon. “We just didn’t like the wording of it,” Bell said. “We’re going on to court and see what the judge has to say.” The NAACP would not continue negotiations with the school district, Bell said. Dee Jennings, a member of the board and chairman of the Fort Worth Black Chamber of Com merce, said, “The board felt the community was being backed into an agreement without any guarantees.” The NAACP board was angry that the school district had ignored a citizens’ committee proposal in 1986 that would tie the end of busing to increased achievement levels at schools, Jennings said. The decision is consistent with the NAACP’s position in 1985 and 1986 when it fought school district offi cials’ attempts to end busing. Waldo by Kevin Thomas THROUGH EQUALLT RIDICULOUS PLOTS, WVtBUR AND WALDO FIND THEMSELVfS LOST IN TIME AND IMPRISONED TOGETHER. THEIR CAPTOR IS THE MEAN AND VICIOUS KUBLAl KHAN/ af\M THE ENTERPRISE IS UNABLE TO INTERVENE BECAUSE OT ITS PRIME DIRECTIVE... WELL, THEY'RE UP A CREEK; GUESS I'LL GO PLAY CARDS... MEANWHILE IN HOLLYWOOD, NED USES HIS FEMALE BODY TO FILM A DENTAL FLOSS COMMERCIAL WITH SHIRLEY MACLAINE... Joe Transfer by Dan Barlow