Che Battalion Vol. 67 No. 199 College Station, Texas Tuesday, January 16, 1973 845-2226 Emphasizes Many New Student Services Senate Evaluates Its Fall Programs Student Government officers evaluated the accomplishments of the fall Senate programs in a Moint executive meeting Sunday. “We wanted to make sure where we were and where we were go ing,” said Layne Kruse, Student Government president. “In general, there was some good continuity in the programs iiiiiYian. k H H M ssawi This Semester’s Routes m. Rt. 1—One bus every 10 minutes from 7 a. until 7 p. m. on weekdays. The bus will leave the cam pus on its final run at 6:45 p. m. Rt. 2—Four buses will run every 10 minutes between 7 a. m. and 1 p. m. Three buses will run in the same manner between 1 p.m. and 7 p. m. and one bus will run between 7 p. m. and 8 p. m. The last bus will leave the campus at 7:45 p. m. this fall, including an expansion of programs continued from last year.” “Special emphasis should be placed on the work of services provided to the students now and in the future such as the day care center, book exchange program, shuttle bus and student attorney by the Student Government,” said Kruse. “I think we did more new things then I can ever remember being done by the Senate during one semester,” said Barb Sears, chair man of external affairs. “There have been cases when there haven’t been a good response and there were breakdowns con stituted among the senators, but on the whole the Senate is a good representative body.” “I wish the only thing the sen ators would do is to have more and better communications be tween them and their constitu- ants.” The National Student Lobby, polling places on campus, bike registration, dead week and more students on university commit tees were also some of the Sen ate’s accomplishments. “The voting box to be placed on campus will have a big effect between the campus and the city of College Station,” continued Kruse. “It will bring the students on campus closer to the community beginning with the April City Council elections.” Other items accomplished and put into effect by the Student Senate include yell leader regula tions, the campus police, radar unit, Phase II of dorm improve ments, Aggie Sweetheart, voter registration drive, Aggie Blood Drive, Free University, Student Discount Programs, tutoring pro gram and the student handbook. “Next semester we are looking forward to such things as com pletion of the student attorney program, car service center, cred it union, Student Service Fee al locations, student radio station, rules and regulation revisions and increasing pass-fail hours,” said Kruse. ' “The Fair Housing Commission will also put out two publications concerning the legal rights of apartment tenents and a list of major apartment complexes and an evaluation of their facilities and landlords,” said Sears. The date for Student Govern ment elections was set for March 29 with run-offs being held April 5. The last Senate meeting for the year will also be held at this time. Symphony To Play Here Committee Plans Next Year’s Shuttle Bus Operation, Funding A proposal for the level of service and financing arrange ments for the 1973-74 Shuttle Bus operation was discussed in a Monday meeting of the Shuttle Bus Committee. A proposed number of ten buses totaling 55 hours per week per bus was presented to the committee. It has two buses on the inner-campus periphery route, one bus to Hensel-College View, five buses on Route 2 (Monaco, Barcelona, Tanglewood, Plantation Oaks, etc.) and two buses to the North Gate apart ments. Approximately $120,000 will be needed to support the nine months operation of 10 buses at $7 per hour with each bus running a total of 55 hours per week. The funding of the operation would be a combination user and student service fee with each user paying $18 per year to ride the bus. “We estimate 3,000 riders with the addition of the North Gate area and the extension of Route 2,” said Ed Davis. “These popu lation figures were derived with the help of the College Station City planner.” Estimated costs from the Stu dent Service Fee would be $66,- 000. “Any Student with an I.D. will be able to ride on the inner- campus periphery route,” said Kent Caperton, committee chair man. “This answers the question about some aspect of the service not being available to all the stu dents.” “The $18 user fee leaves the off-campus student with the cho ice of using the money for the bus or for parking fees,” said Dean of Women Toby Schrieber. Non-student riders include the student wife at $18 for nine months and the faculty-staff at $22 for nine months. The facul ty-staff fare was arrived at through computing the cost to each student for bus service. If the proposal is accepted a coupon book would be available for occasional riders at 10 rides for $1.50. The Dallas Symphony Orches tra will string its bows Thursday for a concert under auspices of the Rotary Community Series. Anshel Brusilow will conduct the orchestra in the music of Berlioz, Mendelssohn, Strauss and Stravinsky. The performance at the Bryan Civic Auditorium will begin at 8 p.m. The program will include Ber lioz’s “Roman Carnival Over ture,” The “Death and Trans figuration” tone poem by