Tuesday, September 11,1984/The Battalion/Page 3 Water, whiskey 7 offered for lunch By CARMEN THOMAS Reporter Foot stomping and hand clap ping were in abundance on the College Station Community Cen ter lawn Monday as the Country Gazette, a southern California bluegrass band, performed their version of a “water and whiskey” concert — “Water are we gonna play and whiskey are we gonna play it in?” a®The four-man band per formed many styles of music in cluding Hawaiian, Spanish and Texan. An Earl Skruggs melody of;songs and country-style ballads also entertained the approxi mately 75 listeners. A banjo, gui tar, mandolin, bass guitar and Dobro guitar added to the plea sure of the concert. aeDressed in blue jeans, boots and T-shirts, Country Gazette gave the audience a relaxed, “down-home” concert. The band’s jokes and stories made the concert light-hearted and gave the audience a chance to laugh. The College Station Commu nity Center and the Arts Council of Brazos Valley invited the peo ple to bring their lunches, lawn chairs and blankets. Those at tending included business people on lunch break, children, parents and grandparents, Texas A&M students, tourists and passers-by. Country Gazette was formed in 1972, and has since turned pro fessional. The group travels around the United States per forming 200 days of the year for bluegrass festivals, clubs and schools. The group hired an ar ranger to fit symphony music to their bluegrass music and often plays with a symphony orchestra. Photo by FRANK IR WIN The Country Gazette performs bluegrass music during a free concert Monday. [lis-ll: automated card catalog system saves time Library organizes circulation holdings By WALTER SMITH Reporter l g! n g king ,C. Evans library, you curse the term paper that your professor as- iigned. However, once you get here, you’ll find a time-saving cie- /ice that will make your research less edious. It’s Alis-II, the library’s au- omated card catalog system. Implemented in the fall of 1982, \lis-l 1 was created to keep records m the library’s circulating holdings. However, the Alis-II system can per form other functions for library us- ;rs as well, library systems analysis! Tim Saito said Friday. Full bibliographical information also can be obtained from the com puter, Saito said. Not only does the system show if books are checked out, it displays their due dates and indicates where items can be found. Users presently can search for books and other items by their au thors or titles on the 15 public termi nals. Eight terminals are working in the reference area, while three more are being installed. Additional terminals are in the reserve, map, microtext, and documents departments, as well as in the corridors by the main eleva tors on the third, fourth, and fifth fioors. Although instructions are placed near the terminals and information is provided on the computer screen, reference help is available if needed. “If it’s going to save them (stu dents) steps, they’re most willing to use it,” said Lynne Hambric, refer ence librarian. “‘The patrons are re ceiving it quite well because it can tell them the status of a book right away.” “There will be less dependence on the public card catalog and more on the Alis-II system after we get all the kinks out,” Saito said. One source of confusion with the system is the existence of two differ ent searching modes with different syntax requirements. When in the INQUIRY mode, you should search for an item by its author, title, or call number. However, when searching in the PUBLIC ACCESS CATA LOG mode, you use either the au thor’s name, the book’s title, or a combination of both, Saito said. Another drawback is that not all of the library’s holdings are rep resented in the computer’s database. “We initally did not think we would have enough memory space,” he said. “Our main concern was to get into the system those things that circulated the most.” Although the system is still in the first stage, the Alis-II hardware has been upgraded by replacing the original Data General Eclipse S/250 processor with a quicker MV/8000 model. The main problems are now within the software, he said. The library plans to improve the Alis-II system even further. Its long term goal is to have the entire card catalog computerized, Saito said. *3/ Bryan school board accepts property tax rate By DARYL DAVIDSON Reporter The Bryan Independent School District Board of Trustees Monday light voted unanimously to accept he current tax rate for the 1984 tax 'ear. The only change from last year vill be the allocation of the tax. The tax, set at 69 cents per $100 of assessed property value, is divided into a general fund used for