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Publicity Vol. 28 (June 1983 - Sept. 1983)
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Y a E i C O P. 4 y > h .yG C 0 v Er O y y ,� V1 0� T• � C y' = v i n o N ;"v °co3 0 0 E, u • - .. y V ° C c ) ' 4. a U w 3 'b v, 0 3 O O N c'.C'L7 O y •-•..., L n d • H N t 0 °' v ad w O O 0 • a.) C 0 " ~ C° . v, • ' : ' V 0 > CA E Q .c > .0 y 0 Q - et a ' - — a Aq U a. a V. ,, o 3 THE EAGLE, JUNE 1, 1983 h . r. O y CD CD pt ("9 •- C ( C D ,"-• b O CD . O R " rn N "" N N 5 4„ : . � • (�D O O G "b ' 4 t fl _ w w ^ rD I X 00 0,. et, D) (D = „ti ? o • • w t< p o '< co y Q O O rD sla P '�. I �G O \ J y �' �. "" r !/� n ^" M Q — ~ CD •.i 00 y , li t p < n O • C. C Da CD w 0Q , 'a' w g rn C. g w . rn 5' (D O •. 7 O' ((DD m 0 p' (D O w 5 co ...... OQ cT Q'0. v' n Q' `,.... o0 ( . 3 A) Q' ^ w' 9 "' r - ' •b C 0 + • -, 'S (D p (0.-, . N w< Ap O " al O O w _ p p O \ rj , w ? 6 a "...7 c' D CD (D 5 0 O ° a A) .'7 a (D > w., O O •� ° 1�. ° o 0P''ageTlEw (D -n,.0, y p , co., .. . ^ �co co a 0 7C' A» <`] N O N `< O O W O rn At 0 X w Cy 0 (D CD O �c b . r' v. r w C. n ' r . 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"' i rn ri . ,••.., 0 - * Day-care permit to be considered By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer A permit for construction of a day -care center at Southwest Parkway and Cornell Street is scheduled for consideration at today's 7 p.m. meeting of the College Station Planning and Zoning Commission. City Planner Jim Calloway said no opposition to the center is expected because it is to be the first structure in an undeveloped commercial area. The application for a conditional use permit for the center has been submitted by Jan -Wic Homes Inc. In other business, the commission will discuss revising the official definition of an accessory struc- ture and the setback requirements for such buildings. Calloway said the present definition of accessory structures, such as garages, tool sheds or greenhouses, is vague and occasionally causes pro- blems when building permits are sought. The commission will consider changing the set- back requirements from 25 feet from the property ® line to 15 feet from the easement line. Calloway said the 15 -foot rule is more effective for most situa- tions. Commissioners also will appoint a committee to study possible changes in current landscaping re- quirements. Other items on the agenda are discussion of a final plat for section 11 of The Glade subdivision, a final plat for phase four of the Windvvood subdivi- sion, a replat for two lots in the Harvey Hillsides subdivision, a preliminary plat for the Harvey Road East subdivision and a parking lot plan for the Southwest Crossing Townhomes. 4 t THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1983 • > S . t �. s.iA X N.: r • } ,► a.►: t-{ ♦ .. , 1a i , i s 1 ,t' �: ,.: . Y 1• • 1644+ 4 ' i 4.'9 � i t • • s f t w.2+}wc •.... �' "?"7 1 ,, ,. . ! ' ► � , I # ► si iy `,v s_ f i � t _ s 1 . . ..M+•#„;.y.� s ,. 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H — Bryan College station tape Friday, Tune 3, t985 u authority sub gro p app roves CS plant , • River $y THOMAS T Huntsville resident. feasibility study that will cost the city up to Staff Writer i ER tion," have Hardy, a "I h have an interest in College Station $600,000 will get into high gear. ARLINGTON — The Executive Com- because my son, David, was placekicker The plant is expected to cost $90- to $120 Aggie football team for the past few million and take four to seven years to Thu rs day unanimously approved a ten of the Trinity River Authority for the Agg build. The river authority will pay for con - tative contract with the city of College Sta- "We've still got to get approval from a struction and reimburse the city Thursday years. for, the tion for a hydroelectric plant on the Lake Iot of different agencies, but we're getting engineering study when bonds are Vold to Livingston Dam. the ball rolling." finance the grant. ' D. Hardy Jr., president of the Hardy said the proposed contract ap- The plant would produce 30 to 60 Ti ;Lard of directors, said the contract proved by the committee received only a megawatts of electricity over its '50 -year will now be recommended for final ap- few minor wording changes previously ap- lifespan; and all of that electricity would proval by the full board at its regular June proved by the city of College Station. be owned by the city. The plant's output tauon's 22 meeting. The College Station City Council ap- would not supply all of College § g . "I' g ood king f the rd to pro i t r c t M P eminary version of th of ec- needs, but city overall i power a costs in,the face help business we're looking forward to doing tract May business with the people of College Sta- tors approves the contract June 22, a of rising prices �r fossil fuels. "•... The Eagle, Friday, June 3, 1983 i NOTICE OF CALCULATION OF THE EFFECTIVE TAX RATE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION • I, Karen Dickson, Tax Assessor - Collector for the City of The estimated unencumbered b alances for Maintenance College Station, In accordance with the provisions of Sec. and Operation fund: 81.075,000 26.04 of the Property Tax Code. have calculated the tax The estimated unencumbered balances for Interest and rate which may not be exceeded by more than three Sinking fund: 51.041.579 percent by the governing body of the City.,of College N Karen N. Kar Station without holding a public hearing as required by the Tax n N Dickson Dickso nllector code. That rate is as follows: . 5.3917 per 8100 of value. • I. ASSUMPTIONS (E■ Subtract 1982 Taxes Levied for Mamtenarice and Operators 1. 1982 Total Tax Levy from the 1982 Tax Rolf 82.286.242 (WO) on Taxable Value of Property Lost Because Property is 2. 1982 Tax Rate (0 .0801 M &O and $ .2299 KS) 0.31/100 Required to be Appraised in 1983 at Less than Market Value 3 1982 Debt Service 11851 Levy 01.626.124 (Assumption No. 7) f . -f 25.575 4. 1982 Maintenance and Operation (MHO) Levy S 61110.118 (F) Adjusted 1982 Tax Levy for Calculation 5625.978 5. 1982 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and Operation 3 (A) Adjusted 1982 Tax Levy for Calculation (2F.above) $ 625.978 (M &O) on Property -in Territory that Has Ceased to (B) Divided by Adiusted }1983 Taxable Value for Calculation be a Part of the City In 1983 840 (1D above) 0729.816.926 6.1982 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and Operation (M &O) ff 1y z 100 on Taxable Value of Property Becoming Exempt in 1983 08.525 (C) Calculated Maintehence and Operation (M&0) Rate for 7. 1982 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and Operation 1983 S 0858/100 (M &O) on Taxable Value of Property Lost Because Property is required to be appraised in 1983 at Less than INTEREST AND SINKING RATE FOR 1983 Market Value 0 25.575 4 (A) 1983 Tax Levy Needed to Satisfy Bonded Indebtedness . 8. 1983 Total Taxable Value of All Property 0793.463.548 or Debt Service )I &S) (Assumption No. 111 ' 52.336.750 9. 1983 Taxable Value of New Improvements (8) 1983 Total Taxable Value of All Property (Assumption No. added since January 1. 1982 563.007.622 8) 0793.463.548 10. 1983 Taxable Value of Property Added Since January 1. 1982. by ICI Divide the Adjusted 1983 Tax Levy for Debt Service (I&S) Annexation of Territory $ 639.000 (4A above) by the Adjusted 1983 Taxable Value for KS (4B 11. 1983 Tax Levy Needed to Satisfy above) - $ 002945 Bonded Indebtedness or Debt Service 11851 02.336.750 152.336.75045793.463.5481 5 - -- I1. CALCULATION Multiplied by S1p0 Valuation x 8100 MAINTENANCE AND OPERATION (D) Calculated Interest and Sinking (I&S) Rate for 1983 $.2945 M &O TAX RATE FOR 1983 5. (ACalculated ceantl0perahon(M80) Rate te for 1983(3c above) f 0858 1. (A) 1983 Total Taxable Value of All Property (Assumption (Br Add Calculated Interest and S(nkidg (I &S) Rate for No. 8) 8793.463.548 1983 (4H above) - 5 2945 181 'Subtract 1983 Taxable Value of New Improvements ICI Calculated 1983 Effective Tax Rate $ 3803 Added (Assumption No. 9) i - 563.007.622 1983 Effective Tax Rule is the tux rote published by the ICI Subtract 1983 Taxable Value of Property Added by Annexation (Assumption No. 10) - 639.000 I 0 assessor; us required by Sec. 26.04 of .the Property (D) Adjusted 1983 Taxable Value Tax Code. for Calculation 5729.816.926 III. MAXIMUM TAX RATE 2. (A) 1982 Total Tax Levy from the 1982 . 1. (A) Calculated 1983 Effective Tax Rate (5C .kbove) ' • $ .3803 Tax Roll (Assumption No. 1). 82.286.242 (B) Subtract 1982 Taxes Levied for (C) (8) Equals Amount by Three of Increase Allowed (3%) x .03 Maintenance and Operation (M &O) on Property Equalt of IreboweC by Code $ .0114 in Territory that has ceased to be a part of the (D) 1983 Maximum Tax Rate (18 1C. above) $ .3917 City in 1983 (Assumption No. 5) ,r -5 40 (C)Subtract 1982 Debt Service (I &S) Levy (Assumption No.1) 01.626.124 (D) Subtract 1982 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and Operation (M &O) on Taxable Value of Property Becoming Exempt in 1983 (Assumption No. 6) -5 8.525 • • 1983 Mgxiinunl Tux Rate - is the tax lute which. if exceeded, triggers the public notice and public hearing requirements of Sec. 26.06 of the Properly Tux Code. 0 ` fiU,v 9 . F.a-laie . Jame oc t a R. 5 , ° O °(D _i ,, = ,., 00 -, O C4 ,-•—• 2 O ih a - N x " O• L°7 no pc. 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'+ p7 fy 8 c < co o o ry(D .e y o G : , ••y a LA fa• y fa O O ,� THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1983 Ss w • B (`° co-* O 5 - + o cD oo CD cr, O'»a ° 0 co ` go PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the City of College Station is accepting bids from all state or national banking cor- porations located within the City of College Station for the right of acting as deposi- tory of the City of College Station, Texas. Bids will be accepted until 10:00 a.m. on . June 17, 1983. at which time they will be opened in the office of the director of Finance. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous.to the City. For more :information and bid forms please contact Glenn Schroeder. Deputy Director of Finance. 06-09 -83 c THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1983 Chamber of Commerce unhappy with allocation of hotel tax fund By THOMAS TASCHINGER the chamber for the first three tion still wouldn't guarantee the Staff Writer quarters of the year. If the fund chamber's remaining $25,000 A tentative 1983 -84 budget of has sufficient revenue in the because total requests from the $427,933 for the Hotel -Motel Tax fourth quarter, the chamber fund exceeded its balance. Fund was announced Wednesday would receive its final $25,000 Other amounts tentatively ap- by the College Station City Coun- payment. Last year the chamber proved from the fund are cil, but the announcement left of- received$101,000. $135,133 to the Community ficials of the Bryan - College Sta- Center, $79,600 to pay off the tion Chamber of Commerce a lit- The council had been scheduled Community Center's debt service, tle flat. to vote on the hotel motel budget $65,000 to the College Station In- at today's 7 p.m. meeting. But dustrial Foundation and $30,000 The budget includes only Mayor Gary Halter said the $75,000 of the $100,000 the chamber's request would be to the Brazos Valley Arts Council. chamber requested. discussed further and the council The Arts Council's request was Chamber President Jim will postpone a vote on the budget reduced from $90,000 and the Scamardo said the organization until its June 23 meeting. Athletic Federations was cut should receive the full amount from $7,500 to $5,000. because its promotional activities Scamardo said the council In other business, the council are the source of much of the should cut back its funding for approved three procedural fund's revenue. StageCenter until it had better changes for the Aug. 13 bond elec- financial information about the tion. "To cut back the source of in- proposed $525,000 theater com- Absentee 'Voting will be con - come that feeds other projects is plex. ducted at City, Hall instead of the not good logic," Scamardo said. Councilman Pat Boughton, a school administration building, "We're just getting professional- member of the Finance Commit- South Knoll Elementary School type recruitment going, and if you tee, said StageCenter's allocation 1. will be the polling place for cut us back now that just cuts our was reduced from $50,000 to precinct 31 as well as precinct 8 momentum." $20,000 with the intention of pro- and the central counting station The council's Finance and viding more money later to match will be at City Hall instead of the Budgeting Committee tentatively other grants. data processing center on the allocated $25,000 per quarter to Boughton also said the reduc- Texas A &M campus. THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1983 1 usin g CS councilconside fo r pr ivate By THOMAS TASCHINGER facility. The proposed new treatment Staff Writer But the council's initial reaction facility would be added to the ci- was favorable. Mayor Gary Halter ty's existing plant. The addition "Privatization" proved more said the city has constructed two would have a capacity of four than just a fashionable govern- water wells via the private sector, million gallons per day and a life ment buzzword for College Sta- and City Manager North Bardell span of 20 years. Construction tion Thursday. said the idea "appears to be a heck could begin in 18 months and A private developer told the Ci- of a deal." would take about 14 months tc ty Council Thursday the city can complete. Darrow said privatization is Halter said the charter changes save real money if it constructs a basically defined as the private are mostly minor and clerical. He $6.9 million waste water treat construction of public capital- said most are required to make the ment facility with private capital improvements facilities which are charter conform with changes in instead of. standard public financ- then sold to the respective public state law created by recent ing. agency for regular operations. legislatures or court decisions. In other action, the council ap- proved putting 21 proposed He said private companies now The city's list of registered changes to the City Charter before can do such work cheaper than voters, for example, can no longer the voters on Aug. 13 in conjunc- public agencies because of certain be taken from the latest tax rolls tion with a $48.17 million bond tax benefits available only to since courts outlawed the practice issue for capital improvements. businesses. in 1975. The provision is simply The council agreed to study a For example, Darrow said the eliminated from the charter. proposition made by Arnold Dar- Economic Recovery Tax Act of The council also approved two row, president of the Whalen 1981 gives businesses accelerated rezoning requests and approved Corp. of Dallas, for the construc- depreciation schedules and grants an engineering contract for a pool tion of the waste -water treatment tax credits for public projects. at Southwood Athletic Park. THE EAGLE, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1983 College Station's FirstSettler I 1. 1 1 Artifacts from Home Site of Richard Carter • 4 al d 7 7 _. -0 — w 7 a) (D ( 7 CO ( 11 S 7 (D O w O 7 () 1-.. ,w. viiii. DJ 40 t • ' 4r. "' "x' - -,. l ) , p,i ,-.- ,....=. kV 0) = ... o ., 7 CO = 0 < -. CT = m a awl cD < m 0 70 n o w m 7 CD (n F , oN -� a (n * O cD m 7 7 ° 7 3 3-, S 3 ( .' 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Aquatics Superinten- dent Charles Szabuniewicz — now known as "Charlie Tuna" around the Parks Department — said the fishout at Central is be- ing held because a similar event last spring at Bee Creek Park was so successful. Anglers will be charg- ed $2.50 each and are limited to a catch of 20 fish. Some of the fish in the pond, however, will have tags good for special prizes. Tri -State Sporting Goods is co- sponsoring the event, which is being held during national "Take- Your - Kid - Fishing Week." Tri -state also will have a variety of fishing tackle available at the pond for rental or purchase. The fishing will be held Saturday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sun- day from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The fish, which range in size from 1 pounds to five pounds, will be delivered.Jriday at 7:30 p.m. Szabuniewicz said the urban fishing experience allows anglers to fish in a metropolitan surroun- ding and promotes fami- ly togetherness. The Texas A &M University Agricultural Extension Service and the Wildlife and Fisheries Department are also assisting ,in the pro- gram. Central Park is located `` – 1 in the southeast part of _� Ea-131 a , r Y 1 aaq , .. 1 0 10 1 1983 College Station off JF \r ,...., CS to study church plan College Station planning and zoning In other business, the commission commissioners will study a permit re- will consider three final plats and a quest to: allow expansion of St. Mary's parking lot plan. Student Center at 103 Nagle St. during The final plats are for the Polo Park their 7 p.m. meeting today. Place addition at FM 60 and County City Planner. Jim Calloway said St. Road, four lots in the Southwest Mary's Cath is Church officials plan Crossing subdivision on Cross Timbers to re odel Jnd slightly enlarge the Drive and two lots and part of a third center, 4oeated across from the church in the West Park Addition at the in- on Church S'Ef`eet. tersection of Park Place and Highland The city - pplanning staff has no objec- Street. Lions 'to the request and will recom- The parking lot plan is for storage mend approval, Calloway said. The on two lots at the intersection of Jane church must receive the permit for the and Cooner streets of equipment and remodeling because it is in an commer- repossessed vehicles owned by cial and apartment area. RepublicBank A &M. 11lLE:c4_a_ r-,,,t,,_. L 1 Jiir I0 LEGAL NOTICE THE STATE OF TEXAS College Station, (409)696 - 8868. TOO: : LENTON JOSEPH Jane Kee GUIDRY, Defendant in the Zoning Official Cause herein described. 06 -15-83 YOU ARE HEREBY COM- TO WHOM IT • MANDED to appear and MAY CONCERN: answer before the County The Zoning Board of Adjust - Court oy in the Brazos in in ment for the City of College Bounty y C Court Station will reconsider a Bryan, Brazos County, , request for a variance which Texas, at or before 10 was tabled at the December Monday h a.m. the the first 1982 meeting n the name of: Monday after m e expiration J.F. & T.M. Sousares Issuance before hereof, being . n a Station, Texas 77840 TO WHOM IT College before 10 o'clock a.m. on Said 9ase will be heard by MAY CONCERN: Monday, the 27 day of June, the Board at their regular The Zoning Board of Adjust - answer then and there JOHN meeting in the City Council ment for the City of College answer tYe Cause Number J 9 Station will consider a requ- D31-B, styled JOHN NumDE- Haom. 1101 Texas Station Coy 2431 -B, styled JOHN DE- Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on est for a variance in the LANEY vs. LENT0N Tuesday, June 21, 1983 at name of: JOSEPH GUIDRY. in which 7:00 P.M. Richard R. Davison, Jr. The nature of the case is as 400 Fairview John Delaney is Pla and follows: "ollege Station, Tx 77840 Lei Joseph Guidry The sai d uidr o y pat May, i- Request of a v to the Said case hill be heard by lion, filed the 9 day a Deen parking requirement on Lot he Board at their regular 1983, discloses that the 11, Bb 3B of the College meetin 9 in the Council nature Su nature of said suit is as Hills Subdivision (located at Room, College Station City 108 Walton which is next to -tall, 1101 Texas Avenue at follows: Wilson's Plumbing Supply) ' :00 P.M. on Tuesday, June Suit on promissory note. in College Station, Texas. 21, 1983. If this citation is not served 9 The nature of .the case is as within 90 days after date cf Further information is avai!a- follows: its issuance, it shall be ble at the office of the variance t e va nce Request to side returned unserved. Zoning Official of the City of Re queS va as nce toe de ISSUED AND GIVEN UNDER College Station, (409)696- xetback 85 Table A to MY HAND. AND THE SEAL 8888. Ordinance n p mary structure. OF SAID COURT, on this the Jane Kee = information is availa- xpand 13 day of May, 1983, at Zoning Official rue at the office of the Bryan, Brazos County, 06 -15-83 !onion Official ni rho e.ir� of Texas. Frank Boriskie Clerk of County Court at Law Brazos County, Texas By: Kristi Bergs Deputy 06-01- 83,06- 08 -83, 06 -15- 83.06 -22 -83 ..r. 1112 6°‘-C-1 ilig ry tii iu IS, l�J(83 Council to discuss industrial park By THOMAS TASCHINGER The 2,300 -acre park site is For example, Ash said a $4.88 Staff Writer located about two miles south of million proposition for construc- ehe plan the city. The city owns 1,265 acres tion of fire, police and public ser- T Col he he comprehensive rehe industrial site site p l park lan for and JAC, its joint- venture part- vice buildings could be split into and additional discussion of the ner, owns the 1,035 acres. three separate propositions. $48.17 million bond election on A preliminary plan presented Similarly, two propositions of Aug. 13 will be she subject of a last March showed the eastern $6 million and $5.49 million for special meeting cf the City Coun- part of the park developed for in- street repairs could be merged into cil at 4 p.m. today. dustry and the western part as a one proposition. residential and recreational area. Other large propositions are Director of Capital Im- $9.5 for sewer improvements, provements Elrey Ash said city of- Ash also said that tentative $4.95 for water system im- ficials and representatives of JAC plans for the Aug. 13 bond elec- provements, $4.07 million for Developers Inc. will present the tion call for 11 separate proposi- park improvements, $3.21 million council with a draft of the com- tions to be put before the voters, for a utility service center and $3 prehensive plan for the proposed although the council may split or million for participation in the high - technology park. merge some of the propositions. oversize water and sewer program. 11 izac Ll VAre k, ...\L 15 1 1583 LEGAL NOTICE DRDINANCE NO. 1426 WAS 'ASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE )th OF JUNE, 1983 meeting in regular session in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption. ORDINANCE NO. 1426: AN ORDINAN9E AMENDING THE Zc JING ORDINANCE NO. 85It .REVISING DE- FINITIONS OF AND REAR SETBACKS FOR ACCES- SORY -USES, STRUCTURES OR BUUDINGS "' A violation bf" any of the provisions of this ordinance is punishable .py a fine of $1.004o $200.00. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 06-16 -83,06 -19-83 Z. •-• a n w co co r CD CD CD 0 C ? w n p r o G ti° G CD 0 ~() C CD A II' o so cr ^ in y CD 5.'.. O , N O C y • 5 x . n `G a n b `° < O n CD v G w a. O ^ ^ -t 3 . ` A) H e ms . cn . Q. O �' "y G ' D pp • d • ^ cn '''' y rn ao w CD 0 ° V) `� a � . G v, N 0 CD CD to n ti G a O rD b co y r4•' Lb ( -I a co ' �� " yc� °° ;�w�rn. ^; �5� - a; w5 .. n p ,. � ,a > CD � ,5a•� ° n o w? 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G O G O p� o 0 0 �o w 4� xx�nn'(�(�(�to fl4 5 0 5 • • ". w ° w O o G w ^ c4 0 >r w ., -, ^ F w ° a 6 . � ' CD Q . a N = . p' < O C O w G e o 5 a s co a w rr fD - ` J. 1 CO A) fa) 0 ..... 0 _ _ C oC U.) •-.. r to O N 00 O CO VD tp A .,Ap opf o ' < r� V] N •-" +p w N y0 -, A N A A w A A to CT A J t ' > p ' C/ j N o I^ W "- w 0 C� A w N O N Q\ A v, {�a w J O A N ,C, r 00 I.,4 a\ U O 0 N N 00 J O 0 A w N N s.,i x AD 0 tri Fo oN • C 'i Oo n LA c, w w ■0 A N •- A Ot w 0 t LA CA- 00 a, to 1/40 00 0 J to ▪ t ::::: ++ J N O A Q\ t0 w N t0 O J •--� w "� VD 0 ON J w J 0o to J O Ot 00 to 00 O\ 0 O 0 0 w O 00 p w J N J VD -3 O w w tr w O t o .-" to w to w t0 ... ,.... ,,,,, ■ O 'ii li iEl S r A J N A A O A w 00 VD to o, A sr.) to J to to V 0 , N 7• \r (yl N * ON v, w 00 : -.1 ON ■O t0 VD oo w �. w tp in ■o ;-• w 6 6 Cc A A 00 109 Legal Notices NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR WASTE DISCHARGE average flow of 500,000 NOTICE OF APPLICATION The CITY PERM COLLEGE gallons per day from the FOR WASTE DISCHARGE STATION, P.O. Box 9960, proposed Interim Phase 1 PERMIT College Station, Texas 77840 Wastewater Treatment The CITY OF COLLEGE has applied to the Texas Plant. The applicant STATION, P.O. Box 9960, pp pro- Department Water poses to build an interim College Station, Texas 77840 sources for r a permit wastewater treatment plant has applied to the Texas (Proposed Permit No. 10024 - to serve residential and Department of Water Re- 03) to authorize a discharge commercial developments sources for a permit of treated domestic until the completion of the (Proposed Permit No. 10024- wastewater effluent at a proposed Parks Wastewater 05) to authorize a discharge volume not to exceed an Treatment Plant (Permit No. of treated domestic average flow of 4,000,000 10024 -03), at which time the wastewater effluent at a gallons per day from the applicant is to divert the flow volume not to exceed an proposed Parks Wastewater from this facility to the Parks average flow of 500,000 Treatment Plant. Upon the Wastewater Treatment Plant gallons per day from the completion of this facility, and request that this permit proposed Interim Phase II the applicant shall divert all (Permit No. 10024 -04) be Wastewater Treatment the flow from Interim Phase I cancelled. Plant. The applicant pro- (Permit No. 10024 -04) and The plant site is to be poses to build an interim Phase II (Permit No. located approximately 10, wastewater treatment plant 10024 -05) to this facility. At 750 feet east of the intersec- to serve residential and that time the applicant shall tion of State Highway 6 and commercial developments request that Permits No. Greens Prairie Road; ap- until the completion of the 10024 -04 and No. 10024 -05 be poximately 7,250 feet north proposed Parks Wastewater cancelled. The applicant of Texas International Treatment Plant (Permit No. proposes to serve r e - S p e e d w a y in Brazos 10024 -03), at which time the sidential and commercial County, Texas. The effluent , applicant is to divert the flow developments. is to be discharged into an from this facility to the Parks The plant site is to be unnamed tributary of Lick I Wastewater Treatment Plant located approximately 16, Creek; thence to Lick Crek; and request that this permit 000 feet east - northeast of thence into the Navasota (Permit No. 10024 -05) be the intersection of State River in Segment No. 1209 of cancelled. Highway 6 and Greens the Brazos River Basin. The plant site is to be Prairie Road; appoximately LEGAL AUTHORITY: Sec- located approximately 6,500 9000 feet north of Texas lion 26.028 of the Texas feet north of the intersection International Speedway in Water Code, as amended. of State Highway 6 and Brazos County, Texas. The and Chapter 25 of the Rules Greens Prairie Road; ap- effluent is to be discharged of the Texas Department of poximately 13,000 feet into Lick Creek; thence into Water Resources. southwest of the South the Navasota River in Seg- No public hearing will be intersection of State meet No. 1209 of the Brazos held on this application Highway 6 and State River Basin. unless an affected person Highway 6 Business in LEGAL AUTHORITY: Sec - who has received notice of Brazos County, Texas. The tion 26.028 of the Texas the application has re- effluent is to be discharged Water Code, as amended, quested a public hearing. into Lick Creek; thence into and Chapter 25 of the Rules Any such request for a the Navasota River in Seg- of the Texas Department of public hearing shall be in ment No. 1209 of the Brazos Water Resources. writing and contain (1) the River Basin. No public hearing will be name, mailing address, and LEGAL AUTHORITY: Sec- held on this application phone number of the person tion 26.028 of the Texas unless an affected person making the request; and (2) Water Code, as amended, who has received notice of a brief description of how and Chapter 25 of the Rules the application has re- the requester, or persons of the Texas Department of quested a public hearing. represented by the reque- Water Resources. Any such request for a ster, would be adversely No public hearing will be public hearing shall be in affected b y the granting of writing held on this application writin and contain (1) the the application. If the Com- unless an affected person name, mailing address, and mission determines that the who has received notice of phone number of the person request sets out an issue the application has re- making the request; and (2) which is relevant to the quested a public hearing. a brief description of how permit decision, or that a Any such request for a the requester, or persons public hearing would serve public hearing shall be in represented by the reque - the public interest, the writing and contain (1) the ster, would be adversely Commission shall conduct a name, mailing address, and affected by the granting of public hearing, after the phone number of the person the application. If the Com - issuance of proper and making the request; and (2) mission determines that the timely notice of the hearing. a brief description of how request sets out an issue If no sufficient request for the requester, or persons which is relevant to the hearing is received within 30 represented by the reque- permit decision, or that a days of the date of ster, would be adversely public hearing would serve t Y publics- affected by the granting of 9 lion of the notice concern- y g g the public interest, the Inc the application. the the application. If the Com- Commission shall conduct a permit will be submitted to mission determines that the public hearing, after the the Commission for final request sets out an issue issuance of proper and decision on the application. which is relevant to the timely notice of the hearing. Requests for permit decision, or that a If no sufficient request for q public hear- q ing and /or requests for public hearing would serve hearing t received within further information concern- the public interest, the days of the date of e ra- a- ing any aspect of the Commission shall conduct a lion of the notice concern- application should be sub- public hearing, after