Wednesday, September 18,1985/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local Sack lunches fun, cheap, nutritious More direct route Brown bagging it need not be dull to Post Oak Mall in planning stage ie de the jump *d luxury to owingly loot easured and Dorm resi le free toilet re “unruns,' rs and late lere is an al lies another ith private n hours and y bills and a e a worthy jmfort. journalism The Battal- By JO BETH MURPHY Reporter No, it isn’t a new dish craved by pregnant women. Peanut butter mixed with mayonnaise and crisp bits of bacon on white bread is one of many suggestions offered to brown baggers in the pamphlet “Packed Lunches.” The pamphlet, which is distrib uted by the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, also offers tips on proper food storage for sack lunches. Convenience, economy and nutrition are some of the virtues of bringing a sack lunch on cam pus, says Susan Lawrence, a ju nior from Houston. A Texas A&M foods and nutri tion specialist on campus agrees. “Without a doubt sack lunches can be less expensive,” Alice Hunt says. She says a student can eat tor less than $1.40 a meal by bringing a lunch from home. Hunt says how nutritious a lunch is depends on what is packed, but she says the four food groups should be rep resented. The specialist also says sack lunches can be low in calories. A sample low calorie lunch might consist of a sandwich with meat and cheese, raw vegetable sticks and a piece of fresh fruit. She warns that calories creep in when things such as butter or mayon naise are added. The qualities Hunt looks for in a packed lunch seem to be qual ities some students also appre ciate. “1 don’t try to eat right, but 1 think I do,” says Clay Gomez, graduate student from San Anto nio. “I use to eat in Sbisa and that was f un but not cheap.” Lawrence says that with a sack lunch “You have more time to re lax." She says she used most of her lunch time standing in lines wait ing to get her food before she started bringing her lunch with her. A limited number of the pam phlets are availale in 109 Kleberg Animal and Food Science Center. Planning pointers, recipes and money-saving tips are included in the pamphlet. Jicketron tickets now at Rudder Box Office By MARK RUDOLPH Reporter You you don’t have to go out of iwn to purchase concert tickets any- nore. You don’t even have to leave he Texas A&M campus. The tickets are now offered hrough the Rudder Box Office, ays Debbie Murray, ticket supervi- or for the box office. “Ticketron tickets have been of- ered through the box office since Tb. 1,” Murray says. Ticketron is a nationwide service vhich sells tickets for almost any vent. The box office has two com- >uter terminals connected to the ervice, she says. Murray says tickets offered hrough Ticketron at the box office oard Iditor Editor >r s Editors tor |erry Oslin , Jan Perry n Williams e newspap er s A&M and those ol the :essarilr rep uors, faculty ■wspaper uphy for classes Friday dur- holiday and 10.75 per se- ,11 year. Ad- McDonald Station, TX 5-331S Ad- TX 77843. The Battal ion. Texas include concerts, Houston Astro’s baseball, Houston Rocket’s basket ball, the Houston Symphony, the Houston Pops Orchestra, the Hous ton Ballet, Las Vegas shows and even Broadway shows in New York City. Thjese tickets are more expensive than those purchased at the partic ular location of the event, Murray says, because of the service charge Ticketron assesses. Tickets also can be purchased through Ticketron outlets for out- of-town A&M f ootball games. “Through this service an alumni can get tickets to A&M events with out having to come into town to pur chase them,” she says. The box of fice also sells tickets for the Plitt movie theatres in the area. The tickets are of fered at a discount of $2.75, Murray says, and can be used for any show at any time. Murray says MSC Operal and Per forming Arts Society season tickets are now on sale and tickets for Broadway shows coming to A&M will go on sale Oct. 7. Student dis counts are offered for these produc tions. However, concert tickets offered through Town Hall are not dis counted, Murray says, because of contract requirements. Besides selling tickets for these events, the box office will sell tickets for any organization on campus, Murray says. A service charge is as sessed if the organization isn’t recog nized by the University. Also, student option passes have been discontinued this year because of the limited number of concerts Town Hall brought in last year, she says. The option passes were used by students to obtain reserved seating for events, prior to general public ticket sales. Murray says the box office has op erated at A&M for over 12 years, al ways as a non-profit organization. She emphasizes that the box office is not involved with the scheduling of events, but it does keep up with the people touring as much as possi ble. “We just sell tickets,” she says. In the past year, the box office has sold over 100,000 tickets, grossing over $ 1 million, Murray says. By ABBY L. LECOCQ Repot ter Barring further complications, residents around Dartmouth and Holleman streets may have a more direct route to Southwest Parkway and Post Oak Mall within a year, said David Pullen, city engineer for Col lege Station. Dartmouth Street will be cut through to Southwest Parkway and Holleman will be reconstructed from Texas Avenue to the Sears Service Center across from Post Oak Mall, Pullen said. Bids were opened in |uly with the hope construction would start Aug. 1, he said, but a problem of right-of- way has postponed the awarding of the contract. The problem involves negotia tions regarding the value of a piece of property that has been under Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, Pullen said. If the right-of-way is secured, Pullen plans to go to the College Sta tion City Council on Sept. 26 with a recommendation to award the con struction contract. “As I understand, there has been an agreement reached on the land negotiations,” Pullen said. “It’s just a matter of getting some signatures on paper.” If the council approves the recom mendation, Pullen said he antic ipates construction to begin in mid- to late October. It should be com pleted in about one year, but only if the right-of-way is secured, he em phasized. “The building of the project will not create any additional expenses to property taxes,” Pullen said. The opening of the two streets also may help T exas A&M bus oper ations better serve students in these areas, said Doug Williams, manager of Bus Operations. Currently, students living in Woodstock Condominiums, Stone- wood Village and Huntington Apartments must board the shuttle bus at the intersection of Dartmouth and Highway 30. The construction, when finished, will make it possible to open a new route so students can get on the bus closer to their apart ments, Williams said. Presently it’s hard to tell which route the buses would take, Williams said, but it’s possible that the plan would include reducing the number of buses on the Scarlet O’Hara route and scheduling a new route on Dart mouth and maybe back down Holle man. “It would be easier to go ahead and make a new route down Dart mouth and we wouldn’t have to stop at all on Highway 30,” Williams said. “It would be a little safer and a little more convenient for students:” The duplexes and fourplexes on Manuel St. currently are not on a shuttle bus route, but the construc tion may change that, Williams said. Also, Eastmark Apartments on Southwest Parkway may be able to be serviced by the shuttle buses, he said. “It depends on which streets are open and how much access we have to certain areas over there,” Williams said. But the rescheduling of bus routes depends on more than just the open streets, Williams said. It also depends on the length of time it takes to drive the route and the number of people buying passes. “There’s so many variables it’s hard to tell where we’d begin to rou te,” Williams said. “If nobody else is added, just (for) the people that live over in the apartments on Dart mouth Street at present we can jus tify putting buses over there and making a separate route.” But, for now, everything is on hold. “Until we have the concrete to drive on, we can just plan,” Williams said. “You can draw anything you want to on paper.” TAMU Management Society Makes It Easy Have plenty of credit in time for your Christmas gift buying. 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