Page 8 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1980 Prices go up at Texas A&M Other shuttle buses cheaper by JERRY MAZE Battalion StafT Increasing fuel, parts and labor costs have led to Texas A&M Univer sity’s shuttle bus riders paying more for shuttle bus passes for the 1980-81 school year. But two other schools have found a way to decrease the cost of the service per student. For the upcoming school year, shuttle bus riders will be faced with a 26 percent price increase for student passes, from $30 to $38. The price of student-spouse passes will rise from $45 to $55, a 22 percent increase, and faculty-staff passes increase 25 percent, from $40 to $50. Texas A&M contracts the shuttle bus service from Transportation En terprises Incorporated (TEI), the same company that provides shuttle service for the University of Texas at Austin and Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos. Brady Burnett, branch manager of TEI, said Texas A&M uses 28 buses per day in its system, each bus aver aging just over nine hours of service, or 254 hours total per day. For the present school year, Bur nett said, about 7,500 people are rid ing the buses. The service currently costs Texas A&M $14.30 an hour per bus, Bur nett said. But the cost to Texas A&M will increase by 18.8 percent, to $17 per hour in the fall, plus $1.30 per hour fuel adjustment. He said TEI must increase its charge to offset the current 18 per cent inflation rate and the price of fuel, which has doubled in the past year. He said TEI has also raised its base pay rate by 12 percent since August to insure getting quality drivers that can be responsible for getting stu dents to class on time. He said the pay rate will probably increase to 21 percent in the next year because having good drivers and maintenance personnel is essen tial to the success of the service and the longevity of the buses. Burnett said shuttle buses remain the most economical means of trans portation available to students, even with the rate increase. It costs riders 47.5 cents per day to use the buses, Burnett said, no mat ter how many times they ride. He said the buses allow students to come to campus an indefinite number of times each day for half the price of a gallon of gasoline, and they do not have to find a place to park. Burnett said these'rates 1 will allow TEI to provide a regular, depend able service for Texas A&M — until operational costs go up again. “Although I wish the price didn’t have to go up to the students,” he said, “it is going to, and I think they’ll be able to afford it. “It might defer ridership some; but I hope it does not.’’ One alternative to paying higher prices for shuttle service is being used at the University of Texas, where students pay for the service as part of their registration fee. Students are charged a $1.98 shut tle bus fee for every semester hour they take. All students pay the fee and the maximum charge to anyone is $23.50, or the equivalent of taking 12 hours. Doyle Stone, vice president for operations at TEI in Austin, said, “Because of the number of people and the congestion we have, every body benefits whether they ride or not. “There is occasionally something said about everyone having to pay, but there are no violent objections. ” Stone said the University of Texas system operates 55 buses each day with 500 total service hours. The system, Stone said, is simple because students do not need a pass, only their I. D. card to prove they are students. At Southwest Texas State Univer sity, students pay $7 each for the shuttle service and do not have to display a pass of any kind to the drivers. Joan Baron, assistant director of auxiliary services at SWTSU, said everyone being able to ride the buses has not created problems be cause the buses run only to areas heavily populated by students and return directly to campus, making them inconvenient for any non students. The SWTSU system consists of 10 buses at a school of 17,000 students. Baron said the only complaints come from students who do not use the service and feel they are paying for other people’s service. At both schools, faculty or anyone else may ride the buses by paying $7 at SWTSU and the ceiling price of $23.50 at Texas. Burnett said such systems are not seen in the near future at Texas A&M because of University administra tors’ reluctance. Having worked for three years in the Austin system, Burnett said the system encourages students to use the buses because they are paying for them anyway and the result is less demand for parking spaces on campus. He said the routes in College Sta tion could be easily modified to facili tate nearly all on-campus student traveling within the city, giving them more use of the service. By adding a stop at Culppepper Plaza, he said, students could be given access to stores and entertain ment. The cost, Burnett said, under such a system would be $10 per stu dent. Eugene Oates, chairman of the shuttle bus operations committee, said, “The shuttle bus committee