The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 30, 1974, Image 5

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    Bus committee aims for convenience
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1974
Page 5
Route 4 shuttle bus riders will now be during peak hours,
nmediatei able to catch their bus at the posted stops extra turns,
moment on First Street instead of walking to Boy
ich more (Jett Street.
oil, but
e searched
^lopment,
After the regular meeting, nine of the with 8 a - m - classes catch the first bus
11 committee members agreed to change a ^ ^ a ' m '
because of the two to the President Roger Miller said the number of buses was turned down by the
problem was a matter of educating people committee due to a lack of funds.
Committee members also turned down
request by students in the South Gate
The change is a result of a Tuesday the on-campus portion of route two to coin- Miller said the second bus fills up with Village apartments for shuttle service,
lorning meeting of the Shuttle Bus Com- c ide with the on-campus portion of route people at the first stop on the route, mak- The shuttle bus did serve this area last
jfittee in which route changes and fre- one. ing it impossible to finish the route. fall but has since then been rerouted to
quencies were discussed. Beginning Monday, both routes will en- Committee members suggested that the sav i e time and . to P as A s apartments now
tir “l Dean of Men Charles Powell, commit- ter the ca mpus on Bizzell Street from Jer- spare bus be used on the route during peak un er construction on Anderson Street.
Is W chairperson said bus stop signs were sey Street; turn left at Lamar, Nagle and hours, but Bob McMinn, Transportation Replacement of lost cards was also dis-
S , , ’ _. _ Lubbock Streets; and turn right onto Biz- Enterprises, Inc. representative, said using cussed by the committee. Members decided
Money aln . . i . an lose ze jj gj- ree {. ) making a loop in front of the only spare on a route could possibly to leave the replacement of the cards to
lout Vwould be convenient for students. Krueger-Dunn. leave one route without a bus if an emer- the discretion of Davis and Powell with
he saT I 0ther committee members noted the Route two turned into a major area of gency sltuatlon was 40 occur. the basic concept that the cards are not
bus frequency would be longer, especially discussion in the meeting. Staff Assistant Expansion of either the routes or the replaceable.
CIA destroyed
Watergate tapes
WASHINGTON (AP) — CIA
director William E. Colby said
Tuesday night that the CIA can
find only one tape recording bear
ing on the Watergate affair and
that it has destroyed all its other
tapes from that period.
In a telephone interview, Colby
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said, “Sen. Howard Baker asked
us if there were any other tapes
that bore on the subject. And we
don’t have any other on this sub
ject at the moment. We had per
iodic destruction of our tapes.”
Baker, the Tennessee Republi
can who is vice chairman of the
Senate Watergate committee, con
firmed in another telephone in
terview he had requested any CIA
tapes bearing on the Watergate
affair.
He declined to say what he was
seeking specificially, but said that
the CIA had been cooperating ful
ly and he expected to get some
thing but did not know how much.
Baker confirmed that he had
talked with Colby about the mat
ter over the weekend.
Colby said that the one tape
the agency has that fits Baker’s
request is of a conversation be
tween E. Howard Hunt, of the
White House special investiga
tions — or plumbers — unit, and
Marine Gen. Robert E. Cushman,
then deputy director of the CIA.
The transcript of that tape has
been entered into the record of
the Senate Watergate committee
and Colby said it also had been
supplied to the Watergate special
prosecutor’s office and several
other congressional committees.
He said the agency would sup
ply Baker with the tape itself.
“Anything we own he can have,”
Colby said.
“But,” Colby said, “over the last
15 years, we have made tapes but
periodically they were tom up the
way you tear up old notes or old
checks after income tax time. And
we have not made any tapes in the
past year.”
He said the Cushman-Hunt
tape, made by Cushman in his
own office, “survived normal pro
cedures of destruction because it
was put in a separate drawer
somehow.”
Colby, who moved up to the
top job in CIA on May 10, 1973,
said, “This is before my tenure,
but as I understand it, we would
collect our tapes for a year or two
and when the storage space got
too full, there would be a request
to destroy the old ones and the
answer would come down to go
ahead.”
Student seats
up for vote
A resolution calling for four
student seats on the TAMU Ath
letic Council will be voted upon
by the Student Senate tonight at
a 7:30 meeting in the Rudder
Center Forum.
Other business scheduled for
the Senate includes a vote on pro
posed changes in the legislative
section of its constitution and
first readings on Student Services
Fee allocations and executive
branch constitutional changes.
S.G. Treasurer David White
will present a grass policy refer
endum to the Senate. It calls to
leave it to the students’ discretion
as to walk or sit on the grass out
side the Memorial Student Center.
TAMU System President Jack
Williams will be a guest at the
meeting to answer questions about
the on-campus liquor situation.
The Athletic Council resolution
asks for two voting and two non
voting students seats on the coun
cil, which has previously been
closed to students. The Athletic
Department asked for $220,000 in
Student Services Fees this year;
the fees committee recommended
they receive $195,000.
“The Athletic Council receives
one of the highest parts of the
Student Services Fees,” said Vice
President Shariq Yosufzai. “We
need a voice in the decisions the
council makes.”
In the Southwest Conference,
Texas University has two stu
dents on its athletic council, Texas
Tech has two, Baylor has two and
Rice has two with no voting
privileges.
Steel to ignore
wage controls
WASHINGTON (A»)_The steel
industry opened crucial contract
talks today with both company
and union bargainers indicating
they will ignore government
wage-price controls.
The talks are the first and
most important in this year’s big
round of bargaining for nearly
10 million workers in various in
dustries. They will be watched
closely by government, labor and
management.
They are also unique in that
for the first time in 32 years
the threat of a nationwide steel
strike is absent.