William F. Buckley Jr. ——— : V v-;r.|V’ , :kT ,'U>' Buckley: conservatism may be rising By STEVE LEE Battalion Campus Editor William F. Buckley Jr. proclaimed con servatism as “the politics of reality” in a lecture sponsored by the Great Issues committee Tuesday night at Rudder Au ditorium. The noted conservative author and col umnist made the remarks in the first of six “propositions” dealing with a possible re surgence of conservatism in America after recent elections. Buckley said that outlin ing these propositon was necessary in order to carefully answer the question of advanc ing conservatism. “Conservatism seeks to inquire of prob able, if not altogether predictable, human responses,” Buckley said, explaining his politics of reality. BUCKLEY CITED AN EXAMPLE of prices initially differing for the same prod uct in different states. He said, however, that these prices tend to equal out in the long run as the free enterprise system takes its course. He said the system is both “self starting and self-regulated” in nature, and said it is “surprising” that critics are often surprised when this occurs. Buckley’s second proposition was the idea that there is “an increasing popular knowledge of the unrealities of progressive economics.” He cited as example one of Sen. George McGovern’s proposed eco nomic remedies offered during the 1972 presidential campaign. McGovern proposed giving $1,000 to each person earning less than the national income average. Buckley said this proposal had a stunning impact, but that impact was opposite of what McGovern had intended. Persons earning above the $15,000 per year income level disliked the idea, accord ing to Buckley, saying they “didn’t fancy themselves in careers of philanthropy. ” THE IDEA WASN’T popular with per sons earning less than $12,000 per year because there would be a lack of work in centive. He said polls showed that McGovern’s plan, therefore, wasn’t popu lar with any significant group of people. Buckley said that McGovern then at tacked corporate executives’ salaries, in particular that of the president of Ford Motor Co., who earned about $400,000 in 1971. He pointed out the importance of the automobile industry and said that the pres ident made a very small percentage of each car sold. He then compared that salary to that of the Rolling Stones rock group on an American tour that year, saying that McGovern didn’t bother to question the group’s salaries. Leading into his third proposition, Buckley said there is a “diminishing of ig norance” regarding the mechanics of in come redistribution. Income redistribu tion would appropriate more income from the wealthy to other areas of the economy. USING FIGURES FROM 1971 to illus trate his point, Buckley said the “very rich,” which he identified as those making $50,000 or above annually, comprise less than 1 percent of the population. Based upon a total taxable income of $29 billion, this group provided a total of $12.3 billion that year, or an average of $37,500 apiece, Buckley said. “If the government were to confiscate the whole of the remaining income, leaving them penniless, he said, “we would bring in an additional $16 billion, or enough to pay the cost of the federal budget for two weeks. Buckley said that although the wealthy already pay a large sum, they could not contribute on the scale that the govern ment is spending. Buckley further identified a “diminish ing of the redistribution myth in his fourth proposition by saying that the idea of “spontaneous generation of money in Washington is growing weaker. He said, for example, that the concept of a na tionalized agricultural program, which would supposedly provide free food for the nation, is becoming less popular since it would involve a spontaneous flow of money from Washington. Rather, he said, there is a flow of money from state to state for social and various other programs. IN HIS FIFTH proposition, Buckley said it is useless to proclaim utilitarianism — the doctrine that the most people should benefit — and disguise it as democracy — the doctrine that all people should benefit. As an example, he examined the praise expressed for Mao Tse Tung upon the leader’s death. What many chose to ne glect, said Buckley, was that many people were exploited for the supposed good of the country. Buckley used a quote from economist John Stewart Mill to underscore his sixth and last proposition. HE RELATED MILL’S stand on equality to a possible remedy for the in come tax system. Buckley suggested the elimination of the progressive income tax method, under which the wealthy bear a larger percentage of the tax burden. In stead, he would support a 15 percent taxa tion on income for all people, thus instilling Mill’s doctrine of equality for all, he said. rr' 1 The UT tickets sent back Wally Groff, assistant athletic director for business affairs, returned 1,000 tickets for Friday’s game to the University of Texas Tuesday afternoon. The University of Texas initially sent 7,700 tickets for