Battalion Wednesday, July 26, 1978 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Inside Wednesday: • Dr. Clinton Phillips to serve as acting dean of the College of Business Administration - p. 3. • Picture page on the Firemen’s Training School - p. 6-7. • Pete Rose hits new NL record ^ -P- 9- dormitories et go-ahead vote By LEE ROY LESCHPER Jr. Battalion News Editor lew dormitories to house 500 Texas A&M University Jen students have come a step closer to reality, pie University System Board of Regents appropriated J,000 Tuesday for design of two women’s dormitories. The (■fabricated construction dorms could probably he com ped by August, 1979, University officials said. Juring a board committee meeting Monday several regents ■ said they wanted to consider construction of another dor- liti y complex similar to the University’s Krueger-Dunn- ■her-Aston complex. But any action on such a complex is ■e time away, they said. Ae two new women’s dorms will be built west of the Uni- Mity s All-Faith s Chapel. Bie board also voted to grant the city of Prairie View an ■ment to lay a sewage line across Prairie View A&M Uni- Bity's campus to the university’s sewage treatment plant. A te between the city and university had developed over a hgc line the i ity had laid across the campus earlier this That dispute culminated in Prairie View’s mayor ordering ■lie View'A&M President A. 1. Thomas arrested for having ■ line disconnected. pit the city and Prairie View V&M have resolved most ol differences, and granting the easement is a “show of good i,” System Attorney James Bond told the hoard. The city university' still have to agree on a rate structure under Ji the university will treat the city’s sewage. During its meeting Tuesday the board approved sale of bonds worth more than $41 million in four bond issues. Those bonds will finance construction of health and physical educa tion facilities, expansion of the Kyle Field football stadium, and retirement of previously-issued Texas A&M and Prairie View A&M bonds. The board approved two formal policy statements that will have long-range effects on the University system. Those state ments were: the updated 5-year master plan for Texas A&M growth and development; and a formalized University system investment policy. The master plan, required by the State Coordinating Board of Colleges and Universities, outlines Texas A&M’s goals, plans and guidelines for operation and growth over the next 5 years. The investment policy, established in principle by the regents at their last meeting, gives System Chancellor Jack Williams authority over almost all investments made within the system. Before that investment policy was revised, the president of each of the system’s universities had had authority for invest ment of the funds connected with his university. The regents appropriated $13,000 for design work on con- ' verting the stadium lights from to be removed from Kyle Field to use as a lighting system for the intramural sports fields on the University’s west campus. The board also granted a $6 per semester price increase in Texas A&M’s optional laundry fee. Officials from the Bryan firm handling the University laundry service had said in re questing the increase that rising costs make the price increase necessary. est Texas town pays ew taxes, cuts spending United Press International IAAN — Until a year ago, this town m Bbome of Alley Oop x year one hank and two Jds —was a city without a tax. flic West Texas town of 1,050 has a one percent sales tax that contributed about S17,000 to city coffers the first eight nonths it was collected. Bhis town was incorporated in the early ,950v We survived until now without any ■it all," Mayor John Kniveton said. ■ut what is preventing a taxpayers re- liolt is that while residents pay a small V jfily and school tax, they don’t pay a city erty tax. Kniveton said the commun es along fine without it. JiVe just don’t believe in spending more we ve got available, he said. “The iiple pay for what they want. II it’s un productive, we don’t have it.” Iraan is among about 25 cities in the state that the Texas Municipal League says has no city property taxes such as those that sparked the controversial Proposition 13 vote in California to trim government spending. Economics was the reason the budget- conscious town opted for the sales tax rather than a property tax when it needed more money. “The sales tax is automatic,’’ Kniveton said. “The state collects it for all cities. It doesn’t cost anything to administer.” Except for the sales tax, the $220, (KX) annual budget is derived from city-owned utilities. Volunteers also run the Fire De partment and ambulance service. Pecos County sits atop one of the na tion’s largest oil fields. The $250 million forwarded each year to the county by the petroleum industry helps keep school taxes low. V.T. Hamlin was working in Iraan as a newspaper reporter during the oil boom days when he had the idea for the comic strip “Alley Oop. Kniveton said folks in Iraan are “thril led" about