the ing the application, the mitted In writing to the Chief issuance of proper and permit will be submitted to Hearings Examiner, Texas timely notice of the hearing. the Commission for final Water Commission, P.O. If no sufficient request for decision on the application. Box 13087, Capitol Station, hearing is received within 30 Requests for a public hear - Austin, Texas 78711, Tele- days of the date of publics- ing and /or requests for phone (512) 475 -2678. tion of the notice concern- further information concern - Issued This 10th day of ing the application, the ing any aspect of the June. 1983. permit will be submitted to application should be sub - Mary Ann Hefner, Chief the Commission for final mitted in writing to the Chief Clerk decision on the application. Hearings Examiner, Texas Texas Water Commission Requests for a public hear- Water Commission, P.O. 06 -17 -83 ing and /or requests for Box 13087, Capitol Station, further information concern- Austin, Texas 78711, Tele- ing any aspect of the phone (512) 475 -2678. application should be sub- Issued This 10th day of mitted in writing to the Chief June, 1983. Hearings Examiner, Texas Mary Ann Hefner, Chief Water Commission, P.O. Clerk Box 13087, Capitol Station, Texas Water Commission Austin, Texas 78711, Tele- 06 -17-83 phone (512) 475 -2678. Issued This 10th day of NOTICE OF APPLICATION June, 1983. FOR WASTE DISCHARGE Mary Ann Hefner, Chief PERMIT Clerk The CITY OF COLLEGE Texas Water Commission STATION, P.O. Box 9960, 06 -17 -83 College Station, Texas 77840 - - - has applied to the Texas Department of Water Re- ' 1 I t �� sources ) to aut for a permit 11 '_` (� (Proposed Permit No. 1002 1 '/"1 041 to authorize a discharge of treated d domestic estic c wastewater effluent at a volume not to exceed an • • • P roperty a raisa s istri ute pp By DANIEL PUCKETT reduced effective tax effective tax rate — 36 higher than, this year's tioners and to pay for a 5 Staff Writer rates by 2 percent to 10 cents per $100 — showed actual budget. percent raise for More than 13,000 percent for most an increase over last Winn said the increase employees. Final ap- notices of tentative 1984 jurisdictions in Brazos year, despite the growth may be necessary to pay proval of the budget is appraisals were mailed County. The figures in the taxable value of ci- for repairs to the ap- not expected until out this week by the won't become final until ty property. College Sta- praisal office air condi- September. Brazos Central Ap- after the board of adjust- tion Tax Assessor - praisal District, Chief ment hearings. Collector Karen Dickson Appraiser Buddy Winn The effective tax rate explained that the dif- told the district board for 1984 is the property- ference is due to a ' "'dnesday. tax rate that would pro- change in the way the ci- _ he notices inform duce the same revenue as ty is planning to reiiay its Brazos County lan- was collected in 1983. As bonds. downers of the value set the value of taxable pro- But the College Sta- on their property, and perty rises, the effective tion City Council is ex notify them of board of tax drops. pected to set the 1984 tax adjustment hearings set Brazos County, with a rate at 31 cents per $100 for July 11 -15. Property 10 percent decrease, today at its regular owners may appeal their showed the sharpest meeting. That will be the appraisals then. decline. The county same rate as was ~set for Winn also announced could raise the same this year's taxed.; effective tax rates and a amount of money in proposed' budget for 1984 at 24.3 cents per The appraisal- district 1984 at the board $100 evaluation as it did board also received the meeting. this year with the rate at proposed 1984 budget. Preliminary figures 27 cents per $100. That budget — at show that growth has Only College Station's $585,000 — is 18 percent THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1983 TR wantsbener stu a r: "Ad, By THOMAS TASCHINGER If that deadline is missed, the TRA General Manager Danny Staff Writer TRA loses its option for a power Vance replied that TAMS was the ARLINGTON — Trinity River plant at the dam, and any other best of five or six firms considered Authority directors on Wednesday public or private power agency for the job and that it had much signaled their support of a con- could apply for the option. experience in hydroelectric tract with the city of College Sta- "The chairman of the Utilities engineering. tion for an estimated $362,500 Services was at the meeting," Har- After, about 10 minutes, Hardy feasibility study of a hydroelectric dy said. "Besides, that's what we ressed the other members to cut plant at Lake Livingston. have the Executive Committee P off the discussion because the Ex- The TRA board was not for." The Executive Committee ecutive Committee had already scheduled to take formal action at consists of the board's three of- acted and the study was under its meeting because its Executive ficers and the chairmen of four way. Committee had approved the con- standing committees. tract June 2. TAMS and another New York Southern Regional Manager The board limited itself to a Dennis Baker of Huntsville also engineering firm, Daverman and brief discussion of the project, said that the 28 state and federal Associates, will perform parallel with only two of the 23 directors agencies which must approve the feasibility studies. TAMS will voicing complaints about how the project need 60 days to review the primarily work for the l primarily while agency handled the agreement. application. In effect, that pro- the Daverman firm will primarily cedure means that the study must report to College Station city of- J. Leard Connor of Liberty y ficials. County said the proposal should completed by Oct. 1. have been brought before the Officials from the city and the The city will pay for the study, board's Utility Services Commit- TRA have said it will be difficult which will not exceed $600,000. If tee instead of the seven - member to complete the complex studies the plant is built, the TRA will Executive Committee. by then, although Baker said after repay that money when bonds are "I am very opposed to the way the meeting that the study would sold to finance construction. this was handled," Connor said. "definitely" be finished in time. The first phase of the feasibility "In my opinion, the power of the F.L. Thompson of Leon Coun- study is scheduled to be completed Executive Committee has grown ty complained that the TRA in late July or early August. At too much in recent years. Why not wanted to use the New York firm that point, the city and the TRA just turn over everything to the of Tippetts, Abbett, McArthy and can decide whether to back out of Executive Committee and then we Stratton instead of a Texas the project or to pursue it and for - won't have to come up here ?" engineering firm. malty apply for construction of Board President Robert Hardy the plant with FERC by Dec. 1. of Huntsville replied that the TRA I'n Ot all that sold on had to act quickly on the proposal TAMS Thompson said. "If we Officials from both parties, because an application for the had a Texas corporation that however, have stressed that the plant must be submitted to the could do this work, I think we plant will almost certainly be Federal Energy Regulatory Com- should use it. All that money is feasible and that no major pro - mission by Dec. 1. just going to New York." blems are foreseen. The Eagle, Thursday, June 23, 1983 CS counc consi T een C en t er By DANIEL PUCKETT groups, such as Young Life or the Young $100 to the chamber, Boughton said. Staff Writer Christian Athletes, Rodgers said. She recommended that the-.council look The College Station City Council took a The council instructed the staff to look into raising the hotel -motel tax rate from hesitant first step on Wednesday toward into the cost of renovating the building. the present 4 percent. A ;haw ; recently establishing a Teen Center next to the Mayor Gary Halter said the renovated enacted by the Legislature .a1bws cities to Community Center. building could be used for several purposes raise their hotel - motel lax rues to 7 per - At its workshop meeting, the council if the Teen Center idea doesn't work. cent. °' -o heard a report that favored a reduced On the allocation for the Chamber of cation of hotel -motel tax money to the Commerce, Co. tmc council Pat Boughton Bough did not adpocat that the t the city Bryan- College Station Chamber of Com- said the Finance and Budgeting Committee t should the rate n l ve perce but said merce. had not budgeted in its recommendation the much should wait until r nu e wo to see how Peg Calliham, director of the Com- for lopping $25,000 from the $100,000 the u hddiriona e e p ee would be needed. Center, and Marci Rodgers, recrea- chamber had requested. The chamber will the Each d produce tt nt i additio a tion superintendent, told the council that get $75,000 — $25,000 in each of three $ he tax would produce «an additional the city could put the Teen Center in a quarters. $80,000 in revenue, she said building at the west end of the Community If the funds are available in the last The council took no action on the com- Center if the old structure is renovated. quarter of the 1984 fiscal year, the chamber mittee's proposal. Councilmen will decide The Teen Center could be used for city- will receive an additional $25,000. But the at their 7 p.m. meeting today ota a final planned activities, such as dances and city will not have enough money from the budgeting of the $435,000 that thWtax is ex- games, and for activities by other youth hotel -motel tax to guarantee the full vented to produce this year. N, The Eagle, Thursday, June 23, 1983 Residents have chance it nce to b a By THOMAS TASCHING how E R o to reduce energy costs. Staff Writer "We'll either get two persons or two hundred," College Station City Manager North Bardell likes said Peggy Calliham, director of the Community to joke that frustrated citizens cart " `always kick the Center. "We just hope to open up lines of com- steps of City Hall and run" when they don't know munication with citizens, and in a positive manner, what else to do. , : try to approach any problems that can be solved." But other city officials will try a different ap- Calliham said the format will be for city utility proach Friday. officials to first give a brief talk describing their A new series of monthly meetings called "Brown operation and then accept questions from the au- Bag Lunch Seminars" will start at 12 :15 p.m. today dience. for city residents who have questions about utility Linda Piwonka, the utilities office manager, will bills or requirements. speak at today's session. Residents are encouraged to "brown bag" their Calliham said the meetings are not intended to be lunch that day and attend the meeting on their "gripe sessions," but a learning experience for both lunch hour. the city and its residents. If the concept of an informal luncheon meeting Future topics are not limited necessarily to to answer citizen questions works out, similar municipal government, and Calliham said sugges- meetings will be scheduled on different topics of tions are welcomed from residents. general interest on each fourth Friday of the month. The community center is located at 1300 Jersey Possible future topics include the upcoming city St. directly south of the campus of Texas A &M bond election, the feasibility of a Teen Center and University. —rte 1 Ig(6.3 • y . . , ounce ears 1 • oatlons reports by Scott Griffin The second largest alloca- • with a $65,0011 allocation, while Battalion staff tion, $79,000, will go to the debt the Brazos Valley Arts Council The College Station City service fund. will receive U0,000. Council heard the final report The Chamber of Commerce The Stage Center Project Wednesday on the Hotel /Motel will receive about $75,000 from allotment is $20,000. The tax budget allocations for 1983- the tax, which is $25,000 less money will go to the construc- 84 and is expected to vote on the than its share last year. tion of a theater. tax rate at its meeting Thursday Responding to reports that' The rest of the allotments are night. the chamber wasn't pleased with as follows: The largest allocation in the the allocation, Mayor Gary Hal- *$5,000 to the Athletic Feder - budget is approximately ter said, "I can assure them that ation $135,000, which will go to the it was not our intention to cut •$5,0Q0 for the city's history community center for operating back on the chamber's funding." project expenses, parking, lighting and The College Station Indust- •$2,500 for firework's equipment. rial Foundation is next in line •$2,067 for emergency funds L i1/ 1 �3- C mmu ii 41 y continued from page 1 household appliances and how munication with its citizens and Other topics ,covered by much they cost to run. in a positive -manner, try to Piwonla were billing dates " ., For example: an air condi- dates differ for different sec- tior'ter costs an average of $26 a approach any problems that car tions ollto*n), how to read an" month, a refrigerator — $7 to be solved." electrical peter, how to calculate $10 a month, a color television Calliham said that other an electrical bill, the power cost — $1 to $3, and a radio — less topics to be considered for later adjustment and the approxi- than $1. seminars are the upcoming city mate costs of running different Peggy Calliham, coordinator bond election, the viability of household appliances. ' of the brown bag seminars, said establishing a youth center and Among the literature she dis- that with the seminars, "the city how to save on home energy tributed was an extensive list of hopes to open up lines of com- costs: 0 -The_ icf\ I ue-sidiq, , i ur a8 1%3 • ‘ftl' „ y 6 „ � s, • • 0' ` � � ` �j °' ° t, F �; '� O e .3 ?o ?� �� • ot� \; p,f- '�.�d°msnd s 3 % N, • s G „ „ O ° c d N 0 9 ° e 0f 42% co • 0 '� s ? f ? G kf • O N d 4 . f � �di „d �� co d' ? ° • ? �r^ o 4 ” •)-- 6 4_, E G � � d ,• � co °� �c A. �d„ d? d0' o J� A c, i r k „ � ° 4 ' C" d °Q S 6 �� � ? ° ° 3 � 0 � 9 � � �r �i V des co, ‹. ��� ° � .cso� •.,i, d 6 p P J C'''',./ „t ? ' oQ c� mr. °�" ?� O J � O „d a a s �0 J' d 'e�•'? d s o „ 3 /! v co G <1, , P ? � o = �'�, G O' ° ?,F � '' A s O 6 . ° ' n °' 13, f c? r4 � o ? 6 G ? dl d d '0 6.6'. ci `o3 � ' . ( " ,S e;$ p 0 � 3 d � G � � `. • ` � c� . e• ? -• '/ • ce � d � � ' o 'f . - �•f s c s i n n din r ° n G ,•' ? 0 6 O t> o a r ?o C , e' ? ed h s P c� e,4 • ' n eh Oj.0 °r 6n i' •Q' 1 ° d 0 , d/ /4. ° F0 d ° a � � ? r ^ � Cir• d , 0' ? � „ d 0 � d^ O 0?1, E I ,r 6n dGs � ?e,� /G „ ?� d d `° 6' 3 ° 3 fit`. 6 4' e P6 d 1 � V,r,0 P c° V 3's 1 � c' 3 '� ' , r ° 'a i c06G d t 4. ',, do `? ccf 0 ?4 , off c• 3 ° � G a I 6 � 0 0 6 ),,i (0 ° ', : e °0 „d q0 n ?� r ee o o q” �� 6 o „ „ ( d /fo c G , o . o d°c� 4ea�s c' d 0 The- Eat ion - r u , io� D8 I�3 , ,, H istory.-mak j ng thes ..., .., „.... , ..„. , „,.......,. Tom Taschinger /C Hall all Report o o "History, " the industrialist firmative, and eventuall [ u Henry Ford once observed, "is student Debbie Parks chose the mayor nd several ity councilmen [ more or less bunk." topic for her thesis. Parks, 27, resigned or didn't seek re- election. C s a result, the That cynical viewpoint is not received her bachelor's degree in In 1973, a constitutional amend- LI shared by everyone, and for- history from A &M in 1977. tunately the College Station City Halter said the money bent enabled the o and p to do at Council is included in the dissen- Parks for the history /thesis will fecte things, dalot of other cities g with ting group. serve in lieu of an assistantshi „ Last week, the council approv- which is often P, nearby universities. ed a $427,933 budget for the city's students in other g fields. graduate Parks' task has a bit of urgency Hotel -Motel Tax Fund, and the Parks has been working on the budget includes a $5,000 ap- project nine months. She, works because vt to intiew the propriation to write the history of afternoons at.' it few surviving g c city y founde while College Station. y Ball and also r they still can discuss the city's ear- i does research at her residence. ly days. The history actually will serve a Parks said she has uncovered dual purpose, being ur ose, because it is bein several interestin That venerable group includes es written by a graduate student at about the city's backg oundoof mayor; Anhersor; Luther J o , , a second Texas A &M University as her which many residents mayo a member R master's thesis. are unaware. Probably of the first City Council; cil; Herman The idea originated last year "When the city was in- Krenek, a settler in the Shiloh area w El ith Mayor Gary Halter, who is corporated in 1938, Po she said, woo Polish ca recal tue old C and also a professor of political "there was a real controversy over former member and C.A. C science at the university. whether university rmer member of the Bonnen, a fo Halter asked Henry Dethloff, (who are state employees) could City Council ors r the sch ren ci ty head of the history department, also hold elective office such as a and the father of current cty il whether the topic would be an ap- City Council seat. councilman Pat Boughton. il propriate subject for a master's "The state attorne y thesis. ed then that they �oulda but should 150-200 b be P completed o by Dethloff replied in the af- around 1970 a suit over the same December. C -Tile_ 1 E.a , Ihurncia June l LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1428 AND 1429 WERE PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 23rd OF JUNE, 1983 meeting in regular session in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption. ORDINANCE NO. 1428: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 11, SECTION 4 OF THE CODE OF ORDINAN- CES, CITY OF COLLEGE STATION RELATING TO SCHEDULE OF RATES FOR ELECTRIC SERVICE AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. ORDINANCE NO. 1429: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 11, SECTION 1 OF THE CODE OF ORDINAN- CES, CITY OF COLLEGE STATION RELATING TO UTILITY DEPOSIT REQUIREMENTS. These Ordinances establish a new schedule of rates for the sale of electricity to consumers, eliminate cer- tain deposit requirements for contractors, and delete a form no longer accepted as a guarantee of payment. 1 A violation of any of the provisions of this ordinan- ces is punishable by a fine of $1.00 to $200.00. ■ The complete text of the 1 above -named Ordinances are on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 06-30- 83,07 -02 -83 LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1432 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 23rd OF JUNE, 1983 meeting in regular session in the Council Roo the College Station City fit Said Ordina signed by the Mayor --aid duly re- corded in official re- cords of they of College Station, has the following LEGAL NOTICE caption. �i The City of College Station ORDINANCE.11,0. 1432: AN is accepting bid(s) for: ORDINANC DOPTING A The construction of PCB BUDGET FOC HE 1983 -1984 1 Storage Site on Switch FISCAL Y A R AND Station Site East By -pass. A U T H O F F I Z I N G EX- , All materials to be furnished PENDITUR AS THEREIN by successful contractor. PROVIDED until 2:00 p.m., July 6, 1983 at The comp text of the which time the bids will be above -nam Ordinance is opened in the office of the on file at MSii. Office of the Purchasing Agent.at the City City Secre and may be Hall. Specifications may be obtained e City Hall, obtained at the office of the 1101 SoutFir xas Avenue, Purchasing Agent. All bids College Station, Texas received after that time will 77840. be returned unopened. The 06-30 -83,07 3 City of College Station OTICE reserves the right to waive LEG or reject any and all bids or ORDINANCE NO. 1431 WAS any and all irregularities in PASSED AND APPROVED said bid and to accept the BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF offer considered most ad- THE CITY OF COLLEGE vantageous to the City. I STATION, TEXAS ON THE These items may be pur- I 23rd OF JUNE, 1983 meeting chases with Revenue Shar- in regular session in the ing funds. 6- 22,6- 29,83 -20. I Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption. ORDINANCE NO. 1431: AN ORDINANCE LEVYING THE TAXES FOR THE USE AND SUPPORT OF THE MUNICI- PAL GOVERNMENT OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION AND PROVIDING FOR THE �Une 3 � t I��� INTEREST AND SINKING FUND FOR THE YEAR 1983- 1984 AND APPORTIONING EACH LEVY FOR THE SPECIFIC PURPOSE. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 08-30- 83,07 -02 -83 CS sued v d o e r zonln g By THOMAS TASCHINGER general commercial and the entire tract to adminstrative- Staff Writer administrative - professional. professional. Developer John W. Haney of He said he began plans to con- Haney charges in the suit that Huntsville has filed suit against struct a convenience store and a the council first failed to approve the city of College Station over a service station on the property. In the provision by the necessary 1982 zoning of his 6.8 -acre tract at March 1982, however, Haney said three - fourths margin and im- the northeast corner of the East the city attorney informed him properly voted again on the pro - Bypass and Texas Avenue. that the two zoning designations posal later in the same meeting. would not be effective until a prior The suit, filed Thursday in 85th contract calling for a 25 -foot ease - District Court, seeks $200,776 in ment in the tract was fulfilled. The suit says the change has damages and $189,333 in lost pro- diminished the value of the pro- fits, interest, attorneys fees and The suit says Haney agreed to perty and caused Haney to lose court costs. The suit asks the court grant the easement, but the city $200,776 for breach of contract. to declare that the property will re- then refused to approve permits or main zoned as general commercial site plans despite Haney's attempt Mayor Gary Halter and City and administrative - professional. to negotiate an alternative pro- Planner Al Mayo said Thursday Haney's suit states that he pur- posal for use of the land. they hadn't been served a copy of 1982 the suit and declined comment. chased the land in January On Sept. 9, 1982, the suit says, for $525,000 after city officials the City Council approved a pro- Haney also declined comment assured him that it was zoned vision initiating the reznr'- - of on his suit. R Q (E. i u I H , LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is currently accepting bids for the repair and renovation of single family homes. Specifications and bid packages may be picked up from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Community Development Office at College Station City Hall, Planning Depart- ment, 1101 Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas. Sealed proposals will be received at the Community Development office until 2:00 p.m. July 14, 1983, at the time then will be opened and read aloud. The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive formalities in bids received. For additional information please contact Michael M. Stevens at 696 -8868 ext. 238. 07 -01- 83,07 -07 -83 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College t Station is currently accepting bids for the repair and renovation of single family homes. Specifications and bid packages may be picked up from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m: at the Community Development Office at College Station City Hall, Planning Depart- ment, 1101 Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas. Sealed proposals wil' be received at the Community Development office until 2:00 p.m. July 14, 1983, at the time then will be opened and read aloud. The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive formalities in bids received. For additional information please contact Michael M. Stevens at 696 -8868 ext. 238. 07 -01- 83,07 -07 -83 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is currently accepting bids for the insulation of single f a m i l y h o m e s. Specifications and bid packages may be picked up from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Community Development Office at College Station City Hall, Planning Depart- ment, 1101 Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas. Sealed proposals will be received at the Community Development office until 2:00 p.m. July 14, 1983, at the time then will be opened and read aloud. The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive formalities in bids received. For additional information please contact Michael M. Stevens at 696 -8868 ext. 238. 07 -01- 83,07 -07-83 rk 6 A c ve rezonin g a ro CS plannerS approve The College Station Planning and Zoning Com- In other business, the commission appro ved a mission approved a rezoning request by Republic- preliminary plat for Phase IV of the Foxfire sub - Bank A &M Thursday that will allow the bank to division, located just southeast of the city limits. store repossessed cars on two lots at the corner of Jane and Cooner streets. The bank had requested the zoning on the lots be changed from medium - density apartments to administrative-professional; roved the bank's plan The commission also app for the lots, with the stipulation that a six -foot opa- que fence be erected on all four sides. ID Til-e, 2l - ---- , J7J q NB ita "w•- crop -, �,A �, p w H o- co c o �� w ^v4a � y �..° o o oo w pc < s o. .+o oo "yam ]�< r oco co ] Otod c o w _ � w '»oo CD= Z Fwa< OD -aQyy�Su� Pr n c,cg= •e��°•ga c.5�. —( 5~.1o9P08g r 'o n . o �, wRa 4 „ F r , py =.,r p s,..a - co w c, G CO co o N C A D w cr —, g • ro g p� m rD y o . ` ,9, 9 p " o c pl co + ] to N f/1 , N = .. o cD ` n ] . lD � N n' ti] O a = ] a " Z w • N< ` D A O (y c co O A' ,- O ci/l) A ] �A A "a] � . a. . -. "o-Q • � �. � ° w y . �•.cD � w � �•] r....`C o M y = (1) �b Q co 0 0 • • 7C co g y OQ 04 =. ] w n ' O • ( oo N C p y] ¢ n w w (,..,0•• '. 4 8 '• K N v cow t7 000 ] c p , -. ^+ g w c ,.. a n o ] n O w 'ro ".no A w ] o co = r. co co .» w co co 4 ] a co ^+ co w a '•. 5 w CD p N O 00 y ] o_ w N a • ? " y Ai ] 4 n _ ? C E- `<,,, o r . w t '-'. `� .. 0 •O j ' ] ] n • r O ' .. B.C. r. C U'' ]' ] CD a T} co C co O co T3 co CD CD w . A ': . CD R co d Q O ] O „] ? N a " . O R < A A� • c"o Z ] o "4 w ti . g a d co . •,- r. ,• •. 9 tjt io ] N «' • C ••n .•r, p ` • w arn] o c oci y -•°`"" oPoao-o�a w wp a "� o g ]o " " o�, � . � C e A " •�' 0 N C C 7C !/i cD G < .. — cD O• ] " sa. to -. n .7 w ] • . m n r. a. ] ' . y .y.. ] —.F30 `. '.. •� A'S 0 ? n r Z o ] ., w ` .9 g o = - w 0, ,0 5 9 f. r, —. .. . Co i a t o 0 w r w o CD ", 00 � x . Iffr:i vr-, 000yp c �, o Q F �a_ "]�kco� 5• �C.° s h y c •`e ;1, 7 1, cv dg c Z PI i' w co o ] H c `< ? . w `` 0 0° co a. �, .0 s -, ` n s.'. ] G i - C a ] -, co O , ] w .Oq I • Q: O co r 'O " 0 " p co O w 'd C Q . ' '' O ] r' w �y 741 F� c 0g c G A "�R,C' " w o "O o �' = o���?; 0< r ''' - '1 1) ' - ''0,''.. " E4 Qi Q �. .. . .. 0 ... N !D D ]r ] A O O `G 7C ., .� g-] ] o ] ' ; A ° < o «�• a a ] w -, `e yr o o co CD "n .7 cD QQ oo ..f cm Ws l ' . '.T cD `C a . .7 n , n UO ] f/i N '.7 to • ..1 ' N fD d4 N 1 ••1 `G f9 fD Vf ..k " • Vl C D o . F � k � / ` : 1'' g u y ".. '�: . i Q 5... O d .��. = •�`Q' 5i co .+ w co co y, 1/5 '. 7.,,..:,..4„...,.....,,,;..„.....,:„.. • C Q., • z w r� y 5 � /� Y ar x a x� r) a o co cD D' f D co (.0 4 �/,y N n • oQ z- a. 4: y : : : :: 6 'S' / „ � - " r y F . h Yv: ' G 1 /i / 4Y G F.: ( o (9 A xk m . w i y � r9 /r, / 5 r � #Y d�� c wt (-3F.,.. �] ^ ' { ' : ; i, ^ r 5 x� y <s g #SrXF Fi N A " w _ n .n cn k � F1 5 '�w 1 [ , Y . f y ,: 1.t f y �`k o O t « Sr9 F 5 y $ y H H . S p "t d �.�fyrG:�vr:�;f 1 ' %'' S 71 lvtltg i;:: w O• o 9, y O ] 0 S / / 1 x 1s H 1 . n ft {, f 1 1 � / c 9 .4410L . ] f9 . te Q / k y £ ' 3 ' h :'.a 0 F y ,d } 1 3. ydw. . . W F [ J1 y Y 3 0 f.4.--.•.:0-,;. , ..,....,6.. ,..› ~� ]w a 1. V h - fi x , �¢5 G z r li :::::::::.:::::::,„:;:,....., ► w Vi Q �. 'am . Fr S t h - x' f' g 4 o0 w ..:0 E tt £ a4 Rai F ; t f N d I f° ]] a(p . ' E • 1r -. g 0 7 0 £.> �... ,S. r o:: 00 % •t r. qb � LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bids for: I. Traffic Signal Cabinets and Controllers II. Coordination Equipment III. Traffic Signal and Luminaire Poles IV. Traffic Signal Heads V. Traffic Signal Wire and Cable VI. Traffic Signal Loop Amplifiers until 10:00 am, July 22, 1983, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with bonds sold to finance Capital Im- provements for 1983. 07-08-83,07-15-83 • / ))/%3 • Museum m to present 0 cr, history to of C.S. ^ On Aug. 18 the Brazos � ,� Valley Museum will be having "A College Sta- gg et tion Archaeological Ex- v) cavation" at the S D museum, 3232 Briarcrest c Drive in Bryan. trl Through artifacts and co 00 slides, Dr. David Carlson will present his finds on the first settlers v , in College Station. The c settlers were the Carter LI m family, who lived on i • Carter Creek in 1831 as I '-� subsistence farmers c :e growing their own food and some to sell. The presentation will t ∎ begin at 8 p.m. and last `" an hour. Families are in- vited. There is no admis- sion charge. S . L Brown Bag II is set A note from Peggy Calliham says that Brown Bag II, the second lunch seminar at the College Sta- tion Community Center, is set for 12:15 p.m. Fri - day. This month's discussion topic will be the 10 pro - positions to be voted on by the citizens of College Station on Aug. 13. Elrey Ash, the city's director of capital improvements, will be the speaker at the free, public event. "Reservations are requested for counting pur- poses," center director Calliham says, "but are not required for attendance." For reservations or information, call Calliham at the community center, 693 -9907. 108 Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: (11 One Hydraulic Excavator (Truck Mounted) until 2:00 pm. July 28. 1983, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agentt All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer . considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- ing funds. 84 -1. 7 -12. 