The Battalion Vol. 72 No. 71 Wednesday, December 13, 1978 News Dept. 845-2611 12 Pages College Station, Texas Business Dept. 845-2611 Batt staff plans hibernation This is the last Battalion of the cation will be resumed Jan. 15, the semester. Issues will be printed Jan. first day of the spring semester. 3 and Jan. 10. Regular weekly publi- suspects ought in oca! killing theriffs officers are looking for four per- jh two males and two females, in con- tion with the beating death of a rtson County man early Tuesday. : dead man has been identified as jyear-old Timothy Michael Merka, a J3 Texas A&M University graduate, ose address is listed as Rt. 1, Box 41B, ame. tlerkas body was found Tuesday morn- on Sandy Point Road north of Bryan, apparently died from massive head in- es. Police identified a tire tool and inner, found near the body, as probable irder weapons. Police, working with witness accounts, they think the four suspects stopped irka to ask for help in jumping the bat- of the gold 1971 Torino they were ring. Merkas wallet was stolen. The ipects then drove away in his pickup ick, which was found abandoned later isday on West 19th Street outside the an city limits. Police say the Torino i is listed as a stolen vehicle. Sheriff's officers are continuing the in stigation after lifting fingerprints from e vehicles. Sheriff Bobby Yeager said Ij. , ednesday morning that the suspects are 'l hen in ||ved to he from this area. Merka is survived by a wife and four ung children. They live outside Mum- id in south Robertson Countv. : Vilson deal r o maintain onfidence’ legua ft diet ds orned risoni u ikoi UO >day ons: 1930 ion: ion nter) 184 IFF By DILLARD STONE Battalion Staff iuilding confidence in Texas A&M iversity’s athletic program was the main »m in awarding Tom Wilson a three- contract as head football coach, said Charles Samson, chairman of the Ath- c Council. amson said the council agreed upon a ee-year contract for Wilson “so that pro- etive recruits would not feel dis- hanted about coming here. Vilson’s contract, although set for three rs, will actually encompass three and a years since he assumed the job halfway ugh this football season. It expires Jan 1981. Is head coach, Wilson will receive 000 per year, Samson said. “Of course, chs salaries are subject to review on an ual basis, he said. ormer head coach Emory Bellard will paid through Aug. 31, 1979, the end of academic year. Bellard’s salary at his ignation was $50,000. samson expressed the Athletic Council s dings on Bellard’s remuneration: The resignation was an unfortunate ation, and Coach Bellard had certainly len dedicated service to the school, ese circumstances merited our decision honor his salary through August,” he Id. The Atheletic Council’s recommenda- regarding the position of head coach made to the Board of Regents, which ve final approval. Another Aggie Tradition Freshman Kelly Steed of Port Arthur and sopho- Yule plant is hanging in the first floor hallway of more David Garnett of Houston show a little Krueger. Christmas spirit beneath a branch of mistletoe. The Battalion photo by Ava King Yuletide tire tables for Aggies During the holidays various campus facilities will have altered schedules. The library will be open Thursday from 7:30 a.in. until 1 a.m. Friday it will he open 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday and Sun day 1-5 p.m. From Monday through Dee. 21, the hours will be from 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. On the 22nd 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and the 23rd 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. The library will be closed from Dec. 24-25. From Dee. 26-29 it will open from 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. The 30th the hours will be 10 a.m.- 2 p.m., and then closed until Jan. 2 when it will be open 8 a.m.- 5 p.m., through Jan. 5, with weekend hours of 1-5 p.m. The Health Center will close com pletely at 5 p.m. Dec. 21 until it reopens Jan. 2, when it resumes 8 a.m.- 4 p.m. hours. Sbisa will serve the campus’s last eve ning meal Friday from 4:15-6:30 p.m. Duncan and the Commons will close after lunch. All three food factories will open for breakfast Jan. 15. Most snack bars will close Dec. 15-Jan. 14, except the Vet School s which will close on the 21st and reopen on Jan. 2. Vet students will eat from the 2nd until the 15th in the MSC cafeteria at which time they 11 eat in Sbisa. Deware Field House will be open for neo-jocks and others from 8 a.m.-10 p.m. every day. The MSC will he closed at 5 p.m. Dec. 21 until Jan 2. That includes the Rudder Tower complex. The MSC Post Office will use abbreviated hours from 10-11 a.m. during most of that time. Archer Parr’s career over? United Press International BROWNSVILLE — By imposing a re stricted 10-year probation, a district judge apparently has ended the political career of Archer Parr so that Duval County can “grow up and mature politically.” Parr, a former Duval County judge and nephew of longtime political boss George B. Parr, the “Duke of Duval,” Tuesday pleaded guilty to one felony count of theft of services over $10,000 in return that six other charges be dropped. According to the 10-year probation im posed by District Judge Darrell Hester, Parr must make a $25,000 restitution move from Duval to Nueces County and not leave it without court permission. Hester