Che Battalion Damp and College Station, Texas THURSDAY & FRIDAY — Partly cloudy warm and humid widely scattered thundershow ers, wind eastern 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 94, low 71. warm Wednesday, July 5, 1972 845-2226 Shuttle bus system approved for fall THE CAMPUS MALL now extends to the area in front of the Academic Building after | several weeks of digging up the lawn around the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross. Work- | men are shown late last week as they put the finishing touches on another portion of the J surface. (Photo by John Curylo) Power failure is prevented By JOHN CURYLO Editor The shuttle bus system, a project which has been thought about and talked about for a long time at A&M, will be initiated here for the fall semester, according to Kent Caperton, a staff assistant to Dr. Jack K. Williams, the university president. The plan, which is being set up as somewhat of a pilot program, calls for the purchase of three school-type buses, two of which will be in operation. The other bus will serve as a standby. “We feel there is a real need in this area,” Caperton said. “The idea is to serve the people immediately off campus in the area surrounding A&M.” At first, the shuttle system will accommodate faculty, staff and students living in the commercial apartment complexes along Highway 30, the Redmond district and the North Gate area, in addition to university-owned housing north of the campus. Caperton pointed out that the program will be looked at closely, since support will be needed before expanding the shuttle system to serve a larger area. Each bus will hold 44 people and will cost approximately’ $10,000. The cost of operating each bus will be five dollars an hour. This includes paying for drivers, insurance, gasoline and other main- fdinricc costs The total operating expenses for the first year will be at least $30,000. This money will probably come from student services fee reserves. ' “The shuttle system is being initiated in response to the expressed wishes of the students,” Caperton explained. “It’s been anticipated for several years, and candidates for student government offices have mentioned it in their campaigns. The Student Senate worked on it quite a bit last year. “Perhaps this will relieve some of the traffic problems we have around the campus,” he added. “Please capitalize ‘perhaps’.” Since the Student Senate is not in operation during the summer, the President’s Office has personally contacted student government officers to obtain their reactions, opinions and suggestions, Caperton emphasized. “We contacted Layne Kruse by telephone in Kansas Thursday,” he said. Kruse, the 1972-73 student body president, is attending U. S. Army ROTC Summer Camp at Ft. Riley, Kansas. A committee with extensive student representation will aid in charge of determining the routes and schedules of the buses. “Routing and scheduling are the keys to the success of the program,” Caperton said. “We think having this committee run the system is important, because it is a student service. The students should have a lot to do with determining its operation.” Also, the possibility of on-campus routes and stops for the shuttle buses is being explored as a possible future addition to the program. These two features will depend on the support and reaction to the original system. at A&M Thursday night For driver training Quick thinking by workers at A&M’s Power Plant prevented power failure Thursday night when one of the large boilers caught fire. J. C. Redman, plant superin tendent, said apparently the forced draft intake fan failed on Geologist’s paper receives award An A&M graduate has received the best student paper award for 1972 from the U. S. Committee on Rock Mechanics at the Thirteenth Symposium on Rpck Mechanics I held at Pennsylvania State Uni versity last month. Dr. Henri S. Swolfs, now a geol ogist with Terra Tek, Inc., Salt Lake City, was awarded the Ph.D. from the Department of Geology and the Center for Tectonophysics in December, 1971. a 100,000 pounds per hour steam boiler at the plant serving all university property. Unburned gases accumulated in the air ducts between the boiler and the smokestack, Red man reported. When the gases ignited at ap proximately 8:30 p.m., operators quickly shifted to a new gas tur bine generator recently installed and currently being tested, ac cording to maintenance fireman Garnett Eimann. He said the quick action led to no loss of power throughout the university. Most of the fire was confined to inside the air duct system, Redman noted. College Station firemen extinguished small fires confined to the insulation around the equipment. Redman said the air ducts were sealed and the fire burned itself out. The equipment was still hot Friday morning and Redman estimated it would be Monday before workers could get inside the system to check damage and determine the exact mechanical breakdown that caused the fire. The university has full power, including the gas turbine and two older boilers with a combined output of 275,000 pounds of steam per hour. Redman said the damaged boiler will be repaired. Education college gets grants Refrigerators to be returned Hannigan improving after mild heart attack A&M Dean, of Students James P. Hannigan is still in The Community Hospital in South Broward, Florida, after suffering a mild heart attack early last week. Hannigan, who was vacationing in Florida, was moved Lorn intensive care into a private room Friday. The heart attack, which occurred June 26, was described by doctors to be a Fibrillation of the heart. According to reports from Florida, the former U.S. Army general is improving, although no word was received on his condition early this week. Saturday, July 8, is the turn-in date for refrigerators rented for the first summer session only, refrigerator manager Ray Hold- brook announced Monday. Hold-brook said that students who rented them for the first six weeks only and wish to rent them for the second six weeks of school may do so Friday, July 7, at the refrigerator office in the basement of the hospital. He added that students wish ing to turn in refrigerators early may do so Friday. Refrigerators must be turned in clean and dry or there will be a charge. Also, refrigerators turned in late cause a charge of $1 per day beginning Monday, July 10. Holdbrook said that there will be someone in his office to car ry refrigerators for female stu dents for a fee of 50 cents per unit. Refrigerator office hours for this weekend are 3-7 p.m. Friday and 9-12 and 1-6 Saturday. Texas Education Agency grants of $120,506 have been made to A&M’s College of Edu cation for training driver educa tion teaching assistants and training equipment, Dean Frank Hubert announced. Grants of $80,506 and $40,000 provide for 1972 summer train ing conducted by Dr. Leslie V. Hawkins and purchase of a 15- place driver simulator and mo bile classroom unit. First major use of the $40,000 unit will be this summer in pre paring paraprofessionals in driv er education. Hawkins expects 48 participants in the teaching assistants