7 -19 L s . - 7 ? /3 Legal Notices Legal Notices ADVERTISEMENT and aysg condition of the bid date. A FOR BIDS bond and performance bond You are invitee project: bid on the well be required. Federal following OOD m ATHLETIC funding in the tor of a Land SOUTHW KFENCI D NG and Water Conservation PARK F Fund Grant administered by Pro N OF G-81-81-0 WORK: Sc OAK Sc ope of the Texas Parks and Wildlife work SCOPE cl Department will be used in includes but is not this project. necee ssarily limited to link 07 -16- 83.07 -18- 83.07 -20 -83 allation of chain a t _ b !.c ouaLiC SALE allfield fencing Southwood Athletic Park. RECEIPT OF BIOS: Sealed proposals will be accepted at the of the Parks and Recreation Department in Central Park, 1000 Krenek Tuesday. 2:00 P.M. t .M.. 2. l b at e op enied and read will b aloud. INFORMATION DING RDOCUMENTS: Plans Specifications be obtain Documents may the Park P m b • y contacting Planning Section of the Parks and Rcreation De- pa tment. Cent al Park. 1000 Krenek Tap Road. College Station. (409)693 -7273. A set is deposit of The $100.00 is required. provided fully refundable p the plans are returned intact , he_ c E . 7 . Lunch forum good idea s Thomas Taschinger /City Hall Report Although Texas A &M Universi- "City Manager North Bardell a five -year period ranging from ty is often called the most saw the meetings as an opportuni- new roads to new sewer lines. tradition -bound school in the ty to communicate what's going Capital Improvements Director country, the city that grew up on in the city," Calliham said. "I Elrey Ash will give a slide presen- around it doesn't have a lot of just felt we needed better com- tation on the proposed im- established customs because it has munication, and it became a joint provements at Friday's meeting existed only 45 years. effort with the city staff." and answer questions from the au- A brand -new tradition, The first Brown Bag meeting dience. however, appears to be getting was held last month on the city Ash's presentation will go started in College Station in the utility system, and a second one is slightly past the regular lunch form of "Brown Bag" . luncheon scheduled for this Friday on the period, but most future meetings meetings on the fourth Friday of Aug. 13 bond election and revi- will be limited to an hour. every month. lion of the city charter. Several topics being discussed The meetings are held at the Most of the charter revisions are for future meetings are how Community Center at 1300 Jersey technical changes designed to residents can communicate better St. and are the brainchild of Pe ggy make city .law comply with new with the City Council, whether the 1 416, Calliham, director of the center. state laws. city needs a Teen Center and how The idea behind the meetings is people can cope with stress in their to provide residents with an in- The bond election is a bit more daily lives. formal forum to learn about city important — and more expensive affairs or matters of general in- — because College Station voters The Brown Bag concept looks terest. The name originated will be asked to approve expen- as if it might succeed, and John Q. because the meetings start at 12:15 ditures totaling $48.17 million. Public can feel assured he has a p.m. and spectators are encourag - The money will be spent on 10 line of communication with his ed to bring a brown bag lunch. capital improvement projects over local government. • 1 C.-- E 1 t l h U rs 4 7/2 iJ y3 vWHti J po ,#. 2 YorE • ,� brown bag LUNCH SEMINAR /: gli l � M; o.wa •. 9 ter ►,��': 0 C■C • J A r c ore College Station Bond Election ELREY ASH, DIRECTOR OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS, WILL DISCUSS THE TEN PROPOSITIONS ON THE AUGUST 13TH CITY BOND ELECTION, BRING YOUR LUNCH AND JOIN US AT 12:15 P.M. ON FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1983, / b ole J o ,� G PRESENTED BY: ,.- College Stohon - FREE TO THE PUBLIC \\\ � f Comm enter unit CALL FOR RESERVATIONS 4111k \ I3 J.'',51 Ca,.s..1..TXMO i 693-9907 r N C i h e, t-- T us. ■• - 7/2 1 J iliw PARKS 6 10 Presents RECREATION Cou•c• S.•nor. TEEN PART' ■ ? Ai ". 1 -11 d ip.,! +�. st,i). fit �Qj 1,�a �. � rr e'er IC � � t ,.. r it F ,` =. pit ®���;�'� +� -eg v 1. ► i� 44' • ti ;lir eta 4 w ( i i . , lin f , !� !!l ritiPP,Allifiti440441:reagio it., 4944% 1100 4 11 414 4 h %it) Ill vu1 , )♦ �. - r •®.cm air mD r cr .'�.cr. f WHEN: FRIDAY, JULY 22 8 to 11 pm WHERE: Adamson Pool ( BEE CREEK PARK ) FOR WHOM: TEENAGERS ONLY ACTIVITIES: Hors d'oeuvres by FISH RICHARDS Music provided by LIVE BAND PRICE: only S2.75 per person Don't Miss It GOOD FOOD - GOOD MUSIC - GOOD TIMES Event Co- Sponsor- The ROXZ —y .----1 1 h e� 5( Q I furs. 721 43 Child care firm seeks CS p ermit By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer The College Station Planning and Zoning Com- mission will be asked Thursday to approve the first request for a "drop -in" child care center in the city. If approved, the center will be located in the Parkway Square Shopping Center northwest of the intersection of Texas Avenue and Southwest Parkway. Don Armstrong of Plan -N -Care Inc. submitted the request for the conditional -use permit. The center would allow parents to drop off their children for a few hours. City Planner Jim Calloway said no problems are expected with the permit. A short -term child care center recently opened in Bryan. In other business, the commission will consider a request to rezone two tracts of land totaling 9.3 acres about 500 feet northeast of the intersection of Texas Avenue and Millers Lane. The tract is zoned single - family residential and general commercial, and I.Q. Development Inc. wants all of the land zoned general commercial. Calloway said the city planning staff recom- mends approval of rezoning about half the tract to general commercial. But he said a different designa- tion for the rear half like administrative- professional might be more compatible with sur- rounding property. The commission also will study a request from the Grace Bible Church, located at 701 Anderson St., to construct eight small classroom buildings. Calloway said no problems are foreseen with the re- quest. Another rezoning request was submitted by Mac Randolph for two lots at the northwest corner of University Drive and Spring Loop Street. Randolph wants to change the zoning from low - density apartments to neighborhood commercial. Calloway said the staff will recommend approval but will point out to the commission the availability of other commercial property in the area. Other items on the agenda are consideration of a final plat for the Harvey Road East Subdivision at the East Bypass and Texas 30, a preliminary plat for the Courtland subdivision at the East Bypass and Barron Road, a parking lot plan for Southwest Crossing Office Building at Southwest Parkway 4 and Eastmark Drive and a parking lot plan for Alfredo's Tacos Al Carbon restaurant at 509 University Drive. C 01 9/C y/y3 wo ma o e s an o ul •ld in By THOMAS TASCHINGER tions." Staff Writer The conference center will be in a separate The Hilton and Sheraton hotel chains plan one -story building that will have convention to construct expansive projects in College facilities and a ballroom which will seat 600 Station next to a recently completed hotel on persons. University Drive, spokesmen for the two The hotel tower and the convention hotels said Thursday. building will be connected by a clear -span Detailed plans were released Thursday for atrium extending from the sixth -floor of the an 11 -story Sheraton hotel and conference tower to the top of the one -story building. center to be located at 925 E. University The lobby and a bar will be located inside Drive. Construction of the "Sheraton Con- the atrium, O'Connor said, and the complex ference Center," as the complex will be will total 196,500 square feet. known, will begin in mid- September. The site will also contain a restaurant, Investors for the Hilton hotel are expected swimming pool and parking for 453 vehicles. to announce in a press conference Monday O'Connor said Nine - Twenty Inc. is the plans for their project also on University developer of the project and that all financ- Drive. ing has been approved. Though investors for the Hilton refused to She said the firm received approval for the reveal details, city and business officials said Sheraton franchise earlier this year from the it is expected to be built at the intersection of executive committee of Sheraton Inns Inc. University and Fed Mart drives. That would put the Hilton just a few hundred yards west of the Sheraton hotel property. A hotel built recently, The Inn at Chimney Hills, would be between the two new facilities, officials said. Officials said the Hilton complex is ex- pected to be similar to the Sheraton and may contain a separate office building to be used as a financial center. A proposal in March 1982 to build a 10- story Hilton at Texas A &M University was killed by a state attorney general's ruling that prohibited long -term leasing of main campus property. Investors for that Hilton hotel proposal are involved in the current plans. Mayor Gary Halter said he was pleased about the plans. "I don't know if both hotels can survive, but obviously they both think they can. "There's been a lot of talk about pro- viding first -class service for the area," he ad- ded, "but I think the Ramada has done a lot in that direction." The Sheraton will have 300 guest rooms, six meeting rooms and a conference center, according to Monica O'Connor of Vance - Matthew Inc., a Beaumont public relations firm. O'Connor said the Sheraton "has been designed to serve the needs of the large con- ference market generated by Texas A &M University with first -class accommoda- * .1:3 0 0 . L., ..., 0 p, E. ,-... ._.: ,,, E4 ( °.A.Oib • c o9 o ¢ co o " a co p , x = Q 0 0" �m +1 o xc ° x 0 o •° x ° o � 0 b o ¢ . CD ° b p tD ` Z 0 o o N b 0 Pa fo �� &r co a= ° x a Nk no cc, ��. ° O u �x ` am o °o °no ao' � ^ a.z C r a • o /D ... A , o m °,' '< � 0 A co `� co 0 "' = ° N O Pr 0 0.'D ?=. 0 0 ° � � ~ 0' 0 0 O ° N ^+ ~ (IQ P, CD , co 0 0 co N 0 0 0 �= ,- . . cD 0 o N 0 r OQ < N fg = .� N .• 5 .g • - '+ co N '° ° , ° • Q:a o .o ° 5. 0 , a: 5 ,.:, a c, - o = . y o co � - a ° 5 - ai .q 'i N '�mayy '* OQ co ° `Z. < 0 , p� CO 0 o N 0 M r O d *-•• CD (D M o ° < ?C1� n.- 0 c/ A A 0 A , 0 ry 8 . ° o . A — . 0 o 0 ' � O Al =-0-6 * n N a...- � � c9 0 o . (D (D o „ . .(p... 0, Gq 0 0 Q) o n L N N N ... •dQ 0 . • r (12 0° n C41 . N c4 N Q. A 0 .. '” o N A pi ,:y'N O�h N 0 0 C n a •d 0 LA .. ,„ 0 a 0 O 0 o c o �* f D 0 0 0 .+' 0- Q. a .+ • co . � . co G p A t CD : * N . r. • 0 e., ( lit N � �\] q 0 P. r+ b c F 0 0 . .^ * N w ti ti 5 G .•. 0 co co N f7 .. • 0 te n ONNImi ro O F r o is a�„S I on ° y'6z 411► ke__ 1 G 2 .._.__, meg 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE REF: Texas Abandoned Mo- herein stated. I his motor CITY OF COLLEGE STATION tor Vehicle Act vehicle has been taken into POLICE DEPARTMENT According to our records, custody by this department TO: Steven F. Loren you are the registered under authority of the Texas DATE: July 11. 1983 owner of the motor vehicle Abandoned Motor Vehicle Act. The motor vehicle herin mentioned has been aban- doned in violation of the above mentioned authority within the city limits of College Station, Texas. Description of Vehicle: Year: 1970, Make: Pontiac, Body Style: Catalina SW Vehicle Identification No. 252360R117058 License Plates Attached to Vehicle: Year: 1983. Number: MGC -44, State: Texas. Physical location of vehicle when taken into custody: Street Address: 800 Block Autumn Circle City: College Station, State: Texas, Zip Code: 77840. Date Vehicle was taken into custody: July 11, 1983 Physical location where vehicle is stored: College Station Police Department Street Address: 2611 Texas Avenue South, City. College Station, State: Texas. Zip Code: 77840 • You as a Owner and have a right to reclaim the herein named motor vehicle witin (20) twenty days after the date of this notice upon payment of all towing, preservation and storage charges resulting from plac- ing the vehicle in custody. Failure of the Owner to exercise their right to re- claim the vehicle within the time provided shall be de- emed a waiver by the Owner of all rights, title and interest in the vehicle and their consent to the sale of the abandoned motor vehicle at a public auction. Marvin E. Byrd Chief of Police 07 -22 -83 NOTICE Tn n - 1 7/ z 7/2-2A3 e qjlc, Days Area's its a st ace rowth vs. • By RICHARD SMITH ;• Guest Columnist We never locked our house, hen the Eagle asked ' because we didn't have a key. It just me to write wasn't necessary. About the only an article on the subject of the crimes we had were traffic viola - benefits of growth to a tlons. Those weren't very common community, I eagerly , agreed. After all .; because we didn't have many everyone knows growth policemen. is great and it's easy to "' boost a proposition which has such universal appeal. Then when I grass over them. We no longer (for the most part) a began to collect my live on gravel streets. In the '50s, Francis was paved thoughts in a more . from Texas (we called it Highway 6) to Walton and specific way, I ran head ' k gravel beyond. We no longer have to go to Houston on into some built -in Richard Smith to shop. We have excellent medical facilities. Our 1 reservations about schools are no longer little country schools with growth. These reservations are usually connected to limited programs. a vague yearning for a return to the good old days. Okay, I said, I'll do what Benjamin Franklin lik- We havgg outgrown volunteer fire departments. In ed to do when faced with a difficult choice — make 1966 our h burned to the ground at 701 Francis a list of the pros and cons of each argument. Let's Drive, now only two minutes from superb fire sup - put the communities of the good old days head -to- presson equipment and manpower. We watched head with the cities in which we live today. everything we owned go up in smoke while we Before I begin, let me set the stage for my good waited 35 minutes for the volunteers to arrive from old days experience. I lived most of my childhood in ' the A &M campus. It wasn't their fault, it was simp- College Station, for a short time on Park Place just ly all we could afford to have. off Wellborn Road and the rest on Francis Drive across from what is now College Hills Elementary When I was a boy there wage y a single equipped School (a cow pa*ure in 1950). park in College Station. Now the park system is a We had very little traffic congestion. As a model for others to admire. youngster, I rode my bike from College Hills, up So, what would Ben Franklin decide on the ques- Texas Avenue to University Drive and then over tion after studying our list? Would he opt for the past Northgate to our only movie house, the Cam- quiet, rural community of the good old days or pus Theater. To be entirely accurate, there really would he choose our growing, vibrant, diversified were two theaters — movies also were shown on cities of 1983? I believe he would enthusiastically campus at Guion Hall. I doubt that many 12 -year- endorse the progress we have made in the past 30 olds would attempt that trip today on a bicycle. years. We never locked our house, because we didn't We have been blessed with many assets in Brazos have a key. It just wasn't necessary. About the only County — our people, our institutions, our loca- crimes we had were traffic violations. Those tion. We have come a long way, but we have a weren't very common because we didn't have many longer way to go. Growth provides many great op- policemen. portunities. But with these opportunities come eves We knew everyone in town. We surely knew greater challenges. How do we deal with traffic con - everyone in our school by name aid everyone knew gestion, crime, growing estrangement between peo- us and our parents. I make this point as being a ple and neighborhoods and the overall loss of the positive aspect of the good old days, but I'm not so "personal touch" in our lives? sure. It sure was hard for kids to get away with anything. The answer lies in our willingness as individuals I know there were other wonderful things about to get involved in the solutions rather than criticiz- the good old days like fresh milk, fresh eggs, ing the status quo and longing for simpler times that 9 vegetable gardens, etc., but these things still.,can be we will never see again. I'm pleased with what we done today with a little more effort. have attempted, and I'm thankful for what we have What else have we lost from the good old days as accomplished. a resultsof our growth? We've lost septic tanks in town and the green Richard Smith is former mayor of Bryan. -- IYe - C7)- 0 1\e, , -‘ —1 ( --1 j1/4..,aW... a4-- 19•6. , , High asbestos levels found in junior high By KEN LANTERMAN Staff Writer College Station school trustees learned Monday night that four classrooms in the A &M Juni.Q,J High School building contain asbestos levels that exceed current Environmental Protection Agency stan- dards. Dr. Chuck Giammona, chairman of the board's facilities committee, told the board that a study conducted in May of all district campuses revealed that the percentage of asbestos content in the ceiling exceeded 5 percent in those four classrooms. The EPA standard is 1 percent. Giammona said the 5 percent level is not a danger or a threat to students. However, he did say it could be a threat to custodial and maintenance workers who come in close contact with the asbestos insula- tion sprayed on the metal frame of the building. He said it would cost $4,500 to correct problem; work should be finished before school begins. 4 4•. G 0 ) c, c`ba • b ti 0 ova 4 0 \ibeac\ 4 .v% e* O. saps '0°�� �� o cl I o o v.. OS�p S QQ c tc � � , r 6''' 3c�rc 0.(C1/4 s° �� °� p s0>- „0-s. �p� 5°� o oa �� co. �° fi ♦a S a 0 NG � 6 ,e, EA' , °p cr �t9 v {1c er c� t� Q s �� � t� p *s s a� r 1i., ra a s r c Q c o1% • tafi cc % � 3c � V3 -02 py `b. 4 edic‘, c tc` . c, 3 � ♦ a sc p ♦ ,b p r o c` c fi \ e , P c 3 sc Q' N , 4 J s. Np cc Q ,� b <". r s `'� a a pC . cc fop cR 41 a a c � t. c c illy V �9 fi,� fi p Cr. e. `� r �� � ♦ ° ito � � � c.. a r ,� c X 1/4, Je p fi `e` p S Q O pt` +p • • t a >p s o t s � � a p � l ♦` , ,, e c , c p� rc� c� �, s �`� � a�o tip occ Q♦ be, ♦ d c, c vi . v ÷ $ 4�,Qck. �r �a . 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S ° ay is O R elocat i ng to air C.4c...chztefoti,/,;7.4yekrki,e,Jeet,kif,r,/0- c t � s • eo / �� t a /or A 4 / Q , 1. 4 e r e 98q fo • sa /Q,he „ ge a✓S 6 /eh- � L p -,ao ..1 4:„ re too ex ensive for A& .., c o de 9 o d y 9oe Ott ob, o s t h e iv r t e �,1 b y t o l'41-,7 8� 4 d, eil s ci • 4 . 1 1 From page IA The report did conclude that an ef- to fit / e POsti I 'll e. 9 1 r • The board, which met as a commit- fort should be made to improve Easter- .4),t, Ew t ed 'le *Pe of the whole on Monday, is. ex- wood Airport. L AC a y w th at • et. :ted to formally ratify the proposal Besides lengthening the runway, the ` ° cl/ Q , Today. ' report said terminal building im- C The move for FAA funding came provements, additional parking, and 6 .9 after regents accepted the final report additional hangars were needed. of the Airport Study Committee, ap The committee also found that pointed in November to determine under state law the A &M system can - whether air operations should be mov- not operate its own fleet of airplanes ed to the old Bryan Air Force Base west unless it operates its own airport, of Bryan. which means that control of Easter - The A &M system owns the air base, wood will apparently remain in the which has two 7,000 -foot runways. hands of the university. The base, now called the Bryan A &M officials in the past have Research and Extension Center, is used discussed turning the airport over to an by the Texas Transportation Institute airport authority. and other system parts. Hansen said the legal connection The committee included the mayors between A &M's planes and the airport of Bryan and College Station, the "was a serious consideration in relin- Brazos County Judge R.J. "Dick” quishing control of the airport." Holmgreen, a representative of the "One of the biggest things we have local chamber of commerce, and two that other universities don't have is representatives of the A &M system. statewide agencies — extension and ex- As expected, the committee recom- periment stations that stretch the entire mended that air operations remain at length and breadth of the state," he Easterwood. Regents had received a said. preliminary report from the committee The board also agreed to establish a in May. standing Intergovernmental Liaison Hansen told the board that Committee to advise the A &M ad- relocating the research facilities cur- ministration on matters affecting the rently housed at the old air base would airport. The committee will be made coot $8 million. up of representatives from A &M, the The cost of relocating was perhaps chamber of commerce, and local ti'trprime reason" for recommending governments. against a move to the air base, the However, regents went ahead and chancellor said after the meeting. directed Hansen to. request FAA fun - The committee also found that mov- ding immediately. ing the airport would not improve "I think it's the board of regents' chances of convincing a major airline responsibility, not that committee's," Lac ‘le to serve Bryan - College Station. said regent William McKenzie. - The. 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N° a "d"/`,25. , ' e• ag a6a`o„bc aye 'z'' S N, ' to � r *,o oN o e, The - BCA26alieLi i LOAM-SC-014 jiL L H D ) / c\l;c4' 10 wrium 11 MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public 1 hearing on the question 01 rezoning the following property: A 9.33 Acre tract located or 40 the east side of Texat Avenue north of and adja. cent to the Lakeview Acre: subdivision (approximatel) 500 feet north of the inter section of Texas Avenu( and Millers Lane). frorr General Commercial .Distric C -1 and Single Family Re sidential District R -1 t< General Commercial Distric C-1. Application is in th< name of I.Q. Development Inc. The said hearing will be hel< in the Council Room of th< College Station City Hall 1101 South Texas Avenue a the 7:00 P.M. meeting of tht City Council on Thursday August 11 . 1983. For additional information please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning 07 -25 -83 • The Eagle, Wednesday, July 27, 1983 to discuss Northgate Council By DANIEL PUCKETT Study Committee, head- ding. reducing the speed limit Staff Writer ed by Dr. Daniel The largest, from the on University Drive west Several possible solu- MacGilvray. Brazos County Health of Wellborn to 25 mph tions to problems in the MacGilvray, assistant Department, is for from next month Northgate area will be dean of Texas A &M's $7,170. City officials through January. The presented to the College College of Architecture said the department reduction is necessary Station City Council at and Environmental miscalculated its budget while Texas A &M builds its workshop session to- Design, said Tuesday request, and needs more a pedestrian tunnel bet - day. that the short report con- money to make up its ween the Medical Meeting at 4 p.m., the tains a list of problems in deficit. The Bryan City Sciences Library and the council will discuss the the Northgate area and Council approved such a Veterinary Medicine first draft of a report several suggested solu- request earlier this Building, blocking off from the Northgate tions. However, he said, month. half of the road at a it's only an early draft. The Texas Municipal time. The council's corn- League is asking for 1 In other business, ments today will be in- cent per capita — $370 councilmen will vote on corporated into the from College Station — a resolution supporting report, and the revised for its Cable Defense the $48 million bond document will be used as Fund. The fund is being election, to be held Aug. the basis for public hear- established to fight 13. And the council will ings next month in the passage of a bill in Con- decide on a rezoning re- Northgate area, gress that would reduce quest for the corner of MacGilvray said. Only cities' control over cable Cooner and Jane streets. after those public hear- franchises. The request, from ings will the council And the local RepublicBank A &M, is receive a finished report. organization of the to change the zoning of The Northgate report Junior Olympics has ask- the lot to allow construc- is the only item on to- ed for help in sending tion of a storage day's agenda. But at 7 members to the national building. The request p.m. Thursday, the games. No specific drew no witnesses at a council will have a full amount has been set. planning and zoning slate, including a few The council also will commission public hear - minor requests for fun- consider an ordinance ing. THE EAGLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1983 ,.... Bonds focus on renovation by Anne McCauley Hedgcoxe , The changes include con- and could increase the adjusted included those things •that we struction of a new water well for tax rate per $100 by approxi- felt were essential in the next Battalion Reporter I emergency situations, partial re- : mately 10 to 25 cents, according five years. On Aug. 13, College Station placement of the existing sewer to a pamphlet published by the "If the program doesn't residents will vote on a series of system, improvements to the city. The tax rate is currently 31 occur and things don't happen, bond issue propositions that electric distribution system and cents per $100. If approved, the the bonds won't be sold. We are N ow would allow the city to continue � acquisition of land for future tax could increase to between 41, just asking the voters for author - the five year Capital Improve - city facilities. to 56 cents per $100. ization to sell these bonds," Hal - ments Plan. "The first five propositions The expansions include con - ter said. Elrey Ash, director of capital are all revenue - oriented prop- struction of a fire substation, improvements, described the ositions," Ash said. "As revenue additions to the Central Fire Sta- Absentee voting in the Col - bond issues at a Brown Bag bonds, they will not have an tion and police station, develop- lege Station Special Election will Seminar on Friday at the Col- effect on taxes. They could have ment of parks and recreation begin Monday and continue lege Station Community Center. an effect on utility rates." facilities and street and drainage through Tuesday, August 9. Propositions one through Propositions six through 10, improvements. Voting will be Monday through five, totaling $23.6 million, deal totaling $24.6 million, deal with 'It is part of a long -range Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in with expansions and refurbish - improvements to streets, public plan," said College Station conference room A at the Col - ments to the utility system. I buildings, parks and drainage , Mayor Gary Halter. "We have lege Station City Hall. Ni — P3f 4 , i On i We_ctia5C-f 1 44j-j-4i i Solutions offered for Northgate By DANIEL PUCKETT Staff Writer Parking restrictions and revisions in the zoning ordinance may resolve congestion and traffic in Northgate, the head of a study committee told the College Station City Council on Wednesday. Daniel MacGilvray, chairman of the Northgate Committee, gave the council a preliminary report that spelled out several types of problems and solu- tions in the area just north of the Texas A &M cam- pus. The proposals, he said, were modest. "There's nothing drastic," he said, "no bulldozer action. But there are problems, and we hope, by taking well- organized steps, to avoid the need for drastic action." Parking and zoning received the most attention in the report. MacGilvray said parking problems arise from two sources: A &M students, faculty and staff • parking in the area, instead of on campus; and customers of Northgate businesses, which often do not provide sufficient parking space. The solution to the first problem, he said, will re- quire discussions with A &M on its parking policies. One possible remedy, he said, would be to allow day students and faculty to park near north campus dormitories and to move dorm students' cars to West Campus lots. Solution of customer parking problems would be more complex, MacGilvray said. The city should implement parking restrictions immediately, he said, and might consider building a parking lot either surface or multi- story. Forbidding parking during certain hours on cer- tain streets close to the campus would allow the smooth flow of traffic and would discourage those who leave their cars parked for long periods of time, he said. The city could finance its parking lot by assessing merchants in the area for a few parking spaces each. That would tie in, MacGilvray said, with a pro- posal to create a special zoning district in Nor- thgate. In that district, off - street parking requirements would be lower than in other areas of the city. Mer- chants could make up the difference by funding parking spaces in a municipal lot, MacGilvray said. Another special district could be created in the • area to encourage development by lowering taxes, MacGilvray suggested. Development also could be encouraged by informing merchants of the tax benefits available to those who repair businesses more than 20 years old. THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1983 EPA fil $4,000 comp l a i n t against for PCB labeling CS By DANIEL PUCKETT developed in the city over storage competition. The young men won Staff Writer of the chemicals, which are now the right to participate in the na- The Environmental Protection kept at the police warehouse. tional meet by victories at state Agency has filed a $4,000 com- City officials are considering and regional competitions, but plaint against the city of College moving the chemicals to an elec- were having problems raising Station for failure to properly trical substation off the East enough money to attend. label a toxic chemical formerly us- Bypass near the Windwood sub- The money will come out of the ed in electrical equipment, Mayor division, where residents have op- city's federal revenue - sharing Gary Halter said Thursday. posed the move. fund. No action was taken on the Halter later said that he didn't The council also approved an complaint, which Halter disclosed know how serious the complaint $83,000 change order in the con - to City Council members at their was. But, he said, the problem is struction of the City Hall addi- regular meeting. City Attorney one that the city is aware of and is tion. The money, already included Lowell Denton said the city pro- trying to remedy. in the city's budget for next year, bably will decide within 10 days "It's a notice that we're not in will pay for more space for the how to respond. compliance," he said. "We know utilities and the media divisions. The council did take action on that, and we're trying to do Also approved were $4,780 for several funding requests. One of something about it." the Brazos County Health Unit the requests approved will help Denton said the city has 20 days and $370 for the Texas Municipal fund six local youths' participa- to reply to the complaint, which League's Cable Defense Fund. tion in the national Junior Olym- deals with past failure to label the The money for the health unit pics competition, which begins to- chemicals. The violation named in will help make up a deficit in its day in North Carolina. the complaint is no longer occurr- budget. City officials have said the During a discussion of the ing, he said. unit miscalculated its needs for the minutes of the last meeting, the Resolution of the complaint year. mayor told the council that the could take several forms, Denton And the money to the cable EPA had filed a complaint against said, including a negotiated settle- fund will be used in the league's the city Thursday over its labeling ment or further hearings on the efforts to lobby against passage of of PCBs. subject. a U.S. Senate bill that would Polychlorinated biphenyls In its regular business, the coun- diminish cities' ability to regulate (PCBs) were used in old electrical cil decided to give six local youths cable companies. The Bryan City equipment as a fire retardant and $500 toward their plane tickets to Council turned down a similar re- insulator. A controversy has the national Junior Olympics quest earlier this month The Eagle, Friday, July 29, 1983 r - • • Not many women In state offices From page I A lege Station, Helen Chavarria outspent her rival, Hugh C. citizens — including women — to Barnett Jr., by nearly $900. run for public office. Locally, Watson sees improve - "There definitely was a surge ment on the horizon. of women candidates after our "For a while, the thinking was y:; last workshop on how to run for � ' '4' that politics was predominantly , for males," she says. "The office," she says, n " Janud we plan greatest problem for women is to have another in January." Another boost for Texas changing roles, thinking, `I can women has been their own 4 „ that, too.' And I think that , strength, says Meg Wilson, chair change is coming about." of the Texas Women's Political 4 ,,,„7* ,N. " - And Wilson says that a Brazos Caucus in Austin. County chapter of the Women's "Women in Texas can do bet- Political Caucus will be formed ter than women in other states," within the next six months. Wilson says, "in part because of q s 4 However, no local members of f the caucus could be reached for a tradition of strong women." '.k College Station City Coun .