The Battalion a s P»rr l 01.71 No. 171 lehas p ages king, self | Thatj; my spce lldi Wi; fiood ■ Thursday, July 6, 1978 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Inside Thursday: • Bill of rights for handicapped chil dren — p. 2. • Butterflies’ in review — p. 3. • pitcher Mark Ross in Alaska — p. 6. - >n, he^ i right.’ ; lt‘e|$k ress drives i achers away United Press International LAS — Stress resulting from class- rscipline problems, fear of violence | upational frustration is driving I'i from the profession, the presi- ■ !he National Education Association I Ryor, president of the 1.8 | member organization, said Wed- |schools are now expected to serve a ||t families have abdicated, forcing ■ s to take on more responsibility. • l-hers, this leads to tension. jlss has become so widespread in Lg that increasing numbers of Jli, ©specially in urban areas in the le years, are either dropping out or I' early retirement,” Ryor said on |'/of the NEA’s national convention. I'hers are driven to the brink be- ;f transfer denials, the added frus- J of no escape from an intolerable I t — — ~ ...... h short of resignation and lack of I,'treatment for their casualties and ji mfrnber of teachers with 20 years le experience has dropped by half I i')6lL with most of the decline in the r years. * I; said teachers also face more threats |;nce from students and parents. He quoted a Los Angeles psychiatrist who said many instructors show symptoms similar to combat neurosis. The extent of violence, vandalism and discipline problems is greater than re ported, Ryor said, because of coverups by administrators who do not want to mar their records. “What 10 years ago were scattered schoolhouse pranks and disturbances today have evolved into serious violent crimes of crisis proportions,” he said. Ryor cited a recent government study that indicated more than 6,700 schools have serious crime problems, more than 5,000 teachers are attacked monthly and 25 percent of all schools are subject to vandalism each month. "School vandalism diverts some $600 million annually from education budgets — or enough to buy a year’s worth of textbooks or hire 50,000 more teachers without increasing taxes a nickel,” Ryor said. “Teachers can not teach when they must police," he said. “The job of a teacher is much tougher today. “The same parents who cry over lack of discipline in the schools are the first to complain or slap a lawsuit on the schools if it is their child who deserves the disci pline. But many schools can not carry out their primary function: education.” Soviet writers under review ioachers like their liiakes rare in Bend Battalion photo by Pat O'Malley Ride a crooked line Newly painted bike lanes near West Gate seem to wiggle and swerve along the street. Bicyclers may get dizzy, but they will be safer inside the crooked lines than in automobile traffic. WASHINGTON — Russian journalists called to the White House Wednesday were told that their press credentials are now under review — a move the adminis tration refused to link with the Soviet’s prosecution of two Moscow-based Ameri can reporters. Walt Wurfel, assistant press secretary, summoned the Soviet journalists to a meeting at the Old Executive Office Build ing and informed them of their “rights, privileges and responsibilities,” according to deputy press secretary Rex Granum. Asked if that meant a credentials review was under way, Granum said, “They are under review.” The White House refused specific comment on the meeting, and the Rus sians were equally circumspect. “No comment,” said Melor Sturua of Iz- vestia, the official Russian government newspaper. “Journalists don’t give other journalists scoops.” Asked if the meeting was friendly, he replied, “Oh yes.” Gennardi Vassily of Pravda, the Com munist Party newspaper, told reporters, "It seems to me for correspondents to interview each other is not the liest way to make a story." Asked what the session was about, Vas sily said, “I myself am trying to under stand. We were told what privileges we have.” Neither Granum nor Wurfel would ac knowledge any link between today’s White House meeting with the Soviet cor respondents and the slander charges lodged by officials in Moscow against New York Times reporter Craig Whitney and Baltimore Sun correspondent Harold Piper. “We thought it was an appropriate time to review the privileges and respon sibilities of those holding White House credentials,” said Granum, who would not elaborate. He said the correspondents could draw their own conclusions on why the creden tials are being reviewed. It was unclear how many Russians at tended the meeting. The number ap peared to be four or five out some 10 Soviet newsmen in Washington. Granum said other meetings may be held. Soviet correspondents routinely cover the White House and State Department briefings and are free to roam about Capitol Hill. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, Na tional Security Affairs adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and Powell discussed the im plications of the Whitney-Pi per trial at a White House meeting Monday. They also reviewed the arrest of Jay Crawford, the International Harvester representative in Moscow who was charged with currency violations. Last week. White House officials said they had “conveyed to the Soviets our very serious view of what this portends for commercial and press relations." There are about 10 Russian corre spondents in Washington, but several were out of town and not available for comment. The State Department had a similar meeting last Friday and only three of the Soviet journalists attended. United Press International | .LINGUA — Country singer Char- I J;le Sold all about it: “Oh, the snakes |;t night, that’s what they say. When "’I l!i goes down, then the snakes will 1 1 f ||song is true, at least in Texas re- rig Bend, and the serpents’ propen- ? . ■' crawling at night is presenting a ' *n for the two game wardens who 9 ®pore than 6,000 square miles of the llargest county. 