he Battalion ol. 89 No.37 USPS 045360 16 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, October 23,1989 Did we win? The Aggie sideline rejoices after A&M quarterback Lance Pavlas scored on a quarterback sneak from the 1-yard line late in the fourth quarter, putting the Aggies ahead of Baylor Photo by Mike C. Mulvey University 13—8 at Saturday’s game. The Aggies went on to defeat the Bears 14—11 and improved their conference re cord to 3-1. „ See story on page 9. Quake victims try to recover after disaster SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Res cuers euphoric over finding a survi vor in a collapsed freeway resumed work at a frustratingly cautious pace Sunday, and earthquake-shaken Northern Californians mapped strategy for Monday’s commute through “gridlock.” Longshoreman Buck Helm, who spent four days in a tomb of Inter state 880 concrete and steel, was in critical-stable condition at Highland General Hospital in Oakland with some slight improvement, hospital officials said. Engineer Steven Whipple, hailed as a hero of the rescue, said he was checking the fallen double-deck freeway for stability on Saturday when he spotted the back of Helm’s head with his flashlight, and then saw a hand wave at him. “It stopped my heart,” Whipple said. “I thought maybe the wind was blowing and that’s what caused it. I thought I might be losing it.” Helm regained some function in his kidneys, damaged by severe de hydration, and his lung condition improved slightly, Dr. Will Fry said. He was still in the intensive care unit, and still was having difficulty mov ing his left leg. “He is not out of the woods yet,” Fry said. While the city rejoiced at Helm’s rescue, the number of dead pulled from the 1-880 disaster rose to 38, including a 4-year-old boy, bringing the earthquake’s toll to 59, with thousands injured and homeless and dozens still missing. Damages topped $7 billion. At the 1-880 rescue site in indus trial downtown Oakland, six sweeps of the area where Helm was found with sniffing dogs and electronic gear turned up no signs of other sur vivors. Digging to remove cars and bod ies was delayed because the double deck freeway, which collapsed on top of itself, shifted under the strains of aftershocks, wind and even the rescue work itself. Workers placed giant airbags, hy draulic jacks and wood timbers un der concrete sections, and used truckloads of dirt to build a sturdier foundation, according to Kyle Nel son, a California Department of Transportation spokesman in Oak land. “The problem is we still have to proceed cautiously and deliberately even though people are encour aged,” Jim Drago, another CalTrans spokesman, said. Officials also closed five more el evated blocks of 1-880 south of the destruction because of newly de tected cracks. Meanwhile, a half-dozen im promptu tent cities have sprouted up around Watsonville, the battered, largely Hispanic city south of San Francisco and closer to the epi center. Hundreds of residents there are so traumatized by the quake, its af tershocks, which have been both strong and numerous, and the mem ory of the Mexico City earthquake that they refuse to go indoors. Official didn’t investigate; Professor explains earthquake, spent budget, paper says seismic waves to geology class AUSTIN (AP) — The head official of the Texas louse General Investigating Committee in 1987 and 988, spent the panel’s entire budget although the roup met once and did not formally investigate any- ling, according to a published report. State Rep. Charles Finnell, chairman of the House General Investigating Committee in 1987 and 1988, ex- austed the panel’s entire $40,000 budget, mostly trough travel expenses and payment to employees of is House office, according to records reviewed by the \ustin American-Statesman. The rest of the committee’s two-year budget ex cuses included temporary clerical help, more than 3,000 copies of documents, decorative memorial cita- ons and certificates for constituents, the newspaper eported. Finnell, D-Holliday, defended his committee spend- tg and said he used the budget to personally investi- ate hundreds of tips, but none warranted attention of tie full committee. “I checked two or three tips a week,” ranging from omplaints about state agencies to allegations about irongdoing by lawmakers, Finnell said. “There was not role for a legislative investigation.” Finnell said the tips kept him and his staff busy. Tim Green, Finnell’s legislative aide from March 987 until August 1988, disputed that. “I never really did anything for the committee — naybe two hours’ worth of work the whole time I was with (Finnell),” Green, whose salary was paid from the committee budget for 12 of the 17 months he worked for Finnell, said. “I think I sent one letter to the attorney general re questing an opinion,” Green said. “That was it.” House business office records obtained under the Texas Open Records Act show Finnell spent more than $5,900 of the General Investigating Committee’s two- year budget traveling between Holliday and Austin. Rep. Doyle Willis, D-Fort Worth, took over as chair man of the committee in January. “I don’t think the committee really did anything” in 1987 or 1988, Willis said. “Nothing I know of.” Finnell acknowledged that might be the impression some people got. He said the committee office was closed most of the time and the panel’s business was conducted in his Capitol office. “Each chairman runs the committee his own way,” Finnell said. “I didn’t have any complaints ... I felt like I did a good job. The committee was operated the way it should be operated, and just because there were not any subpoenas or whatever — that’s not the way to mea sure the success of that committee.” Finnell currently heads the House Rules and Resolu tions Committee, which has a two-year budget of $46,500. The nine-member panel acts as a clearing house for resolutions and monitors House rules while the Legislature is in session. By Melissa Naumann Of The Battalion Staff The seismic wave from Tuesday’s San Francisco earthquake traveled 1,000 miles in three minutes, a Texas A&M geologist said Friday. Dr. Karl Koenig, associate profes sor of geology, explained the earth quake’s seismograph, a paper show ing the measurements of the magnitude of an earthquake, in his geology class. The P wave, the wave of compres sion that reaches a seismic station first, went from Santa Clara, Calif., the epicenter of the earthquake, to El Paso in three minutes, Koenig said. Although the seismograph showed action for more than an hour after the first wave, the movement after the P wave and the S wave, the wave that follows the P wave, was just reverberations from the initial shock, he said. He com pared the continuing motion to waves in water, saying that one wave generates another. At any