# rxR comment. cilman Pat Boughton agreed: Statewide, women have much "I did not see any problem Pat Boughton more room for improvement. (with being taken seriously). At she hadn't heard of local women Not one Texas state senator, and first, I thought the men were a lit- candidates having that trouble. not one member of the state's tle bit condescending, but that Boughton said her campaigns congressional delegation, is a was probably my own feelings of have always been inexpensive, woman. Only one woman holds inadequacy." and money has not been a pro- statewide office State Across the country, women blem. But in Bryan, where coun- Treasurer Ann Richards — and have complained about problems cil races this year cost eight to 10 only 13 out of 150 state represen- raising money. But Watson said times as much as they did in Col- tatives are women. Local women active By DANIEL PUCKETT Staff Writer In Brazos County, the following people have one thing in common: three College Station City Council members; one member each of the Bryan City Council and the College Station school board; one justice of the peace and one county court at law judge. That one common trait: they're all women. In recent years, women have done well in local politics. Doris Watson, president of the Brazos County League of Women Voters, says the league, through its workshops, has helped encourage all Turn to NOT, page 18A The Eagle, Friday, July 29, 1983 • CS school board calls budget lean l By KEN LANTERMAN Staff Writer The College Station school district will have tc live,on a budget next year that is not much bigger than this year's, school trustees were told by their own finance committee Monday night. "We're looking at a very lean budget," said com- mittee chairman Bill Wasson, who told the board • it's going to have to look at ways to deliver the same programs with fewer resources. No budget figures were announced Monday, but trustees anticipated budgetary belt- tightening in the face of decreasing state funding for the district. The board did tentatively approve a 4.67 percent increase in the overall teacher and staff salary benefit package for next year, but Wasson said that percentage was for budget planning purposes and could change. Dr. Don Ney, assistant superintendent for ad- ministrative services, gave the board a brief run- down of some of the expected cuts in budget re- quests for the 1983 -84 school year. Some of the specific cuts include cutting in half the unallocated reserve fund, which consists of money set aside for travel, supplemental textbooks and unbudgeted items. He also noted projected cuts in capital outlays, community education and special education. "Whether you like it or not, you are in a period of budget retrenchment," Wasson said. L The Eagle, July 29, 1983, Thursday • (JS worksho p stud Northga to ro bl em s p - by Gwyneth M. Vaughn parking on certain streets at cer- traffic problems in the area in- tain times of the day. cluded: Other recommendations in- •Changing Patricia Street Battalion Reporter cluded: from one -way east to one -way The special committee on •Reducing parking require- west,. or closing it to traffic Northgate submitted its pre- ments for those merchants who altogether. liminary report at a College Sta- have mostly pedestrian cus- •Establishing a bicycle path • lion City Council workshop tomers. system and improving side Wednesday afternoon. Chair- •Working with Texas A &M walks. man Dan McGilvray said, on the problem. One suggestion •Working with the University "There is not anything drastic in was that students residing in on making better use of the what the committee has prop- northside dormitories who do shuttle bus service. osed." not need their cars during the Maintenance suggestions in- McGilvray said the committee week be asked to park on the cluded: found the Northgate area brings west side of the University. •Enforcing trash laws, run - the city a third of a million doI- •Acquiring some of the ning the street sweeper during lars in revenue, but slightly vacant land in Northgate for use quiet hours and maintaining the more than that is spent on the as municipal parking lots. The streets better, especially Cherry area by the police and fire de- committee suggested these be fi- and Cross Streets and Church partments. He said 15 percent nanced with parking meters or Avenue. of the police calls are made in by charging the merchants. •Studying drainage and the Northgate. Zoning recommendations in- street lighting improvements. The committee made recom- cluded: Capital improvement recom- mendations in five areas: park- •Rezoning the commercial mendations by the committee ing, zoning, traffic, mainte- area to a new "planned commer- included: nance and capital improve- cial" zone. •Making Patricia Street into a ments. •Rezoning some of the re- plaza or mini -mall. McGilvray said parking is the sidential areas to insure adequ- •Removing the parking most severe and most visible ate space for housing. places in front of the clubs on problem. Northgate shoppers McGilvray said the committee University Drive to provide cannot find enough spaces, and also recommended that tax cre- more standing room for custom - Texas A &M students and facul- dits be given to promote de- ers and keep people from stand - ty often use Northgate ■ for a velopment of the area, and that ing in University Drive. parking lot, he said. The com- a special tax district be created mittee had several recommen- for the area. •Improving parks, surface ;nelnrlina nne to allow na nA drainage and street standards. commendations to ease g t - The tattaticki, fcaj ,i,6419 419 i9i3 Can , ^ ON , N O O O O �^+ N �, w Mme p 1../ ›N 69 69.40 U � a N o) 0 a u O° I °33 0`� gi ° = O b O p� j " cn 00 00 2 2 y - c ° = v u Eg `S ca z o^�o' >• 3 m 0� • .••4 X 04 �cM o a 0 u u 0 ,c ▪ pr"cnb9... s,rx C o)w y a w Ir •0 .0 � N ..b '" 00 v x 4.+ O l 69 cv o z a a c i' U y cI h �, .... O O r. r 0 o .+ ., w ~ o) OV OMU13 O .0 Q o I. N u 3U Qo u bog m' w " v,id N o -O.°°� ° p =. X O O �+�i o) ^ — , cri So.� w --o„, c v � v '^E w o � I. �N�o i & .I v °�� U al•[ C aj h o) ,g ~ E O 0.0EULIO Z0. . >, r H X .... 7-1 •t.... =1... U 0 0, °° U -. H e -o X v u m l U O m O-° E ' E - y " u 0 w w u w '0 C° .r � Ecy °'O 6.V C •... vi 4, = fl 7 4. 4 1) N 0 E M O' 00 V ,..4 csi v ' M~m� a� R� m U 3 c^x�i �`Q w� C NW i L,•9 .y, H N al ~ Coor) T • >' !all U o 0 v c o CIMIIIIIIII ---,--- . `. e e (e /mod i TGl y j 11 3 � � ay Absentee voter turnout high in B -CS Bryan voters are turning out in greater numbers Station. than expected to vote-absentee in an election that Bryan City Secretary Dorothy Mallett said will decide whether the city grants a 40 percent absentee balloting was heavier than she had ex- property -tax exemption for homesteads, the city a . t ot l the peo CityCounc runoff the secretary says. Meanwhile, the city secretary in College Station in which Helen Chavarria was elected. says absentee turnout was good this week for an Absentee balloting continues in both cities on election on a $48 million bond package and a series weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Aug. 9. of charter changes. Bryan voters may vote at the city secretary's office By late Friday — the end of the first week of in the police station. College Station citizens can absentee balloting in both cities — 49 people had cast their ballots at the city hall. voted absentee in Bryan and 25 had voted in College Election day in both cities will be Aug. 13. The Eagle , SthjrdaL.1 j .J y 36, 191 3. Where can they sleep? Jeep , I am very disturbed by the recent unanimous vote by the College Station City Council to close the city parks from 1 to 5 a.m. While other towns and cities across this nation opened their hearts and purse strings to those most seriousiy hurt by have Y our economic crisis, our City Council is closing the parks. It is unfortunate that in a town that boasts so many people must resort to sleeping in a No longer sleeping park bathroom. y the No long vagrants noW, g In harmlessly on a park bench, w Moved to garage? In the backseat of a are Bryan? It would have been a car? compassionate to close the parks to others froma1 tt 5 a.m and . so the vagrants could sleep in peace. to 5 a.m. D'Ann McMurrey College Station C The Eagle, Monday, August 1, 1983 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station Now The accepting bid(s) for: Water and Sewer Supplies consisting of Miscellaneous Joint Fitiings, Adapters, Couplings, Manhole Rings and Covers, Fire Hydrants. until 2:00 p.m., August 4, 1983, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chases with Revenue Shar- ing funds. Bid 84 -2, 7/25. 8/1 (7/21/83). Nair The Eagle, Monday, August 1, 1983 City services aren't fre e Proponents of the homestead tax exemption seem to be self - serving and not very forward looking. Just as "There ain't no free lunch ", there are no free city services. A vote against this proposal will hopefully insure that we do not have any immediate tax rate increases, that we have adequate fire and police protection, and better city services, i.e. garbage collection, street maintenance and utility ser- vices. Most people take these things for granted. The very people who want more city parks, better traffic control, more police protection, etc. The estimated $900,000 loss in tax revenue to the city of Bryan will undoubtedly raise the tax rate and pass this burden on to the businesses in Bryan, who in turn will pass through these costs to the consumer. The persons and families who can least afford these increases in costs by living in this community will bear the brunt of such a thoughtless act. Many homesteaders are on fixed incomes and will only be transferring the ill begotten gains into higher insurance premiums which will ultimately result from subsequent lack of adequate fire and police protection. No one gains by the proposal! California's proposition 13 referendum is a perfect exam- ple of what can happen when the public becomes aroused by a few persons trying to cut the tax base to benefit themselves. California is broke! Let's not make the same mistake. Those of you who are interested in living in a growing and dynamic community and are looking for a better life style in the future should not only vote no on August 13th but you should actively campaign with your friends and neighbors to defeat the homestead tax exemption proposal. Henry G. Miller, Jr. Bryan The Eagle, Monday, August 1, 1983 City services aren't free Proponents of the homestead tax exemption seem to be self-serving and not very forward looking. Just as "There ain't no free lunch ", there are no free city services. A vote against this proposal will hopefully insure that we do not have any immediate tax rate increases, that we have adequate fire and police protection, and better city services, i.e. garbage collection, street maintenance and utility ser- vices. Most people take these things for granted. The very people who want more city parks, better traffic control, more police protection, etc. The estimated $900,000 loss in tax revenue to the city of Bryan will undoubtedly raise the tax rate and pass this burden on to the businesses in Bryan, who in turn will pass through these costs to the consumer. The persons and families who can least afford these increases in costs by living M this community will bear the brunt of such a thoughtless act. Many homesteaders are on fixed incomes and will only be transferring the ill begotten gains into higher insurance premiums which will ultimately result from subsequent lack of adequate fire and police protection. No one gains by the proposal! California's proposition 13 referendum is a perfect exam- ple of what can happen when the public becomes aroused by a few persons trying to cut the tax base to benefit themselves. California is broke! Let's not make the same mistake. Those of you who are interested in living in a growing and dynamic community and are looking for a better life style in the future should not only vote no on August 13th but you should actively campaign with your friends and neighbors to defeat the homestead tax exemption proposal. Henry G. Miller, Jr. Bryan The Eagle, August 1, 1983 L LEGAL NOTICE • The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) tor: Water and Sewer Supplies consisting of Misce 0 s Joint Fittings, Rings H Couplings, MannalderaiRin and Covers, Fire yydrant 4 , j until 2:00 p.m. the bid 1983, at which time th s office will be opened Agent at I of the Purchasing the City e obtained at the may the Purchasing Agent. office oAll aide received e will be time after that unopened. The returned uoop City of Station reserves the right to waive • he rig or reject any ae or all irregularities n and ao any 1 the offer bid and to accept ad- vffer e eons tod the' City. These- iBites chases Revenue Sher- �I chases with in9 funds. Bid 84 -2, 7125. 8/1 (7121183). 'i The Eagle, August 1, 1983 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: Two (2) Refuse Collection Bodies Two (2) 5 to 6 yard Dump 10 Notices Bodies Three (3) V2 Ton Pick -up Trucks atter that time will be One (1) 40 horse Power returned unopened. The Utility Tractor City of College Station Six (6) Truck Cab and reserves the right to waive Chassis or reject any and all bids or One (1) Back Hoe any and all irregularities in One ( {) Aerial Man -lift said bid and to accept the Device offer considered most ad- until 2:00 p.m., August 16, vantegeous to the City. 1983, at which time the bids These items may be pur- NE. will be opened in the office chased with Revenue Shar- of the Purchasing Agent at ing funds. Bid 84 -3. 8/2/83, the City Hall. Specifications 8/9/83. may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received The Eagle August 2, 1983 • Cost of not living more than $20 in B -CS Everyone knows the cost of liv- Utility officials explain that the ing is high, but consider the cost service charges are basically fees f "not living." for having a meter, having it read College Station residents pay by a serviceman and keeping a $8 service charge for water customer on the books. d electricity, $8 for sewer ser- The above rates also assume no e and $4.20 for garbage consumption or usage, but gas- * kup every month — even if powered water heaters and elec- ey don't read or wash their tric refrigerators are generally e, create any garbage or kept on whether a home is oc- nerate any sewage. cupied or not, so actual charges In fact, a College Station resi- probably will be slightly higher. nt who vacates his home for a The minimum residential onth — on vacation or for a telephone bill in both cities is mer research project in a dif- $10.25, although that figure is ent city — will still pay $28.83 cut in half if a phone won't be us- water, sewer, electric and gar- ed for 60 days. ge charges from the city and If a resident of Bryan or Col -': r phone service from General lege Station has gas service from Telephone Co. and gas service Lone Star, the automatic service from Lone Star Gas Co. charge is $3.50 per month. In Bryan, a resident with the Bryan residents pay customer same services will pay $21.02 charges of $2.10 for electricity, because of lower customer $2.35 for sewer service, $3.44 for charges for utilities and garbage water and $4.50 for garbage pickup. pickup. The Eagle, Wednesday, August 3, 1983 CS b • Iss hea4S agenda City officials plan to answer questions By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer A public discussionthe $48.17 million eb d a i slated for Aug. 13 is p.m. College Station City Council meeting today. After the discussion, the council will consider a resolution formally supporting the bond election and the 22 proposed amendments. City Secretary Dian Jones sent to answer officials es dents councilmen will be p questions on the election, but no formal presenta tion is planned. The bond issue is divided into two parts. Five of the propositions are for revenue bonds totalling b2c eca u mi se they will Those be paid offfsby won't revenue from the buey utility system. Utility rates, however, could increase 10 percent under a "least favorable" scenario if the city fails to grow in the future. Propositions 6 through 10 are for general obliga- tion bonds totaling t $22 59 million. city o bond will be paid off by i ru a i t tax c a s rate. expect Lytle increase in the with n growth in t t the tax base would p he say a produce an increase of 10 to 25 t cents in the property tax rate. Most of the 22 proposed amendments in the City Charter are minor revisions designed to simplify operations or to make the charter comply with rent practice or state law. For example, the mayor could no longer serve as a municipal judge, the annual audit could be started sooner than 60 days before the end of the fiscal yea' and the city council could transfer funds betweer denartments at any time in the fiscal year. The Eagle, Wednesday, August 3, 1983 �I. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold 'a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Part of Lot 16, Lakeview Acres, located on the east "W side of Texas Avenue ap- poximately 300 feet south of Morgan's Lane, from Single Family Residential District R -1 to Administrative - Professional District A -P. Application is in the name of Mike Lane. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall 1101 South Texas Avenue a' the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com mission on Thursday August 18, 1983. For additional information please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning 08 -03 -83 (hr The Eagle, Wednesday, August 3, 1983 w o 0 o 0 Y t4 y e l o c ° o c °3 a o c , 0 .0 IA 0.. c , = -. c'. < 0-4 4 ...e A) CD co 0 ?CDy = ' � 0 O 'V -., w O r. n 'tt ' Iiii 2 3 9 N ( o.rDD tid f O ] ' A CD n 'O ° G' 2 (D a.= E. P r, 0 0' << t ull CD cr co con ■- w C 000 O (D .. .. 0. co to O. .d ,... o- w Q G N td w O 5 .`o w G o n er ( • Z n El; 01 f n ,c,,."- ' < O 5 do y A� N `< x c CO r. '. LL . a ' w c, °. c o g 0, CI, CA ... � r7 k ° co w ° N ail (D n G ^ ° ti .. e CD O •_ Oo p O w c� n c D " 'J . �. ', f i OOQ O w . '. ' � ° , , .. ( n • O O n aa , CD 14m. • cr. cr. C.., < (D EG. ph) - a'N -, c 0O. ^�` `< O : „7 . co ' °o , 0- 0 � 3 v, i1 p y, < E. � p N D, . a CD Gd s ' ■ w v, `< o ° �?' p - c ., c o r. co 3 0. �. p ••. c a • �° a ' 0 w a , ( , c o.c� . � . D °oo co (D O = Q `< C co (D y O 1 w y " ".y. 0 3 G ?O Fr: � = >14 A -9 oil v , aoG 0:1 N O p O • (Dr � ' n CD pi S ( n.A.�� a 0 p(). 4 lD d- H y OQ r (D . w w - w o " a ° r ya -, o 0 y w o 0 o wo ( mo o w a 0 The Eagle, Wednesday, August 3, 1983 o o -, c " ^ o 0 y < ( (o (D p: � o y i a v ( < o o, o �� o � = . ' c a .... Firemen's school helps local mer chant hotels s by Tim Widdison are out driving around or shop- business each summer, she said. Battalion Reporter ping for souvenirs. Several retail The firefighting school is one Bright red has replaced ma- stores cater to their needs. of several events bringing roon as the predominant color For instance, a large banner money into the community in College Station, at least tem- handing in the window of Uni- through tourism. porarily. versity Bookstore reads "Wel- Figures provided by the Un- Several local merchants have come firemen." ited States Travel Data Center in painted the town red to welcome Red and white shirts piled in Washington, D.C., show an in- industrial firefighters who are in stacks cover long wooden crease in the total economic im- town this week for classroom shelves previously reserved for pact of tourism on Brazos Coun- and field training through the sale books. Red patches and caps ty of 15.36 percent over $45.2 Texas A &M Fire Protection lie next to bumper stickers with million in 1980. School. slogans relating to firemen's Anne Bell, manager of the The Fire Protection Training work. College Station Branch of the Division at Texas A &M sponsors A large box contains black, Bryan - College Station Chamber three firefighting programs: pink and green underwear with of Commerce, said the amount municipal firefighting last week, firetruck silhouettes stitched of hotel/motel room taxes col - industrial firefighting this week across them. Iected each year is an indicator and a program for Spanish- Martha Camp, owner of Uni- of the total economic impact. speaking firefighters next week. versity Bookstores, Inc., said the More than $318,000 in room When not in class or out stores prepare for the firemen taxes were collected in College training, the firefighters often every year. They bring a lot of Station in 1982. i 1 II 6 L merle C ALI 0 '- I gE Board to hear zonin g request q By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer Planning and zoning commissioners will consider a proposal to rezone two lots in College Station's West Park subdivision to a smaller residential classification at today's 7 p.m. meeting. Joseph L. Mashburn of 401 Highland has asked the commission to rezone the two lots at the corner of Grove and Highland streets from standard single- family residential to a type of single - family residential with a smaller lot size. City Planner Jim Calloway said the city staff will recommend approval of the request. On another proposal, however, Calloway said the staff will recommend that the commission not approve a request because of drainage and ease- ment problems. That request was to vacate and resubdivide two lots in the Emerald Forest subdivision. In other business, Calloway said the staff will recommend approval of: •Preliminary plat for Phase II of the Woodway West subdivision. •Parking lot plan for BrazosBanc Savings' 12- lane drive- through facility in the Ashford Square subdivision. *Parking lot plan for renovation of the BrazosBanc branch at Texas Avenue and Southwest Parkway. *Parking lot plan for BrazosBanc's proposed automatic - teller- machine building at Texas Avenue and Millers Lane. •Parking lot plan for revised landscaping at the Woodstone Commerce Center on Texas 30. •Site plan permit for the Treehouse Village Apartments in Phase II of the Woodway West sub- division. The Eagle, Thursday, August 4, 1983 LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1434 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 14th OF July, 1983 meeting in regular session in the Coun- cil Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance. signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption: LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1434: AN ORDINANCE NO. 1437 WAS ORDINANCE AMENDING PASSED `AND APPROVED CHAPTER 1, SECTION 14, BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF SUBSECTION 1, OF THE THE CITY OF COLLEGE CODE OF ORDINANCES, STATION, TEXAS ON THE CITY OF COLLEGE STA- 28TH OF July, 1983 meeting TION, TEXAS, RELATING in regular session in the TO THE CONDUCT OF Council Room of the College PERSONS WITHIN PARK Station City Hall. AND RECREATION AREAS Said Ordinance. signed by OF THE CITY, ESTABLISH- the Mayor and duly re- ING PENALTIES FOR THE corded in the official re- VIOLATION THEREOF, AND cords of the City of College PROVIDING FOR A N Station, has the following EFFECTIVE DATE. caption: A violation of any of the ORDINANCE NO. 1437: AN provisions of this ordinance ORDINANCE AMENDING is punishable by a fine of CHAPTER 10, SECTION 3 OF $1.00to$200.00. THE COLLEGE STATION The complete text of the CODE OF ORDINANCES above -named Ordinance is RELATING TO SPEED on file at the Office of the ZONES AND SPECIFICALLY • City Secretary and may be DESIGNATING ADDITIONAL obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, AREA IN THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION IN College Station, Texas WHICH RATES OF SPEED 77840. OF GREATER OR LESS 08- 04$3,08 -05-83 THAN THIRTY (30) MILES P E R H O U R A R E AUTHORIZED, RESCINDING ALL 'PARTS OF ORDINAN- C E S I N C O N F L I C T HEREWITH: AND DECLAR- ING THAT ATTENDANT FACTS NECESSITATE IMMEDIATE ACTION. A violation of any of the provisions of this ordinance is punishable by a fine of $1.00 to $200.00. