l y ches > Zanft ed Jay La, ’- 3 ;JeffT[, Bruce KL The Battalion Serving the University community 75 No. 173 USPS 045360 14 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, July 14, 1982 - ’hirty-two of the 35 new shuttle buses Texas A&M University purchased have been delivered. The large buses, which will replace the Transportation Enterprise staff photo by Octavio Garcia Inc. buses, seat 46 passengers. Two buses, which seat 24 people, will run an intra-campus route between the parking lots across the railroad tracks and the campus. Pass cost remains same Shuttle bus service to be first-rate 3 5 jr by Hope E. Paasch Battalion Staff ■ Shuttle bus service for Texas A&M students this fall will be more efficient and reliable than the sys tem offered by Transportation En terprises, Inc., Jim Ferguson, mana ger of adminstrative services, said Tuesday. I “Our objective is to offer more efficient service and keep the cost down,” Ferguson said. “We will have brand new buses, completely new management and a core of full-time drivers. “The system is run completely by [the University now. We are not con- acting with anyone.” In the past, Austin-based TEI has had a contract with Texas A&M for providing bus service. Complaints of poor service and inefficiency prompted the University to let TEI’s contract expire. J “The new buses are more rugged lian anything TEI ever used,” Fer- juson said. “These buses were cus tom-built for Texas A&M by the Thomas Co. in North Carolina. The buses will be transit-style, with rear- mounted diesel engines. They will not be air-conditioned.” Thirty-two of the 35 new buses have been delivered. Two of the buses are smaller, 24-passenger models that will be used for intra campus routes. They were purch ased for $26,000 each. The larger buses, which carry 46 passengers, cost $47,000 each. The buses for the intra-campus routes will be used to transport peo ple from parking lots across the rail road tracks to the campus. These buses will operate from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and anyone may ride the intra-campus buses at no charge. Despite the cost of the new buses, the cost of a shuttle bus pass will still be $40, the same as last year. “We are able to use facilities that already exist,” Ferguson said. “And we don’t have a profit motive. That’s how we can operate for about the same cost.” Students may pick up passes be ginning the week before the fall semester begins. Maintenance for the buses will be handled by the Transportation Cen ter on Agronomy Road. A new facil ity is now under construction to house the system and is expected to be finished by April 1983. Further efficiency and stability in the new bus system will be gained by using a core of full-time drivers, Ferguson said. He said some part- time drivers will be used to supple ment the system. All drivers will undergo training — consisting of both classroom and practical instruction — with the De partment of Safety Education at the University. Ferguson said all full-time drivers will be hired Aug. 9 and the part- time drivers will be hired Aug. 23. Two new off-campus routes also have been added. One, called the Lincoln route, covers the area northeast of campus. The route runs east on University to Tarrow, to Lincoln and back to campus on Walton. The second new route is off FM 2818, near Balcones Drive. Also, several on-campus stops have been modified slightly, Fergu son said. All the south routes will stop on Throckmorton, instead of having one stop on Joe Routt Blvd. Another change will have all east routes stopping on Bizzell Street. Two will stop on the street between the Commons and the golf course, and one will stop at the bus shelter. Ferguson said sidewalks will be added near the golf course. North routes will use the same stops as last year. “The idea is to get the buses on the perimeter of the campus and off the small streets with tight turns and lots of traffic,” Ferguson said. Heavy winds, load caused crash United Press International KENNER, La. — Federal investiga tors say a combination of adverse ■find conditions and a heavy payload apparently caused the crash of Pan Am Flight 759, a newspaper report- | ed Tuesday. I ! The investigators, who asked not to be identified, said preliminary ex amination reveals no evidence of en gine failure or other mechanical problems, said the copyright story in Tuesday’s edition of The Times- Picayune-The States Item. The investigators also told the newspaper they found no evidence of human error in the control tower. Test results revealed no alcohol, drugs, or other chemicals in the bodies of the airliner’s crew, National Transportation Safety Board spokes man Brad Dunbar told the news paper. The expected legal avalanche from the crash started Tuesday with law suits in Louisiana and California seek ing nearly $90 million. In U.S. District Court in New Orleans a man and his “miracle baby” sought $15 million in damages for their “suffering, pain and grave men tal anguish.” In the eight-page document, Gab riel Trahan Jr. of Kenner claimed negligence on the part of Pan Amer ican World Airways, United States Aviation Underwriters, the Boeing Co., ABC Insurance Co. and the Fed eral Aviation Administration. “The accident is the kind of tragedy and disaster that does not Ex-student not guilty by insanity by Terry Duran Battalion Staff A former Texas A&M student ac cused of the stabbing death of his roommate was found not guilty by reason of insanity Tuesday — but will not have to undergo psychiatric treat ment. District Judge Bradley Smith de clared Leighton Hurst, 21, not guilty of the May 8, 1981 stabbing death of Joseph Dill after three psychiatrists and a psychologist — three of whom were witnesses for the prosecution — said Hurst was insane at the time of the killing. However, he will not be committed to a mental institution or other man datory treatment because Smith de cided Hurst was not currently mental ly ill. Dill, a freshman accounting major, was found dead — stabbed 48 times — in his Tanglewood South apart ment in College Station. Hurst was arrested in the apartment shortly af ter discovery of the body and charged with the death. District Attorney Travis Bryan III decided to let Judge Smith determine Hurst’s sanity after three psychiatric reports found Hurst insane. “The judge,” Bryan said, “did the only thing he could have, given the status of the law and the evidence pre sented. I have no argument with the judge’s decision.” Bryan said he thinks the insanity defense “should be abolished. “We ought to have some psychiat ric unit type prisons and some regular facilities, but they ought to go to pris on regardless.” Bryan said no appeal can be made by the state to