Cbe Battalion la V Cl, 10 IE lA 111! 8ii '■ 3 8.1 : - 9 L6 r»i i-2 ;i.i Vol. 69 No. 29 Copyright (c) 1975, The Battalion College Station, Texas Tuesday, Oct. 21, 1975 Private firm offers service when funeral homes retreat lay 'g- ).0 1.2 1.9 1.6 >.6 '.0 1.8 1.0 14 1.2 Ambulance service in Brazos County A four-part series by Rod Speer, Alan Killingsworth and Steve Goble. Hie cities ol Br\ an and College Station were desperateb l«K)king for someone to provide ambulance service to tbe area wlien the Br\an funeral bomes discon tinued tbe sen ice in Marcb of last \ear. The funeral bomes were cbarging as iniicli as S25 for local runs but could not Plate ends meet. “0m collections readied a peak of about 1)5 per cent tbe last seat we jmn ided tbe service, according to Raymond Jones of Callnwav-Jones Funeral Home. “Win go up on tbe fees if you re not fioim! to collect any way " We felt we bad a lieller cliance of collecting if yy'e kept our fees low," be said. "We stayed in (tbe ambulance' business a couple of months longer (ban we wanted to, Charles Hillier, another funeral direc tor, said. “We ran into wage and hour prob lems — the costs were eating our break fast. Tbe funeral directors adv ised tbe cities that (bey hoped to drop tbe ambulance ser vice by Jan. 1, but when tbe date arrived, tbe cities bad no replacement sen ice. Tbe funeral homes continued tbe service until Marcb. In tbe interim, tbe cities considered two proposals. Transportation Enterprises, Inc. told tbe local governments it was in terested — if it could receive a subsidy and if all billing would be bandied by tbe cities. (Transportation Enterprises has run tbe ambulance sen ice in Austin for tbe past 10 years and also operates tbe Texas A&M and University of Texas campus shuttle-bus sv stems.' Ed Sherrill, whose father owns tbe am bulance sen ice in Waco, offered to handle tbe Brazos area ambulance needs without gov ernmental assistance. Sherrill now runs tbe only ambulance in tbe county. I was stunned when they decided to go with a private firm, Jones said. "We all thought that they would take our cars and The College Station City Council Thurs day will consider a contract that will regulate the conditions under which Sherrill Ambulance Co. of Bryan may operate the city’s new modular ambu lance. The meeting begins at 7 p.m. in City Hall. put one at each Tire station and let the fire men run the calls. Tbe idea scared them literally to death. Although tbe cities firemen are better trained to deal with accident victims than Sherrill s ambulance crew. College Station City Manager North Bardell said tbe ser vice is too expensiv e to be run bv tbe city . A fireman, Bardell said, cannot be on duty as both a fireman and an ambulance attendant. The increased cost to tbe cities for personnel only, lie argued, would amount to about SUM),000 annually per ambulance/fire station. When complaints concerning tbe service surfaced in tbe media, a graduate-student class at Texas A&M did a study of commun ity feelings toward tbe ambulance service. Among tbe concerns revealed bv tbe study were: a slow response time, in adequate training of personnel, poor equipment, inadequate communications, lack of complete records, lack of an adequate recourse mechanism to deal with complaints and tbe lack ofov erall coordina tion in tbe emergency medical system. Tomorrow: The validity of the com plaints, Sherrill’s response and the ambu lance service s physical capabilities. Weather Increasing cloudiness and warmer Tuesday. High today and tomorrow 85; low tonight 63. Twenty percent chance of showers Wednesday. Shades of Saturday’s game. Last and Rick Weaver h ied to remove the night, the Baylor Bears made their still wet paint but some gasoline and a presence known on campus by cover- lot of scrubbing were needed to finish ing Sully with green paint. Andy Pen- the job. The vandals were not caught, nington (right). Boh Pennington (top) Photo by Alan Killingsworth R.NS •(Is 19 16 2 10 19 cM (lit TD 0 0 i ALL SENIORS are eligible to compete or the revered title of Ugliest Senior. The ill-male contest will be held at 12:30 p.m. ridayby the MSC Fountain. The winner ill be judged on the basis of (1) a nauseat- tigappearance, (2) a one-minute speech on 0 the depth of the contestant’s unsavoriness md(3) a generally lousy attitude. The win- ter will receive a T-shirt. Contestants need ;oregister in Room 216 of the MSC. For those less homely, a Pumpkin- arvingcontest is being sponsored Oct. 30. The owner-supplied pumpkins must stand without interior support and be able to be it. Entries must be brought to Room 216B oftheMSC between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. on )ct. 30. They will be displayed Oct. 31 in he MSC. The winner will receive a icme-made pumpkin pie. I® IX t THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUN DATION is looking for student-originated )rograins to finance. This course of study provides financing and $90 a week salary to infest* iniall(5-10) groups of students interested in 9 in K? leveloping ideas relevant to society and ints inti a kid 1 each p interval ing at i . A kid iedatoS I g oaI f he 40, irst in* as toll he kid* ■ IrizarP ge was* 5, 25,31 Irizarf) terffli” 1 d and e chost J Cha» offwil* Tights' the J'' Offif* otos b! ■d hive