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. THE EAGLE, SUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 1983 Amendment a liability I am a homeowner, a businessman and a good citizen and it's from these three seats that I address this important issue. I think all of us would welcome the HOMESTEAD TAX EXEMPTION, but this would profit us NOTHING. Fellow citizens, I beg of you to take an in -depth look and see what we are about to let ourselves in for if this is passed. We are complaining now, how our far city is falling behind in ser- vices rendered. Lets try to upgrade not down grade this city. We are apart of the sixth - fastest growing area in the nation but if this is not defeated, the result of this will show its ugly head when we can't attract new businesses to our industrial parks. It doesn't take a Ph.D. to see that if we don't attract new business, unemployment can only rise. We just can't af- ford this "would be" luxury which in reality is a liability. The few dollars that we might save today will be overshadow- ed by what we pay tomorrow. I will admit that this exemp- tion looks good on the surface, but as in most propositions that are presented to us they aren't for the good of the masses but the few and this one the very few. I salute Mr. & Mrs. Hart who signed this petition but who later found out that was a mistake. It's not often that we will publicly acknowledge when we have made an error. In haste there are others who now regret having permitted their names to be used on the petition but I urge you LET US CORRECT THIS AT THE BALLOT BOX. W.C. Daniel Jr. Bryan THE EAGLE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1983 Lif eg uar d s totest r s y , . y H Thomas Taschin e r /Cit Hall Report Anyone who has ever spent a tasks. A summer as a lifeguard knows that "When the swimming season be • alert and guwatchful always for the job requires a tricky mixture starts to wind down, " possibilities for accidents and pre - of skill, diplomacy and authority. Schrecengost writes to pool vent them before they occur. He A lot of lifeguards are good at managers about the contest, will recognize that praise and their jobs, and next Monday# have you noticed that even your glory for a rescue is not impor- they'll be able to test their skills at best guards start to become, we tant, but that a rescue had to be the first annual "Texas Super hate to say it, bored? The guards done. Pool Guard Contest." may even become restless, Such a guard will understand Sponsor for the contest is the careless, irritable, derelict in their that he needs to be courteous and Colle Sponsor Stat Parks and contest is the duties. When this happens, tactful at all times and will always lion ge Station i nt a the swimming mistakes (and accidents) are much be properly dressed and groomed. pool in Bee Creek Park. more likely to occur." Lifeguards are the city's first line Pool Manager Randy . The contest is designed to of contact with its citizens at Schrecengost thought up the day- counteract this malaise and create Pools. long event, and 24 lifeguards from 'Super Pool Guards" -- who ' super pool guard should across the state have registered, even have a motto similar to the be knowledgeable of the opera - Schrecengost expects a total of 30 Boy Scout oath: lions of a swimming pool. Above super all, a super guard will be respect - registrants by the day of the con- •A su P pool guard will be ful of the responsibility entrusted test, including lifeguards from trained and capable in all aspects to him and will continue to train Corpus Christi, Longview and of safety, prevention and rescue. and practice to become better. Pasadena. He will know his role during a g Swimmers may want to keep The contest is patterned after rescue and realize that he is en- some of the above points in mind the Super Stars competition in trusted with the constant respon- when they're dealing with the that participants will be tested on sibility for the safety and lives of lonely man or the woman sitting in a variety of physical and mental others. the elevated chair beside the pool. The Eagle, Thursday, August 4, 1983 Volunteers t• • to e rape victims by Gwyneth M. Vaughn The center also will provide refer- The center needs funding — most ral services — sending people to other of which will come from the commun- agencies for additional services or in- ity, she said. To help raise the funds Battalion Reporter formation, she said, and will work to Ruffino is applying for grants, but to Training sessions for 22 volunteers educate the community about rape. open the center $10,000 will ,have to began Monday for the area's first Bill Turner, Brazos County assis- be collected. Eventually, a director, rape crisis center. A location has not tant district attorney, said most peo- secretary and full -time staff will have yet been found for the center, but ple think rape is a sex crime, but it is to be hired for the center, she said. organizer Carolyn Ruffino said really an assault crime. The victims Wednesday, she hopes it will be open seldom bring it upon themselves, he Persons interested in volunteering within the next two months. said. donating Ruffino, the county court at law The volunteers will staff the center or or Ruffino money o Turner an for or the e center c an judge, said the volunteer counselors from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day, and will provide escort counseling for calls will be forwarded to theiwhomes or send donations or checks, made rape victims, which means they will go at night, Ruffino said. out to Brazos County Rape Crisis to the hospital' with them, see them Anyone interested in helping can Center, Inc., to the county offices. through queltioning and assist them attend the training sessions, she said, Those interested in volunteering also through a 'trial if one results. The and volunteers will be screened 'for can attend the training sessions being L counselors will act as sounding boards counselor positions after the training held Thursday and Monday through for the victims and "give them moral, is completed. She said she hopes to Thursday of next week at the county physical and emotional support," eventually have 50 trained volun- court at law courtroom on the second Ruffino said. teers. floor of the county courthouse. IP Thy -1-iatic Frida j,) 1 kr I) I° 3 CS la p nners rezone 2 lots By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Whiter The College Station Planning and Zoning Com- mission this week approved a request to rezone two lots in the West Park Subdivision from standard single - family residential to a classification with a smaller lot size. The request was submitted by Joseph L. Mashburn for two lots on the southeast corner of Highland and Grove streets. Mashburn plans to construct a second house on the two lots. The commission also tabled a plan by BrazosBanc Savings to construct a building at Thxas Avenue and Millers Lane to house automated teller machines. City Planner Al Mayo said the commission wants to study the potential effect on traffic at the site. In other business, the commission approved a plan to vacate and resubdivide two lots in the Emerald Forest Subdivision after drainage and easement problems were corrected, Mayo said. The Eagle, Saturday, August 6, 1983 Absentee voting ends Tuesday Absentee voting in Bryan's charter - amendment lection has surged ahead of the absentee turnout for College Station's bond election. ; By late Friday, 133 citizens had voted absentee in Bryan. City Secretary Dorothy Mallett called the turnout strong. In College Station, 68 voters had cast absentee ballots by late Friday. Absentee balloting continues in both cities Mon- day and Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. College Station residents can vote at the City Hall. Bryan voters can cast their ballots at the city secretary's Office in the police station. Election day in both cities will be Aug. 13. The Eagle, Saturday, August 6, 1983 Ordinance needed Bryan and College Station officials need look no further than last weekend's major telephone service disruption in Bryan for a reason to adopt tough ordinances penalizing careless construction crews for the needless inconvenience and expense they cause their neighbors. Some 1,600 Bryan residents and businesses spent the weekend without telephone service because a construction crew slashed through a GTE trunk line while working on street repairs at Finfeather Road and Groesbeck Street. The accident was easily preventable — within feet of where the cable was cut stands a sign warning of the presence of a buried telephone cable. On that sign is a telephone number which construction crews are requested to call when digging in the area of a buried cable; had the contractor done so, General Telephone Co. employees would have come to the site and marked the exact location of the cable. But they did not do so, and the result was a significant loss of telephone service for a significant number of people. The bulk of the businesses and residences affected by the cut lost the use of their telephones for most of Friday and all of Saturday. There was simply no reason for that to happen. Certainly the two cities could include a clause in all municipal contracts requiring contractors to notify utilities of their construction plans when those plans involve digging in an area where there are buried cables or pipelines; failure to have done so, in the event of a service disruption, could then result in forfeiture of a performance bond or a penalty or both. Similarly, an ordinance requiring all contractors to notify utilities when their excavation plans call for digging in an area where there are buried utility pipelines or cables — and providing for a penalty when service is disrupted by a contractor who failed to do so — could be enacted. Such penalities would not ensure a future free of line cuts — accidents are not entirely preventable — but it would en- courage contractors to be sure that GTE and other local utilities were aware of construction plans and given the op- portunity to identify the location of underground lines in ad- vance of actual construction. The time and effort required of contractors to notify utilities of their excavation plans are insignificant compared to the wholesale inconvenience and financial loss incurred by thousands of businesses and individuals when a line is cut. Perhaps by giving contractors a more tangible incentive to avoid such disruptions, the number of these incidents can be cut instead of another telephone cable. The Eagle, Sunday, August 7, 1983 911 mean` nothing in Bryan By JANET GIBSON Staff Writer It's 1 a.m. and she awakes to ind a man crawling through her )edroom window. Almost paralyzed from fear, ;he manages to grab her phone and dial 911 — the emergency number she used before moving to Texas from the Northeast. The woman is fictitious, but of- ficals say the situation is realistic. But, depending on where the woman lives, she could be in — or out of — luck. If she lives in College Station, Hearne or Huntsville, she'll reach a police dispatcher within seconds. If she's a student at Texas A &M University, dialing 9 -911 will plug her into an emergency system. If the woman lives in Bryan, however, she'll receive a busy signal and only a busy signal — every time she attempts to dial the three -digit number. The 911 system, which is quick- ly gaining recognition as a univer- sal emergency number, has been in existence in College Station for nearly 13 years. On the Texas A &M campus, fires and other emergencies have been reported on a 9 -911 number for nearly two years. City officials in Bryan say that citizens and the city council would have to take an active interest before the emergency number is implemented there. Proponents of 911 believe that the seconds saved in dialing a three- or four -digit number as op- posed to dialing a seven -digit number could be the seconds that save a life. "Believe me, it's worthwhile," said North Bardell, College Sta- tion city manager. "Dialing 911 is not just your common call. It gets you a quicker response time." When a College Station resident Dials 911, his call will ring at both :he police and central fire stations. 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The Eagle, Monday , August 8 , 1983 k �� mIllt 0 " VI H4 \ A ,. � ice' \ a z ,M - . t n \ \,�\ 2r te gg 8 '�\ ' �bc \, 'fit+ � \�'no y Z\ ' _ ��` `, � te'. l J \ J Z'\ M\ Eagle photo by David Einsel Therese Casey shows how to swim with one arm during a rescue Lifeguards o of s k i l ls ID By JANET GIBSON physical and mental tasks. Staff Writer Therese Casey and Adolfo Ibanez, both So you'd like to be a lifeguard? of Corpus Christi, said the most beneficial The mere word, you say, conjures im- part of the contest was a "safety hazards ages of icy -blue water, sunshine and wat- course." ching good - looking bodies all day long. "You had to pay close attention or you But, lifeguarding requires intricate skills, wouldn't notice the hazards — a dedication and maturity, said Randy screwdriver hanging out of a fen and the Schrecengost, manager of College Sta- gate open to the baby pool," said Ibanez. tion's Adamson Pool. And, job "bur- "The idea was to use your powers "of obser- nout" — not just from the sun — is in- vation." evitable. But most of the day was spent in fierce, "It's toward the end of the summer and physical competition — a simulated rescue some of thdlifeguards have been out at the and various swimming contests. pool every day — listening to the same At the end of the competition, plaques screaming kids every day," he explained. were awarded to the top winners — Larry To perk up motivation and the guards' Brown 'in. the men's division and Terry knowledge of life- saving skills, Harkins in tliwomen's 4yision. Brown is Schrecengost organized the 1st Annual a guard at Thomas Park Pool in College Texas Super Pool Guard Contest held Station and Harkins is from Pasadena. Monday at Adamson Pool in Bee Creek Charles Szabuniewicz, aquatics super - Park. visor for the College Station Parks and Lifeguards from College Station, Cor- Recreation Department, shared his own pus Christi, Longview and Pasadena par- definition of lifeguarding as he watched the ticipated in the contest, which was pattern- competition. ed after a Super Stars competition. "Lifeguarding," he said, "is more than Sixteen lifeguards, ranging in age from just sitting on your can and blowing your 17 to 26, were tested on a variety of whistle." The Eagle, Tuesday, August 9, 1983 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: Two (2) Refuse Collection Bodies Two (2) 5 to 6 yard Dump Bodies Three (3) Ya Ton Pick -up Trucks One (1) 40 horse Power Utility Tractor Six (6) Truck Cab and Chassis One (1) Back Hoe One (1) Aerial Man -lift Device until 2:00 p.m., August 16, 1983, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing - LEGAL NOTICE Agent. All time will be be YOU ARE INVITED TO BID after that im will ON THE FOLLOWING o returned unopened. The WORK: City of College Staive NAME OF PROJECT: Con - reserves the right all bids or waive struct Tick Research Facil- or said bid and to and any and la it Texas A &M University, say and all irregularities accost ce p t s in the College Station, Tex 8 as, o PROJECT MO offer considered most ad- vantegeous to the 0301 be pity. FOR TEXAS A &M UNIVERS- These items may ITY, COLLEGE STATION, chased s .th d 8enu8 /2)83, TEXAS 77843. ing 8/9 funds. Bid 84 -3, RECEIPT OF BIDS: Bids for 8/9/83. _ - - - -- this project will be received -- until 2:00 p.m.. August 30 by B.E. Woods, Engineering & Design Supervisor, in the Conference Physical Pla t Department Building, No. 437, located on Ireland Street, Texas A &M University, College Station, Texas. DESCRIPTION OF WORK: Construct 30'x70' Metal Building on slab and extend utilities to provide a labora- tory for Tick research facility. INFORMATION AND BID- DING DOCUMENTS: Bid documents may be obtained from: Mr. B. E. Woods Engineering and Design Supervisor Texas A &M University College Station, Texas 77843 409 -845 -531 08- 08- 83.08 - - R 1 The_ En91E TUelcict9 kg-n I 3- Chamber endorses bond issue in CS The Bryan - College Station Chamber of Com- merce Tuesday gave its endorsement to a $48.2 million bond issue for capital improvements in the city of College Station. Jim Scamardo, chamber president and president of Unitedbank - College Station, praised the city for its "foresight" in planning a five -year program of improvements in utility systems, buildings, roads and public services. College Station Mayor Gary Halter and Elrey Ash, the city's director of capital improvements, outlined the 10 propositions included in the bond issue during the regular chamber board of directors meeting Tuesday. The bond issue, almost as large as the city's three previous bond issues combined, goes before voters Saturday. T+�E L !1LY UST 1 0 )I Ig townie-600y TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The Zoning Board of Adjust- ment for the City of College Station will consider an appeal in the name of: Alfred Gutierrez, Jr. 509 University Drive College Station, TX 77840 Said case will be heard by the Board at their regular meeting. in the Council TO WHOM IT Room, College Station City MAY Y CONCERN: Hall. 1101 Texas Avenue on The Zoning Board of Adjust- Tuesday. August 16. 1983 at ment for the City of College 7:00 p.m. Station will consider a requ- The nature of the case is as est for a variance in the follows: name of: Appeal of the decision made Texana National Bank "In by the Planning and Zoning Organization" Commission to deny issu- P. O. Box 10130 ance of a Building Permit for College Station, TX 77840 additions to the business Said case will be heard by operating under the name of the Board at their regular Alfredo's Tacos Al Carbon TO WHOM IT I. meeting in the Council located at 509 University MAY CONCERN: Room, College Station City Drive. Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue at Further information is avails- ' The Zoning Board of Adjust- 7:00 P.M. on Tuesday. ble at the office of the ment for the City of College August 16, 1983. Zoning Official of the City of Statigp will consider a requ- The nature of the case is as College Station. (409)696 - est fdr a variance in the follows: 8868. name of: Request for variance to sign Jane Kee, M., H.. B. R. Joint Venture regulations prohibiting de- I Zoning Official (Ashford Square P.U.D•) tached signs in A -P and C -N 08 -10 43 3230 Texas Avenue South zones as required by Ordin- College Station, TX 77840 ante 850 Section 8 -D.5 at the Said case will be heard by site location at the the Board at their regular southeast corner of State TO WHOM:f . meeting in the Council Highway 30 and Stallings MAY WH *CEIII Room. College Station City Drive. The Zoning. Board of Adjust - Hall. 1101 Texas Avenue at Further information is availa- ment for the City of College 7:00 P.M. on Tuesday, ble at the office of the Station veil consider a requ - o,,,,,, 18 1983_ Zoning Official of the City of Station for a variance in the The nature of the case is as College Station, (409)696- name of: follows: 8868. Texana National Bank "In Request for variance to rear Jane Kee Organization" retback as required by Zoning Official P. O. Box 10130 istrict Use Schedule (Table ) of Ordinance 850 on all ts in th 08 -10 -83 College Station. TX 77840 Said case will be heard by e. Ashford Square ubdivision located on the outh side of Southwest arkway immediately south the Board at their regular meeting in the Council Room, College Station City Hall. 1101 Texas Avenue at f the intersection of Cornell 7.00 P.M. on Tuesday. August 16, 1983. F Southwest Parkway. TO WHOM IT Further information is availa- MAY CONCERN: The nat ' ble at the office of the The Zoning Board of Adjust - j follows: ure of the case is as 1 1 Zoning Official of the City of ment for the City of College Request for variance to sign College Station. (409)696- Station will consider a requ- regulations prohibiting de- 8868. est for a variance in the tached signs in A -P and C -N Jane Kee name of: zones as required by Ordin- Zoning Official P a y l e s s C a s h w a y s. ante 850 Section 8-D.5 at the °+� 08-10-83 ___ Inc /B Main site location at the 2301 Main Street Suite 800 southeast corner of State Kansas City, Missouri 64141 Highway 30 and Stallings Said case will be heard by Drive. the Board at their regular Further information is availa- meeting in the Council ble at the office of the Room, College Station City Zoning Official of the City of Hall, 1,101 Texas Avenue at College Station .(409)696- 7:00 P.M. on Tuesday, 8868 August 16, 1983. Jane Kee The nature of the case Is as Zoning Official follows: 08-10-83 h e i gh t st height regulated $1 by Ordinance N No. 1409, an Amendment to the Zoning Ordinance 850 at the site location of a retail lumber store just north of the intersection of Highway 30 __ and the East Bypass PUIC NOTIC Further information is availa- com Station tion outer Accuracy Test ble at the office of the ill be conductetl the at the Zoning Official of the City of 8868. entral Counting Cp. S co unt in College Station. (409)696- the Elec 983, 13, 1 L1e Council Room of the o Jane Kee 1101 lege South Texas Av enue, Zoning Official 08 -10 -83 — vote CColollleg e ege d ballots Stati n, n tabulat aB the City TexH at 7:15 P.M. Saturday, August of and Charter Amendment equipment shall again be tested at the conclusion of count before the el s tion returns are approved as official. For additional in- formation concerning t process. contact Dian Jones. City Secretary Col- City Hall, or , c (409) 696-8868. 08 -10 -83 i- -THE, EA 4E , A u( 10 lq83, wFDIJe5o6y Kudos to board Kudos to the College Station School Board, or at least those members voting in favor of doing away with the position of Athletic Director of CSISD High School and the monies previously allocated for football coaches' uniforms and meals for foot- ball players. (My daughter, a band member, has played at every football game, but to my knowledge, she has never received a free meal, nor should she; neither does her band director have a special uniform.) Athletics, especially football, has seemed to take far too much precedence over academics in this community, and I, for one, am glad to see the School Board take the action that it did. Can you imagine how big the footbal coaches' salaries would be if merit pay for teachers is in- stituted.? Sally Kirk College Station — THE en 6LE , 4 uGOST io, I 83 tOEDIJEsDA ' n polis set r e S tati o 1 v O � 1e � — 3 precinct, is a Polling places in Bryan, by 26 Bryan High School 36 —VFW Hall places in elec- voting precinct: 3 — Municipal Golf Course i n Bryan and Col- 4 — Carver School 38 — Castle Heights Baptist lege Saturday 11 — Crockett School lege Station. Polling places in College Sta In Bryan, voters will decide 12 —Sul Ross Elementary whether to approve a city charter 13 — Henderson Elementary n: amendment that would provide 14 — Ben Milam Elementary tion: property tax exemp- 15 — Fannin Elementary 8 and 31 — South Knoll School 9 and 31 — S nit Knoll — Bowie Elementary 10 — Police Station lions. Voters in College bond pro- 16 — Travis Elementary 20, 21 Police 35 — Old City Hall will cast involving on 10 bond p 20 — Col 35 Hills Elementary. iHall in 18 — Central Fire positions rove l ts n and 48 2 2 ilcharter 19 — Bo ham Elementary 3 2 — C Station No. 2 ctal prof 32 — Li S t a io n amendments. Pis 22 — Army Reserve Center i 3 — Central Center S Polls in both ci open at 7 25 — American Legion Hall a.m. and close at 7 p.m. ThL 10.. 11 1 Parks board supports to build wave plan From page 1A No machinery touches the water and a metal screen prevents swimmers parks advisory board also back the from getting close to the motor. There proposal. is no undertow and the waves gradual - Admission fees at wave pools are ly taper in height near the shallow end generally higher than at standard of the pool. pools. Some commercial wave pools Typical wave pools are eight feet charge around $8.95, but other mun- deep at one end — where the waves cipal pools charge $2 for children and are generated — and gradually slope $3.50 for adults. to dry land at the other end. The in- Wave pools are larger than stan- clined, concrete surface of the pool is dard pools and fan - shaped instead of flat. rectangular. A motor above the deep Usually the waves are alternately end forces compressed air onto the turned on for 15 minutes and off for water in an up- and -down manner to 10 minutes so that swimmers can en- create the waves. joy a variety of activity. WAVE LENGTH WAVES BREAKING ON BEACH The device on the left causes the waves to form. 1 - The, J rsia ►) -- E 1I,1�3 ria r d Its your future The polls will close at 7 p.m. Saturday, but Bryan and College Station residents are going to have to live with the decisions made that day for years to come. Unlike electing a slate of public officials, who serve fairly short terms, the issues on Saturday's ballot represent fundamental changes in city procedures, and in the case of College Station's bond proposals, the com- mitment of a significant amount of money to meet municipal needs for the next five years. So in a very real sense, the decisions made tomorrow will determine the future direction both cities take. In Bryan, voters must decide whether the individual savings which would result from voting themselves a hefty homestead property tax exemption are worth whatever adverse im- pact the corresponding loss of municipal revenue portends for their city. In College Station, voters must decide whether the 10 bond proposals and the 22 proposed changes to the city charter are in the best interest of their city. For the record, the Eagle Editorial Board strongly believes that the homestead property tax exemption in Bryan would be catastrophic to both the city's immediate fiscal health and its long -term ability to cope with the pressures of growth and demands for increased city ser- vices; that the 10 bond propositions in Col- lege Station represent a sound, well - considered approach to meeting the an- ticipated demands of the next five years; and that the 22 proposed amendments to College Station's charter are in the city's best interest. Whether you agree or not is less important than whether you vote or not. Every resident of Bryan and College Station has a direct stake in the outcome of Saturday's elections. And the issues at hand are simply too impor- tant to be decided by only a fraction of the population. Take the time to vote Saturday -= it's your ftiture, too. The Eagle, Friday, August 12, 1983 Council votes to cont inue • n on Texas 30 constructlo By THOMAS TASCHINGER if other modifications are possi- Because of that offset condi- Staff Writer ble. tion, traffic engineers face The College Station City Coun- The medians will be completed unusual problems in routing east - cil voted Thursday to continue shortly, but the traffic signals west and north -south traffic at construction of medians and traf- won't be installed for 3'/ months. those intersections. fic signals on Texas 30 at the in- Merchants in the Woodstone Halter said the city council must tersections of Dartmouth and and Post Oak Village shopping consider three things: the needs of Munson streets despite objections centers agreed that some type of the merchants, the movement of from nearby merchants. medians and traffic signals pro- traffic on a heavily - traveled Mayor Gary Halter and coun- bably should be installed because thoroughfare and the safety of cilmen Vicky Reinke, Pat of numerous traffic accidents on motorists. Boughton and Lynn Mcllhaney the road. However, they feel the In other business, the council voted in favor of continuing con- city's current plan will unduly rejected a proposal by Coun- struction. restrict entry into their shopping cilman Gary Anderson to stop a centers. $7, 500 feasibility study of a pro - Councilmen Gary Anderson "We are really worried, " said posed wave pool in Southwood and Alvin Prause voted against it. Mike Martin, owner of Mike's Athletic Park. Councilman Bob Reynolds was Discount Liquor. "We are con- Anderson said the proposed $1 - absent. cerned about our businesses sur- million pool was a "highly Director of Capital Im- viving and you should be concern- speculative" venture and not the provements Elrey Ash pleaded ed about your tax dollars." type of project a city should get in- with the council not to stop con- City Council members were volved in. struction for further study because sympathetic with the merchants' City Finance Director A.E. that decision would make it ex- complaints, but they said "Van" Van Dever replied that the tremely difficult to work with the something must be done to make wave pool has a very good state highway department in the the intersections safer and able to possibility of paying for itself and future. handle more traffic. generating other profits. Van The state highway department is Munson and Dartmouth streets Dever said the city's two standard overlaying Texas 30 and installing intersect the highway 300 feet pools currently each lose between the medians and the city of Col- apart because, years ago, area $80, 000 and $100, 000 a year. lege Station will install the traffic residents were afraid that traffic He also noted that all 60 wave signals. would become too heavy if the pools currently operating in the The council agreed to study the streets intersected Texas 30 in a United States have been financial - situation after two months to see straight -on fashion. ly successful. The Eagle, Friday, August 12, 1983 CS bond issue faced with new opposition By THOMAS TASCHINGER John Gudelman, one of the Staff Writer organizers and a resident of the Last - minute opposition to parts Raintree subdivision, said the of Saturday's $48 million College flyers are being distributed by Station bond issue surfaced residents of the Raintree, Wind - Thursday, but it was answered dwood, Emerald Forest, and with strongly worded rebuttals College Hills subdvisions and the from officials who insist the bond Southwood Valley and Welsh package is sound and necessary. Avenue areas. A group of citizens from a half Some residents fear that Ap- dozen College Station pomattox would become a major neighborhoods are currently thoroughfare that will disrupt distributing flyers urging residents their neighborhoods. to vote against bond propositions Others oppose Proposition 9 8 and 9. because they're against the im- Proposition 8 is a $2.22 million provement of Welsh and Lincoln project for the extension of Ap- streets because they also feel those pomattox Drive and Proposition 9 projects would disrupt residential calls for $11.5 million in repair of neighborhoods. old streets and construction of Turn to RESIDENTS, page 6A new ones. P S The Eagle, Friday, August 12, 1983 L ocai v ot ers to decide on taxe bonds By DANIEL PUCKETT and For a list of polling places, 6A THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writers The homestead exemption, Bryan voters go to the polls to- which is permitted by a state con - day to decide on a controversial Turn to LOCAL, page 6A proposal to exempt 40 percent of homesteads' value from property taxes. Meanwhile, College Station residents will vote on 10 bond issues and 22 proposed changes in the City Charter. Polling places in both cities will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. The Bryan Homeowners Association, which gathered the petitions that forced the homestead election, says city taxes are too high. Association sup- porters also say that tax revenues are used to support a bloated, in- efficient city staff. They say that property taxes have doubled or tripled for many in the past two years and that adoption of the homestead exemp- tion would lift an oppressive burden from many homeowners. The Eagle, August 13, 1983, Saturday f Local residents to . rote on tax bonds today From page 1 A could result in increased property taxes. ey ficials say the least- Here's Where stitutional amendment adopted in favorable scenario would increase 1981, would drop to 30 percent in the tax rate by 10 to 25 cents. 1985 -88 and to 20 percent However, they say the bond issues you can vote thereafter. The minimum exemp- will probably result in little or no •+ tion would be $5,000. increase. The amendment is opposed by Opposition has surfaced to pro- Here's a list of the polling the City Council and a host of positions 8 and 9. p ?aces for today's elections in other groups, including the Bryan- Proposition 8 calls for the $2.22 Bryan and College Station. College Station Chamber of Com- million extension of Appomattox Polling places in Bryan, by voting merce, the League of Women Drive through the Emerald Forest, precinct: Voters, the Bryan Development Raintree and Windwood subdivi- 4 — Carver School, 1401 W. Foundation, the board of trustees sions. 