If You Have Something To Sell, Remember: Classifieds Can Do It Call 845-0569 The Battalion rf ir_ Aggie Cross Stitch www.aggieland-depot.com N= I ! =F Tuesday, April 8, 2003 www.AGGIESA.com The San Antonio Ag’s Information Center on the Web Thinking of San Antonio? - Visit www.aggiesa.com for your relocation needs - Post your resume for Ag employers to view in San Antonio - View available jobs with Ag employers in San Antonio - Keep in touch with the Ag family after graduation When traveling to: A&M Sporting Events * George Bush Library * Post Oak Mall l\i/ The Place to Stay is: Marino Road RV Park 10% Discount^ with this ;ouponL 549 Marino Road Bryan,Texas 77808 (979) 778-3767 www.marinoroadrv.com 65 Sites - 32 Level Pull-thru • Full Hook-ups 30/50 Amps. Clean Restroom & Showers • Dump Station Big Rigs & Slide-outs • Public Phone Laundry ‘Country Atmosphere (Run (Thru the Vines 10K and 5K Fun Run 9:00 a.m. on Saturday April 12, 2003 At Messina Hof Winery www.runthruthevines.com Visit us for information or to register online Presented by Texas A&M Roadrunners bsl c£ i)( ■ Aggie Dance Team Try-Outs May 3rd Reed 3ui!diri0 Gym 303 , I :aorl ■ )0£ br Prep Classes April 12th & 26th 690-1813 Jennifer Hart Aggie Pance Team Pi rector wvwv.aggieathletics.com jhart@athletioe-.tamu.edu MATHEMATICS CONTEST Annual FRESHMEN & SOPHOMORE MATHEMATICS CONTEST TONIGHT 7:00 P.M. - 9:00 P.M. Six prizes from $50.00 to $150.00 will be awarded! Contest problems will cover topics through Math 152 (Engineering Calculus II) for Freshmen contestants, and through Math 308 (Differential Equations) for Sophomore contestants. Contact Doug Hensley, e-mail: dhenslev@math.tamu.edu For more information and sample problems, check Dr. Hensley's Home Page: http//www.math.tamu.edu/~doug.hensley (For purposes of this contest, freshmen are first-year undergraduate students, and sophomores are second-year undergraduate students. All majors are welcome.) SCI|TE0f 1 THE BATTALIOJ Innovative angling Students mech-fishing rod helps the handicappd 2HIV M ■' By Steve Kuchera KRT CAMPUS DULUTH, Minn. — A group of University of Minnesota Duluth students are going into business. In just one semester, four engineering students are trying to develop a working prototype of a mechanized fishing rod and reel that physically disabled anglers can use. Four marketing students are working with them, doing extensive market and product research, and developing plans for selling the one-of-a-kind device, named HandiCast. “It's nice to work on some thing that will bring value to society,” said Mariia Kouznetsova, one of the School of Business and Economics stu dents involved in the project. This is the first time students from different schools at UMD have worked together on such a project. It may not be the last. If all goes well, the students will work with UMD to create a company named “Limitless Opportunities,” where future groups will improve existing projects or design, create and market new ones. The whole idea is to give stu dents from marketing and from the College of Science and Engineering a foretaste of the business world, where people from different disciplines com monly work together on proj ects, said marketing instructor John Kratz. Students began this year with a 2001 prototype rod and reel. The device — cobbled together from a Snoopy rod and reel, a couple of motors, a few gears and switches and some wires and duct tape — was designed and built by a previous group of UMD engineering students to allow a quadriplegic person to accurately cast a fishing lure. In November 2001, it took first place in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers interna tional design competition. The prototype had to meet strict competition guidelines. That's no longer the case. “The engineering students are free to alter it in any way to Cullen Boyd, a University of Minnesota student at the Duluth campus, is a senior industrial engineering! He holds the controls of a prototype device to help physically disabled anglers cast a fishing rod. make a better piece of equip ment,” marketing student Chris Bremner said. “We're aiming for a 20 to 35- meter casting range,” up from the few yards required for the competition, engineering stu dent Eric Hesse said. “From the original rod, we ordered larger motors and a longer casting rod,” engineering senior Andrew Eldien said. “We're also putting the whole device on a rotating base.” The students are refining the controller, aiming for a 4-by-6- inch box similar to a video game controller. Anglers will use the box to control the base's rota tion, the drawback of the rod, the cast and retrieval speed. “I try not to get too involved in the details,” said mechanical and industrial engineering professor David A. Wyrick. “I let the students do the design and then ask questions that make them think about what's going on.” While the engineering stu dents are developing and refin ing HandiCast, the marketing students are trying to determine whether people would buy it. “Our whole goal is to develop a comprehensive busi ness plan and test the feasibil ity of this product from all perspectives — cost, market ing, price, distribution,” Kouznetsova said. Toward that end, students have talked to people whow with the disabled. They present the HandiCast idea at conference this month. They're also researching 1 possible patent for HandiCal making sure they're not infrinl ing on an existing product.