Pag< C Con lem the I: few, a pr curi not, lem also lege did the; ing : Contrai tion, ap for mon Adminis autoterr 21 Beal able. Night w sary, bu TAMUR 11th floe INSPIRE quired. Managei rnainten; Part-time preferrec at 29th, f Compute be familit TO HAVE donor is a sible (45°^ day. Don read, stud cash in ha year. Nice 8855. Coileg 82; $100 already | - 2 bath. Ask Available Now lease OK! 82 Paee 2 WEALTH & SCIENCE - y V* J':'* Monday • August 1, - ■ ■ AIDS research not conducted at A&M By Elizabeth Preston The Battalion Texas A&M is not participating in any commu nity or federally funded AIDS research projects in Texas, though many other schools in Texas are, ac cording to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s AIDS Clearinghouse. The University of Texas System is participating in several of the 50 projects being conducted in Texas. Texas Tech and Baylor also are participat ing in one or more of these studies. John Scroggs, a counselor at AIDS Services of Brazos Valley, said one reason is the size of Bryan- College Station. “The population of identified HIV positives in our area is not big enough to support large scale HIV studies,” he said. The center works in conjunction with re searchers in Houston. A study on infected preg nant women is currently being conducted with several partici pants from the Bryan-College Station area. One certain researcher at A&M is study ing the sociolog ical impact of "The population of identified HIV positives in our area is not big enough to support large scale HIV studies." - John Scroggs, AIDS Services of Brazos Valley this fatal disease, AIDS. Dr. Pam Morales, a researcher in the Depart ment of Educational Psychology at A&M, is focus ing her work almost entirely on AIDS research. Morales is in various stages of five separate studies, at least one of which is funded by a mini grant from A&M. She has nearly completed one study on educa tors’ perceptions of children with HIV. “I’m interested in finding out how school system teachers handle the changes in the classroom from 10 years ago to today,” Morales said. She said she wants to encourage the beginning of a course to teach instructors how to handle cl| dren who are HIV positive. Morales is also working on a study to detenni whether HIV causes the eventual deterioratioi the white matter of the brain, which is the nett tissue around the brain and spinal cord. She has applied for funding from A&M for study dealing with doctors’ perceptions with HIV. Morales will study how doctors treat HIV pi tients compared to cancer patients and how dtt tors feel about an HIV patient’s right to die. Is study will be done by a random survey of doctoi in applicable fields in Texas. Despite the lack of research at A&M, a mi sub-committee of the A&M Faculty Senate ism ommending a proposal that will implement curriculum requirement designed to educate in dergraduate students about AIDS and health related issues. Fiber optic cables: Connecting the ~ World Monday • August SMU 6 Shut uj sit dow CONSTANCE PARTEN Sportswriter CS! Telephone calls are transmitted over land, under sea and across the skies. An overseas call is likely to be handled by an undersea fiber-optic cable made up of tiny, hair-thin glass fibers. This modern fiber, also used for regular overland service, has revolutionized the telephone system because it has allowed cables to carry more calls. a Indian Ocean Victor Kotowitz / Los Angeles Times Map shows AT&T’s existing and proposed fiber-optic undersea cable routes. Satellites are used to link sparsely populated areas and to transmit video broadcasts and data services. Competing companies also have cable lines. Undersea cable: Through the years UNDERSEA CABLE How calls are handled These cables, peeled open to reveal their inner components, have increased dramatically in call-carrying capacity while their size has shrunk. Modern fiber-optic cable is at right. 0 © International long-distance phone call originates at a traditional telephone. Digital signal is transmitted via telephone lines, some along overhead cable, some underground. Cellular phone path would skip this step and go directly to computerized switching station. If satellite is used, the signal is then transmitted from a satellite dish on the ground up 22,000 miles to an orbiting satellite. S MU head f< Rossley sa should not 1 the conference c year since the f< probation. ‘Scuse me. S' the team that football in the la bationary restric Some people where to get ofi coach Ken Hatfi think the SW A&M’s games to Yeah, like R better chance at if they didn’t coi The bottom attitudes helpei up of the SWC The coaches of want special p counting their probation. Many SWC riddled with Ni several years, i A&M is not an some reason th and fans for th seem to thin should suffer quences for th than they do. “It’s hard w straight years to beat some! coach RC Sloe about some o teams. So, this is Coaches are ru cials with thei: out like little c brother Aggie and your still outside and pie fair.” Here’s a tip 1950s: Carried 36 calls simultaneously Preparing a message for transmission At switching station, electronic "decisions” are made. These switching stations decide which is Satellite traveling in a geo- acts as a repeater and reroutes signal back down to its destination on the other side of the world the most convenient and efficient route available. 