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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1975)
Council meeting set THE BATTALION Page 3 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975 Two items on the agenda for the Thursday night College Station City Council meeting deal with the con troversial sidewalk clause of the subdivision ordinance. The voting was tied on an earlier motion requiring sidewalks on all right-of-ways wider than 60 feet and on all streets leading to schools. A discussion of the park dedica tion requirements is also on the agenda. The subcommittee investigating alternatives to the current dedica tion ordinance reportedly has sev eral ideas to present to the full council. Two meetings between con cerned developers and realtors and the subcommittee have been held in the past two weeks. The council is not expected to take any action on the dedication requirements at this meeting. Also on the agenda is a report by the Council’s Hotel-Motel Tax Committee and the city engineer’s report on drainage problems in the Bee Creek area. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. in the Citv Hall. AMERICA S FAVORITE PIZZA Our regular $1.89 Spaghetti Dinner with meatsauce, served in true Italian style with garden fresh salad and garlic toast. Share a today. [No. 2 Pizza Inn of Bryan Nextto Bryan High 1803 Greenfield Plaza No. 1 Pizza Inn of College Station 413 Texas Ave. ail fDonor East’3’Theatres in fltanty tost ffloli 82J-8JOO PALACE 822 ssn Oowntowrt Bry<n HAPPY HOUR $1.50 till 6:30 -5:45-7:45-9:45 Call Theal': for Showtftr as 51.5C >irst hour BUFORD PUSSER's own true story Atv-* "t BCP.piesems PART 2 WALKINGS TAIL ' i ■ f Wf -5:35-7:35-9:35 the RETURN of the Rink Panther United Artists |G C•••• •*. r wr « \\ f : v \\ % V Jv^'5'v V !j ' < R I #• >> u i / V A 4 ,>7:10-9:20 Call Theatre for Showtimes Starts Thursday P0R MIS PIST0LAS campus v:'r. V.I84-4J1J SKYWAY TWIN m.uoo . ,‘y West Screen at dusk "SMILE” plus (PG) "THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING” »•••••••••••••••* • •••••••••••< East Screen at dusk "DROWNING POOL” plus "WILD BUNCH” Call Theatre for Showtimes $1.50 first hour “ larqurih- Susaaiis One* L Eihhi^Ii” Jnf^olpr Pr ; r>K by Mocr-laii l^naM‘tr*ti* \ 1‘arainount Pirtnn |[r!"25- Special Saturday Midnight Show ‘Happy Days’ plus (X) Angie Baby’ Phone increase (Continued lioin page.* 1 -point, the method of collecting the money woidd be decided on by the Bryan and College Station City Councils. He said the money could come from several sources, for example, by increasing single-family resi dence rates, commercial residence rates, pay-telephone tolls and/or long-distance tolls. Councilman Gary Halter said the next step in the process is for the College Station phone rate sub committee to meet with the Bryan subcommittee. A tentative date for the closed meeting lias been set for Sept. 15. The last time General Telephone asked Bryan and College Station for an increase, the matter wound up in court. According to sources, the re quest is likely to end up in court again if General Telephone is of fered less than 60 per cent of the $1,073,193 by the cities. The Battalion has learned that General Telephone has agreed to settle for approximately 75 per cent of the $1,073,193 originally asked by the phone company, hut the offer was not accepted by the Bryan- College Station phone rate sub committees. i - , v ^ ’* v Rev’s Funeral (above) Thousands gather in the northern horseshoe end of Kyle Field Tuesday evening for Reveille Ill’s burial cere monies. SlafT plioto i)> l)a\itl McCarroIl (left) As a special farewell to their “lady,” the E-2 cadets each hammered one nail into Reveille Ill’s coffin. I’liolo In Jim I'elcrs Correspondent Mascot respect differs iConlmnotl Iroin page 1 Hi s funeral services. Their own mascots just don’t fade from the pic ture with such a respectable pro duction. Shasta 111, the “potentially dangerous,” declawed Cougar for UH, “will probably he buried out somewhere in the country, said Richard Beskin, one of her keepers. The first Shasta was skinned after being donated to the Houston Zoo, he said, whereas Shasta 11 was kept only a few years because of her vici ous temperament. Tech’s galloping and traditionally black quarterhorse mascots come and go, each with a different owner, name, and now minimal function. The first however, died suddenly the week of an A&M-Tech game. Rumored to have fallen to the hands of an Aggie, “Black Beauty was doused with water one cold night and developed a fatal case of pneumonia, according to Jeff Klotzman, sports editor of the Tech student paper. Perhaps the most outrageous final treatment of a mascot is reflected by a 1921 picnic. “Bevo, the first of nine longhorn steers at rival UT, was the prime ingredient of a bar becue attended by Aggie guests. Bill Little, L'T sports information director, said. SHAG cur C0URTEA HAIR DESIGNERS A FULL SERVICE SHOP FOR THE DISCRIMINATING MAN RADIAL CUTS SEBRING STYLE PROMPTER WE USE & RECOMMEND ALL RK ACID BALANCED PRODUCTS 3808 OLD COLLEGE RD. - NEXT TO TRIANGLE BOWLING - BRYAN DORJHY DUNN Owner CALL FOR APPOINTMENT ^SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS? —-TicowwiS liifi A AGGIES L MAUI EXPRESS-BUS TO DOWNTOWN BRYAN COMPLETELY FREE! Shop the many fine stores in Bryan-College Station’s LARGEST Shopping Center. Pick-ups on the hour starting at 10:00 at Sbisa Hall & Krueger-Dunn. Pick-ups downtown on the half-hour. EVERY SATURDAY 1 5sssSSSSSS! SSSSSSSSSSSSS®SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSiSg=«sggs«sagqBSgg%