Texas A&M students. About 5,400 tickets were distributed Monday and only 700 tickets were distrib- uted Tuesday. Battalion Vol. 72 No. 62 News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Wednesday, November 29, 1978 College Station, Texas 16 Pages Sports Unsung Hero: in to meet at will be i. kickoff. xas-Texas j0-20-5, A&M regents approve $26 million contracts Contracts totaling more than $26 million |were awarded Tuesday by The Texas University System Board of Regents Ifor additional academic facilities and space |for state agencies headquartered here. The largest contract, $11,889,000, went ItoB-F-W Construction Co. Inc. of Temple Ifor construction of the six-story Academic land Agency Building. The 257,900- |square-foot structure will house Texas [A&M’s College of Business Administra- Mon, English Department and Institute of [Statistics, as well as portions of the Texas [Transportation Institute, Texas Real Es- jtate Research Center, Texas A&M Re- [search Foundation and remote facilities for [the Data Processing Center, which also [serves several state agencies. Texas A&M officials noted the building, [which will be one of the largest on cam pus, will be built at a 45-degree angle in relation to all other major buildings on campus for optimum solar orientation to conserve energy. A $9,063,000 contract was awarded to ^Zapata Warrior Constructors of Houston for a two-story 103,440-square-foot clinical sciences building for Texas A&M’s College [ofVeterinary Medicine. Other contracts for projects on the Col- ;ge Station campus: $1,918,850 to R.B. Butler Inc. of Bryan for the 28,199- t square-foot second phase of the food pro tein center; $1,230,000 to Drew Woods Inc. of Carthage for expansion of the heat ing and chilled water plant on the new western portion of the campus, and $353,639 to Mechanical Specialties Inc. of Houston for renovation of the old biologi cal sciences building. “These new facilities will greatly enhance our capability to serve our grow ing student body and meet needs as sociated with our increased research and public service activities, but we will still fall short of generally accepted standards for space per student,” said Texas A&M President Jarvis E. Miller. Thurmond and Stuart of Bryan will build a general purpose facility at the Texas A&M Research and Extension Cen ter at Bryan under a $1,722,400 contract. The 36,300-square-foot building will serve both the Texas Engineerimg Experiment Station and the Texas Engineering Exten sion Service. The regents also awarded three other contracts for projects in Galveston, Sonora and Stephenville. LEM Construction Co. of Stafford received a $294,639 contract for a parking lot at the new classroom- laboratory building at Moody College in Galveston. A meeting facility will be added to the Texas A&M Agricultural Re search Station at Sonora under a $164,176 contract with Wilbur L. Brown Contractor of San Angelo. Tarleton State University will gain a new horse management labora tory under a $94,700 contract awarded to Phillip Hale Construction Co. of Stephen ville. Additionally, the regents appropriated $247,000 for detailed design of waste water treatment plant expansion and re novation of the mechanical engineering shops at Texas A&M, additional fecilities and equipment at the Texas A&M Agricul tural Research Center at McGregor and a slaughterhouse at Tarleton. In other business, the regents au thorized Texas A&M and Prairie View A&M University to seek approval of the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System for new degree pro grams. Texas A&M is requesting new bachelor of science degree programs in mining engineering and political science. Prairie View will petition for new de gree programs in industrial and chemical engineering and a master of science de gree in engineering. Frank X. McNerney of New Orleans, George P. Mitchell of Houston and Ed ward H. Harte of Corpus Christi were reappointed to the Moody College Board of Visitors. Their terms on the advisory group now extend through Dec. 31, 1981. Teague comes home for a visit By DOUG GRAHAM Battalion Staff Clin E. “Tiger” Teague returned home to Bryan and the 6th Congres sional District Tuesday for a short visit with friends and relatives. Teague still is recovering from a recent prostate gland operation and a stroke he suffered in early Sep tember. He lias been recuperating at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Mary land. Teague said he was told his kidneys were failing, but reported that his condition seems to have im proved after the prostate operation. The Democratic congressman flies back to Washington, D.C., to day, however, to check back with his doctors. “I came up here just because my doctors gave me permission to gel out a little bit,” he said. “I had no purpose except to say hello and thanks to my friends and the press.” Teague has served as representa tive for the 6th District for 32 years. Upon retiring, he will be succeeded by Democrat Phil Gramm. Teague