* extensive search has fond nothing similar, Bremner sai: There have been some ps| lems along the way. Durinftf first few weeks, the engines ing and marketing studentsdit n't understand each others' gon, said marketing seni(| Megan Vesaas. “It's been a real learnii experience for students anl teachers because it's all nett she said. I ATL A NT Summitt is I |n icy glare, a surrogate i Connecti ultimate agit who enjoys Different 'o intense! ic same uesday nij ihampionsh NEWS IN BRIEF Aggie b on Rice Experts recommend pills to stave off radioactive fallout CHICAGO (AP) — Households, schools and child-care centers near nuclear power plants should keep potassium iodide pills on hand to protect children from an accidental or inten tional radiation release, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends. The pills protect people from getting thy roid cancer. Bioterrorism concerns and the war in Iraq helped prompt the new policy, Dr. Sophie Balk, a New York pediatrician who heads the academy committee that wrote the policy, said Monday. The policy is aimed at families, schools and child-care centers within 10 miles of nuclear plants. Schools and child-care facilities within that distance should stockpile the pills and develop plans for how to distribute them in the event of a disaster, the academy said. "It may be prudent to consider stockpiling potassium iodide within a larger radius because of more distant wind-borne fallout, as occurred after Chernobyl," the 1986 Ukrainian nuclear plant catastrophe, the academy said. The academy posted the policy late last week on its Web site, and plans to publish it in the upcoming June edition of its med ical journal, Pediatrics. China turns to animals in search of SARS beginnings GUANGZHOU, China (AP) - China disclosed Monday that a deadly respiratory illness had struck in more of its provinces than previously reported, while experts in the south looked into whether the disease came from animals on farms or in the wild. In nearby Hong Kong, officials said they we' preparing for a worst-case scenario of 3,Oft! cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome,: SARS, amid fears its health system could fe stretched beyond its limits. There are 7ft! cases and 22 confirmed deaths in Hong Konj Also Monday, the Beijing office of tlii; Geneva-based International Labe Organization was sealed, and an employeeo ! the diplomatic office building said it was disie fected after a Finnish official of the agency Id ill with severe acute respiratory syndrome,® SARS, in Beijing. The official died Sunday. China's death toll rose by one Monday to 51 state television reported, citing the Heat Ministry. It said that included 43 deaths in southern province of Guangdong, whert experts suspect SARS originated. Other deatbs had been reported in Beijing and the Guangi region. AIE>S MEMORIAL UILT Skydive Sponsored by TAMU Student Health Services (847-8910) (htto://shs. tamu. edu) 10 minutes from campus Skydive Aggieland The Quilt is on display at the J. Wayne Stark Galleries, Memorial Student Center @ Texas A&M. Admission is free. Gallery hours are 9am - 8pm Tuesday thru Friday 12 noon to 6pm Saturday and Sunday. TUESDAY, APRIL 8 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 THURSDAY, APRIL 10 12:00pm - 1:00pm Living with HIV: A Student’s Perspective Stark Galleries (Student Health Services) 4:00 - 5:00pm History of the Quilt: HIV/AIDS Today Stark Galleries (Student Health Services) 9:00am -11:00am Personal Perspectives and Remembrances Stark Galleries (GLBT Professional Network) 8:00pm - 9:00pm Candlelight Vigil Rudder Fountain (GLBT Professional Network) 7:30pm Viewina of movie And the Band Plaved On G. Rollie Coliseum Room 267 (MSC Film Society) 10:00am - 2:00pm Free HIV Testing Memorial Student Center (MSC) Room 139 (AIDS Services of Brazos Valley) a • 16 years combined staff experience • Video of your jump available • Call or go to the website to make a reservation • Located at Coulter Airfield • dzo@skydiveaggieland.com www.skydiveaggieland.com 778-JUMP The No. V travel to Hou Rice Owls at Rice (31-1 team in the r and is riding The Owls e the national won. The Aggies hander Dan ! the Owls. Th< and an ERA < Donaldson recorded 17.: Rice will Wade Towns perfect 4-0 n In 53 innin out 75 oppo The two te Feb. 11 at Mi Rice defeate The teams holds the se First pitch can listen to Station. HHHH *MSC E