19th St. of the Bryan Independent School Some residents of those subdivi- 11 — Crockett School, 401 District and the Brazos County sion oppose the plan because they Elm St. Mexican - American Democrats. think the road will become a 12 — Sul Ross Elementary, City officials say passage of the 3300 Parkway Terrace 1 amendment would cut the city's 13 — Henderson Elementary, revenues by $900,000, possibly The homestead exemp- 801 Matous Drive I resulting in cutbacks in city ser tion which is permitted 14 — Ben Milani Elementary, vices, higher tax rates, higher user 1201 Ridgedale St. fees for city services, or a cam- by a state constitutional 15 — Fannin Elementary, 501 bination of the three. amendment adopted in S. Ba St. They fear enacting the exemp- P 16 — Bow Elementary, 401 tion will hurt business and the 1981, would drop to 30 W. 26th St. poor, since a larger share of the 17 — Travis Elementary, 901 tax burden will be thrown onto percent in 1985 -88 and E. 25th St. businesses and those who rent to 20 percent ther±ea f ter. 18 — Central Fire Station, 801 their homes. N. Bryan St. The bond issues and charter 19 — Bonham Elementary, changes in College Station met lit- 2801 Wilkes Drive dangerous thoroughfare. City of- tle opposition until this week. ficials counter that the extension is 22 — Army Reserve Center, College Station's $48 million 511 W. Carson St. capital improvements bond issue vital for north south access east of the East Bypass. --- 23 LBJ Elementary, 3800 is the largest in the city's history Proposition 9 calls for expen- Oak Hill Drive and almost as big as the three 25 — American Legion Hall, ditures of $11.49 million for repair 2301 Highway 21 E. previous issues. of old streets and construction of City officials say one reason for 26 — Bryan High School, 3401 the issue's large size is that it will new ones. The proposition n E. 29th St. eludes plans to improve or extend nd 36 — VFW Hall, 1447 FM cover a five-year size is y period instead of Lincoln and Welsh streets. the usual two years. Some residents of those areas 2818 Several of the projects to be think those plans will disrupt their 37 -- Municipal Golf Course, financed by bond proceeds are neighborhoods. City officials say 206 W. Villa Maria Road based on projections of where the that the changes are necessary for 38 --- Castle Heights Baptist city will grow. Most of that proper traffic flow. Church, Texas 21 east of the East growth is expected to occur to the Most of the 22 charter changes Bypass south. are routine housekeeping Polling places in College Sta- tions, growth th does 't follow certain n llow ce� tion measures designed to make city & 31 So th Knoll School, law comply with current practice 1220 Boswell St. projects will not be started, and or state law. those bonds will not be sold. 9 — Community Center, A recent proposal to build a $1 One former councilman came Holick Drive & Jersey Street out against changes 13 and 21, 10 Police Station, 2611 million "wave pool" in which would allow the city to sell Southwood Athletic Park is not land at the College Station in- Texas Ave. 20, 21 & 35 — Old City Hall, connected with the bond issue. dustrial park through private Wellborn Road & Church Five of the bond propositions negotiations instead of public bid - will be funded by utility revenues ding. Avenue and could result in a slight in- Jim Gardner said the change 24 -- College Hills Elemen- crease in utility rates if growth would lessen public control of a tart', 101 Williams St. slows significantly. City officials vital activity. City officials say 32 — Fire Station No. 2, Rio predict no rate increase and only a they need the flexibility of Grande Street & FM 2818 10 percent increase under worst- negotiations to prevent 33 — Lincoln Center, case conditions. speculators from intervening in a Holleman Drive &Eleanor Street — The other five propositions will sale and driving up the price or 34 e Central Fire Station, be paid for by tax revenues and killing the deal. 1101 Texas Ave. h h urt erm it ners to s tud y � p Plan pp CS to recommend approval of St. Thomas Aquinas location The commission will also consider a commission to prepare a brochure explain - By THOMAS TASC fse a permit for a new Writer ER rezoning request for part of a lot just south ing commission meetings. A conditional u Sta f of Texas Avenue and Morgan's Lane used Other agenda items are a final plat to p Catholic church on the bypass frontage as an orthodontic clinic by Dr. Everett vacate and resubdivide a lot in the road between the Raintree and Emerald Treadway. The request was submitted by southeast College Park addition; a final Dr. and Mrs. Treadway and Mike Lane. plat for Phase 6 of the Parkway Plaza; a Forest lleg Station Planning a be nd Zoning C the They seek a zoning change from single- revised parking lot plan for the Brazos r 9n Colegnt at today's 's s 7 p 7 p.m. . and om meeting. family residential to administrative - Square Shopping Center; a final plat for '..rty Planner Jim Calloway said the city professional. Calloway said the staff will the resubdivision of two lots in the Ber- planning staff will recommend that the recommend approval. nadine Estates addition; a final plat for commission approve the request for the In a related item, the commission will subdivision of a lot in Section 3 of the consider a parking lot plan for a profes- Regency South addition. new church, which will be called St. sional office building at the same site. Thomas e proposed d s Church. City Planner Al Mayo said the staff will Also a preliminary plat for the Walden which The proposed future of site of e Westinghouse church, recommend disapproval of a resubmitted Pond Townhomes between FM 2818 and ii directly south n plant, is currently zoned the resideenntial and parking lot plan by BrazosBanc Savings for the extension of Southwest Parkway west agricultural -open. an automatic - teller - machine building at the of Holleman Drive; a preliminary plat for In other business, the commission will rear of an Exxon station at Texas Avenue One Lincoln Place on University Drive; a and Millers Lane. site plan permit for the Cedar Creek Con - know consider a Lord's plat for a tract of land Mayo said the site. will not be able to dominiums in One Lincoln Place; a park - known as proposed church ch s which will contatr . handle the extra traffic: circulation pro- ing lot plan for the Phillip Blackburn Inc. office building in Ashford Square; a site the proco church ake. blems that the building d generate. The church will take the 0-acre Lord's City Attorney Lowell` enton will also plan permit for four- plexes in Section 2 of Acres northern half of the 10 acre Lord's Y Acres tract. give his recommendations on a plan by the the Woodway Village addition. The Eagle, Monday, August 15, 1983 Northgate chan es recommended changes THOMAS TASCHINGER residential zoning for the area Street to all traffic except service Staff Writer from R -6 (unlimited density) to R- vehicles. Imaginative planning techni- 5, which has a maximum of 24 "You could turn Patricia into a ques can cure the Northgate area dwelling units per acre. pedestrian mall," MacGilvray of longstanding problems, the He also said the city should said, "especially if large parking head of a study committee said create a new zone for Northgate lots are created elsewhere." Wednesd since many of its buildings and The committee also suggested a His coa mmittees preliminary lots were laid out long before cur - "scrambler" traffic signal at findings suggest tax incentives to rent regulations were put into ef- University Drive and College encourage "quality" development fect. Main that would allow pedestrians of the area and conversion of For parking problems, to walk in any direction on a red Patricia Street into a pedestrian MacGilvray said the committee traffic light, re- engineering the mall. recommended a one -hour parking east end of Church Street and Dan MacGilvray, assistant dean limit in most parts of Northgate to establishing bike routes in Nor - of the College of Architecture and prevent A &M students from leav- thgate. Environmental Design at Texas ing their cars on the streets for Regarding - maintenance pro - A&M University, presented the long periods of time. blems, MacGilvray said it was preliminary findings of the Nor- He also said the mayor or some essential to clean up trash because thgate committee at a meeting other city official should it only breeds more litter. Wednesday of Northgate mer- "establish a dialogue" with A &M "If you see trash somewhere," chants and residents. officials on mutual problems like he said, "you throw trash." Many of the approximately 30 enforcing traffic tickets. Other committee recommenda- persons who attended the meeting Northgate employees also tions are repair of substandard were enthusiastic about the sug- would be urged to park in streets, the installation of a new gestions, saying that they finally designated areas and a parking lighting system and regular use of could solve lingering problems. curfew from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. the street - sweeping machine. For zoning problems, the com- would prevent overnight parking For capital improvements, mittee suggested creating a tax and allow streetsweepers room to MacGilvray said the committee abatement district or a tax- manuever. recommended that the city pur- increment financing district for Councilman Pat Boughton also chase land for small parks along Northgate. suggested that Northgate mer- drainage easements or abandoned "Right now there are no incen- chants give the university some rights -of -way and improve ex- tives to develop quality projects," money for a "stop fund" so that isting streets and drainage MacGilvray said. "The city can do shuttle buses could stop in Nor- systems. hat by means of tax credits or ac- thgate. MacGilvray said the Northgate :elerated depreciation schedules." For traffic problems, committee would meet once more MacGilvray said the committee MacGilvray said the committee before presenting its final recom- ilso recommends changing recommended closing off Patricia mendations to the council. r.. The Eagle, Monday, August 15, 1983 ■ 0 BID NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: tlo. 84 -4: Transformers Misc. 3 -phase - 9 each 25KVA Padmount -100 each 50KVA Padmount- 15 each No. 84 -5: Meter Cart, helved and Mobile - 1 each o. 84 -6: Service/Mainten- 'nce Contract for Telemetry System - 1 lot . No. 84 -7: Shielded Computer • Cables - lot approximately . 6400 feet until 2:00 p.m., August 24, 1983. at which time the bids v.ilt be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the ' office of the Purchasing - Agent. All Bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered' most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- ing funds. 8/10,8/17/83. B/O 8/24/83 The Eagle, August 17, 1983, Wednesday NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR WASTE DISCHARGE PERMIT CITY OF COLLEGE STA- TION. P. O. Box 9960, College Station. Texas 77840 has applied to the Texas Department of Water Re- sources for a permit (Proposed Permit No. 10024- 1 Legal Notices 02) to authorize a discharge of treated domestic waste.water to exceed an average flow of 4 million gallons per day. The applicant proposes to build a new wastewater treatment plant since the existing wastewater treat- ment plant is 1.2 million gallons per day overloaded. The plant site is to be approximately 1.5 miles southeast of the intersec tion of State Highway 6 Bypass and State Highway 30, approximately 1.9 milos north of the intersection of State Highway 6 and State Highway Bypass, south of the City of College Station in Brazos County, Texas. The effluent is to be discharged into Carter's Creek; thence into the Navasota River in Segment No 1209 of the Brazos River Basin. Section Legal Authority: Code of theme Texas Water Chapter 25 of the Rules of • the Texas Department of Water Resources. No public hearing ill be held on this application unless an affected p erson who has received oticerof the application quested a public hearing. for a such hearing shall be in the writing me. mailing address na and phone number of the person making the request: and (2) a brief description off o s the requester, or p r represented by the reque ster, would be adversely affected by the granting of the application. If the Com- mission determines that the request sets out an issue which is relevant to the permit decision. or that a • public hearing would serve the public interest, the public hear a the issuance of proper and timely notice of the hearing. If no sufficient request for hearing is received within 30 days of the date of publica- tion of the notice n- ing the application, permit will be submitted to the Commission for final decision on the app Reg and /oorr a quests he for further information concern- ing any aspect of the application should be sub- mitted in writing to the Chief • Hearings Examiner. Texas Water Commission. P.O. Box 13087, Capitol Station. Austin. Texas 78711, Tele- phone (512)475 -2678 Issued this A g ust 8. L. Mary Ann Chief Clerk I Texas Water Commission DS -17 -83 The Eagle, August 17, 1983, Wednesday EL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAR- ING The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of granting a Cohditional Use Permit for a child care facility to be located in Space no.5010. Post Oak Mall, College Station, Tx. The request for Use Permit is in the name of Stay N'Play (Gustavo Arguello). The hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, Legs{ Notices 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning c om- mission on Thursday, September 1, 1983. For additional information contact the City Planner'° Office, (409)696 -8868. Albert O. Mayo, Jr. Director of Planning 08- 17-83. 4 The Eagle, August 17, 1983, Wednesday This morning's Eagle carried the second men- tion in a week of a proposed million dollar "wave pool" being looked at my College Station City Council. It brought on a second mild attack of motion sickness. What is a city council doing making waves? Aside from the unbelievably high installation cost as compared to even an olympic -size swimming pool, it will prove expensive to fool around with Mother Nature. The energy consumed to generate those waves costs. The turbulence created is not suited for the very young, old, or unfit; probably three times as many paid lifeguards are needed to watch those waves. Everyone knows which way in- surance rates will go. And can the physical fitness benefits of standing around waiting to "ride" the big one compare favorably with those offered by a swimming pool? Ask Parks and Recreation. Maybe it's a great idea and I'm one of only a few who still prefer the "drawbacks of salt and sand" with my waves. But it's a marketing idea that properly belongs in the world of private in- vestment, not city government. Kathryn Lindsay College Station The Eagle, Thursday, August 18, 1983 Outlook not bright for CS ow p er p giant By THOMAS TASCHINGER about $100,000 on engineering Staff Writer feasibility studies for the power Financial concerns and a plant. disagreement over the size of a The plant was originally intend - hydroelectric plant planned by the ed to produce a maximum of 60 city of College Station and the megawatts, but Bardell said the ci- Trinity River Authoriy on Lake ty and the TRA now disagree Livingston could cause the project about how big it should be. to be be scaled back or even scrap- Bardell said the TRA basically ped. wants as large a plant as possible An emergency meeting of the on the dam at Lake Livingston. College Station City Council has During infrequent periods of high been scheduled at 4 p.m. today to water, like after a heavy discuss the situation. rainstorm, it could produce a Large City Manager North Bardell amount of electricity in a short said the city has already spent period of time. In contrast, he said, the city favors a smaller plant that could run at peak production more regularly throughout the year. He said a smaller plant would be cheaper to build and therefore more economical for the city, which would own all the plant's output. Initial plans called or the city to spend up to $600,000 on engineering studies by two separate firms. If the plant were built, the TRA would repay that money to the city when bonds were sold to finance construction. Bardell and City Finance Direc- tor A.E. "Van" Van Dever Jr. declined to discuss further details about the plant until the council could be briefed. Mayor Gary Halter said the cost of electricity from the plant could be about 12 cents per kilowatt hour (kwh) instead of the six or seven cents city officials had earlier predicted. 4 4 The Eagle, Friday, August 19, 1983 L LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1441 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 11th OF AUGUST. 1983 meeting in regular session in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance. signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption: • ORDINANCE NO 1441: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 10, SECTION 2 OF THE COLLEGE STATION LEGAL NOTICE CODE OF ORDINANCES ORDINANCE NO. 1444 WAS RELATING TO SCHOOL PASSED AND APPROVED ZONES AND SPECIFICALLY BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF DESIGNATING ADDITIONAL THE CITY OF COLLEGE AREA IN THE CITY OF STATION, TEXAS ON THE COLLEGE STATION WHERE 15th OF AUGUST. 1983 SCHOOL ZONES ARE meeting in special session AUTHORIZED. }RESCINDING in the Council Room of the ALL ■PARTS OF ORDINAN- College Station City Hall. C E S I N CONFLICT Said Ordinance, signed by HEREWITH: AND DECLAR- the Mayor and duly re- ' - — ING THAT ATTENDANT corded in the official re- LEGAL NOTICE FACTS NECESSITATE cords of the City of College ORDINANCE NO. 1442 WAS IMMEDIATE ACTION. Station, has the following PASSED AND APPROVED A violation of any of the caption: BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF provisions of this ordinance ORDINANCE NO. 1444: AN THE CITY OF COLLEGE is punishable by a fine of ORDINANCE APPROVING STATION, TEXAS ON THE $1.00to$200.00. THE RETURNS OF THE 11th OF AUGUST. 1983 The complete text of the ELECTION HELD ON THE meeting in regular session above -named Ordinance is 13TH DAY OF AUGUST, in the Council Room of the on file at the Office of the 1983. FOR THE PURPOSE College Station City Halt. City Secretary and may be OF AMENDING THE CITY Said Ordinance, signed by obtained at the City Hall. CHARTER. AND MAKING the Mayor and duly re- 1101; South Texas Avenue, FINDINGS AS TO THE corded in the official re- College Station. Texas AMENDMENTS WHICH cords of the City of College 77840. PASSED. ORDERING THE • Station, has the following 08-19- 83.08 -20 -83 CHANGES TO THE CITY caption: CHARTER AS APPROVED ORDINANCE NO. 1442. AN BY THE VOTERS AT SUCH ORDINANCE AMENDING ELECTION. AND DIRECT - CHAPTER 3, SECTION 1 OF ING THE CITY SECRETARY THE CODE OF ORDINAN- TO ACCOMPLISH THE CES OF THE CITY OF P R I N T I N G A N D COLLEGE STATION, DISTRIBUTION OF SAME. TEXAS, PROVIDING FOR A The complete text of the NEW SECTION 105.6(c) TO above -named Ordinance is BE ADDED TO THE BUILD- on file at the Office of the ING CODE, AND PROVIDING City Secretary and may be FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. obtained at the City Hall, A violation of any of the 1101 South Texas Avenue. provisions of this ordinance College Station. Texas is punishable by a fine of 77840. $1.00 to 5200.00. LEGAL NOTICE ^A -1 °-RZ na_2n_ga The complete ,text of the ORDINANCE NO. 1443 WAS above -named � t ice of is PASSED AND APPROVED on file at the Tice of the B Y THE CITY COUNCIL OF and may be THE CITY OF COLLEGE obtained at th City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station. Texas S TATION. TEXAS ON THE 15th OF AUGUST. 1983 City Secretary m eeting in special session 77840. in the Council Room of the 08-19-83,08-20 College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption: ORDINANCE NO 1443: AN ORDINANCE CANVASSING RETURNS AND DECLARING I HA I SAID SHALL BE EFFECTIVE IM- MEDIATELY UPON ITS ADOPTION. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall. 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station. Texas 77840. 08-19- 83.08 -20 -83 4 The Eagle, Friday, August 19, 1983 r LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1441 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED I BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF ' THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS ON THE 11th • OF AUGUST. 1983 • meeting iri' regular session LEGAL NOTICE in the Council Room of the ORDINANCE NO. 1442 WAS Said Ordinance. signed by College Station City Hall. PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF the Mayor and duly re- THE CITY OF COLLEGE corded in the official re- cords of t o City of College STATION. TEXAS ON THE LEGAL NOTICE il Rbom of the BY THE CITY COUNCIL O 11th OF AUGUST. 1983 ORDINANCE NO 1443 W AS .I Station. as the following ,, meeting in regtitar seSsfon PASSED AND APPROV , captI �on: in the Council NO. 1441: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING College Station City Hall. THE CITY OF COLLEGE Said •Ordinance. signed by STATION, TEXAS ON 1983 CHAPTER 10. SECTION 2 OF the Mayor and -duly re- 15th OF AUGUST THE COLLEGE STATION corded in the official re- meeting in special session CODE OF ORDINANCES cords of the City of College in the Council Room of the RELATING TO SCHOOL Station, has the following College StationCity.Hall. j ZONES AND SPECIFICALLY ` DESIGNATING caption: ADDITIONAL Said Ordinance, signed y • ORDINANCE NO. 1442: AN the Mayor and duly re- IYU legal Notices CES OF THE • AREA IN THE CITY OF ORDINANCE AMENDING corded m the official re- THE CODE OF ORDINAN- f COLLEGE STATION WHERE • CHAPTER 3, SECTION-1 OF - - Stattiion,f he Ci o f Colle CITY OF caption: COLLEGE STATION. ORDINANCE NO. 1443: AN SCHOOL ZONES ARE • TEXAS, PROVIDING FOR A O DI CANVASSING AUTHORIZED. RESCINDING NEW SECTION 105.6(c1 TO ALL PARTS OF ,ORDINAN- R AND DECLARING BE ADDED TO THE BUILD- TH S ORDINANCE CES IN. ING CODE, AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE "DATE. SH B EFFECTIVE IM- HEREWITH: CONFLICT AND DECLAR- EDIATE UPON ITS on file at the Office of the INC THAT, ATTENDANT A violation of any of the ADOPTION. provisions of this ordinance The complete text of the IMMEDIATE ACTION. FACTS NECESSITATE is punishable by a fine of A violation Q any Ordinance ie - of the 51.00 to 6200.00. above -named O provisions Of lres.drdinance The complete text of the is punishable by„ a• tine of above -named Ordinance is City Secretary and t iny obtained at the Crty El.00,to$200.00. on file at the Office of the 1101 South Texas Avenue, The Complete text of the City Secretary and may be College Station, Texas above -named Ordinance obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, 77840. on file at thece of the College Station, Texas 08-19- 83,08-20 -83 City Secretaary rt' a annd may be 77840 obtained' at the City Hall. 08- 19- 83,08 -20 -83 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station. T.exas 77840. 08 -19- 83.08 -20 -83 C LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1444 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE TO O CON - 15th OF AUGUST, 1983 . CERN meeting in special session The flanning and. MAY Zoning in the Council Room of the Co le bn of •the' Cut' of College Station City Hall. tation will hold a Said Ordinance, signed by public hearing to in ides the Mayor and duly re- annexation M IT of an area of corded in the - official re- approximately 3800 acres cords of the City of College locathe College Sted WH generally along the State Highway 6 corridor for Station, has the following . a distance of- ap'proxtmately caption: 3.5 miles south of Rock ORDINANCE NO. 1444: AN Prairie Road and ,along the ORDINANCE APPROVING THE RETURNS OF THE Rock, Prairie Road corridor ELECTION HELD ON THE for a distance of ap- droximately 5 miles south of 13TH DAY OF AUGUST. 1983, F ENDI r N E PURPOSE State Highyvay •6. Maps of OF AMENDING THE CITY the proposed annexation CHARTER, AND MAKING are available for viewing at FINDINGS AS TO THE the office of the College for of the WHICH Planning in the C PASSED' ORDERING THE Station City Hall. The public CHANGES TO THE CITY hearing will be held on CHARTER AS APPROVED Thursday. September 1. BY THE VOTERS AT SUCH o in the ELECTION,. AND DIRECT- Council Room of 1 the College ING THE CITY SECRETARY Station City Hall. 1101 Texas TO ACCOMPLISH THE Avenue. For further informa- P R I N T I N G - *A N D lion, contact the office of the DISTRIBUTION OF SAME. Director of Planning, The complete text of the (4091696 -8868. above -named Ordinance is 08 -19- 83.08 -20 -83 on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall. 1101 South Texas Avenue. College Station. Texas 77840. 08-19- 83,08 -20 -83 L The Eagle, August 20, 1983, Saturday ,b > c 0 l' - c v v C 9 s v, y N u c= aJ z E t40 y a= [s. o °-0 0 % O °c' 8 u c t473 Cc c � y te vays3 °„ v • 41.4 a� ' 7 � � a nb $ Counci 3 • r "4 3 v 15 TC a y o c c' 0 O T 0 > CCI ° ., ' U O . c0 L U c0 'O V1 0 T ., - '�� c a,u =`' � o U •� a) v al al o� �a > a os ° 3 - 0 �1 ■-. _ cZ01)nv o. 04.) u . adds � _, — . O• �� - °• E.5 ti is U .�. TE E'^ V w • o ' o =� • 07) c . 5 3 ° a,2 a U �4 > 3 �E—.0 ° > > � Y ° ao' $50 , 000 room( j v c .c . O p°p cC 0 Q c 4) CL) O . v i� t +- c CS pays for rights ,,-o o o 2 -' ' ' � u . � =o as C �"'3 �� 3 L � C c> to TRA electricity T N o �'N a g P4 a� -0 N °r, o o °� ns By THOMAS TASCHINGER s= w° � , '� c N a o Staff Writer > ` 3 ° 4) o '1-) N 'N o The College Station City Coun- L j ° b °' ' a . 7+-'- ...7 ' >, 3 ° o cil voted unanimously Friday to L '� '� : s = c o add $50, 000 to the $100, 000 0 2 " o ' � 0 3 0 ` F ^ ' r ,c a . ') o hydroelectric plant on Lake Liv- -4004 ' - Q "' s as - a, .42 °' °_ 5v s o already spent for a 0 ingston and a, '° a) a4 z (-- O° b. o " 0 3 3 T „ 0 to continue .2 N E- c b @ s negotiating on the size of the C/) ' m s • a = a b a v _° D 3 2 E•= o plant. _ The $50, 000 will be paid under �� w- 3 '� a E s a- a = ' 3 spring between the city and the 0�1()'� " o c ro a prior agreement worked out last Trinity River Authority under �+d oos v .� s 3 $ n o0 0 3 c which the city can obtain the first D v■O a �'�° o s co - � a s •G ° right of refusal for the plant's i•••4 -a .7:. 8 _ N • E -- c y -= = o .0 v _ ate' c c � � a) ❑ , power output. About $100, 000 m y c `. 7 C has already been spent on m 'n -E u T_ "= . � ; 4), - °� (a ;, fl 0 " engineering feasibility studies. * 1 t s ° a, L �" a o o s of . ▪ d - v - b The right of refusal, which con- o .^ o t - a) v. ° ° °' a o �' Z- - 2 (u G a) c a,� 0 3 y stitutes ownership of the electrici E do .° 5 o O 4,_. - - = a o s c o c ty produced at the plant, is cur- v o a t o° c� o a 3 E= s o v rently held by Gulf States Utilities. c ' ° fl c 3 3 ° ' ° 5 = o ,c E c 0 Q a Gulf States is also the city's pre- v ^ Q ❑ ` `. s _ c �s 3 ° y a sent wholesale supplier of elec- v s 3 o '- . v Q -o c ^ E - c c — E- 5 w. 3' v -o r=4 A � , o tricity. Y c - N t w a T. T ro E- L E D .c E The council has not yet decided U c :d, y E- -' g ` m 'a s a s E✓ whether the hydroelectric plant is �1 feasible, however, and the c $50, 000 will be lost if the plant is $••4 _ �"_ =ma not built. O oo • ` � _ L s ° Q ; If the plant is constructed, the �, c v O cd co y C • G U c O 'b " a°Qin°'i c3y - c'cSrocc =° city's contract with the Trinity ��C40•04 a, co T c '- co m m 0.0 g-. =° a, River Authority guarantees that T o co c A co E co o c c 70.. E > L 6 -� o a se cis •o s co E E o all city funds spent for the current engineering feasibility studies — ac, a� E c 0 c = o s 'E .`- up to approximately $600, 000 — Q °.° 4 E ° ° - o > N > c a) o ` a; will be repaid when bonds are sold s ° Q �s 0 o d 0 to finance construction. p °' 3 c "° F ro " ` ` ` ° E f, a. 4 cEov os E c=a c cn cu 4) Turn to CS, ,., U T >� .6 ro R3 ° c �` 0 3 0 o o� page i ; v 'b n = >, i,i .r a cd o pp co a, C ie) fi y O r ^ c 00 °co a. E v s t �� 'b c C 'D O s 4 7; c v t Q =o c 64.