will be ending a career as a ranking member of the House Committee on Science and Technology. Before receiving that assignment, he worked on the Vet erans Affairs Committee, He spon sored the bill that made widows and orphans of servicemen killed in war eligible for the same benefits as if the men were still alive. That bill took 12 years to pass, it got passed was I be- of the committee,” As a member of the science and technology committee, Teague said he saw the United States’ space ef fort from the very beginning. ‘T started out believing it couldn’t be done,” he said, referring to the go on display with those of other prominent former students. Teague spoke on several political subjects. He said be did not support giving the District of Columbia senators and separate representa tives. “It doesn’t belong just to the “fe who live there,” he said. “It But he said he was soon con vinced it was possible to reach the moon, and went about obtaining funds for NASA. “It was the most interesting part of my life,” he said, but added that “1 still get letters saying, ’you old bony, those moon rocks are just otn West Texas.’” Teague received a Buck Schiwetz ng of King Ranch in South >m the SCO N A committee . A&M University. Teague g been a supporter of the porary affairs group, a luncheon with Texas A&M student leaders, Teague donated his Senior Class ring to the Association of Former Students. Teague has lost n his hands and is unable to 3 wearing the ring from the The ring is expected to longs to everybody , hope it never comes about, but I’m afraid it is going to.” Teague also said inflation is the country’s biggest problem, but that President Carter will have a hard time implementing an austerity program. Everyone is willing to have other people’s projects cut hut not their own, he said. One place that could be trimmed, be said, are congressional operating budgets. He said he turns back about $50,000 of the $200,000 per year he receives for staff. “Instead of hiring an extra re search assistant on agricultural prob lems, 1 can go talk to the Texas rep resentative on the agriculture com mittee and And out exactly what I want to know,” he said. with persons who had sponsored a dinner in his honor Sept. 16. The dinner was canceled when along with a science symposium in Bookmaking — one of many links found in area gambling chains Editor’s note: This is the second of three articles on gambling in and around Bryan-College Station. The reporter spent three months researching the story as an observer and through interviews. Because of the sensitive nature of the ma terial, the names of “inside” sources have been changed. The identity of the re porter also has been protected by the use of a pseudonym. Tomorrow, the final arti cle of this series will discuss the little- known connection between dogfighting and gambling. By BARNEY J. LEPERIE Special to The Battalion Friday, 6:30 p.m. The phone rings. “B.G. here.” “This is A.Z. of Hilton. What’s the line on the Dallas-Pittsburgh game?” “Pittsburgh by two points.” “O.K., get me down for a quarter on the Cowboys.” “That’s a quarter on the Cowboys plus two?” “Yeah. See ya.” Click. Click. THE CONVERSATION was between a neighborhood bookie operaring out of a Bryan recreational facility and one of his regular customers. The “line” is the point spread, a “quarter” is $250, and “A.Z. of Hilton” is a code name to conceal the iden tity of the person who is making the bet. Bookmaking is just one form of illegal gambling going on in the Bryan-College Station area, some of which is for very high stakes. The local activity is only a tiny stroke in a complex nationwide picture. In bars, pool rooms, bowling alleys, casinos, at legal and illegal race tracks, at golf courses, at well-disguised dogfight and cockfight pits all across the country, men and women, sometimes compulsively driven, are placing bets every day of the week. GAMBLING IS IN their blood. They speak a language all their own and they pursue a unique lifestyle. They gamble and lose, gamble and win, gamble and break even. It doesn’t matter. They continue the chase, certain of one day proving that their “system” works. The more money involved, the more in tense the “chase” becomes. And the more pressing becomes the gambler’s need for money. He may support his habit from his paycheck, loans from a loan shark, legiti mate bank loans or his wife’s paycheck. He may even resort to burglary or embezzle ment. It’s the same as the addict getting a “fix” or the alcoholic taking a drink. Gambling can become a serious sickness — a com pulsion that inflicts pain and heartache on parents, spouses and children. STEVE (NOT HIS real name) is a 22- year-old junior at Texas A&M University. He comes from a well-to-do family in Houston. His introduction to gambling came when he was 13 when he began ob serving his father’s weekly poker games. He learned the ropes of card playing from his dad and took part in low-stakes games during his high-school days. Heavier