‘Progress’ retires doormen lit ’igU lyed'l ner slanii mat* tlieio low ‘e maiij By ANA QUINTANA I H “Chalk it up to progress” is the Btitude of Phil Blackburn, a library j doorman at Texas A&M University . after learning he will not be needed R next year when the new library addition opens. Blackburn, a 25-year resident of tyan, and the six other men who Ispect outgoing library materials to M ‘ [isure they have been properly d out, will be replaced by a new book security system. Attempts will be made to locate ither positions on campus for the men, but because they receive Social security, it restricts them irom working more than part time, and there are not many part-time P es f? dbs open, said Dr. Irene Hoadley, director of the library. I The new security system works on an electromagnetic principle. All ibrary materials will be tagged with • Isensitized (magnetically charged) TV] metal strips called targets. These detected by a magnetic field at 1 me library’s exit. When the material L is checked out at the circulation IV desk, the target will be desen- jtized. However, if the material is [ot properly checked out, as the non tries to leave the library the agnetic field will detect it causing e exit turnstile to lock and a buz- rto sound at the circulation desk. Reference Librarian Charles to b Smith, the project coordinator for (he new addition, said the system is ilar to metal detectors in stores d airports and that the targets can be put on just about anything. Hoadley said the main reasons for opting the new system are its nomic value and increased etiec- :ness. I It costs approximately $26-27,000 jmually to pay the doormen, whose llaries range from $2.65 to $3.06 an pur, depending on how long they i worked there. The book secu- rjty system will cost roughly 5,000, according to Smith, plus le price of the targets which cost a Tv cents apiece. [Because of its impersonality, the Iw system will catch more offen- ftrs, according to Hoadley. “It’s Ird, on a one-to-one basis, to de- In anyoneshe said. The system Jllso will create new jobs for the Jople who have to place the targets oh the materials. [According to Hoadley, an average j 13,000 periodicals and other ma- orepi terials are taken from the library an nually. In 1976, a total of 9,259 items was missing. Some 15,580 were missing in 1977. These are the items reported missing from the shelves by students and other libra rians in 1977. A waiting period of one year determines if a book is lost and needs be replaced by the li brary. Not having enough time to check the material out and needing it longer than the allotted time, are some of the reasons materials are taken without being checked out, said Smith. The attitude that “I’m the only one using this book’’ is another. “Materials show up sometimes when they were accounted lost years before,” he added. Blackburn said students are sometimes preoccupied and forget to check out books. When he catches them with a book, he sends them back to the circulation desk to check it out properly. Some stu dents resent this, he said, but none has ever resisted him physically. He only catches “maybe one or two a week,” he said. Most of the doormen are retirees. It was not a policy to hire the re tirees, Hoadley said. “It just hap pened.” “Our superiors count on us to be punctual and responsible where maybe a student wouldn’t be be cause of classes,” said Blackburn. Blackburn said he heard about the job through a student and applied for it. He said he knows of some other applicants who have been turned down because of the limited number of jobs. Blackburn is not resentful of the book security system and said he expected it to happen because he knows of other universities that have it. “I will just re-retire,” he said. “In this time of inflation the salary from the job is a welcome supple ment,” Blackburn said. However, he feels that being up and active is the most important thing and also to be around young people. “If you’re around young people, you feel young,” he said. Blackburn likes to greet students as they go past him, but said foreign students are “at times hard to com municate with,” but added, “that a smile is understood in all lan guages.” THE BATTALION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1978 Page 5 PIPES — CUSTOM BLENDED TOBACCO CIGARS — DOMESTIC & IMPORTED BUD WARD VOLKSWAGEN INC. 693-3311 Imported Cigarettes SNUFF AND SPITTOONS Town & Country Center Bryan] Fred Norcross, a 10-year veteran as doorman at the University Library, is serving in his last days at that position. His job is being replaced by an electronics sensing system that will detect books that have nqt been checked out. The new system will be put into operation when the new addition to the library is opened next year. Battalion photo by Elizabeth Ohio Ancient Texans traced Portrait Special One 8x10 Two 5x7s • One person: head & shoulders • Ages 5 and up • Choice of 6 proofs • All portraits fully retouched and finished Campus Activities Friday All Night Fair, 7 p.m. to 3 a.in., MSC Aggie Players, "A Street Car Named Desire,” 8 p.m., Rudder Forum Aggie Cinema, Bette Davis Festival, "Jezebel,” 8 p.m.. Rudder Auditorium and "Hush, Sweet Charlotte,” midnight. Rudder Theater Saturday Aggie Players, “A Street Car Named Desire,” 8 p.m., Rudder Forum Aggie Cinema, Bette Davis Festival, "All About ^Eve," 8 p.m.. Rudder Au ditorium and “Dark Victory," 10:30 p.m., Rudder Auditorium Sunday Texas A&M Sports Car Club, autoe- ross, 9 a.m. Zacliry parking lot Monday Microbiology, Dr. Fred Rapp on “On cogenic Properties of Hyman Cytomegalovirus,” 12 noon, 206 Oceanography-Mete rology Women’s Leadership Workshop, 6:30 to 8 p.m., 230 MSC Dance Arts Society, ballet, 7:30 p.m., 266 G. Rollie White Coliseum MSC Arts Film, “Shoot the Piano Player,” 8 p.m., Rudder Theater Tuesday Science Career Workshop, sign up by calling 845-1741 Microbiology, Dr. Frank Young on “Impact of Genetic Engineering on Sci ence and Society,” 12 noon, 226 Evans Li brary Baseball, St. Mary’s vs. Texas A6cM, 1 p.m., Travis Park Anthropologists at Texas A&M University have established a con tinuous pattern of life from prehis toric Indians in southwest Texas that dates as far back as 7,200 B. C., mak ing it one of the oldest on record statewide. Radiocarbon tests on wood, char coal and other material taken from a cave near Del Rio confirm the dates, says Texas A&M archeologist Dr. Harry Shafer. Some material from the site suggests man existed there around 10,000 B.C., and latest radiocarbon results show continued habitation of the site since 7,200 B.C. The Indians, probably all mem bers of an extended family, lived at the site periodically until the 16th Century, explains Shafer. “This is one of the most consistent If • people keep •* telling you to • J quit smoking • • cigarettes * • don’t listen ... • • they’re • * # probably trying to * trick you into # # living ** sequences of periodic habitation studied so far,” Shafer said. Shafer and paleobotanist Dr. Vaughn Bryant Jr. have directed ex cavation and analysis of material from the cave for three years. In that time, the project has received support totaling $100,000 from the National Science Foundation, Na tional Geographic Society and Win- ship Foundation of Corpus Christi. Excavation has yielded an abun dance of preserved plant material (1,500 sacksful) plus 2,000 coprolites (fossilized human feces) examined for what it can tell about early man’s diet. When analysis is finished, the project will provide the clearest pic ture yet available of the west Texas environment 10,000-12,000 ago and how early man adjusted to it. ALL NIGHT FAIR FEBRUARY 24-25 7PM TO 3AM .50 AT THE DOOR OR PRICE PER GAME MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER JOIN IN THE FUN AND GAMES PREHISTORIC BOWLING, SPONGE THROW, NAME THATTUNE, PAN FOR GOLD, GONG SHOW, COMPUTER GAMES, SQUIRT GUN, FRISBEE THROW, RING TOSS, DART GAMES, OLD TIME MOVIES, AND MORE! SPECIAL ATTRACTION DENIM Winners Announced at 11:00 P.M. 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