The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 17, 1983, Image 3

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    Monday, October 17,1983/The Battalion/Page 3
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vehicles are parked in handicap
ped spaces 69 percent of the
time.
A $10 fine does not deter
violators from parking in hand
icapped zones, he said. Powell is
recommending that the Board
of Regents impose a $50 fine for
the violation next year.
He said the College Station
Police Department enforces a
$50 fine for handicap parking
violations.
“Do you ever see cars parked
illegally in handicapped spaces
at Safeway? . . . not too often,”
Powell said.
There are about 160 hand
icapped spaces on campus, and
Only 30 or 40 of them are located
next to buildings. Seventy-five
permanently disabled persons
on campus need those spots,
Powell said.
However, more handicapped
spaces are available this year be
cause almost no temporary
spaces have been awarded,
Powell said.
Last year, temporary permits
were issued to people with
broken legs and other major in
juries. This year they’re not
being issued because the people
with such disabilities are consi
dered mobile, Powell said.
Powell’s office provides a
shuttle bus service from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. for persons needing
assistance to class.
Squirrel causes grass fire
staff photo by John Makely
The College Station Fire Department
responds to a grass fire Saturday at 11:30
on Dorothy Isgitt’s land off F&B road in
Bryan, The fire was caused by a squirrel
short-circuiting a transformer in the middle
of a pasture. The fire was quickly
contained and only burned about one half
acre of underbrush.
money next fiscal year
Hensel won’t get replaced
.1 by Ronnie Crocker
***** mBmi R
Battalion Staff
v ; i Some Texas A&M streets will
ontinue to be in need of repair
,or|a while because of a lack of
|oney in the maintenance fund,
Associate Vice President for
Iperations Jim Ferguson says.
,g;^^™Jpiensel Drive, which runs
l^firough the married student
’’ jbusing area near South College
ivenue, is full of potholes and
neven surfaces, and has resi-
"'“'eniscomplaining about its con-
iidon.
Resident Cathie Lockett said
Recondition of the road is “aw-
ulr When driving on the road,
he has to “dodge the potholes,”
he said.
Her husband, Pete, a sopho
more horticulture major,
agreed. He said he avoids the
road as much as possible because
of the bumps.
Lockett said he sees the
asphalt patches in the road
washed away during the first
rain that follows the repairs.
The problem is a lot worse than
it was two years ago when he was
here last, he said.
Ferguson said workers could
continue to patch the road, but
in order to do a “first class job”
officials want to replace the road
with a new one. He estimated
that the job would cost several
hundred thousand dollars.
Gene Ray, director of
grounds maintenance, said his
department receives money for
routine repairs, but not for con
struction projects of that magni
tude.
Since state appropriations for
maintenance and repair won’t
cover the cost of the job, Fergu
son said the alternatives are li
mited. The office of operations
will try to integrate the project
into the University’s five-year
master plan, he said.
Items placed in the master
plan are based on the priority
they are given. Repairs for Hen
sel Drive are not yet included in
the master plan.
Some repairs in the master
plan include replacing the sec
tion of Bizzel Street from Jersey
Street to Lubbock Street. It will
cost about $700,000 and is sche
duled for fiscal year 1985.
Ferguson said the Bizzell
Street project was given higher
priority because it is used often
to get from Jersey Street to the
university.
Ray said reasons for the con
dition of Hensel Drive include a
broken water line which occur
red in the early 1970s and shut
tle bus traffic.
Ray compared loaded shuttle
buses to concrete trucks, saying
they put a lot of wear and tear on
the roads.
SEE THE LIVE PRODUCTION! THE BROADWAY
SENSATION! DIRECT FROM NEW YORK!
“If you go to the theatre only once this year,
this is the show!”—jack kroll, Newsweek
Texas A&M Rudder Aud.
October 23-24 8 p.m.
Tickets Available at MSC Box Office
Visa/Master Card 845-1234
Spence housing women
3$ beginning this spring
t whom the f by Kay Mallett
ag]-, I Battalion Reporter
t inappnf ■P ,1 ' cam P us spring housing
ig forbeeivign-up beginstonight and will
themselves ontinue through Wednesday
fore the 1 or students currently living in
he residence halls.
this couldhBThis spring, women residents
ias the harMl have an extra option — mov-
icated. Then into Spence Hall,
hem on thel Spence Hall presently is a
r ht toledormitory occupied by the
’eetotaler, r
r invention,
[at she is a law
goes to an f*
ie ingreditf
tter take if
iterest is f
Corps of Cadets and civilian stu
dents, however, beginning in
January it will house only civi
lian women, Housing Services
Supervisor Tom Murray says.
Each residence hall will have
a table set up from 6 to 9 p.m. for
the housing sign-up.
Students may either sign up
to stay in the same room, to
change rooms, or to change resi
dence halls, Murray says.
Students not returning to the
dormitories this spring must
sign up for a deposit refund.
Current hall residents that neg
lect to sign up will lose their
room and their deposits auto
matically will be refunded, Mur
ray says.
Students planning to co-op in
the spring should sign-up to re
serve a room for next fall, he
says.
Ear
HARRIS
is holding an
OPEH HORSE
For exceptional graduates with bachelor’s or advanced degrees in
Electrical, Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Computer Science, Engineering Technology and Business
Thursday, October 20th, 7:00 p.m. — 9:00 p.m.
At the Memorial Student Canter, Room 206
Harris is a producer of advanced communication and information
processing, equipment and components for the information technology
market. We invite you to meet some of our key management people. They
look forward to an informal evening of informative interchange that’s
particularly meaningful to you. They’ll zero in on the direction Harris
Corporation is taking today and the avenues of opportunity and growth
that direction is offering this year’s graduates in our Fortune 200
company.
Plan to join representatives from Harris divisions for enlightening
conversation and refreshments.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Friday, October 21st
Make arrangements now at the Placement Office
If you are unable to meet with us, send your resume to Harris Corporation,
College Relations, 1025 W. NASA Blvd., Melbourne, FL 32901. An Equal
Opportunity Employer M/F/H/V.
33
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