`41)-0-E`" v � o o °s E o co) The Eagle, August 20, 1983, Saturday Sunday, August 21, 1983 f ette rs Grave concern A situation of grave concern to all parents and concerned Christians has recently come to my attention. I am referring to the upcom- ing vote by our local United Way on whether or not to fund Planned Parenthood. I did not realize the full impact of this program until I did some further research. From the standpoint of a parent this pro- gram outraged me. Minor children may come to this program and receive contraceptives or advice concerning abortion and the parents need not be informed. A minor child can not have her ears pierced without parental con - sent, but if this program is funded she can learn where and how to have an abortion without her parents ever knowing a thing about it. From a Christian standpoint this is not only immoral, but inhuman as well. In the Bible we are told that man was created in God's own image. We do not have the right to decide who is to live or die. Life is something we all take for granted until such time as we may lose it and then we cling to it for all we are worth. I think many people would stop and think twice if it was our own lives at stake. This issue is just one more steop in the moral breakdown running ramped in our society today. With illicit sex being so open on television, in movies, books and magazines, we do not need our social organization giving what could very well ap- pear their stamp of approval on something our children could see as freedom from parential control. This, I feel, could also lead to our children not consulting us in mat- ters which have much whose consequences than pregnancy. So, I urge all concerned Parents and Chris- tians in Bryan - College Station to contact the United Way and voice our objections to this very harmful program. We stand to lose our children's confidence and trust if we do not make ourselves heard on this issue. Also, one final point; if we let abortion continue on demand, what is the next step? The next step would almost certainly be in- fanticide, which is already practiced in this country today illegally. Stop and think where we are headed and ask yourself one question. Is that the kinds of world I want myself and my family to be living in. The Eagle, August 21, 1983 , Sunday Ken Steelman Bryan Council to stud 3 plant ro o p p al By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer A report on recent negotiations for the proposed hydroelectric plant on Lake Livingston will be presented to the College Station City Council at to- day's 4 p.m. workshop meeting. At Thursday's meeting, the council will consider a proposal to increase water and sewer rates to develop a fund for oversized water and sewer development. A bond issue for such funds was defeated Aug. 13. Assistant City Manager A.E. "Van" Van Dever Jr. said there has been little change in the recent disagreement between the city and the Trinity River Authority about the size of the plant. Original plans called for a plant that could pro- duce up to 60 megawatts, but now city officials favor a smaller, more economical plant than the one envisioned by the TRA. City Manager North Bardell said city officials met with representatives of the TRA on Monday. They told city officials that they would present the city's viewpoints to the TRA's board of directors on Tuesday. The TRA representatives were then supposed to inform the city of the board's response, but as of late Tuesday afternoon Bardell said he hadn't heard anything from them. Despite the recent problems, most members of the city council believe that some type of plant will be built. In other business today, the council will review the Thoroughfare Plan for Plan 2000, the city's proposed new comprehensive plan. The council will vote on adopting the Thoroughfare Plan at Thurs- day's regular 7 p.m. meeting. Representatives of Lone Star Gas will also report to the council on plans to implement a residential conservation services surcharge. The surcharge is mandated by federal law to fund residential inspec- tions designed to increase energy conservation. Under the proposal to create an oversize water and sewer fund, water rates would increase from $1.25 per 1, 000 gallons of water to $1.37 with com- mensurate increases for additional use. Sewer rates would increase from a flat rate of $8 per month to $9. Van Dever said the increases would raise about $350, 000. He said that, without some type of over- size funds, the city could be forced to spend "millions and millions" in the future to lay duplicate lines. The council will also consider a proposal to in- crease the hotel -motel tax rate from 4 percent to 5 percent. Van Dever said the council could also in- crease the rate to 7 percent to retire the $350, 000 debt on the Community Center. L The Eagle, Wednesday, August 24, 1983 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Part of Lot 16, Lakeview Acres, located on the east side of Texas Avenue ap- proximately 300 feet south of Morgan's Lane, from Single Family Residential District R -1 to Administrative - Professional District A -P. Application is in the name of Mike Lane. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Council on Thursday. S eptember8, 1983. Ftnr additional information ph case contact me. Jar, nes M. Callaway As:;istant Director of 'Ian ning •2 I -83 The Eagle, Wednesday, August 24, 1983 11D Teen center discussion Whether the city of College Station needs a YouthTeen Center will be the sub- ject of this month's Brown Bag luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m. today at the Com- munity Center. City officials will be at the meeting to ex- plain proposed plans for the center and to answer questions from residents. One plan calls for a Teen Center to be located in the old building adjacent to the Community Center, although the building would have to be substantially remodeled. The Community Center is located at 1300 Jersey Street directly south of the main campus of Texas A &M University. A LL h J X5, r+ -s v, Q rn , O C r-1 5- ro ›, a' C = C CD ��� Oco�r. O , , G 7'lD� „ ..c fD D, . . . C = OQ .... ;. a '�7 0 r � O w il' w � - ~ A z,-''—=. OQ a 7k'� m Q ems} - t � „ C a C �n rn .,-.1 vi ., W O 'C1 �.• O rn rn . a , � lD "'s N a C' ,e ' (� 0 -, • v, CA •- aOQ y " COQ < cow �r �r C r w N a r. OQ ,-, -' .., a " rn C m M M .I"IA 'o ba wp ,,,P)o aCOO a », f0 �..�• co O co , '"S•. m w ' C ' . C. I ry w C P” vim, a, "•I ... ftl v O .q r n "qI 1 5D a. 5 y O .00 g In 'O o a.:=1.?-4.' vi R° fen g O y a• r Z' y ^^ / • N O• ' co �—. co w 'o ..., co O m co -1 = co a• A '. 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Sealed received pbypthe Community Development O until 2:00 P.M. 1983, at which time they will be opened and read aloud. Bid documents may be secured at the Community Development Office, lege Station City oHeallll, 101 lio Texas TX, or Cby calling c, X, at Michael M. Stevens (409)6968868 EXT 238. The City of College Station reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any formalities in bids received. 0629- 83,0 -05-83 jr1E-rd-D-14 CtlitiStezzig ) 19�� CS mayor says community y y still helped Texas A&M by Anne M. Hedgcoxe ; Battalion Reporter £ R Texas A &M plays a vital role in College Station but unlike the .. ' past, the city is taking on a life of its own, says the College Station mayor. "We are becoming less of a University - oriented town," Y, Mayor Gary Halter says. Although the University is . ;£ still a dominant force in the eco- nomy and the community, it doesn't have as big an impact on College Station as it did fifteen years ago, Halter says. However, Halter attributes College Station's growth in busi- ness to the growth in the num- ber of students. Therefore, Halter says, Texas A &M still is one of Col- lege Station's greatest assets in recruiting new industry. C Mid ity Manager North Bardell agrees. "There has been a huge growth of the retail industry," Bardell says. "Fifteen years ago there was no, N -O, industry. Mayor Gary Halter during council meeting Now we have Westinghouse, Texas Instruments, Agency Re- cords Control and some other things." would have to say that A &M which the University can be- Not only can Texas A &M would be such a super catalyst in nefit. offer faculty expertise, it also the development of high- tech," Should this growth continue, can offer a labor market and Bardell says. Bardell says that students are Continuing education for in- Bardell also says that in the likely to see a community that is dustrial employees, Bardell says. future College Station will have a little less structured toward • "If you add all that up, you a more diversified base from their needs. Tke. .gam ifea 1 o /r'd `9 sf I ci g3 •. Park facilities upgraded by Pam Barnes and improving lots on 10 area athletic parks for softball, soccer parks. or basketball. Battalion Reporter The project is designed to im- Both Bee Creek and Thomas The College Station Parks and prove established parks which parks have swimming pools. Recreation Department is build- lack adequate facilities. The pools are open Tuesday, ing a new athletic park in South- With a total of 24 parks in Col- Thursday and Friday from 1 wood Valley and is conducting a lege Station, there should be a p.m. to 7:45 p.m. and on Mon - Neighborhood Parks Improve- park for everyone's needs, but if day and Wednesday from 1 p.m. ment Project, a park planner not, the parks and recreation de- to 8:45 p.m. says. partment is happy to hear sug- _ , The first College Station park gestions and /or complaints, was constructed in 1938 and the Mendez said. Parks and Recreation Depart- "We keep an open door policy ment has continued improving, in parks and recreation. The city planning and constructing is growing, but our department parks since then. is still small enough to do busi- The new multi - million dollar ness on a one -to -one basis," he — athletic park sits on 47 acres. said. Proposed facilities for the park include four little league fields, Mendez encourages all two senior league fields, seven citizens to take part in the deci- tennis courts, two soccer fields, a sions involving their parks and basketball court and possibly a neighborhood. The community wave pool, Carlos Mendez said. is invited to Parks Advisory Also in the master plan of the Board and city council meetings park, but not planned for con- where proposals for improve - struction for several years, are a ments or construction are gymnasium and a tennis pro- brought, he said. shop, Mendez said. Construction of the parking In College Station there are lots and baseball fields already arboretums and nature trails to has begun and is scheduled to be explore, jogging and exercise completed by baseball season trails to attempt and beautiful next year, Mendez said. parks to enjoy. The park's planned comple- The parks in College Station tion date is August 1984. are designed to serve the needs The Neighborhood Parks Im- of the community, Mendez said. provement Project currently is The parks range from passive under way adding playgrounds, recreation areas complete with enlarging ponds, building decks picnic and open nature areas to L T - Battali o N /rator acj Lctfi i 1.9'g3 cs • • activit y d oesn ' t stop f sum by Eric Evan Lee white and should be available in known as Space Week in College time for the Christmas season. Station. Battalion Reporter In College Station, a commit- The council also has allowed Although the population of tee studying Northgate made re- Midwest Cable Co. to raise its the city has been smaller in the commendations to the city to im- rates from $4 to $6 for regular summer months with the abs- prove the area. Some of the sug- channels and $2.50 to $4 for su- ence of Texas A &M students, gestions were to remove parking perstation channels. the twin cities have continued to in front of the stores and bars on The council passed an ordi- function and initiate changes. University Drive, changing Pat- nance that prohibits the sale of The Hilton and Sheraton ricia Street to a one -way street or alcoholic beverages within 300 hotel chains announced plans in close it off to traffic. Another feet of churches, schools or hos- July to build hotels in College suggestion was to turn Patricia pitals. Station. The location of the Hil- Street into a mini -mall or a pla- The College Station City tqn has not been formally za. The city has not acted on any Council purchased a 100 -foot announced, but it is expected to of the proposals. ladder fire truck from the Pierce be built within a few hundred During the summer the Col- Manufacturing Co. for yards of the Sheraton confer- lege Station City Council $440,000. ence center — to be built on East approved a $7,500 feasibility The council helped a group University Drive. Construction study on building a public wave of athletes attend the National on the conference center is to pool in Southwood Athletic Junior Olympics in North Caro - begin in September. Park. The pool will be similar to lina this summer by giving them The winery business also has those already in use in Grand $500. The group lacked only come to the area. The Paul Bon- Prarie, Arlington, and Houston. $500 to attend the meet. They narigo family has begun making Mayor Gary Halter signed a placed in a regional meet in wine in a vineyard in Bryan. The proclamation stating that the Lafayette, La. which allowed wjne, to be named Messina -Hof, first Saturday before July 20 to them to advance to the national will be manufactured in red and the First Sunday after July 20 be finals. c e aztiat i /m orals, y ds )q8 C. NoE,�0 . '•p nnn0.n S w rt rD C 8 C a w O , 3 n . rD O w C . d ro r � o » , n r�y n 0 ' a a r�t F �.. ^ O •w 0 CD n rt w -, lab I. nw ? a'o a � ^. ? E H Cr p `i.... M.- .5'n.y'w et 0'0 a. D ay • Do CD Dw — e ,,, �° � 0 a 0 • °. N s' ^ rt y o 7 � � r ` t �� a a » a 5 . • 0 r, w 000 OrDxNTJ ^^ A 0-Ci • w C ' : O b et -I 9 0 rD \ / r0 ^ - A O n 't a rD O ^-�aU _y rt w - `p TI0 't n m .1 � �1 .rt ° co p ° - t - D, — c.y c O X C rD C 2 rD y ° 5 "Y C" R ag 0 ^ ] w ww' w Cl V' '" '' ° r .••'7 Cr 011•4 • ^Y Oq 7 r ' O< C y 0 0" w ^s n ':11 V A ° w 0^ rt Cr w n F r n 5 0 0 y Dap .y ? K ft'" y O el" w et ^ • X ° et et Ii ^ 0 : o N 'A Ciq v' w E. W . a • O . ^ eD e, fl; ^ c' r y. o. 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C V ` =z f9 r o •.- <° F w a o c° a 0 7 C o a v r-, r ° „ H. 5 G ti ' ^ 0 1 0 r" C Cap w " Q w"C • v O • 'et - r° y k rD `G 0 0 N rD '_' r. w �� 0Q 0 0 . . 0 . 0 , O v-e [ D 0 z rD n r nD C✓ -, 0.. DJ n w m C. £ r "0" k n LJ 7 ?� " '0' + O' z O 0 r n o 'n O r, O 0 O a4 R°5-;-' '-' -.•' O " F' n P ° el f Xro 0 f1 t r o -1 C O -5 ( " ° O � wa, "" -5-i p,0 �. w 0-n ? m ° °�. H R w 3 ''4. rt m x ( '0 (1) - 0 rD w ¢ w !/ ° aQ aq y a. 0 c ^.a0�- oado<on <� ^ y a =z .-•• o o w w n ro rt ow ^ C r t E • '0 - • CO ^a a 7 g- -I 7- 0 • c n ; r w F o ° 0 . £ n C C D = . lke B, tt ali © N / 7 5 f� 30 vi t3 uepury Wel 18-30-83,084143 LEGAL NOTICE the City of College Station s accepting bid(s) for: Nire Shelving until 2:00 3.m. September 13, 1983, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- :thased with Revenue Shar- ing funds. Bid 84 -9, 8/30 & 2 /6. ,36'611Exial-kA . ti� Smart bid saves money s t 6 Thomas Taschinger /City Hall Report . _ td A shrewd bidding procedure by If the controllers and the LAUs to areas that desperately needed m College Station city officials com- had been specified as one unit, the help in the grim aftermath of the bined with a very low bid from a Eagle Co. would have been the on- storm. n supplier has saved taxpayers up to ly firm that could have handled Alvin, a town of 15,000 persons o $46, 200 on traffic signal equip - the job. 10 miles south of Houston, By separating the two units and emerged from the storm with � ment at 14 intersections. CA City Traffic Engineer John also allowing an alternate bid for three- fourths of its 75 miles of Black told council members the LAU devices, Eagle was forc- roads impassable because of fallen F.' recently that the Eagle Signal Co. ed to submit a very low bid if it trees and debris. of Austin submitted a bid of wanted the contract. Bryan sent a brush truck and A) $1, 700 each for seven signal- The LAUs are more economical two employees from its solid- - - control devices known as local and flexible than comparable waste services division, Donald adaptor units (LAUs). equipment, so the city ended up Turner and Aaron Green, from The LAUs are used at intersec- getting the hardware it wanted at a Aug. 19 -26. tions to connect those traffic very reduced price. College Station sent seven Who ever said someone from 5 signals with other traffic signals e c, controlled by a computer in City College Station couldn't outsmart rush truck, mobile generator and b mployees over five days and a Hall. people from the land of teasip- chain saw. The $1, 700 bid is good news for pers' * • * The program worked out so ep the city treasury because the Eagle Bryan and College Station were well that College Station Mayor 3 f irm's list price for the LAUs is about $5, 000 each. spared much of the wrath from Gary Halter may ask the Texas CD .. City officials were so pleased Hurricane Alicia, and that good Municipal League to set up a for - with the low price that they fortune allowed city officals to mal infra -city aid program for bought 14 LAUs instead of the send repair crews and equipment future disasters. seven they had planned to pur- `" chase. The savings of $3, 300 on each unit amounted to the tidy sum of $46, 200. Black explained that the city helped cause the low bid by allow- ing suppliers to bid separately on the LAUs and another piece of equipment known as a controller. Asir ir & /Yil-LOCita/(j, eh. 1 1983 Park annexation on agenda By THOMAS TASCHINGER to cit; standards. Staff Writer The industrial The commission will also vote A proposal to annex College undeveloped park is on a conditional use permit for a Station's 2, proposal to an industrial oped now, but plans call drop -in day care center in Post for it to contain a major hotel and park and 1,500 acres of land con- conference center, a first -class Oak M all. necting it to the city will be voted golf course, homes, parks and The members will also consider: on by the Planning and Zoning schools. The connecting corridor a final plat for a 36 -acre site for Commission at today's 7 p.m. is sparsely populated. Agency Records Control g y just meeting. The ro osed hi h- technolo In other business, the commis- south of Emerald Parkway and p p g high-technology sion will reconsider a parking lot the East Bypass; a revised parking park is located about two miles plan submitted by BrazosBanc lot plan for the Southwest Cross - south of town, and the connecting Savings for an automatic - teller- ing Office Building at Southwest corridor of land generally runs machine building at the rear of the Parkway and Eastmark Drive; a along Texas Avenue south of Exxon station at Texas Avenue parking lot plan for a professional Rock Prairie Road. and Millers Lane. office building on Texas Avenue City Manager North Bardell The city planning staff is oppos- just south of Morgans Lane; and a said the city needs to annex the ed to the application because it site plan permit for the Walden park and the connecting corridor feels the building will cause too Pond Townhomes between FM so that the area can be developed many traffic problems. 2818 and Southwest Parkway. • £ /Srs � •e. tember �- ��I --r4 � P ,, i . Annexatlon plans r 1 By THOMAS TASCHINGER "doughnut hole" plastic bags, but he scoffed at the Staff Writer of unannexed land _ idea, saying that he had 10 acres The College Station planning north of the park, a of leaves. As it turned out, his r commission Thursday reduced the proposal that one 4 � , '"' property was eliminated from the � : annexation along scope of annexation plans for the spectator referred v,A, er . anne segments g g hat had been with some other city's proposed industrial park to as gerrymander Y small a in gmnt that plans. after hearing protests from ing. , ` residents who want to retain rural "You're saying • - Commissioners Gerald Miller, habits like hunting and burning that I can't shoot a d , Ste hen Hansen voted in Roy Kelley, Murl Bailey ey and d leaves. gun in my ���'" the reduced annexa Raymond The commission voted 4 -1 not backyard, that I ' to annex a narrow corridor along can't go deer hun- Bill Harris Martyn voted against it. David Rock Prairie Road connecting the ting there, that I Hill and Ronald Kaiser were ab- present city limits with the city's can't burn leaves ?" asked Bill sent. 2,300 -acre high -tech industrial Harris, who lives west of Texas David Pugh, head of the depart - park. Avenue and south of Greens ment of Urban and Regional Plan - Its recommendation to the City Prairie Road, about a mile south ning at Texas A &M University, Council was that the city annex of current city limits. was also opposed to the annexa- the industrial park and a single "We don't need the city," Har- tion. connecting corridor running along ris said. "We've got good police "This is just an exercise in ur- Texas Avenue. protection now with the sheriff." ban sprawl," he said. "There's no If it had followed the city staff's Commissioners told Harris that real planning, just a lot of recommendation, the two cor- the city would pick up his leaves hypotheticals. This could end up ridors would have left a large for free if he would put them in costing the city an arm and a leg." C) The Foil e /frtdc rten,cbec a letK3 1 0 Planners reject BrazosBanc request J q The College Station Planning The city planning staff had voted to deny the bank's request, and Zoning Commission voted 3 -2 recommended against the move, while Roy Kelley and Stephen Thursday to deny a request by saying the machines and the new Hansen voted to grant it. David BrazosBanc Savings for permis- building needed to house them Hill and Ronald Kaiser were ab- sion to put automatic teller would cause traffic problems in an sent. machines at the rear of an Exxon already crowded lot. In other business, the commis - service station at Texas Avenue Commissioners Gerald Miller, sion approved the other five plats, and Millers Lane. Murl Bailey and Raymond Martyn plans or permits on the agenda. 4 tv , 60 /s,-,„s", c ,,,,E. $_3 108 Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1445 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 25th OF AUGUST, 1983 meeting in regular session in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption: ORDINANCE NO. 1445: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 1, SECTION II, SUB - SECTION B.(1) OF THE CODE OF ORINANCES, CITY OF COLLEGE STA- TION, TEXAS, RELATING TO PERCENTAGE OF HOTEL OCCUPANCY TAX, AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. This ordinance levies a tax of 5% to be paid by the occupant of any hotel /motel room where such cost of occupancy is at the rate of $2.00 or more per day, said tax rate to be effective on January 1,1984. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 09-02-83,09-03-83 LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1446 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE 25th OF AUGUST, 1983 meetipgg in regular session in the'Council Room of the College Station City Hall. Said Ordinance, signed by the Mayor and duly re- corded in the official re- cords of the City of College Station, has the following caption: ORDINANCE NO. 1446: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 1, SECTION 5 OF THE CODE OF ORDINAN- CES OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, RELATING TO GENERAL PENALTY FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE CODE AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. The complete text of the above -named Ordinance is on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 09-02 - 83,09 -03-83 C S p � 3,A1 T R - CS to look at wave pool study BY THOMAS attract enough swimmers TASCHINGER to make it successful. Tuesday's 7 p.m. Beachy said the study Staff Writer Parks Director meeting in Central Park indicates that a 16,000 A Staff Writer report and then recommend square -foot pool with preliminary P Stephen Beachy said the that the City Council four motorized fans indicates a wave pool in parks advisory board either pursue or drop the could draw 75,000 per - College Station would will review the study at proposal. sons by its third year of operation. That type of wave pool is considered medium - sized. "Based on what we know," Beachy said, "there's no reason why ' that type of pool couldn't be successful." Beachy said he had no other information on the pool, such as its con- struction costs or pro- jected revenues. He said � some of those questions would be answered when the entire feasibility study is available. Other questions, such as the cost of construc- tion, would have to come from engineers and would not be included in the study, he said. The feasibility study ; was performed by William Haralson and Associates of Dallas for $7,500. In other business, the parks board will review the $4 million parks pro- position rejected by voters Aug. 13. Beachy said the board will discuss deletions, changes or additions to the proposition for a future bond election. The board also will consider a parkland • dedication proposal for the Emerald Forest sub - I division. I e /s n .c1 ) Se -t � i �� 3 y Transportation forum set A special forum has been scheduled this week by the Transportation Division of the Bryan - College Station Chamber of Commerce to discuss local transportation needs. The session begins at 11:45 a.m. Thursday at Briarcrest Country Club. Speakers will include Dr. W. Arthur porter, director of the Texas Engineering Experiment Sta- tion and former chairman of the Texas A &M Board of Regents Airport Relocation Study Com- mittee; H.B. Cooper Jr., president of Texas Railroad Transportation Co.; and Carol Zeigler, district engineer for the Texas Highway Depart- ment. Also, officials representing Bryan, College Sta- tion and Brazos County will be present. A buffet luncheon will be served. The cost is $6.50 a person, paid in advance. No tickets will be sold at the door. Reservations should be made no later than Tuesday. For more information, go by the Bryan chamber office at 401 S. Washington St. or call 779 -2278. k k e_ CCC9 Sun��, s +(tuber 4 ►q?� 0 NOTICE TO BIDDERS The City of College Station Community Development Office is accepting bids for the installation of concrete driveways and walks no eight single family u units under the City's Opportunity Program. Sealed proposals will be I received by the Community I Development Office until 2:00 P.M. September will 1983, at which time they be opened and read aloud. Bid documents may be secured at the Community Development Offlc e,l, Col- lege Station City Texas Avenue, byeg allin9 or lion, TX, Michael Stevens at (409)696 -88 8 EXT 238. The City of College Station reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any formalities in bids received. Ilif OS-29- 83,09 - � _— BID NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: 1 (One) - Half -ton Pickup 1 (One) - Medium Size Automobile until 2:00 pm, 9/14/83, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station At reserves the right to waive St or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in tf said bid and to accept the a offer considered most ad vantageous to the City. ❑ 09 -05- 83,09 -12 -83 S '� IAA a. J Ikc � Ji t � � i c Eb u adww >>, o �>>❑ - te r,`d� wo. a os a, u ., �w aC �.�uc u -.• a!) °O oow>�. 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The College Station City Council will hold its regular In addition, the Council will monthly meeting at 7 tonight at consider the addition of a wave City Hall. pool for Southwood Athletic There will be a public hearing Park c gcub(69, /Sku Jiepk-eA 3 0 Council turns down wave pool From page 1 A the pool with Valley area this week and several "My 10- year k son was residents o op sed to plans ns to a persons spoke against the wave knocked over and he had to be nex 3,800 acres south outthof the city. pool at Tuesday night's meeting of pulled out.... For the safety of our The annexation includes the pro - the parks' advisory board. children, I urge you to stop these posed high - technology industrial Debbie Ross presented to the plans." council a petition signed by 400 City Finance Director A.E. Van Avenue leading to the paork Texas persons in 11/2 days this week pro- Dever Jr. said that based upon the Most of those persons, residents testing the wave pool. recently - completed feasibility of the predominantly rural area, "I have never been so strongly study, the wave pool would said they opposed annexation opposed to something," Ross receive $243,750 in admissions because it would force them to pay said. "My husband and I and our and $40,000 in concessions over a city taxes and accept more restric- two children recently went on a 110 -day period in the summer. business trip to Dallas. I did not It's expenses would be $150,000 t � Dav and Gardner, know what a wave pool was in operations and $120,000 to pay two members of the Urban Plann- before then, but we went to White off the debt service. Based on ing Department at Texas A &M Water (a commercial operation those figures, the wave pool's net University, also spoke against the which operates a wave pool). operating income would be annexation, saying that the plan "When the wave pool was $13,750 per year, Van Dever said. was not ill- conceived and en- quiet, there were six guards sitting Van Dever compared that to the couraged wasteful sprawl. around the edge of the pool. city's two standard pools, which The audience was so large that When the wave pool was active, lose $60,000 to $80 ,000 each per the council chambers were filled to they were standing around the year. capacity and about 30 persons sat edge and there were two guards in In other business, the council or stood in the hallway. Al N ■ ,v- F (9n ---- 1-w.ifuldet, ) E 9,__QQ__ I' 41 t^ ` • 77 c G G A A 7c c T n A> ? m''' v F u. .u. � � R - fD C... -. < T T ` < te .. C C. NC c Z.". C J 0 ? _ C C G � G S �^ - c N x C. rt S SID ri- m. 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CL= - y 3 a T 3 V l '� • 3 - -..• • 3 ' � o C c- +� p T�F" �"v 00• -.... = C p• - v 1 �� x c aa)a) = o as .. �� sz 0 aE" Eo 4 '� � E . � a a� , ° a� a•= h•�3 i E a a' :�a >a,EaE3 i:14" > v� o aoQ O'co i !11 c ` u o a' Q a v, T ..a u o E c T as aa - a • ° -0 • u u ° o c u a„-- ct ooz^: a) 0 y 4. _. u a � ,., w, O a � a� cv w e a v E m= .= �.. , a0 CG a w l I lk °' a �� E a; ° ic ° ° '�3 �'� o r o._� as EN N W c t 4, c ,.. a u Q G ..-. .—I a o 04 Q) . @ 1, ,: F-' 0 a O E .., ,. 00 .^ L • as al -C ° u ' a( C . o J N E O D ' co) o c o o V) E ?� 3 ° °�� a . - 1'h�. - cig(e. / ' T1nU.rsdud ) g'e,p +ember 15 lq 63 ....1111M1111. 11111111111111116mm 41) Bryan - College Station Eagle Thursday, September 15, 1983 Page 3A The final report by the Northgate its appearance. • Study Committee will be reviewed by MacGilvray said then that the Committee the College Station n ing Commission at Planni today's g and regular 7 to preliminary include pu c reaction would be an d then p.m. meeting. presented to the planning commission to present The comm which was headed and the City Council for approval. In other business, the commission F by Dan MacGilvray of Texas A &M will study final plats for the Walden fi nal report University, presented its preliminar Pond Townhomes and One Lincoln findings last month. Place and a preliminary plat for the It suggested a variety of changes and Family Tree subdivision just south of regulations for the area designed to Rock Prairie Road and Rio Grande reduce traffic congestion and improve Boulevard. ID 3c„,__ E /4,,,,kivJaa, ) ,s44--. 