19 |hers from as far away as Minnesota, 11 and Washington have been com- sparsely populated Brewster County j;t couple of years to carry away sev ” Jlecies of snakes so tLr» Shio Mture has lered list. |iuse some of the reptiles can be sold ilmuch as $500 apiece, the snake A H' rs ar< * willing to risk fines and jail ' Jin their quest for grey-banded king U J;, Trans-Pecos copperheads, rock I, Texas lyre snakes, Trans-Pecos rat 9^1,and Big Bend milk snakes. Jpetimes they come in here and Socialize on them, haul them off and | m and one thing or another,” said £ J Parks and Wildlife warden David yM'f Alpine. “They’re protected by so rare put them the State on the l:he highways at night waiting for I to cross, then use spotlights to cap- |'em on the right-of-way. The war- jiiy their heaviest patrols are during I $ i|k of the moon when the snakes are jlentiful. ^ Jl;y hunt mostly from the highways. A l!sy to tell when they’re hunting. I liiave extra lights on their vehicles. | of them have spotlights. They’ll | |real slow and stop real often. It - has to be done at night because that’s when most of the snakes crawl. They’ll cross the highways and the hunters just drive back and forth until they spot one. ” Cook said most of the snake poaching takes place from north of tiny Study Butte to the Big Bend National Park and along the narrow highway which runs from the ghost town of Terlingua along the U.S.Mexico border to Presidio. “It’s a pretty new thing, the warden said. “The snakes haven’t been protected very long so it’s pretty new to us, as well as everybody else. We just file a charge on them just like anybody else who has game he isn t supposed to have." Because the highways around Terlin gua, located 100 miles south of Alpine, are lightly traveled. Cook said the reptile poachers so far have not presented a traffic hazard, although every so often wardens will find a drunk snake hunter. “We’ve checked them from as far away as Washington state, Minnesota, Florida, Louisiana, California,” he said. “They just come from all over the country — the ones that want a certain kind of snake and can’t find them anywhere but right here. And around Langtry, there’s a lot going on.” He said a minimum $100 fine accom panied the first snake poaching conviction, a second offense could result in a maximum $500 fine and 180 days in jail, and a third offense was punishable by up to a $2,000 fine and one year in jail. “It’s hard to spend all our time on that. We have other things to do. We catch one or two (snake poachers) now and then. It’s just like anything else, you miss most of them, I’m sure,” Cook said. “In fact a lot of people who are poaching are the same ones who’ve succeeded in getting them on the endangered list. But they have to live with it just like everybody else.” Program for low-income youths opens workshop on job opportunities By SCOTT PENDLETON Battalion Staff Disadvantaged youths are visiting Texas A&M University today to learn about job, education, and financial aid opportunities. The 115 youths, aged 14 to 21, are par ticipating in the Comprehensive Em ployment and Training Act (CETA) pro gram administered by the Brazos Valley Development Council. CETA is designed to help young people from low income backgrounds find a job or receive further education or training. Al though minority youths predominately benefit from CETA, the program is open to any applicant from a low income back ground. Representatives from the offices of ad missions, financial aid, personnel and the ROTC delivered lectures on the services available to the high school students through those campus offices. City of Houston must pay After the lectures the youths toured var ious areas on campus ranging from the floriculture greenhouses to the automotive maintenance shops. The campus tours are meant to familiarize the high school students with educational and related job opportunities available at Texas A&M. The University provides disadvantaged youths with a va riety of jobs and apprenticeships on cam pus in cooperation with the CETA pro gram. Each year a number of young people with no training are accepted as appren tices in sheet metal work and other trades. They are paid while they learn. The CETA program aims to reach mainly high school students who are ready to work or receive training. Applicants for the program are screened according to the low income background requirement. Participants in the federally-funded program receive group and individual counseling that helps them identify their goals and interests. The counseling also at tempts to familiarize them with various aspects of getting and holding a job, cover ing such things as how to behave during an interview and why some jobs are lost. The Brazos Valley Development Coun cil administers the CETA program in Brazos County and six surrounding coun ties. The council is a regional planning commission concerned with the long- range physical, human, and