re viewed the possibility of having a system like the ones at Austin and San Marcos, but they decided it was not just to make students pay for a service they would not use. ” He said the shuttle bus service at Texas A&M is subsidized 20 percent out of student service fees, and if this support is ever lost a new plan might have to be sought. Oates said the policies and sche dules, with the exception of the new prices, of the shuttle bus system will remain as they are now for the fall semester. Spring brings snakes out The warm spring weather that is bringing Texans out of their homes into the countryside is also bringing snakes out of their winter dens. When man and snake come together, it usually means trouble, said a Texas A&M University wildlife specialist. Each year more than 2,400 people are bitten by snakes, both poisonous and nonpoisonous, explained Charles Ramsey, but fortunately, the incidence of poisonous snakebites is rare. The death rate from snakebites is even lower — less than 1 percent of the snakebite victims — and most people will recover quickly without side effects, Ram sey said. If bitten by any type of snake, try not to panic, advises Ramsey. Bites of harmless snakes do not pro duce immediate swelling, discoloration, intense burn ing or any of the other symptoms normally associate! with poisonous snakebites, he said. Indeed, probably the best advice is to leam to iden tify the poisonous snakes and leave them alone, said the Texas A&M specialist. “Snakes are rarely aggressive toward humans, said. “If you encounter a snake, just walk leave it alone,” he said. “If necessary, an average person can outrun a aggressive snake,” he added. Poisonous snakes in Texas considered to ous to humans include species from two families: pit vipers such as rattlesnakes, copperheads and cotton mouths, and cobra-like snakes including the snake. ..-the Wonderful Meat s OPEN 24 HOURS! EXPRESS CHECKOUT OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT! _ - Pork Spare Ribs 3 to 5 Lbs, Frozen Fresh Excellent for Outdoor Cooking” ' Vi C Sliced Bacon Safeway Brand #1 Quality 1 Lb. Pkg. WE GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMP COUPONS! Prices Effective Thursday thru Wednesday, May 8th thru 14th, 1980 in (Town Name) USDA CHOICE BEEF! . . . The key to delicious meal planning! There are many excellent reasons to choose fine quality beef from Safeway. Every steak and roast cut at Safeway from beef is USDA Choice . this is your assurance of fine flavor and great eating . close-trimmed, guaranteed to please, and selected cuts aged to the peak of eating goodness! Pork Loin Chops Assorted Family Pack v : (Pork Loin or Rib Chops Thick Cut... Lb. *1.78) Whole Boneless Hams Smok-A-Roma Fully Cooked, Water Added '(Sliced Hams.Lb.*!.68) Lb. Chicken-of- The-Sea Tuna Limit 2 Cans with a $10.00 purchase or more, less Beer, Wine and Tobaccos. . . SI 6.5 Oz. Cans Crushed Wheat Bread Mrs. Wright's Manor House Fried Chicken Serving Suggestion Tomato Soup Town House, 10.75 Oz. Condensed Can Soup Town House Cream of Mushroom. 10.5 Oz. . . . Can 23 29 V/2 Lb. . . Loaf D|inc Mrs - Wright’s 11 oz. Hot Dog Buns 8 c *- QQC Dulls or 13 oz. Hamburger Buns Pkg.uT Pecon Twirls “• M ’ 69‘ Breeze Cheese Spread Imitation Cocoanut Fudge Ice Cream Lucerne “Flavor of the Month” English Muffins Regular, i Ct. Waffle Syrup log Cabin 24 0i.Ca an SPECIAL! Bit. I .HT Orange Juice Scotch Buy 6 Oz. Frozen Can Meat Pies 5 Bel-air Pizza £;.« '’,£*1.19 33 2-Lb. . Box Margarine Scotch Buy Solids Canned Biscuits ro r cor. 9h ! s Colby Cheese Kiuceme pig! $ 1.99 3 CM Garden Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Corn Florida Oranges Navel !/ 2 Gal. . . Ctn. Bel-air Dinners Macaroni & Cheese and 12 0z. Chicken & Noodles Pkg. “T # Mellorine “XW Cream Pies "ZW ss -j In a hurry and just a few items... AN EXPRESS CHECKSTAND d ~~7 IS OPEN / 1,1 ,t EMs i /MIDNIGHT! LESS Apples Potatoes Golden Delicious Washington Extra Fancy ®Ij| $ Lbs. For Russet US #1 Beautiful Plants And Flowers! Croton Norma Come See Our Selection of Plants and Flowers for Mother’s Dai;! Potting Soil «„! 20 b^ 5 1 .39 Mums 6 '^ $ 3.99 Prices Effective Thursday thru Wednesday, May 8 - 14, 1980 in Bryan-College Station More Low Prices! A Red De l' c i° us AppieS Washington, Extra Fancy. ib 49’ Green Onions ^ 6,.,M Yellow Onions Mua a, 15’ v — ^California T OmS U.S. No. 1 3 u» M Potatoes S s no , 8 Lb -00< Bag T T Mushrooms ^“ n h. r c. s ilo nd : p£99’ Prunes Pined Hou$e ...,'p£99’ Raisins iZe 'VS *1.39 it’s somebody’s dinner!' Safeway has long had a reputation for fine meats. We top this with our famous trim policy. The excess fat is trimmed just right to keep that luscious, juicy rib-eye, T-Bone or sir loin . . . luscious and juicy all the way to your table. And it helps the price, too, because you don’t pay tor something you can’t eat. At Safeway, it isn't just meat . . . it's somebody's dinner. a little bit more ...from Safeway - QUANTITY RIGHTS RESIRVID Everything you want from a store...