13 I ?e?3 IP _ tours proposed annexation Council By THOMAS TASCHINGER lots off Dowling Road, "you City Planner Al Mayo pointed Staff Writer won't be able to drive through out on the tour that just west of The area south of College Sta- here. The stink (from poorly func- the city, the land is covered with tion proposed for annexation is tioning septic tanks) will kill numerous small housing lightly populated, but city of- you." developments that would make it ficials said Wednesday that the The council took the tour to extremely difficult to run a sewer best time to annex land is before it prepare for a vote Oct. 13 on a line or build a major thoroughfare is filled with undesirable uses. proposal to annex the planned through the area. Four members of the City 2, 300 -acre high - technology in- City officials said the un- Council artici ated in a s ial dustrial park and corridors controlled development was both p p leading to it along Texas Avenue a barrier to city expansion and an tour of the area Wednesday. City and Rock Prairie Road. staff members showed them ex Some city residents have pro- example of what could occur amples of "substandard" tested the annexation, saying it south of the city unless that land is development, which they said oc would encourage wasteful sprawl annexed. curred because county housing to the south. Councilman Lynn Mcllhaney standards are less rigid than city Staff members have replied that asked whether it might be better to codes the city cannot expand to the annex land in phases instead of Brazos County Pct. 1 Commis- north because of Bryan, to the large chunks. sioner Bill Cooley accompanied east because of the Carter Creek Mayo said that would be an in- the tour and admitted that floodplain and to the west because efficient way to expand. He said undesirable development existed of drainage problems, numerous the city may have to build a in parts of the county. small "substandard" sewage plant to serve one area and "When this area along here is developments and large Ian- then a second one to serve another fully developed, " Cooley said dholdings by Texas A &M Univer- area farther out when one large referring to a stretch of half -acre sity. plant would have been sufficient. ,.....11\0_, C /16„Aboto./j 1 4f±t ic, i 9k3 40 i . Challenge deadline nears Local companies, retailers and other vocational enterprises have through Friday to sign up teams to compete in the Brazos Valley Corporate Challenge. The event is sponsored by the College Station Parks and Recreation Department and the Bryan - Collegndjeafln Athletic Federation. It's intended to emphasize the importance of physical fitness for employees in tthe'Brazos Valley through a series of athletic events. Those events include bicycle racing, bowling, golf, horseshoes, volleyball, tennis, softball, runn- ing, swimming, basketball and more. For more information, call 693 -7273. c C4dQQ- 1 19 3 /CLLAC‘CIC(d S g O = h u a) O 0 "' N U G CU ct P c u 3 O is in.0 c y • > «, � i `'30 et E� a E E _ v .0• D 0 ° .0• � 0 via 'vcl xa ��.0 �cc� asp x I. ..... «3 u04 G ..0 > u a? `" 0 as via O u 04 + 0 •= A . at E u y C y E o ai u_ y� O O a • 0 v vi .0 u v, of v w �- c..) p O O ^ [ I) a) O O .0 � • 2 0 Ca ca ti ti CI' O E u E a u E-02 0 2 = 6" - > a 4 S a�o0v O y 0 � O N a u i O u • fir E to ti :° O •E > 0, • O 0 as U i. a> oq � 0 a ao0,E o O •^'� a u-8 0 E u u �.fl I. u � C u� '0 u •rte a CS= v o0 0 i u .) u '- ai 0 ►" r'� C O O 0 as '- u C ....., to �� • °,.. O uy ~ _ Ets as > C O O 7' C C • 0 0 w0 r u> ,O ,...,= u • ' cn E' y as u . O a u i w n Q Ca >,,^ u at l., A' .E0 O• i. i, O> W ciE = u �; 3 -a.5 u 0 0 'i a) ,...• C 0 CI _o I-- CU CU C.) >, a, C co) a) p o a O O 0 —Na O - E v; T� '>' is y ommi as C u O :O O E t U , • ^ aJ —4 CO• > U ca as O u c d 0 '0 ›,03 c ao o'C� • �. 0xi.— Cl v, O • C 2 O •m b0 as of O uyv u.E Q as h D u u o p x V CL) �...�... I. �", u • ca E u T • n ° • O O 6 of Q ... u a) • O ., o [ ^-, r`�./ E ar > w' Z a; p E F" u O v 0. - ro(7) CI U ' UCa V 1 T7 ; as as .) u v, L. of q C 2 ': O o a$ V1 >" u 4 E T l w C. y am , U O •– !" ' aJ N �/ 1 w ° as y ' `' to'c x U � -,...E = C °' ,� to �v s u E �"O�,..0 3 �� > > = u oy • v4 H O•E . o E 03 Li °` C uX'C3— N UN ca Q as ., u of . • r1:4 uv,xu . a x = o v ,- 0 c-) 4 e c, , huci,tal s dO )983 Storm Weather • In B -CS More rain falls than during Alicia By JANET GIBSON Staff Writer Tropical moisture moving westward from the Gulf of Mexico dumped more rain in Bryan - College Station Monday than was recorded during Hurricane Alicia last month, prompting police and fire crew§ to barricade several flooded city ktreets. A total 3.60 inhes of rain was reported by 7 p.m. at College Sta- tion's Easterwood Airport. But according to the National Weather Service, between 2 % to 7 inches of rain fell in the area. • Bryan police and city crews worked in the late afternoon bar- 500 and 600 blocks of Southwest ricading two blocks of roadway on Parkway and in other areas sur- Villa Maria Road from Cavitt to rounding Texas A &M University, Texas Avenue. A spillover from including University Drive and Municipal and Finfeather Bryan parts of Jersey Street. caused water to reach thigh -high ment diispatchertsaidFthe hardest levels in certain' parts of the street, hit area was near said Bryan police Sgt. Jeff A Agoc of Haislet. Apartments in the 300 block of Other flj Redmond Drive. Many areas areas were along the street, he said, were im- reported in Bryan at the intersec- passable. tion of Barak Lane and Oak Ridge Monday's rainfall coupled with Drive and on Palasota Street accumulations Sunday of 0.90 in- north of Groesbeck Street. A citizen reported to c.50 inches. the two -day total to Monday night that he had seen 4 inches. body floating down Carter Cradf weeather cougN near Rosertjany Drive in Br an: hour period of bad g'a Y -by Htrricane Alicia — 2.72-inc ed at the airport. man was swimming in the creek, es But police determined that the of rain was report said Bryan police Sgt. Although a flash flood watch Jadlowski. No weather-related morning, a in National Weather Ser- remainuel effect deaths or major injuries had been vice spokesman said through this reported to the department, night i`hat most of the bad weather Jadlowski added. In College :Station, .. had passed, firefighters kept busy most th of n- College Station� that radar has seen the day — closing streets and respon- worst of it," said aUrrett ding to minor traffic accidents. with the weather service off ice in High water was reported in the Waco. �� ) 5e a t98 3 NOTIC OF PUBLIC HEARING The College Station Plan- NOTICE OF ning and Zoning Commis- PUBLIC HEARING sion will hold a public The College Station Plan hearing on the question of ning and Zoning Commis - granting Project. Plan appro- sion will hold a public val for the University Drive hearing on the question of Convenience Store located granting Project Plan appro- at the corner of Spring Loop val for a restaurant located and University Drive (Lots 12 in a Neighborhood - & 13 ° Block T University Park Business District and �.... II) which is located in a specifically located at 606 Neighborhood - Business Tarrow Street in College (C -N) zone. Station. The request for the plan is in The application is in the the name of Mac Randolph. name of Ronald Cobb & The hearing will be held in Juliann McDaniel of Little the Council Room of the River Enterprises, Inc. College Station City Hall, The hearing will be held in 1101 South Texas Avenue at the Council Room of the the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the College Station City Hall, Planning and Zoning Com- 1101 South Texas Avenue at mission on Thursday, the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the • October 6, 1983. Planning and Zoning Com - For additional thformation, mission on Thursday, contact the City Planner's October6, 1983. • Office, (409)696 -8868. For additional information,. James M. Callaway contact the City Planner's _ Assistant Director of Office (409)696-8868. Planning .�3 James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning 09-21-83 TO WHOM IT NOTICE OF MAY CONCERN PUBLIC HEARING MAY e Station Plan- The City of College Station • The Coll g Planning and Zoning Com - ning and Zoning Commis- mission will hold a sion will hold a public hearing the public hearing on the question of amending Se of rezoning the following Ordinance 850 of the City of property: College Station, Texas, re- A 3.00 acre tract of land lying lating to Signs. The purpose and being situated in the of the amendment to the Morgan Rector League and specifically located on the Ordinance n establish clear and unambiguous re- north side of Krenek Lane gufations pertaining to signs approximately 920 feet west in the City of College Station of the intersection of Krenek an Lane and the State Highway attracttiv and thereby aesthetic . • 6 East Bypass, from Single community, foster traffic Family Residential District safety, and enhance the R -1 to Apartments Medium Density District R -5. Applica- and effective xchange ocommunication deas L and • tion is in the name of J.W. Wood. T hmme a cinl information. e The said hearing will be held he Cou Room 01 the in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. 1101 South t Texas Avenue at 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Pla annninin P and meeting C the Planning and Zoning Com- mission and Zoning Com mission 9n Thursday, NNW. mission on Thursday, October 6, 1983. October 6, 1983. For additional information, James please contact additional reformation, please contact me. James M. Callaway ames t a Callaway i Ass't. Director of Planning - Assistant Director of Planning 09 -21 -83 -- - 09-21-83 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN • The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lot 14 Block T University Park Section II subdivision from Apartments Low Dens- ity District R -4 to Administrative - Professional District A -P. Application is in the name of J.W. Wood. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, O ctober 6, 1983. or additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway . Ass't. Director of Planning '09 -21 -83 • - 11� l . o , .- ,, �. 2 68.._ ...0 L.,..,,. fl: = c -, A) c — m- A, `G ° r, Z OCa O M � . rD ^ `" p0 G , r - t -: CO 0 0 ~ ~ N CD D NO a E. r O ro (b I< D go t7 a cy. o r, 0 4 v w 3. o oa °�"o o 'a' _�- � W - rDC - ` G u � -. �A'c " F 1:3 . � cb noo " n> o o c fp n... l J vrD o =~ ( � ' - �yn (Da Z ] co 0 r, CD ^ C co O G7 m . od, < w o . r it . < 0 - A , r'� rD rD c cts c B i - cv� ' •c v `D oa - + a • ts O a a. c a. A, p s, b ��� �_QO A)rn �Oa< l=") 0 ca n C C a A , nr m c_. O Ir CD O O •? ,e ry m V = ... , C A' = = C Z CD a.ro w ° o o P0 w o Ob - < w m X n �- a ' oo p rD � ` D g nu rD V, ti 0 N ti O O • ■ CD C.* A °° ° p n 0° f1 � o 'U n y n `< C F CD O < ° • F . D .., ,,,, ,.. , 0 ;-...t„ 0, = :74 ,__. CA 5" ■-,- = Z 1-, Owl r `° ' v A(b , C v, -00—r,,,- a r 1 D CD <p � �cnCC m O X a. „, N n CD ` G b G C c. O '4 . , O A, o O O C O O n C ° .. C C C O C O . ?• C C v (( p rD S v ".,rD a. a."i' r D rD C Or aC' go po 8 Z CD a Z ( O0 N •a y r' a0 n - O O A , 5 r. 0 n O C a- < A, C Olt A , r" -- v, n FT a ^ C O cn A A' " O C O A, O O r' O cr Cn.» C C A' - t.-, H1 ° -,' N • c n • a. rp E. B 'C3 O A, r) Uo c t3 .T, a. O — '•s X C a... &,'D CD 5b O O r, O� O o O A=-. r CD O !D O C O rD C 9 C C 0• ^ b0 A, ,�'� ( 2O) 683 • 108 Legal Notices BID NOTICE The Caldwell Independent City sponsors trip Sch I District is now ac- re ti bids for Jhe sale of the oltOwing:, The College Station Parks and Recrea- 1957 Chevrolet Pick Up. • V2 Ton, 11 running, Serial No. 108 Le Notices tion Department is sponsoring a ski trip to 3A57S 26 1967 Ch rol tick Up, V2 C from January 5 -8. For further Ton, runnin Serial No. office of the Purchasing CS147S192644 Agent at the City Hall. information, contact Susan Dashner at 1959 Ya Warehouse Trac- Specifications may be ob- 693 7273 or 696 1033. tor, S ial No. 020298, Model tained at the office of the T -40 ', Purchasing Agent. All bids Sealed bids will be received received after that time will in the Administration Office, be returned unopened. The 203 N. Gray,,Caldwell, Texas City of College Station 77836 untiJJ'10:00 a.m., Sep- reserves the right to waive tember 7 7, 1983, and will be or reject any and all bids or reviewe by the—Board of any and all irregularities in Trustees at their regular said bid and to accept the meeting that evening. offer considered most ad- - Bid forms can be obtained vantageous to the City. from the Caldwell Indepen- 09 -22- 83,09 -29 -83 dent School District Ad- ministration Office. 203 North Gray, Caldwell, Br an-CZ: tation Texas. • l The vehicles may be seen at the Maintenance Depart- ment of the Caldwell In- GM dependent School District. Contact the office of the Superintendent (713) 567- -- 4332 for mate information. The Caldwell Independent SchooyDistrict reserves the right tpreiect any or all bids. 09-12- 83;09 - 13- 83,09 -14- 83.09- 15-83 , 0 9 -1 6-83,09-17-83.09-18- 1 83,09-1 9 - 83.09-20-83,09-21-83, 09- 22- 83,09 -23 -83 . rLGAL NOTICE Notic is hereby given that the p rtrlership of Don Rice and Associates doing busi- ness at Bryan, Texas under that name. and the partner- ship of Darco Press doing business at Bryan, Texas under that name, have been dissddved as and from the first day of September, 1983. All debts due to and owing by these respective firms will be rec, ved and paid respectively by Don Rice and Associates, Inc., a newly formed dortfestic cor- poration, which will carry on business under that name. Dated this the 6th day of September. 1983, , Don A!,Rje.e. Sara V. Bice 09- 08-83,09-15-83,09-22-83, 29 -83 'LEGAL NOTICE Sealed bids will be received by Parks and Wildlife Dept., Bryan, Texas, until 12 Noon, Sept. 30, 1983 on a 1979 Chrysler 4 door Sedan. Contact Janelle Lewis at (409)846 -0131. 09- 21 - 83,09-22-83,09-23-83 LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bid(s)for: Miscellaneous Water Meter Boxes and Covers Protective Clothing for Firefighting until 2:00 p.m., 9/30/83, at which time the . bids will be opened in the \ t rr . ,111.Q._ etiee / ruzaKi _ • ay ) „ • . 1 ,--, t . to your councilmen Talk ,, -"ft- i Daniel Puckett /City Hall Report �� e We have three ways to get a c government here - in barber or And because of 'declining sales - council to do what we want it to beauty shops, at parties and at tax revertiets, the budget will be do. We can elect like- minded church — but the problem is that.` smaller than the 1983 budget. It council members, we can get up the complaining is done irt; the includes a 2.5 percent pay raise for petitions to force referendums, or wrong place, where the ,pt ople city employees and no new hiring. we can talk to council members responsible for the deciv4ons can't All the issues are major; none before they make decisions. hear. has been controversial. Few, if Why do we in Bryan seem to any, citizens have attended to tell The City Council will make avoid the easiest of the three? the council what they think. several importalit decisions Mon - Elections — whether for council day night. Three of the most visi But if residents have objections 1. seats or on referendum proposi- to the annexation or the tax rate, ble decisions will be final readings tions — are time- consuming and Monday night will be their last of an annexation ordinance and a expensive. They require hours of tax rate and the first reading of the chance to change council work and bundles of money, and city's 1984 budget. members' minds. And the budget the influence any one person has is will get final approval on Oct. 10, :usually indirect and uncertain. The annexation ordinance will so time is running short. Talking takes an hour or so and bring 1,903 acres into the city, an The council will meet on Mon - it costs nothing. But it's strangely 11 percent increase in Bryan's day at 6:30 p.m. in the city rare in Bryan. area. The tax rate will be 46.35 Utilities Building. The Medallion The City Council calls public cents per $100 assessed valuation, Room, where the council meets, hearings, which usually last 30 a 2.65 -cent reduction from this will probably be half- empty. - seconds because no one wants to year's rate. The rate represents a 3 And that's a shame. For if :speak. Council members ask for percent 41ctease over the effective you're dissatisfied with what public comments during their tax rate, 5n$ning that, in 1984, council members are doing, it's meetings, but seldom get any. the city should earn 3 percent much easier to influence them in It's not that no one cares. more in property -tax revenue than person than through the ballot Citizens complain about city it did this year. box or a petition. . wpm l C I ck_cA ; 5 ep y 193 J Traffic counts set for 14 intersections By THOMAS TASCHINGER patterns could have changed at the light time for motorists on Dexter Staff Writer intersections since the planning Drive where it intersects. Jersey College Station officials will period for the 1981 bond issue. Street. ' perform traffic counts at 14 in- Signals are under construction Runnels said the short green tersections throughout town to at three of the intersections on light there and at other intersec- determine if driving patterns have Texas 30' — at Munson, Dart- tions throughout town caused changed over the past few years. mouth and Puryear streets. anxiety for ,motorists who feel The new counts will then be in- FM 2818 and Welsh Avenue they must hurry through before corporated into plans to install was scheduled to receive a traffic the light turns red. traffic signals at the intersections. signal this year, but that project In other business, the council Traffic Engineer John Black has been postponed. Four other approved a $1,600 payment to received authorization to perform intersections are scheduled to local artist Helen Finney to pro - the counts from the City Council receive signals in 1984 and three duce three wall hangings' for the at Wednesday's workshop session. others should receive them in new City Hall addition. - Funding for traffic signals at 1985. The money will be paid from 1111w the 14 intersections was part of a Councilman Bob Runnels also the contingency fund of the hotel - 1981 bond issue. Black said traffic asked Black to lengthen the green- motel tax fund. - e A litk 4 vitzdo,y !9` 1 -Thi 42 7,) tkii.,/) okt,ii J 41) City and judo club offer classes The College Station Judo Club and the College Station Parks and Recreation Department will offer judo classes begin- ning Oct. 3. The instructor for the course is Jongsoo Park, a fourth - degree black belt in judo with background in competition and military Taekwondo. The classes, which will be held every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday in the College Station Lin- coln Center, are designed for both Junior Olympic Judo prog- rams and self - defense and safety for men and women. Registration and more information are available at the Lin- coln Center, or at 696 -1033. To submit an item for this column, come by The Battalion office in 216 Reed McDonald. .ohs Bek r. �:ect,y‘szAc SL fo ., 1 ) 19S-3 Associatiofl offers CAM course The Bryan - College Station Apart- the beginning date for the C.A.M. II •Maintenance — Sept. 22, 6 -10 p.m., ment Association has put its entire sup- course. Classes will be held at the Ken McGregor. port behind a program designed to in- LULAC Hill Apartments Clubroom. •Legal — Oct. 5, 6 -9 p.m., Mike crease professionalism in their in- The cost of the course is $125 for Calliham. dustry. members, $175 for non - members, and •Marketing and Management — Oct. According to Ada Taylor, excutive $25 per seminar for those who wish to 7, 6:30 -9:30 p.m., Ted Hendricks and officer of the association, "We need to sit in on certain topics. . Susan Melton. heighten the distinction between apart- These seminars are open to the •Marketing and Management — Oct. ment managers and professional apart- public. The B -CS Apartment Associa- 8, 8:30 a.m.- 4 p.m., Ted Hendricks ment managers." tion is especially urging industry and Susan Melton. The program that is being supported related people to take the course. •Economics — Oct. 15, 10 a.m.- 3 is the Certified Apartment Manager "This course is very helpful to p.m., Joe Sharp. (C.A.M.) program, which consists of managers who are experiencing pro- •Human Relations — Oct. 20, 1 -6 of the Challengers Exam (which meets blems in maintenance, legalities, p.m., Jack Nelson. C.A.M. I course requirements and was human relations, economics, or Payment will be required in advance. held last week) and the C.A.M. II marketing and management," explain- Call the B -CS Apart - course. ed Taylor. ment Association office for further in- Dr. Art Wright, education chair- Seminar topics, times and instruc- formation. The number is 260 -9839 or man, has designated September 22 as ,tors are as follows: 260 -9840. t ih L / CC j Se � rig 3 J GS • y counci meets tonight The College Station City Coun- p.m. at the College Station City cil tonight will consider approval Hall. of the city's comprehensive plan and discuss plans for additional funding for the Brazos County Animal Shelter. Al Mayo, director of plan- ning, says the council already has approved most of the major areas of the city plan. He says he will request the council to approve the entire plan. Currently the Brazos County Animal Shelter is $9,496 in debt. When the shelter is running with a debt, Brazos County and the Cities of Bryan and College Station — as the shelter's board of directors — provide the needed funds. The three en- tities pay for the time animals from its jurisdiction are kept at the shelter. The council will decide what percentage of the debt each enti- ty will cover. Also on the council's agenda are: *A proclamation for Oct. 9- 15 to be declared Fire Preven- tion Week. *Consideration of the final recommendations of the North - gate Committee. *Consideration of the selec- tion of consultants for Fire Sub- station No.3. City council will meet at 7 �8 s -►' as l X 493 `' '8 .t'S-)Sx ^ — ° ov 61 y 3 = v oU u c ,..9 C -p O 0 3� `" -� • O.. .N v bb . e C J b ■• . c. .., > OV H A C O 3x • . . E id v 7 :0 , R..+ c. by v) 4 . O O cdR N H v 0 U. ; .= c� v [w v u . i r1 N p _ G• O c.� v c 0 3 V N ca., c,.., v 6" cd O '. OWN °N' v • c N C N N O O v.5 y r v v C O O C�� C v 3 O '. 4) 74 0 O — .'c, O ce F" C O O (1) .o c ' 5 5 I-. c . s . 1... 6. .., • O i. c= - C C. O v v 3 ,, ".'." « c C T v C c N ' O vC c°• N C p = Nv -c O C . 5 v " — a'..2 .� � C • C > v^v N O N4. G VE • N . 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C = = E o v y cldE v panies, University departments, retailers or any other form of Q cn ' 3 3 :74 c g c vocational enterprise can organize teams to compete in events N d `n o ° 1 ° o such as bicycle racing, bowling, golf, horseshoes, volleyball, v ° - v .o ca "' tennis, softball, running, swimming and more. ft a • 4 P. W ' c �° . ti The College Station Parks and Recreation Department and -O -4...i 0 4., a. p �.4 .0 ro the Bryan - College Station Athletic Foundation are sponsoring tn E the challenge to emphasize the importance of physical fitness for CL) � T V. ^ T employees in the Brazos Valley. o > 0 o p Teams must enter by Friday to compete. For more informa O O u. > O - d P: tion, call the College Station Parks and Recreation Department T C ,, o o i u• 0 at 693 -7273. � a W .{ $, ° to O N i .5-1 ., = ., C br a) ' " c cd 2 v I. cd 0 y v L r ��' V cn C U v ca n - T �.- v v p,•ro U 0 W 'O y O 0 co .0 d W . r. O U C v F MO ih„ CL - _r:'. . ........ .... 4a„. 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Council p Y It o st ones Animal Shelter p by Bonnie nie Crocker bud Battalion Staff get a copy of the budget to each The College Station City of the councilmen before the Council ac the final very meeting, action should be de- , lion of the city's comprehensive s until the next council work - plan Thursday night, but post- shop session OMCT. sho poned its decision on the prop- agree The council, however, poned budget for the Brazos did ` Count CO provide $9'97 to the y Animal Shelter. shelter for the city's share of the The city's c omprehensive plan operating costs for the 's administer and plan The shelter should then be able is a guide pervise growth and development $ o repay the they borrowed rowe dur- of the city over the next 20 years. $ that the Ma or y borrowed dur- Y Gary Halter ing the past nine months. The announced to the council that the eld off ac- major parts of th plans had been lion on co c report from the p major parts over the past few been Northgate Committee pending appro edy Planner Al recommendation fromtheP a w l that City d er Al Ma said g and Zoning was a g Commission. It in the plan was support data such was at the n he n exx t regg d er ulaar r council era- as population studies. tion at l Mayo suggested that the plan meeting Oct. 13. be adopted in its entirety, which In other business, the council it was accepted the r ecommendation to Holster On the meeting's agenda was sign the firm of and Sow consideration meeting's agenda e budget James the consult- do ing for construction of Fire Sub - for the animal shelter, by the shelter's ptOp°sed station No. 3. ctors. board of dire - Mayor Halter also signed a Halter, a member of the Proclamation deeming the week board, said that since he couldn't °f Oct. 9 as "Fire Prevention Week" in College Station. the p■ t e N �r,1 ) Se�fe�• bey a3� 1��3 c Brawn -bag session is Set The fourth in di scussio n a series Community sessions io ns being held of brow bag lunch and and can best c how citizens will deal at College St and o me communicate city anon tion Mayor of mmu g Yor Gary 11a/ter te city council. Co S con_ and counc memb will gi College n, Questions will be presentation, a T he session n, t 'cipants ° 's set for on hand to answer are invited 12:15 Beverages will to brin Friday Par- director provided. bring their tion e t er would helpf earn says that at 693-9907. at reserva_ reserve a space, call her Ise E� � m s - r � S�p+c (� I `1�3 — • b 4cb� 5' a�� 7,, ',7.4. � °off • cro < cD z to S - •r 0 D =( .D ° f D = CD N 'I' , ? � {v n M .' y e . .., N r. • O C a' r < .y w ^r ^ d A) f. O 'b 70'i N (,,, O a?, .8 0, Cl. (I , ,...•" 'AI 5 " N c'D �, a• O H — • pz It o- A� `" CD C N a t ,) p' c oo CD O' fD co ,.< ti >v 0" O Oo a = c° C a ': n Wry < ' y v , y CD O C A) CD ,... CD .t CD V] ' G 2 L3 w < v' tT A) W r' � to N go r o t3 P 0. 3" A'. . r Q 0 A , or .. ' CD co O CD 4. Qj ? a+OQ 0\ .y L 0 � a � • ( OQ '"�' u.. X " w co O OQ 'r ur r 7' ti A) �/ //�) co ' � CD P �' CD '" � ' _ o ° O 7, .7' co ..� C^ () .t v' \ I CA A O O .r " a. 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N A 0 0 — .1 �1 w . 0 c + + + + + + + + 0 4 . + r ON w + p OS . + O + vi VD w -4 N W : . - ‘..0 s.0 t.) . n A :D :O A t0 t0 to O w -] N VD \D 01 w ao A ■0 tD w �l w t o N 00 l \ .(L .:....... a6dIL /TWO Ci- CI j S...Q101,12/Mtfi g. r 7 i qn ■ Page 8A Bryan - College Station Eagle - Thursday, September 29, 1983 • poor people either," he added. \,T oters tc settle "I believe this referendum will turn out just like the Bryan pro perty tax referendum," he said. • • "When push comes to shove, the u l t system issue county will be out $100,000, and, when the people see how it is, it'll be a different story." Turner's From page IA sioner Bill Stasny's longtime view- precinct is in the northwest point and that position has been quarter of the county. county commissioners make about maintained by Commissioner Watson said League members $10,000 less a year than the Milton Turner who succeeded will speak to black citizens groups $29,000 a year the commissioners Stasny. as well as other groups to explain make here. Turner is blunt about his op- their position. Pct. 3 Commissioner Billy position to the unit system. Differing with Turner, Watson Beard, who favors the unit "You basically have the unit said she believes the unit system system, said that, if the referen- system in the city, don't you ?" has a good chance of passing if dum passes, commissioner salaries Turner asked. "Just look at the ci- people understand what it is. will probably come down. ty roads in the black community," "The unit system is kind of dif- Beard and Watson each said Turner said. He added that he ficult to understand, so we hope to they expect opposition from the doesn't believe blacks will fare any educate the voting citizens so ''... better in the county. they'll know what it is," she said. black community. y y Beard said that many black "Precinct 4 will be a disaster She said the League would pro - voters feel that the unit system will area," Turner said. "It's not go- bably need to raise $500 for adver- distance them from their commis- ing to be just the blacks, either, tisement purposes but is expecting sioner and keep them from getting but a lot of whites. to rely primarily on a speakers quick service for problems. "I've had plenty of people come bureau to campaign for the That was former Pct. 4 Commis- talk to me against it, and not just system. A /Thrscji Se .2 1983 _______ C oun ty se 1 or e unit s By JANN SNELL , , - tt,04. " Staff Writer ; Voters will get the opportunity to settle the issue of a unit road system for Brazos County on Nov. e 8, county commissioners an- ,v nounced Wednesday. ` County Judge R.J. "Dick" ' Holmgreen said that 2,022 , ' • signatures have been certified by the county clerk which forces a referendum on the issue. LEGAL NOTICE l T he City of College Station The Brazos County League of scceptingbid(s)for. Women Voters submitted the peti- Miscellaneous aing bi Water Meter tions in time to have the vote call Boxes and Covers Boxes t;ve very Clothing for Firefighting until 2:00 p.m., ed on Nov. 8, along with the Prote 9/30/83, t at which time the regular statewide constitutional bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing referendums. Agent at the City Hall. Agent Specifications may be ob- League President Doris Watson M ilton Turner tained at the office the Purchasing Agent. genrrt. All II bids explained that the unit system received after that time would change the management would be a more efficient means r r e returned ar unopened. ened. The he City of College Station � and planning that goes into of managing the roads and maintenance of county roads. bridges," she said. reserves the right to waive or reject any and all b any and all irregularities t in wids or said bid and to accept the Instead of having four separate Watson admitted that the unit any most ad- road and bridge budgets each system would cost the county offer c c onsi nsi tedered red mo mo. overseen by one of the four county more initially, because an engineer 09 -22- 83,09 -29 - 8 3 commissioners, there would be would have to be hired. But she one road and bridge budget over- said the county will save money in seen by a county engineer. County the long run through more effi- roatt would be repaired, main- cient use of personnel and tained and planned for on a coun- machinery. tywide basis, instead of a precinct - She also said that in most coun- 4 by- precinct basis. ties which have the unit system, "We made a study several years 8A ago and we determined that this Turn to VOTERS, page 4 Q /Thursela 1 , Se eMbec a Ic 3 The 9