said Parr cannot seek public office, support political candidates nor try to influence them. “You have served 41 months in prison and further imprisonment would serve no good purpose,” Hester told Parr. “If we have you unde supervision for 10 years, maybe the county can grow up and mature politically.” Parr, 53, was released from a federal prison in Texarkana Dec. 6 after serving three years and six months of a 10-year sentence for lying to a federal grand jury during a 1974 investigation of the corrupt political machine of Duval County. Parr, who served 16 years as county judge, his uncle, George, and great-uncle, the late Sen. Archie Parr, had ruled the South Texas county for six decades until federal and state authorities began investi gations that led to more than 100 indict ments. Computers keep holiday hours, too United Press International The University computing centers have posted operating hours for the Christmas holidays. Any changes in scheduled hours will be posted at the computing centers. Teague Computing Center (TCC) is lo cated on the ground floor of the Olin E. Teague Building, The Zachry Computing Center (ZCC) is on the ground floor of Zac hry Engineering Center, the Remote Computing Center (RCC) is in the old Cushing Library, and the Kleberg Com puting Center (KCC) is in the Kleberg Animal and Food Science Center on the West Campus. TCC 12-15 — 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. 12-16 — 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. 12-17 — 1 p.m. - 10 p.m. 12-18 - 12-20 — 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. 12-21 - 12-22 — 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. 12-23 — 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. I2'24 — 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. 12-25 — CLOSED 12-26 - 12-29 — 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. 12-30 — 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. 12-31 — 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. 1-1 — CLOSED 1-2 - 1-5 — 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. 1-6 — 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. 1-7 — 1 p.m. - 7 p.m. 1-8 - 1-12 — 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. 1-13 — 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. 1-14 — 1 p.m. - 10 p.m. ZCC and KCC 12-15 — 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. 12-16 - 12-17 — CLOSED 12-18 - 12-21 — 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. 12-22 - 1-1 — CLOSED 1-2 - 1-5 — 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1_6 - 1-7 — CLOSED 1-8 - 1-12 — 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1-13 - 1-14 — CLOSED RCC 12-15 - 12-21 — same as ZCC and KCC 12-22 - 1-14 —CLOSED Regular schedules will resume on Jan. 15. The help desk in Room 6B Teague will be closed Dec. 22 to Jan. 1 and will resume regular schedule on Jan. 2. No Yule songs heard from Vienna Choir VIENNA — The famous Vienna Boys Choir will be prevented by child labor laws from singing their traditional carols this Christmas for the first time in nearly 500 years, their director said Tuesday. “It has never happened since the Boys Choir was founded by the Hapsburg monarchs in 1498,” said Director Walter Tautschnig. “We regret it very much, but we can’t help it.” Tautschnig, who has directed the choir for the past 23 years, said somebody has discovered that child labor laws forbid chil dren under 15 years of age to work during school holidays. “As a result, our choir will be prevented from performing on Christmas Eve and six other days during the coming Christmas school holidays,” Tautschnig said. The Vienna Boys Choir sings every Sun day morning at Catholic Church services in the Hofburg chapel attached to the former imperial palace in the heart of town. Their traditional Christmas songs include “Silent Night” and several other carols. Tautschnig said it is hoped parliament will pass a revised version of the child lavor laws next year that would skip the prohibi tion of work during school holidays. lease mm Hr*** on * Brazos ambulance service Officials to discuss medical care now provided. •■**** 3 By SCOTT PENDLETON Battalion Staff State and local officials will meet Dec. 19 to discuss the status of ambu lance services in Brazos County and the possibility of one county-wide service. The county judge, the mayors and city managers of Bryan and College Station, and representatives from Mid-Tex ambulance service, Texas A&M University, and St. Joseph Hospital will attend the meeting. The participants will discuss the kind of emergency medical service they provide. Rod Dennison, a field consultant for the Emergency Medical Services division of the Texas Department of Health will evaluate the county’s emergency facilities and discuss pos sible improvements with the offi cials. The meeting will be held at the Brazos Valley Development Coun cil. Bryan Mayor Richard Smith initi ated the talks about establishing a county-wide service partly in re sponse to the city’s ambulance prob lems. Last October Mid-Tex Ambulance Co., which provides the city’s ambu lance service, requested a subsidy from the Bryan City Council to make up uncollected fees. The city council agreed to provide a $2,000 per month subsidy as a tem porary measure until another alter native could be found. But acting city manager Hubert Nelson said