change the court’s deci sion. Two psychiatrists and a psycholog ist for the prosecution, along with a defense-hired psychiatrist, testified that at the time of Dill’s death Hurst suffered from a form of schizophre nia which could strike and leave sud denly. Psychiatric reports said that in the weeks before Dill’s death Hurst began seeing glimpses of monsters, thought birds, radios and televisions were talk ing directly to him, and believed the U.S. Air Force had set up surveillance equipment in his apartment. The reports said that on the night of Dill’s death, Hurst thought Dill was a Russian spy with a gun who had come to kill him. Hurst’s attorney said Hurst has been under treatment since the inci dent, taking medication to reduce the chance of another schizophrenic in terlude, and is working in an Austin supermarket. Hurst was defended by Roy Min ton, who successfully defended Texas House Speaker Billy Clayton in the federal Brilab case. FBI investigates Braniff kickbacks United Press International DALLAS — At least one former high-ranking official of Braniff Inter national was involved in a kickback scheme, sources told United Press In ternational, and the FBI confirmed it was investigating. Several kickback schemes or equipment thefts — in the fuel ser vices and maintenance departments, and perhaps others — may have cost Braniff between $50 million and $60 million during the last decade, one source told UPI. Sources said BranifFs plunge into bankruptcy in May could have been hastened by employees taking mil lions of dollars from the airline be cause they suspected it would soon become insolvent. Thomas C. Kelly, agent-incharge of the FBI in Dallas, confirmed an investigation was under way, but could not comment further. Sam Coats, BranifFs senior vice president and spokesman, Tuesday said Braniff was aware of an investi gation, but he could not divulge any other information. “Yes, we requested an investiga tion,” Coats said. “We have cooper ated with that investigation and will continue to do so.” The information on the kickback schemes was given to UPI by an air line industry executive and con firmed by two former Braniff execu tives and two Dallas fuel brokers. The reported initial target of the FBI investigation is Jack Ward, sources said, but they indicated the investigation could go higher. Kelly said the FBI had not made an attempt to interview Ward “to date” — indi cating agents would likely want to speak with him later. Ward was BranifFs director of fuel administration until his unexpected, forced resignation from the airline Sept. 22, 1981 —only weeks before a new management team headed by Howard D. Putnam assumed respon sibilities at Braniff. Forum to host critic normally occur except in the presence of negligence of those persons in charge,” the suit said. The second worst aviation disaster in U.S. history killed all 145 passen gers on the Boeing 727 and at least nine people on the ground. Trahan’s suit asked $7.5 million for himself and $7.5 million for 16- month-old Melissa, who was pulled from the rubble after more than three hours. The crash killed her mother and older sister. MSC Political Forum will host Dr. Russell Kirk, a noted historian, poli tical and educational theorist, literary critic and novelist tonight at 7:30 in Rudder Forum. Kirk’s topic will be “The Nature of Freedom: An Academic Perspective.” Kirk has been described by Time and Newsweek “as one of America’s leading thinkers” and has been a dis tinguished professor at several uni versities and colleges since 1948. Gary Hickman, Political Forum services coordinator, said he was in terested in getting Kirk to speak at Texas A&M after hearing students in his English course discuss book ban ning practices. “His basic idea is that you cannot have academic freedom if you don’t have some rules,” Hickman said. Author of 23 books, Kirk holds a bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University, a master’s degree from Duke University and a docto rate from St. Andrews University in Scotland. Admission is free. [‘Whorehouse’ opens; Reynolds apologizes United Press International AUSTIN — Burt Reynolds is tying to cool his feud with playwright arty King — author of “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” — by Apologizing for threatening to “hit |im so hard his parents are going to Reynolds and his leading lady, [Dolly Parton, were in Texas this week for the premiere of the $25 million musical-comedy based on the real-life [story of the famed Chicken Ranch Jrothel of LaGrange, Texas. King, who penned the original Broadway play, has been outspokenly critical of the casting of Reynolds as the town sheriff and Parton as the bawdy house madame. He has blamed Reynolds, whom he described as an egomaniac, for the fact that the movie strayed from the stage version. That criticism prompted Reynolds to lose his temper this week, telling a local newspaper “that I’ll meet him (King) anytime, anywhere, and I’ll hit him so hard his parents are going to die.” But the actor apologized for the remark in a news conference Tuesday. “I just reduced myself to his level the other day and I’m ashamed of it,” Reynolds said. “I’m sorry and I should have kept my mouth shut.” The premiere audience responded enthusiastically to the movie Sunday night, interrupting it several times with loud applause, cheers and laugh ter. But both Reynolds and Parton said they were disappointed the movie contained several nude scenes involving the Chicken Ranch prosti tutes. “I was surprised at the premiere. I didn’t know there was any nudity at all,” Parton said at the news confer ence Tuesday. “It kind of embarras sed me to a degree. I don’t think it was in bad taste, I just was really sur prised. I didn’t think it was neces sary.” “I thought it went too far,” Reynolds said. Parton, whose flashy clothes prompted her to describe herself as “the polyester princess,” said she en joyed the role of Miss Mona, the kin- dhearted madame. “I thought I was Miss Mona and I didn’t have to act,” she said. “The women they called trash in my home town were the women I always thought were really pretty. I wanted to grow up and look like they did.” She and Reynolds both said they planned to make another movie together, perhaps a film that Parton will write and Reynolds will direct. Parton also said she had written a screenplay for a movie she hoped she could co-star in with equally-flashy singer-actress Bette Midler. inside Classified 6 Local 3 National 7 Opinions 2 Sports 11 State 3 forecast Partly cloudy skies with a 20 per cent chance of rain today; high in the mid-90s; low in the mid-70s at night. Thursday’s forecast calls for a slight chance of rain with highs in the mid-90s.