program. The unit, a 14 by 64-foot trail er, will be housed at the TAMU Research Annex and used for both instruction and research pur poses, noted Dr. Donald L. Clark, associate dean for research in the College of Education. It also includes a 14xl5-foot observa tion room, besides driving sim ulators and film projection and sound equipment. He said it will be employed in ongoing teacher education pro grams and for university research purposes. A&M is in its fourth summer of driver education teaching training under TEA support. In dustry and public schools have provided equipment in previous years. Clark said the simulator and mobile equipment will be used for teacher preparation, teaching assistant training, research and teaching traffic safety in sec ondary school. The Industrial Education De partment in which Hawkins and Clark are faculty members has been involved in preparing driver education teachers 24 years. Broader concern has evolved over the years to interest in research in evaluation of individuals and programs, curriculum develop ment for content and production of equipment and facilities for use in traffic safety education. Teachers and teaching assist ants prepared at TAMU are trained in operation of technical equipment and media, as well as theory of teaching traffic safety, utilizing the new unit as well as existing facilities. The latter includes a 16-place multi-car driving range that meets state specifications, a 30- place multi-media student re sponse system, psychophysical testing equipment and others. TAMU offers seven driver and traffic safety education courses, including graduate-level problems and research courses. Offerings in other departments are of in terest to students concerned with traffic safety. Hawkins, Clark and Dr. Jack K. Weaver of the Industrial Edu cation Department instruct teachers of driver education at A&M. Participants selected for bicultural program Eight participants have been selected by the College of Educa tion at A&M for a junior college bicultural guidance specialists program. The one-year program will pre pare student personnel specialists for guidance work with Mexican- American junior college students. Understandings and skills neces sary for assisting the bicultural student in today’s society will be emphasized in the Education Pro fessions Development Act (EPDA) Fellowship program. Dr. Robert R. Reilley, associate professor in educational psychol ogy, directs the federally funded project. Participants hold bachelor and master’s degrees, the latter usu ally in counseling and guidance. Experience in counseling, student personnel work, teaching and ca reer development are common to their backgrounds. The participants are Marcelino Cuellar, Edcouch-Elsa school dis trict teacher; Ann R. Nunez, Mi chigan Vocational Rehabilitation Center counselor; Jerome B. No- vosad, Wharton County Junior College counselor; Ivan V. Sim mons, Carol Stream, 111., indus trial career training coordinator. Also, Dale Gilsdorf, training development officer, Catholic University, Ponce, Puerto Rico; Michael W. Sharp, San Antonio East Central High School teach er; Dan C. Galvan, extension serv ice advisor in the Dominican Re public for the Office of Interna tional Programs, TAMU, and Charles Schubert, John Carroll University counselor and psycho- metrist, Cleveland, Ohio. Ph.D. language requirement studied 4 The foreign language option for Ph.D. candidates will be vot ed upon by the Academic Council in August, and graduate students need to be made aware of the action which is proposed. The Graduate Student Council, which initiated this effort to change the present requirements, is encouraging all doctoral stu dents to make their preferences and ideas knowh to their depart ment heads. “It is important for every stu dent to familiarize himself with what is going on,” explained Dick Zepeda, GSC president. “The new program may call for stiffen re- Friday is housing deadline for second summer session A&M summer students who will attend the second summer session continue room reserva tion through Friday, July 7. Housing Manager Allan M. Madeley announced that the cur rent reservation period is for students who wish to stay in their present rooms. making reservations July 10, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students desiring to reserve another room for the second six- week summer session will begin University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Students completing work and leaving campus at the end of the current summer term July 12 must make advance arrange ments with their hall resident advisors to have rooms cleared. The advisor will pick up keys, room clearance cards and other university property. Second summer term registra tion will be July 13. Classes be gin Friday, July 14, and con tinue through exams August 17 and 18. quirements or no requirements at all, but either way, it will be bet ter suited to the field of study.” Zepeda said that he judged the major complaint to be the “across the board” requirement, with no consideration given to field or concentration. In other words, the language requirements are the same for a Ph.D. student in agricultural economics and one in science, for example. At the present time, there are three possible options for doc toral candidates. The first is for a student to make a score of 450 or higher on the Graduate Stu dent Foreign Language Test in two foreign languages approved by the Graduate College. The second possibility is for the stu dent to pass the exam, making a higher score in one language, thus showing a proficiency in that language. The third option calls for making 450 on the GSFLT and taking six hours out side one’s field for broadening the background of the individual. The alternative plan, which has been passed by the Graduate Council, must be approved by the Academic Programs Committee and the Executive Committee be fore going to the Academic Coun cil. This option calls for each de partment to set the requirement for its field, thus filling the need for that course of study. This would go into effect in Septem ber, and it would be written into the next university bulletin. The proposed plan eliminates the foreign language require ments in doctoral programs for which such study and knowledge is not especially useful or neces sary. Zepeda said that any interest ed individuals could contact the GSC concerning the matter or come to a meeting to discuss the issue. “This is not a closed thing for us,” he added. “We think that the proposed option is best for all concerned. If everyone will let departments know how they feel, then the vote in the Aca demic Council will reflect the needs and wishes of the stu dents.” i 1 W-*'- 1: u— v 1 I ; im Banking is a pleasure at First Bank & Trust. WE KNEW KENT CAPERTON had several fringe benefits in his job as a staff assistant to A&M President Jack K. Williams, but no one realized that caddy service from batgirl Susan Cummings was one of them. The assistance paid off, though, since Caperton shot a five-over-par 75 at the Bryan Municipal Course Friday afternoon. (Photo by John Curylo)