APPLICATIONS for Free University Chairman will be taken through Oct. 30. onus and interview schedules are availa- ileinthe Student Programs office. Applic- mtsmust have a 2.4 GPR. Interested per- ions may call John Nelson at 845-1515. • HALLOWEEN CANDY for mentally- etarded children at the Austin State School is being bought through donations, ’ersons or groups interested in partieipat- ng in this project should contact Mary iobinette at 845-1227 before 5 p.m. Electing data. The projects last for 10-12 sveeks. Interested persons should call Gerard O Donovan (845-4943) or James Wiki (845-3131). • LOCAL STATE-REGISTERED emergency medical technicians will meet onight in room 139 of the MSC at 8. Any- >ne unable to attend should call Gerry Greager, 845-2063, or Scott Mitchell, 145-1961. • THE SEVEN BEST student book col lections could earn their owners $100 cash prizes in the Third Annual Student Book Collectors Contest. The deadline is Oct. Members of the A&M Library staff will announce the winners on Nov. 14. For further information contact libra rians Charles Smith, Irene Hoadley, Tam ara Frost, Bonnie Hughes or Evely n King. ' ll *90 23 collections and i. i to k) ] , id* •rent ^ ted KENNY KIRK, AN A&M FOOTBALL of eJt player, reported to University Police that his car was stolen from the Cain Hall park ing lot. It was later found wrecked and abandoned at Lake Somerville after appa rently having been pushed over the spill way. In other police news, a citizens band radio antenna was stolen from a car parked inlot50, across Bizzel Street. Also, awallet was reportedly pilfered from a window ledge outside the handball courts late Fri day night. “THE WOMEN,” a satire of the Fifth Avenue women of every American Town, will be shown Oct. 21, 22, 23, at 6:30 p.m. in the MSC Ballroom. A&M students and date tickets are $4.50; general public, $7,00. Reservations close 24 hours before performance. MSC Box Office, 845-2916. Consol changes amount of authorized bond issue ERNMENT candidates meeting will be held Wednesday at 5 p.m. in Room 105 in the Harrington Center. Candidates who at tended Sunday’s meeting need not attend. If neither meeting is attended the candi date s name will he removed from the bal lot. • HOWARD PHILLIPS, National Direc tor of the Conservative Caucus, will speak on “A Conservative View of Politics Oct. 22 at 8 p.m. in Room 201 in the MSC. Admission is 25 cents for students, $1 for non-students. Death of O. D. Walker at 8 p.m. Wednes day in the Forum. Admission is free for students and 75 cents for the general pub lic. Texas GOVERNOR DOLPH BRISCOE S first public speech on the proposed con stitution since he advised Texans to vote against it was in Rocksprings this morning. He told a Capital news conference last Tuesday that he though all eight proposi tions concerning the new constitutions should be defeated. MARK WHITE, TEXAS SECRETARY OF STATE, said in Houston Monday that he was in the process ofappointinga Voting Protection Task Force for the Nov. 4 Con stitutional election. “We want to be sure every registered voter in Texas is able to vote freely in this important election, he said. • A MAXIMUM SECURITY PRISONER and two jail trustees escaped from the Brown County Jail in Brownwood, Sunday after cutting through two steel bars and climbing down a rope made of blankets. • AN AMERICAN EXPERT AND A DUTCH SCIENTIST told delegates to an international conference on the future of man in Woodlands, Monday, that many nations face massive and continuing hunger unless there are changes in basic agricul tural policies. They said that without new and bold measures world food prices could double within 35 years and the numbers of starving people could quadruple. • GALVESTON COUNTY HEALTH DIRECTOR Dr. W. W. Kemmerer Jr. said in Texas City, Friday, that two cases of typhoid have been confirmed in nearby LaMarque along with one suspected case and two other cases are suspected in Texas City. He said that the disease was contracted at a restaurant and there is no fear of the disease spreading. • FIVE NEW SUSPECTED CASES OF ST. LOUIS ENCEPHALITIS have been found in Houston, health officials said Fri day. The new cases bring to 41 the number of suspected victims of the mosquito-borne disease, including five who have died. There are 18 confirmed cases, including one death. PRESIDENT FORD HAS curtailed his schedule because he is suffering from a sinus cold and a slight fever White House press secretary Ron Nessen said yesterday. He said that Ford has been suffering from the sinus cold for about a week, al though Ford first complained about it Oct. 9 after a news conference. • SENATOR BIRCH E. BAYH, D-Ind., announced his candidacy for the presi dency today. Bayh, 47, hopes to put together a coali tion of backers from organized labor, wo men’s groups, blacks and liberals based on A CABINET AT PRESIDENT FORD S CAMPAIGN headquarters — containing cash and financial records — was the target of an unsuccessful burglary attempt over the vveekend, officials said Monday. General counsel Robert Visser of the President Ford Committee discounted any resemblance to the Watergate break-in against the Democratic National Commit tee headquarters three years ago. • TWO MEN WERE INDICTED MONDAY on federal charges of plotting to ussassinate President Ford