1960s: 138 calls 1970s: 845 calls Words begin as sound waves, called analog signals becaPSe the wave shapes are analogous to the rising and falling tones of a voice. But now, voices, as well as data and images, are transmitted as digital signals, coded in binary 1s and 0s. To travel in digital form through fiber-optic cable, an analog voice signal is converted to energy pulses. A pulse stands for a binary 1, a missing pulse for 0. When the message reaches its destination, it is reconverted to analog and heard as the human voice. If the undersea cable route is selected, signal travels along one of several fiber-optic cable routes, depending on the destination. ANALOG 1970s: 4,200 calls z OPTICAL FIBER DIGITAL Light Today (fiber optic): 40,000 calls Off On Off On Off On 3/4" Fall 1994 (fiber optic): 225,000 calls Source: AT&T Optical fiber £ $ ? Emm t Matt Moody / Los Angeles Times vii 1 Dante II Environment threatens Texas lagoon NASA robot begins drop into volcano Needed - fema W/D, bus route MOUNT SPURR, Alaska (AP) — NASA’s Dante II robot began descend ing into a volcano’s steamy crater on Friday when the 1,700-pound machine whined, lifted its Erector-set-like front legs and walked. Dante’s steps were guided by opera tors 80 miles east in Anchorage, where the robot’s moves appeared on comput er screens. NASA hopes the test could lead to robotic explorations on other planets. The robot stepped off the crater rim on Mount Spurr and into snowpack es timated more than 10 feet deep, the first time the 1,700 pound, eight-legged robot had walked on snow. Rubber snowshoes were made spe cially for the occasion. Scott Boehmke, a Carnegie Mellon research engineer, said the machine will walk 12 hours a day on power from a diesel generator parked up-slope from the robot. The test may run three to six days. Destruction of Laguna Madre endangers wildlife, economy ARROYO CITY, Texas (AP) — It’s a little past sunrise. The shimmering waters of Laguna Madre extend for mile after mile of golden ripples. Laguna Madre. The Mother Lagoon. The saltwater bay, stretching 130 miles down the Gulf Coast, is a vast cradle of wildlife between the South Texas mainland and the barrier sands of Padre Island. It’s a rare environment only a few feet deep, where hundreds of marine and bird species breed, feed and thrive. It’s also worth hundreds of millions of dollars to the area economy. But, increasingly, scientists say the Laguna Madre is under threat. • Underwater meadows of sea grasses — the core habitat in the food chain — are disappearing at alarming rates. •The brown tide, a mysterious algal bloom, is spreading persistently, clouding bay waters and per haps threatening fisheries. •The Arroyo Colorado, the largest source of fresh water into the Lower Laguna Madre, is loaded with pollution that may be feeding the brown tide. •Large tracts of wetlands and tidal flats, which provide fishing areas for migratory water birds and shorebirds, have been lost to what is called “spoil,” a dark silt dredged from the bay bottom. The Army Corps of Engineers dredges in the La guna Madre to keep the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway open for barge traffic between Corpus Christi and Brownsville. “The Laguna Madre system has a series of insults coming into it, and to me it’s at the crossroads right now,” says Steve Thompson, manager of Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, which shares 12 miles of the Lower Laguna Madre’s eastern shore. “Are we going to continue the insults or slow them down?” The Laguna Madre is one of only three bays in the world that are hypersaline — meaning saltier than sea water — but still support abundant wildlife. The other two productive hypersaline bays are the Mexican Laguna Madre, just across the Rio Grande from Texas, and the Sivash, adjacent to the Sea of Azov on the Crimean Peninsula. Even though the shallows of the Laguna Madre comprise only one-fifth of the Texas coastal bay area, the lagoon accounts for more than half the state’s catch of commercial fin fish each year. The warm waters are rich in sport fishermen fa vorites such as redfish, black drum and spotted sea trout. Robert Ditton at Texas A&M’s Department of Wildlife and Fisheries estimates that fishing and other tourism activities that depend on a healthy La guna Madre generate at least $400 million a year the regional economy. Protected from overdevelopment by Padre Islai National Seashore, the Laguna Atascosa refuge & the sprawling King and Kenedy ranches, the Lagui Madre is the cleanest bay in Texas, and the only ot that retains extensive seagrasses. “In spite of all the abuse inflicted on the Lagui Madre, it retains an amazing regenerative capacity says Tony Reisinger, marine extension agent fc Cameron County. Biologists say the seagrasses provide oxygen and* foundation for the food chain, from microorganisms to the largest fish and birds of prey. Laguna Madre contains the world’s largest con centration of reddish egrets. It provides habitat for endangered piping plovers, peregrine falcons, Kemps ridley sea turtles and an amazing array of shorebirds and neotropical migratory birds. Most of the North American population of redhead ducks winter in the Laguna, feeding almost exclu sively on shoal grass, a species of seagrass. The underwater meadows aren’t only important to ducks. Seagrasses in Laguna Madre estuaries of Texas and Mexico provide crucial nursing habitat for Gulf of Mexico shrimp, a $600 million annual crop in Texas alone. “Our policy is to protect every blade of seagrass we can,” says Deyaun Boudreaux, coastal environmental director for the Texas Shrimp Association. “We are sitting here guarding the last system that has sea grass beds.”