seismic station, a minimum Chess champ Kasparov whips Deep Thought computer twice Police question teenager’s role in fatal shooting HOUSTON (AP) —A 16-year old boy was questioned in connec tion with the death of a man whc was inadvertently shot during a confrontation between rival high school football fans, police said. The teen is a junior at Madison High School in southwest Hous ton, homicide Sgt. Dave Collier said. The boy made a statement to police Saturday and was ex pected to be turned over to the juvenile detention courts, he said. Collier said the fatal shot was not intended for George Allison, 21, but for three students from Willowridge High School, whose football team beat Madison 28-21 Friday night. The three Willow ridge students had driven to the mobile home park, where about 100 Madison students were hav ing a party. “Somebody handed him (the suspect) a gun and said, ‘Shoot at them,’ and he shot at them,” Col lier said. The shot struck Allison, who was standing nearby, in the chest. He was taken to Ben Taub Hospital, where he died at 1:12 a.m. Saturday. NEW YORK (AP) — It was a bat tle of two chess champions — one ac tive and outspoken, known to sip tonic water during matches, the other sitting quietly on a desk, taking in a different kind of juice. World chess champion Garri Kas parov, who hasn’t lost a tournament since 1981, met Deep Thought, the winner of this year’s World Com puter Chess Championship, for two games Sunday. The human won the first game af ter more than 2 hours when the computer retired from the game af ter Kasparov’s 52nd move. He won the second match after 2 hours when the computer surrendered after 37 moves. “I expected it,” Kasparov said. “It’s a good player but without posi tion and experience.” Kasparov said after the first game he realized early on that he would win when the computer missed some tactical opportunities and was not able to analyze all of the champion’s decisions. “I don’t mind who’s sitting oppo site me,” said Kasparov, who lives in the Soviet city of Baku, in Azerbai jan. “If a computer should win, of course, I would have to challenge it to protect the human race.” Murray Campbell, who helped create the computer at Carnegie- Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said it appeared there was a bug in the computer during the first game. “It wasn’t looking at the right “I ■ expected it. It’s a good player but without position and experience.” — Garri Kasparov, world chess champion moves,” he said after the first match. “It wasn’t given a chance to show its best style of play.” Commentator Shelby Lyman, who helped arrange the match, said be fore the games that Deep Thought was “clearly the first chess computer with the potential to draw blood and defeat the world champion. Kaspa rov has never played a machine at this level, and it will make moves he may not expect. This will be histori cally interesting.” But one of several hundred spec tators, chess grand master Larry Christiansen, complained that com puters are “killing the creativity of chess. A lot of the beauty of chess is coming up with an original and beautiful idea. Now, with comput ers, everything is known.” Nine-year-old Conrad de Marez Oyens disagreed. He has been play ing against computers for three years — and prefers them to human counterparts. “When you play it, it’s always a good game, even if you lose,” he said, predicting that human chess skills will improve because of com puters. Deep Thought, created by five graduate students at Carnegie-Mel- lon University in Pittsburgh, can analyze a possible 700,000 positions on the chessboard per second. Deep Thought evaluates the mil lions of possible board positions cre ated by each sequence of five moves it imagines. of three different seismometers is present to measure three different directions of movement: vertical, north-south and east-west. His seismograph, obtained by Dr. Vickie Harder, A&M professor of geology, from the University of Texas at El Paso seismic station, measured the vertical movement of the earth. The 1906 earthquake in San Fran cisco, Koenig said, which measured 8.3 on the Richter scale, was at least four times as intense as Tuesday’s earthquake. The earthquake in China late Wednesday had nothing to do with the quake in California, he said. Koenig said that, after the quake, a Dallas man called to ask if the earthquake could have been related to underground nuclear testing that was being done in Nevada. Incidents like this reflect a growing interest in science on the part of the public, he said. “A populace that is concerned about these things is a populace that will learn about these things,” he said. “This is our world — are we messing it up doing things we think will improve it?” Mattox pushes for lottery to fund education reforms By Melissa Naumann Of The Battalion Staff A state lottery will pay for edu cation improvements and anti drug action if Jim Mattox, attor ney general and Democratic gu bernatorial candidate, has his way. Mattox, speaking at the Brazos County Courthouse Friday, said his estimates show a state lottery can generate between $500 and $700 million a year, enough to support his plans for new prisons, drug treatment programs and ed ucation improvements. He said his war on drugs will include drug testing as well as re habilitation for people as they pass through the criminal justice system. “Less than 5 percent of people who need assistance or rehabilita tion are provided that,” Mattox said. Formerly a criminal prosecutor in Dallas County, Mattox said he is the only candidate for governor who has prosecuted a drug pusher or “ever actually fought against drugs and crime.” “I want the pushers to meet ‘the slammer’,” he said. “As gov ernor, I’ll see to it that they do.” Mattox said new prisons must be built or existing ones ex panded so prisoners can serve more of their sentences. “I’m tired of a system that lets the criminals out of jail before their victims get out of the hospi tal,” he said. “When we get these people in jail we’ve got to keep them long enough to rehabilitate them.” The race for governor comes down to the issue of a state lottery versus new taxes, Mattox said. “I’m the only candidate who is unequivocally opposed to new taxes, unequivocally opposed to a state income tax and firmly in fa vor of a state lottery,” he said. “As a Southern Baptist, I understand the concerns of my fellow church members (about the lottery), but I know that the Legislature needs new revenue to fund our drug and alcohol abuse programs, crime efforts and our educational system. “No one will be forced to buy a lottery ticket, but anyone who does will not only earn a chance at the jackpot, they will also be help ing to pay for education and the war on drugs.” Photo by Km thy HMvemMn Attorney General Jim Mattox