economic re source development in the area. Special tours and briefings for groups of minority students through programs like CETA are only one way in which Texas A&M trys to attract minority students to the University. The Office of Admissions and Records Court upholds couple’s suit United Press International AUSTIN — A Houston couple injured in an auto accident caused by the negli gence of a city police officer can collect $101,307.46 in damages from the city of Houston, the Texas Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. Arnold and Mary LeBlanc also paid $9,992.54 by the insurance company of officer Ronald G. Hickman. A trial jury originally awarded the couple a total of $124,864, but the Court of Civil Appeals ruled that judgment ex ceeded a Texas Tort Claims Law provision limiting awards to $100,000 per person. The city appealed, contending the jury \ * Now just a minute... lie train crossing’s protective arms are a safety feature well- Jjpreciated and respected when they drop, except when there is no j;in coming. Wednesday afternoon the arms were dropping every few Battalion photo by Pat O’Malley minutes, raising up, then dropping back down again all with no train in sight. A few persons were delayed on their way to classes or work perhaps, but the episode lasted only ten minutes. failed to consider the payments already made by Hickman’s insurance company to the LeBlancs, and that the city was re leased from liability at the time the LeB lancs signed a statement releasing Hickman. The Supreme Court rejected those ar guments and upheld the $101,307.46 judgment against the city. Records in the case show the police car driven by Hickman hit the rear of a pickup truck on Interstate 10 on Sept. 2, 1972, triggering a multi-car accident. The pic kup was spun around, and hit by a van driven by LeBlanc. Witnesses said Hickman was driving 70 to 80 miles an hour when he hit the pic kup. The investigating officer estimated Hickman’s speed at 65 to 70, but did not give him a ticket. The trial jury ruled Hickman was negli gent in his speed and in failing to keep a proper lookout. In other cases Wednesday, the court: —Ruled the city of Mesquite improp erly denied Aladdin’s Castle Inc. a license to operate a coin-operated amusement business, and ordered the license issued. The Supreme Court declined to rule, however, on the constitutionality of a city ordinance permitting licenses to be re jected if applicants have “connections with criminal elements.” A lower court had de clared that provision unconstitutionally vague. —Ruled three passengers injured in a North Texas auto accident are entitled to collect damages from the insurance com pany of the driver’s father. —Ruled the Public Utility Commission has authority to set interim rates pending appeal of rate cases it considers. The city of Corpus Christi had challenged an interim rate set by the commission before the PUC granted a $23 million permanent rate inrease to Central Power and Light Co. —Rejected the appeal of Webb County in a suit by 97 taxpayers seeking to block relocation of the county courthouse. works with other federal programs such as Project Stay, Talent Search and LULAC in an attempt to recruit minority students and promotional literature routinely is sent to Black National Achievement Stu dents and outstanding two-year college graduates. The Office of Admissions and Records also conducts seminars to aid the Black Awareness Committee and the Committee for the Awareness of Mexican-American Culture in their recruitment efforts. Black and Mexican-American Texas A&M graduates cooperate with the Ad missions and Records office to work with prospective minority students. Despite these efforts minority enroll ment at Texas A&M remains low with minority students making up about two percent of the student population, accord ing to figures released by the Registrar’s Office. Oldest man boozes to 136 years July 4 United Press International BARTOW, Fla. — Charlie Smith celebrated his 136th birthday Tues day and said he still drinks as much booze as he can get and likes to smoke cigarettes, too. And on special occasions a piece of cake is a nice change of pace for Charlie, who may well be the oldest man in the world as well as the United States. Getting booze at the Bartow Con valescent Center, Charlie’s home since 1972, can be a problem, of course. He solved it by refusing to take his vitamins until the staff agreed to provide a shot of rum to wash them down. However, Charlie prefers to cel ebrate with rye. “I like to drink rye whiskey,” said Smith, perched in his wheelchair. “I drink it neat and I smokes ciga rettes. Nothing wrong with that.” At the Fourth of July party mark ing Charlie’s record birthday, other residents of the nursing home sang and presented him with a birthday cake without candles. Missonia Stephens, the center’s activities director, said America’s oldest man, who nods off frequently and whose memory fades in and out, “was really sharp” for his birthday. “I’m still growing” was Charlie only comment — an apparent pre diction that he expects to be around for the next Fourth of July. Dr. Frederick Charatan, a geriat ric psychiatrist who interviewed the bald, wizened man every day for a week, said he was astonished by Charlie’s condition. Charatan, of the Long Island Jewish-Hillside Medical Center, in New Hyde Park, N.Y., said “It can be demonstrated that he is defi nitely 120 and, in all probability, it appears that he is close to 136.”