passage of Proposition 13 be cause it indicates a trend toward what they have operated all along — efficient gov ernment. “It’s everybody’s money,’ Kniveton said. “Who is the government? It’s all ot us. I think that’s what we’ve lost sight of. You individually and I individually)!know there’s a limit to what we can afford and what we can have.” It's been a long day Thoughts of a cold beer, a long shower or a little training at the Firemen s Training School. See re rest dance through Fireman Aaron Younger’s head. lated photos on pages 6 and 7. Battalion photo by Pat O’Malley h |enior citizens’ 'boom expected population next century Younger, from Marshall is tired after a hard day’s Run on traveler s checks expected Americans abroad as dollar value falls to new low feel pinch United Press International ■VASHINGTON — Thirty years ago, 'Hrly half of all men 65 and over were •nil Joyed or seeking jobs. Today, among Iple 65 and over, only one man in five lone woman in twelve are in the work- But two Cabinet members and other j^Berts question whether the nation can ^^>rd the trend toward early retirement especially when the people born in the Jt World War II baby boom become I nor citizens. IVitnesses at recent hearings of the Se- le Special Committee on Aging testified , I the percentages of those working over hf and expressed concern about the So- ~ Security costs and the loss of skilled Jrkers to early retirement. Secretary of Health, Education and jifare Joseph Califano told the commit- ft other changes also are taking place Bich may require a reconsideration of the lole U.S. policy on work and retire- |nt. People are living longer, he said. In B40, the average life expectancy at birth s63.5 years — now it is 69 for men, 77 [or women. Three-fourths of the popula- now reaches 65 and, once there, lives l he average to 81. i'We are at the dawn of the first four- jnerational society in the history of our nation,” said Califano. The baby boom following World War II, Califano said, will become a “senior boom’ in the early 21st century. In 1940, seven percent of the population was 65 or over; today it is 11 percent; by 2030 it will be nearly 20 percent. Today six active workers support one in retirement. By 2030, the ratio is expected to be 3-to-l, and under present trends, the federal government will have to spend $635 billion by 2025 — up from $112 bill ion this year — for Social Security and other pensions, Medicare, welfare, food stamps and various other services for the elderly. This would be a growth from 24 percent to 40 percent of total federal outlays. Dr. Harold Sheppard, director of the Center on Work and Aging of the Ameri can Institutes for Research, said the com ing senior citizen boom means that by 2000, there will be eight million Ameri cans over 80 — 1.7 million more than had been projected as late as 1971. How will the increasing proportion of Americans in their early 60s in the next century support these octogenarians if they themselves are retired, he asked. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said it may be difficult to ensure older Americans a comfortable retirement by shifting money through Social Security, welfare and other programs. He said it will be necessary to expand employment opportunities for the elderly. Congress took one step in that direction last April when it raised from 65 to 70 the age at which a private employer can re quire a person to retire solely because of age, and removed the upper age limit of 70 for most federal workers. It also agreed to allow older Americans to earn larger amounts of money without losing Social Security benefits, and to in crease a worker’s retirement benefits by three percent for each year of work past 65. United Press International LONDON — Americans at home may shrug when the dollar tumbles against foreign currencies. Americans abroad wince. They were wincing hard Monday. Tourists as well as Americans who live overseas took an immediate financial beat ing when foreign exchange dealers de cided yet again that the "Almighty Dollar wasn’t. “Americans were shocked at the rate when exchanging over the counters Tues day,” said an American Express spokes man in London. “From what you can hear,” echoed an official of equally thronged Thomas Cook, “most of them think the rate will go lower still. Sooner or later the dollar’s slide will hit pocketbooks at home. Everything im ported will cost more, everything made or transported using imported oil will go up. Overseas the impact is now. “This is lousy,” said Stan Greenfield of Brooklyn as he peered at the Italian lire he had just received for his dollar checks in Rome. “The rate was supposed to be a lot better than this. But what can you do?” An American in London will pay $8.30 for a seat at the National Theater. Last week it was $8.11. In Germany, the stein of beer which cost $4.84 last week was $4.90. A howl of Italian pasta which could be had last week for $1.17 was about $1.20. A Japanese tape recorder that cost $123 in Tokyo a year ago costs $157 now. Americans