bet ting on the golf course followed and now he is into betting on football — a passion he has indulged in the last three years. “I work, get money from my parent, have bookies ride my losses for awhile, ” he says. “There are always ways to get the cash. I once had to borrow $1,000 from the bank for a pay-off, got an older gambling friend of mine to co-sign a 90-day note loan. I just knew I would be able to get myself out of the hole in three months, be able to pay off the loan and be in the clear.” BUT THINGS didn’t work that way. “I got on a losing streak for weeks, I was broke and there was no way I could go to my parents and explain what had hap pened. I was in a real jam so I managed a school loan out of the financial-aid office — one of those you pay back after graduation. That gave me plenty of rime to work things out and preserve my sanity.” Steve is only one of the 40 million Americans who bet on football games at some rime during the season, according to a national poll printed in TV Guide magazine. Football is only a part of the picture. Gambling in the United States, despite all the federal and state restrictions against it, may be considered one of the country’s leading industries, both in the number of participants and the amount of money in volved. MILLIONS OF Americans gamble an estimated $400 billion annually — only an eighth of which is wagered legally. In Texas alone, more than $750 million is bet annually during football season, ac cording the the Texas Department of Pub lic Safety. In Bryan-College Station, a prospective bettor can talk to “X.Y.” (not his real in itials) who hangs out at a popular recre ational facility or “Cooky the Bookie, ” (not his real name) who operates out of a pri vate club. Cooky is considered to be one of the bigger books in town because he hand les the “high-roller” traffic. One might also try one of the gambling restaurant operators in town. Lt. Gene Knowles of the Bryan Police Department and Capt. Jim Reamer of Col lege Station say there are no statistics on illegal gambling in the city. BUT THE ACTION is here for anyone who knows where to look. Ask any of the seven bookies operating locally. It is relatively easy for a bettor and a bookie to establish contact. I’ve done it. So have lots of others. “This place has got a much dirt as any big city,” one Texas A&M professor said. “They’re just afraid to expose it.” We were having a drink at a local lounge whose owner is said to be a heavy bettor. Once you know how to contact you local bookmaker, you should take a few pre cautions. Check on his past perform ances. Does the bookmaker always pay up? Will the bookie give the best handicap (point spread, “line“) available? How high is the transaction cost (the “juice” or . “vigorish”)? How are tie games resolved? THE BOOKMAKER, if he is smart, will check out his potential bettor, includ ing his credit record. “B.G.,” who began his bookmaking business in Austin, complained of getting stiffed too often by bettors who wouldn’t pay their losses. That is why he is operat ing here now. Most bets can be placed on credit. The bettor and bookie will agree that until one party owes the other some prearranged amount, no cash will be exchanged. The amount “B.G.” and I have agreed upon is $100 since I am betting on a rela tively small scale — $25 a game. Most bookies will get their line out on the Wednesday preceding the weekend games and will accept bets until just be fore kickoff. Many large-scale bookies have agents or “runners” to handle wagers and the numerous telephone calls. The bettor will be given an account number or code name by which to identify himself when placing the bets, as in the opening lines of this article. JUST AS THE odds on the tote board in horse racing constantly change, so can the bookie’s line. Get your bet down early because what he quotes you on Wednesday will be the best “line possible and your contract with him cannot be changed even if he is forced to adjust the Ine in the latter part of the week. The bookie does this to minimize his po tential loss and to even up the amount bet on the competing teams. The final stage of your transaction with the bookies is the pay-off and the “juice. ” For instance, you bet $25 on the Colts and you gain the point spread. The point spread is Philadelphia Eagles five over the Baltimore Colts. Philadelphia defeats the Colts 17-10. BY APPLYING the line, the score would still give a victory to the Eagles by a two point margin (17-15). Consequently you would owe the bookie $25 for the bet and $5 for the “juice,” 20 percent of the amount wagered. The juice is paid only when the bettor loses. The customary juice is 10 percent (amounts from $50 to $300), 20 percent for small bets ($50 and down) and 5 percent for very good customers ($300 and up; those who bet heavily, lose and pay up regularly). Of course, these variables and figures can change depending on who you are dealing with and on the competitive mar ket for bookmakers in the city.