in Sacramento by shooting him and bombing a sewer line. On the day of the attempt. Sept. 5, the men were in jail in Santa Barbara, Calif., after being arrested by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office on Aug. 26 on state theft charges. • THE UNITED STATES has agreed to sell the Soviet Union at least 30 million metric tons of wheat and corn ov'er fiv e years, U.S. officials said in Washington yes terday. The Soviets, meanwhile, promised to let this country purchase some of its oil. • KAREN ANN QUINLAN’S doctor tes tified Monday that the comatose young woman “reacts to light, sound and pain, and he would refuse to disconnect a re spirator that has kept her breathing for the past six months. Dr. Robert J. Morse was the first witness in a trial to decide whether Quinlan s pa rents can remove the respirator and allow their 21-year-old daughter to “die with dignity. The Quinlans have said there is no hope for recovery. • ALABAMA GOVERNOR GEORGE C. WALLACE said yesterday in Bonn that he is 95 per cent sure he will declare himself a U. S. presidential candidate. Wallace arrived in West Berlin today for a two day visit. World THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT has decided to expell Andrei Sakharov, the nuclear scientist and civil-rights fighter, the conservative newspaper Berlingske Tidende reported in Copenhagen yester day. • A COMMUTER-PACKED SUBWAY TRAIN slammed into the rear of another train in Mexico City Monday, and Mayor Octavio Senties said at least 22 persons were killed. The lead train had stopped when some one pulled an emergency cord because a man had been injured by the closing doors. By PAULA GEYER Battalion Staff Writer The A&M Consolidated School Board Monday night voted to change the amount of the bond issue authorized bv the hoard on Sept. 23 from S5,5()6,<)()0 to’$5,150,00. I he hoard, which also set (lie date of the bond election for Nov . 18, altered the amount because of a building plan change. Board members Charles Hensarling, Bruce Robeck and Joseph Natowitz voted for the change in the amount. School board President Nancy Donaldson and member Jon Botsford voted against it in support of the original propos al. Board members Bill Lancaster and Lambert Wilkes abstained on the v ote be cause of lack of information concerning use of the old Middle School building at 1300 Jersey St. for the school proposed in the bond issue. The bond issue will, if passed by the voters provide for an elementary school to be built on the site of the old Middle School. The building plans for the bond issue also include lour classrooms at College Hills Elementary School, a sixth grade classroom unit at the middle school and a new voca tional building for the high school. Also planned are physical education buildings for both elementary schools, site work at the middle school and additional food service facilities at the high school. Remodeling or new construction of ad ministrative facilities are also in the bond issue. The board was div ided on whether to tear down the old Middle School and re build it or whether to iise the present build ing. School Superintendent Fred A. Hopson said the cost of remodeling the building to meet the College Station building codes Would cost as much as constructing a new building. Natowitz figured the cost of renovating the building at $1,900,000 while building a new school would cost 81,800,000 Wilkes said he saw no reason in not using die buildingas it now stands for classrooms. If the bonds are passed In the voters the grade div isions of the present schools in the district will remain the same except for the addition of kindergarten at the elementary schools. 'I he elementary school to be built on tbe old Middle School site will include kinder garten through fifth grades. In other business the hoard voted to order two new school buses for next year at a cost of $12,918 each The two buses will hav e a seating capac ity of 72 persons each. One of the buses will replace an existing bus and the other will he used as a spare. Currently the district has six buses in "medium condition and fiv e buses in fair shape, Hopson said. ft* ;g | Collision injures bicyclist i 1 A 23-year-old Texas A&M University student suffered minor injuries Monday af ternoon when the bicycle she was riding was struck bv a car. Robin Ann Couch was hit bv a car driv en by Bernard E. Forrester, 25, a KAMU-TY employe, police said. She was treated and released from St. Joseph s Hospital According to College Station Police Of ficer Richard D. Gulledge s report, Forres ter was driving east on tbe inside lane of Jersey Street when his car jumped on ter the median. The car clipped two trees at Jersey and Pershing Streets and then veered off down Pershing Street. The report stated that Couch was headed west on the bicycle lane on Jersey Street, against the traffic, and wasJurning left onto Pershing Street when Forrester s car hit her. She was knocked into the yard, and the car continued and flipped on its hack in the yard, the report stated. Forrester also suffered minor cuts. He was treated and released from St. Joseph s Hospital. I s 1 1 :g i 1 SUDAN ART, a group of actors who his Senate record and a contention that he work out of Houston, will present “The R both liberal and electable.