Strauss, Mendelssohn’s “Italian Sym phony” and the Suite from “The Firebird” by Stravinsky. Rotary Series season tickets will be honored and a block of seats are available to TAMU stu dents and their dates at two dollars each, announced Town Hall Chairman Philip Goodwin. The Dallas Symphony is pre sented by the Rotary Community Series in cooperation with Texas A&M and the Town Hall commit tee of the Memorial Student Center. The 85-member Dallas Sym phony plays some 170 concerts a year in a variety of offerings. The 72-year-old orchestra, one of the six oldest major American symphony orchestras, was recipi ent in 1969 of a special award for its 20th-Century Gamut Anshel Brusilow Series. The award by the Amer ican Society of Composers, Au thors and Publishers cited con tributions to contemporary music. During a typical season more than 120,000 young concert goers hear the Dallas Symphony in performances designed especially for them. It plays annually to 450,000 people. Among its many services are subscription concerts, Dallasound Concert Series, educational tele vision tapings, free State Fair Concerts, Dallas civic opera and civic ballet performances, park concerts and free in-school con certs. The orchestra’s Dallasound re cording, using special arrange ments of the most popular hit tunes, became a collector’s item. Brusilow led the DSO in one of America’s first performances of the rock opera, “Jesus Christ Superstar,” in the first season. Student-date tickets for the concert are on sale at the Student Program Office in the MSC daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. New Group Defends Air Discounts Through the sponsorship of the National Student Lobby and Con tinental Marketing Corporation, the Coalition to Retain Air Dis count Fares (CRADF) has been formed. On Dec. 7, 1972, the Civil Aeronautics Board announced the results of their Domestic Passen ger-Fare Investigation: “that youth standby, youth reservation and family fares are unjustly dis criminatory and that family and youth reservation fares are also unreasonable.” The board did de fer cancellation of these fares pending further hearing on the question of an adjustment to normal fares. The purpose of CRADF, in the words of Russell Lehrman, presi dent of Continental Marketing Corporation, a youth fare card sales concern, “will be to alert every traveler affected, advise them that they may lose from 25 per cent to 33 per cent air fare Banking is a pleasure at First Bank & Trust. Adv. reductions if they don’t act now, and provide them with a vehicle to express their views so that they will be heard.” An open appeal is being mailed each college newspaper in the form of an ad that can be placed by the editor as a service for his readers. The ad will carry a tear-out letter, to be signed by readers, appealing to Congress to act on legislation that can pave the way for continuation of these discount fares. The letters will be submitted to the CRADF Of fice in Washington, D. C., where they will be systematically sorted by Congressional District, count ed to measure response, and finally forwarded to the proper Congressmen. National Student Lobby leaders will then go into action. They will visit the members of the House and Senate Commerce Committees in an effort to get at least one Republican and one Democratic sponsor for necessary legislation from each committee. They will work with staffs 6f the committees, airline repre sentatives, senior citizens and other groups interested in pre serving the discount fares. On Feb. 28 a National Student Lobby Conference will be held, with students from all parts of the country in attendance, to consider this problem. At that time, the delegates will visit with their own legislators to urge posi tive and final action to retain these important fares. In Jamuary, 1968, CAB exam iner Arthur S. Present ruled that discount fares limited to persons 12 to 21 years old are “unjustly discriminatory” because age alone isn’t a valid distinction between passengers. Shortly thereafter, present received mail from col lege students by the sack load. Their expression of opinion was so overwhelming that the CAB ruled that airline youth fare dis counts don’t unjustly discrimi nate against adults. The board put off any decision on a petition to abolish the discounts until a a study of whether the fares were reasonable in relation to carrier costs was completed. Originally youth fares were challenged by National Trailways Bus System, a trade association of bus companies, and by TCO Industries, Inc., formerly Trans continental Bus System, Inc. Over $300 million is spent by young people on youth fare tickets annually. Each year over 1 mil lion youth fare cards are bought by young people who believe that they are entitled to its benefits until age 22. If the fare is abolished, privileges of the card would be evoked. A special Air Hot Line has been set up to receive telephone inquiries for up-to-date informa tion on this issue. Since CRADF is a non-profit organization, col lect calls cannot be accepted. There is, however, a number in Houston, Texas for Western call ers and another number in Wash ington, D. C. for Eastern callers. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv.