THE BATTALION Page? THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1979 °od stars, hofalostli Rudder A, ' v 'll sponsuj ident Loi turday. PI vett at Ip, in the M! . PaulW )n will dj 31, Rudder Hindi , O&M rsity of Ter >sion —fa )od stars s i of a lost W Admission-! es around! am War. 1 m — $1.( ion will spa a noon at relp haapi Although their voices are attractive and their appearance enjoyable, the birds on campus are creating a problem with the messes they leave due to their large numbers. This prob lem has even reached the extent that the maintenance department has to scare the birds out of their nesting sites. Battalion photo by Sam Stroder annons, distress cry sed to scare birds By STEVE CRITCHFIELD Battalion Reporter Those cannons you may have fcard on campus the weekend of msorak P* 27 between 6 and 7 p.m. we- Englisli p n t those of pranksters or military 11 benefit li rills. ■They were one of the Texas A&M (niversity Grounds Maintenance epartment’s attempts to scare losting birds off campus grounds. The best method of controlling the ge numbers of roosting birds has en the trimming of the smaller lynches of campus trees, Ray said. ^ ^ ^ They cause a great sanitation "tch begin'fe ro ^ em ’' sa *^ Eugene Ray, dire- Hor of the department about the ■rds. Ray said the grackle, starling ; Jewish S: aiK l cowbird concentrations after Tower, j^irk in campus trees can leave great ,amounts of defecation. R Ray said the problem reached its r universit rt Pier, lub wills 'eWare Fi >st Texas, ic Univent v Day. Go peak three years ago when it re sulted in thousands of dollars in labor to clean up after the birds. “It was then we decided to try to control the birds,†Ray said. He said all earlier attempts to scare the birds from their roosts failed with the birds only fluttering up and landing again in nearby trees. The department was then granted a federal permit to shoot the birds but that didn’t help either. “It didn’t scare them anymore than the other methods,†Ray said. But finally, after more than a year, the best scare tactic was discovered. “We had two trucks driving around campus,†Ray said, “One had a cannon and the other had an ampli fied recording of a starling distress cry. The birds didn’t react well un less the trucks were in the same an star in to go to to admission ounty, state election returns match Brazos County voters followed itewide trends Tuesday and stayed tiway from the polls in droves as two of three proposed constitutional endments passed. Voter turnout was light all over the state. Locally, only 1,284 ballots were cast in the election. Proposition 2, which would have given the Legislature the power to "eto the actions of state agencies, as overwhelmingly defeated locally and statewide. Both Proposition 1, which would license notaries public statewide and Proposition 3, which would create a $10 million bond program for farm loans, were approved by voters loc ally and statewide. Vote totals from Brazos County’s 31 precincts were: — No. 1: 650 for, 623 against — No. 2: 388 for, 876 against — No. 3: 826 for, 444 against. 03-B 77843 16 Ext. 3i| 35 >s r») lYOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT FROM US TO YOU! ^0! Gift Certificate 20% discount on all Merchandise - Gift Certificate good through Dec. 3, 1979 Must present certificate for discount. ts&tXft&QSK c The 3601 E. 29thSto&et Post Oak Center Use our Convenient Layaway Plan $110,000 contracts enable A&M archeologists to continue projects A large tract in East Texas and another site in the Cross Timbers region will undergo exhaustive archeological surveys this year and next by Texas A&M University sci entists. Two contracts totaling nearly $110,000 — the second and third major Texas projects in recent months — have been awarded to the interdisciplinary Cultural Resources Laboratory at Texas A&M, said re search scientist Dr. Erv Garrison. The larger project is a $57,567 contract from R.W. Beck & Associ ates of Seattle to study an area in Palo Pinto County where an electric re servoir and hydroelectric storage tank will be constructed near the Brazos River. SUNOCO Energy Development Corp. awarded $49,921 for the Texas A&M scientists to make a similar study of9,000 acres in eastern Ange lina County where SUNOCO prop oses a lignite mining project. Habitech Specializing in casual furnishings and decorative accessories GRAND OPENING November 16, 1979 10% off all Merchandise (excluding rugs) 907 E. Harvey Rd. -5046 odstone Center Tues.-Sat. 10-6 Thurs. 10-9 Ray said the combination of the distress cry and the propane cannon noises apparently signaled a greater danger to the birds and their roost ing sites were abandoned for the night. The department has been using that method ever since but now only one truck is used. Ray said this pick up is equipped with both a propane cannon and a tape player. Only one man is needed to activate the prop ane tank, play the recordings and drive while the cannon automatically fires at 30-35 second intervals. Ray said the cannons and record ings are generally sounded only dur ing Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring break when students are gone from campus. He said they were used Oct. 27 because it was assumed that most students would have gone home or to the Texas A&M-Rice football game in Houston. Ray said the birds are frightened “30 or 40 minutes either side of sun down because after they get settled in the trees they’re a lot harder to scare.†Ray said this method is more eco nomical than those used in the past. So far it has cost us between $600 and $800 and 200-300 man-hours.†Ray said the birds are only fright ened from the parts of campus where people walk. He said the area east of the Administration Building and around the golf course are not dis turbed and are allowed to remain roosting places. 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