who live abroad and are paid in dollars — all servicemen, for instance, or employees of American corporations — faced the fact that their rents have jumped, their local taxes have gone higher, everything they buy “on the economy costs more. Most European countries reported no instant run on dollar assets like traveller’s checks. But some said this may be because tourists haven’t yet gotten the word. “It usually takes a day or two before U.S. tourists realize what’s going on,” said an American Express official in Vienna. “They learn of changes in the dollar rate with a certain delay. From early morning onward, any tourist with eyes in London knew of Monday’s dollar plunge. Notice hoards at news stands on all main streets shouted “Dollar Falls to 34-year Low,” and banner head lines in London newspapers backed up the boards. So the usual places to cash traveler’s checks were extra busy. “We always have big queues after the weekend, but today there seemed to be a few more getting rid of dollars, the American Express spokesman said. Vienna reported tourist dollar-changing business “lively, Rome about normal. No other capitals recorded tourist stampedes. Nor did every price go up instantly. “We are not changing the dollar price of our rooms or souvenirs, said a spokesman for an American hotel chain in Stockholm. “It wouldn’t pay to change prices after jumps in exchange rates. College graduates failing ^professional licensing tests United Press International AUSTIN — Up to 75 percent of the :xas college graduates are failing profes- mal licensing tests, a Galveston senator d Tuesday. JSen. A.R. Schwartz, D-Galveston, Dliestioned four appointees to the State Billege Coordinating Board about statis- |cs he said that showed 50 percent of the i graduates of Texas colleges who take the » lamination to he licensed as architects |d 75 percent who take the certified pub- account test had failed. “We re finding out that four-year uni- irsities in this state are doing a lousy job of educating people, ” he said. “If you base anything on a testing average, they’re not accomplishing what they’re supposed to be accomplishing.” Harvey Weil of Corpus Christi, who has been on the Coordinating Board since its creation, said he was unaware of any test ing device to determine the effectiveness of instruction at state colleges and univer sities. “I do know we have a reputation nationwide for having a very good univer sity system,” Weil said. “I’m shocked to learn some of them are not doing well. ” Blackjack 6 counter sues Las Vegas casino Making a mess of a mess Construction workers seem to be piling the rubble even higher. These workers are on the crew rennovating Sbisa dining hall this summer with heavy equipment including an oversized air hammer. Battalion photo by Pat O’Malley United Press International DENVER— An attorney for the Amer ican Civil Liberties Union is handling the case of a Nevada blackjack player who filed suit'against a Las Vegas casino that barred him from gambling tables because he played the game too well. The case of Mark Estes is set for oral argument on Dec. 12, 1979, before the Nevada Supreme Court. Attorney Stephen Pevar of the Mountain States Re gional Office of the AGLU said he has filed a motion to expedite the hearing. Pevar said Saturday the suit contends the Las Vegas Hilton wants only losers gambling in its casino, not winners. The Nevada district court recently ruled that the casino, as a private business, could exclude anyone it pleased — as long as it didn’t discriminate against them on the basis of sex, race, or creed. Estes, a Las Vegas resident, was ejected in November 1976 from the gambling ta bles at the Hilton for “card counting.” He was arrested and spent the night in jail. Card counters use a system devised by mathematics professor Edward Thorp of the Massachusetts Institute of Technol ogy. In 1972, Thorp used a computer to come up with a system for winning at blackjack. In his book, “Beat the Dealer," Thorp explained his system of memorizing cards dealt to the player and adjusting bets ac cording to the number of “good” and “bad” cards remaining in the deck. Normally, the house wins about five percent of everything bet, said Pevar. A good card counter can reduce the odds to about two percent and a superb card counter may get the odds two percent in his favor, said the attorney. Pevar, who lives in Denver, said “The Hilton is saying that a blackjack player can’t use his mind when he is placing bets. ” He filed suit saying Estes had been discriminated against. “There is something inherently con temptible in the Hilton’s exclusion of card counters, allowing only those persons to play who are more certain to lose, said Pevar in his court brief. “It is akin to a major league baseball team refusing to play all but minor league teams. Pevar is appealing the case to the Nevada Supreme Court, arguing casinos must comply with constitutional mandates of due process and equal protection under the law because they are so closely con nected to th< supervises them.