local maintenance and a debt service fund. Last year’s tax allotted 64 cents for the general fund and 5 cents for the debt service fund. The resolu tion adopted by the board for 1984 will allocate 61 cents for the general fund and 8 cents for the debt service fund. Superintendent Guy Gorden said the increase in the debt service fund was needed to pay outstanding bills caused by the construction of addi tions to district schools. The board also heard a construc tion report on the Bryan Aquatic Center pool complex and the class room addition at Anson Jones School. The pool complex will be completed by Oct. 1 but completion of the classroom addition, scheduled for the middle of August, will be de layed until Nov. 1. Board member Woody Hum phries stressed that, despite the de lay, the committee was pleased with the work on the addition. “We’re getting a good building. That’s the main thing,” he said. C. B. McGown, Jr., director of personnel for the district, reported the enrollment in the district for the fifth day of class was 10,631, up 278 from last year. Dry weather hurts crops in B-CS area By KEVIN S. INDA Reporter The dry weather that South Texas has been experiencing hasn’t af fected the Bryan-College Station wa ter supplies, says Charles Otto, assis tant water superintendent for the City of College Station. The Bryan-College Station area receives the majority of its water from 3,000-feet-deep wells located west of town near the Bryan power plant. “The rains come at just the right time to replenish the water sands in the wells,” Otto said. Water consumption in the Bryan- College Station area has been above normal this summer. “The increase in the population of the area has caused the water con sumption to be above normal,” Otto said, “not the dry weather.” The Bryan-College Station area has been using an average of 8.5 mil lion gallons of water a day during the dry months, with a record of 10.2 million gallons on Aug. 31. “We probably have reached our peak water consumption rate, so wa ter rationing shouldn’t be a factor in the upcoming months,” Otto said. But while many people aren’t suf fering from the lack of rain, some area farmers are. Farmers who grow cotton and sorghum have had lower yields be cause of the dry weather, said Dale Fritz, a Brazos County agricultural extension agent. Profits from the sale of these crops have also declined because of the added cost of irriga tion. The lack of rain also has affected cattle ranchers. “Many farmers are culling their herds in an effort to keep their pas tures from being overgrazed,” Fritz said. In addition, the dry weather has affected farmers beginning to plant winter crops, Fritz said. Wheat and oat farmers need rainfall to soften the ground before they begin plant ing. Current rainfall amounts are about 5.55 inches below normal. Janine Bryan, Texas State Clima tologist graduate assistant, said the Bryan-College Station area had 18.95 inches of rain through Au gust, but the average for the same period should be about 24.50 inches. vhere on ihd sor of a blues yi ievance ate notably loid'- taff lot 51 isn staff membff f contains al« iff use upon! i up to then* ics, one catd r ows of partfi I cuts search -i ridiculous# is concrete a# ed in it and# _ in die fish I* dents obvious 1 ons and park been guilty ^ using empty? predate the* res but I tbiul <■ considered e’ss of the situ the campus? c.ets to all slid although non ] in this part 1 ' its feel cheatt staff memte r priveleges. "ty of my arfl» . m paring thd sued for lot- ailable. I a® ■pprieciate W Eter the inert* as. d aric TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Professional c AREER Planning in Agriculture VI 8:30 am-12:00 am (juniors, seniors, and graduate students) 1:30 pm-4:00 pm (all students) 5:30 pm-7:30 pm (reception at Texas Hall of Fame-$1.00 admission) Wednesday, September 12,1984 MSC 2nd Floor LU o NATIONAL AGRI-MARKETING ASSOCIATION U- I ICAREER PLANNING! CALL-AMERICA Get a FREE PHONE! And Save Up To 50% On Every Long Distance Call. For a limited time Call-America will give you a free Styleline desk top or wall tone telephone ($79.95 retail value) when you sign up for Call-America long distance service. Just pay our $20 initial fee for residential service and get your free phone. Call-America is the lower priced, higher quality long distance company in Bryan-College Station. You can Call-America for up to SO^o less than the other guys—less than MCI, less than AT&T, less than Star-Tel. No WAITING in lines. No BUYING a phone. And the best long distance at the best prices in town. Call more. Pay less. And get a free phone. call America 106 E. 26th/Bryan, TX/77803 (409) 779-1707