that that wasn’t Smith’s only reason. “The mayor has been concerned about an area-wide seivice since be fore that,” Nelson said. “There’s a need for us to coordi nate what we do and not have one guy going off half-cocked,” he said. College Station officials are not very enthusiastic about a county wide service right now. “We feel reasonably satisfied that we have a good emergency medical service, adequate control, person nel, and training. We don’t refuse service to anyone,” Bardell said. “We don’t see any advantage to going to a county system,” he said. But he said that if a county system was less expensive without lessening the quality of service. College Sta tion would consider it. Operating the ambulance service costs the city about $90,000 annu ally, Bardell estimated. The two city and county govern ment have been trying to provide an ambulance service since October of 1973. That month three local funeral homes announced that they would cease to offer ambulance service ef fective Jan. 1, 1974. The need to continue having an ambulance service was very real. Among a population of 100,000 — the approximate size of Brazos County — there will be 293 fatal heart attacks, 27.2 highway deaths, and 27.4 deaths from other accidents each year, Management Information Service reports. As many as 20 percent of the deaths in the first and second group could be prevented, the report esti mates, by effective and prompt at tention at the scene. To date, Brazos County has had funeral home service, a private county-wide service, a private serv ice, a private service receiving a sub- People die sidy, and a fire department ambu lance service. The last two currently operate in Bryan and College Station respec tively. Bryan has contracted Mid-Tex, a private company owned by Bill Thornal, to provide the city’s ambu lance service. Mid-Tex also takes calls from any where in the county, including Col lege Station if requested. Mid-Tex handles all the transfer calls in the county. A transfer call involves moving a patient from one ■ needlessly By SCOTT PENDLETON Battalion Staff Sixty thousand people die needlessly each year for lack of prompt and effective treatment at the scene of an injury or accident. An additional 25,000 people are permanently injured or disabled each year by untrained ambulance attendants and rescue workers. The reason is that many ambulance services, especially in rural areas, continue to operate with obsolete equipment, poorly trained attendants, and insufficient supplies. The above estimates appeared in the August-September, 1973 issue of Health Service Reports. Only partial progress toward implementing better emergency medical services has been made since then. Two related articles appear on page eight and nine. The first article explains the federal government’s commitment to improving emergency medical services and the obstacles it faces. The second article deals with emergency medical service, and the lack of it, in Texas. Local resistance to improvement, aided by an obsolete state law, allows many ambulance services to operate in open violation of ambulance regulations. possible improvements hospital to another one usually out of the county. The company has one modular ambulance and three other ambu lances. All the ambulances meet the state registery requirements, which are more exacting than those for the state permit. Mid-Tex employs about 12 people to work as attendants, Thornal esti mated. All of Mid-Tex’s employees are Emergency Medical Technicians or Emergency Care Attendants, Thor nal said. It takes 120 hours of training to be an EMT and 24 hours of train ing to be an EGA. The College Station fire depart ment provides that city’s emergency medical service. The fire depart ment will take an ambulance call anywhere in the county, Bardell said. The city has three modular ambu lances, the last just purchased a few weeks ago for over $31,000. The 30 College Station firemen at tend the ambulances. All the fire men are EMTs, Bardell said. From 1974 to 1977 Brazos County received federal assistance to im prove its emergency medical serv ices. The BVDC administered the in dependant grant from the Depart ment of Health, Education, and Welfare as part of assistance program that included Brazos and six other counties, Ellen Nelson said. Nelson was the program director of the BVDC’s emergency medical services program for its final six months. The county and two cities each bought a modular ambulance with matching federal funds. One of these is being used by Mid-Tex, and the other two by College Station. The funds were also used to buy bought radio communications equipment, emergency room equipment for St. Joseph Hospital, and to hold EMT classes. Nelson said. The grant period was intended to last five years. Nelson said, but the BVDC wasn’t able to justify it adequately after the third year. The problem was a lack of financial participation by some communities, she said. “It wouldn’t be fair for the federal government to spend money estab lishing emergency medical services unless the local communities were going to support it,” Nelson said. For instance, the seven counties needed to provide their emergency rooms with telemetry equipment (a cardiac monitoring device) and a physician 24 hours a day, she said. Not one emergency room in the seven-county region met those re quirements, Nelson said.