Slouch By Jim Earle “When I stay in bed and take care of myself, I get jumped for cutting class! Now I ask you, are we committed to conserving energy or are we just giving lip service to it?” Opinion Mortgages changed by rule Home mortgages may never be the same again. The Great Squeeze of record interest rates has dried up home sales.lt was time to lubricate the whole business, and this week a federal agency moved to do precisely this. In response to pleas from lending institutions the federal Home Loan Bank Board broke with tradition and decided that thrift institutions (mainly savings and loan institutions) could begin offering variable-rate mortgages. Within limits, the interest charged on such loans henceforth can ris^opfalf. Some consumer groups oppose the board’s move, arguing that some homeowners (such as those living on fixed*ih'fcom- es) could be severely hurt if such rates continue to climb. This is a real concern that Congress should monitor closely. It would be disastrous to make home ownership more diffi cult than it already is, for many people. Yet the new ruling also protects borrowers in several ways. Mortgage rates could go up or down by no more than one-half percent a year. Lenders would have to pass on reductions in interest rates. The new approach would seem to encourage competition. Some would-be home buyers now may be wiling to take out, say, a 16-percent mortgage with some confidence that its rate will decline as interest levels begn to recede from their present peaks. Providence, R.I., Journal-Bulletin the small society by Briclcman [dFL/m^N H5 £AP 00 B 0 Jnnss. £UT IT£ A 4UAMB THAT IT MAP T? / AL0r& WM&N ALfZeAPY ^ ■ Hl^H- ©1980 Kr»o Features Syndicate. Inc World rights reserved. 4 The Battalion U S P S 045 360 LETTERS POLICY l^etUrs tn the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such lettirs and docs not guarantee to publish any letttr. bach letter must be signed, show the address of the uriter and list a telephone numlnr for verification. Address correspondence to Ij ttirs to the f.ditor. The Battalion. Boom 216. Reed McDonald Building. College Station. Texas 77643. Represented national!) by National Educational Adver tising Services. Inc New York City. Chicago and I>os Angeles. The Battalion is published Mondav through Fridav from iepfember through May except during exam and holidav )eriods ami the summer, when it is published on Tuesdav hrough Thursday. Mail subscriptions an- $16.75 per semester. $3.3.25 p« r choo) year. $3.5.00 per full year Advertising rates furnished n request. Address; The Battalion. Room 216. Reed McDonald Building. College Station. Texas 77H43. United Press International is entitled exclusivel) to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein reserved. S<*cond-Class postage* paid at College Station. T.X 77S43. MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Roy Bragg Associate Editor Keitli Taylor News Editor Rusty Cawley Asst. News Editor Karen Cornelison Copy Editor Dillard Stone Sports Editor Mike Burrichter Focus Editor Rhonda Watters City Editor. Louie Arthur Campus Editor Diane Blake Staff Writers Nancy Andersen,- Tricia Brunhart,Angelique Copeland, Laura Cortez, Meril Edwards, Carol Hancock, Kathleen McElroy, Debbie Nelson, Richard Oliver, Tim Sager, Steve Sisney, Becky Swanson, Andy Williams Chief Photographer Lynn Blanco Photographers Lee Roy Leschper, Steve Clark, Ed Cunnius, Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of Regents The Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Viewpoint The Battalion Thursday Texas A&M University April 10, 1980 GSA buys expensive furniture for federal wage council’s H.Q. The headed lems i in taken n professc Dr. J of chem prospec ing ene future t “Tm way,” N you (th self-sufl time. Y By DONALD LAMBRO United Press International WASHINGTON — When the General Services Administration furnished the office of a high-level White House official last April, money was no object. GSA bought the best in 18th century reproduc tions. The Chippendale chairs and end tables, Sheraton pedestal and cocktail tables, and custom covered sofa and chairs, which cost taxpayers $5,700, was, according to GSA auditors, a waste of money. The irony — if it can be called one — was that the furniture went into the office of the director of the President s Council on Wage and Price Stability, which is charged with holding down government spending to curb inflation. Its director, auditors said, shouldn’t be blamed for this bit of extravagance. GSA, circumventing agency rules, decided on its own that his office was entitled to some thing better than ordinary furniture. This is not an isolated case. It is one of many in an eyeopening internal GSA audit completed in February as part of an in teragency investigation into the govern ment’s seemingly unending furniture buying spree that costs taxpayers about $250 million a year. The audit found numerous cases in which GSA has engaged in ‘‘unnecessary procurement of new furniture for high- level officials” and other federal offices while government warehouses bulge with new and used furniture. It found “pervasive management prob lems” in the purchase, use, and storage of furniture, including “lack of understanding of regulatory requirements, disregard for administrative control, (and) the desire to please important people.” For example, the audit said GSA purch ased $672,000 in new furnishings last year just in the Washington region, an expendi ture that “could have been avoided,” if GSA had complied with its own regulations requiring use of existing new or used furni ture. The auditors said that in most instances GSA “failed to express a demonstrated need for new furniture,” noting that $314,800 in furniture bought to equip one downtown federal building was entirely unnecessary. “The furniture was procured without au thority, without approved funds, and with out any method to recover costs ex pended,” the audit said. “Furthermore, there was no determination that the occu pants of the building needed furniture and inappropriate types of furniture were pro cured.” The Council on Wage and Price Stability moved into the building in question, early last year. The White House agency already had adequate furniture in its previous loca tion but left it behind when it moved. The auditors said they were "unable to determine what happened to the old furni ture.” In other cases, they said, instead of just buying basic, useful furniture as needed, GSA is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars solely to “improve appearance, de cor or status of offices belonging to high- level GSA officials and their staffs.” One GSA furnishing project, which cost $5,100, included decorative “luxury items such as a custom-covered camelback sofa, wing chairs and mahogany reproductions of 18th century furniture” including a Chip pendale chest, drop leaf table, butler tray have it. McK counti should 1 b« table, and a Pembroke table. Federal regulations forbid than essential items for offices furniture procurement to the sive lines available. Sadly, the) “We found no evidence thi alternatives were considered, Unfortunately, this isonlyai; part of the government’s ibmitwi sa ga Og The audit details other cases one in which GSA last yerp $357,000 in furniture for its out# out fully considering the_ $400,000 worth of unused fnDL | hand.” GSA Administrator Rowland{§ III — who has recently placed furniture buying — ordered a inventory of all GSA-ownedand tore, but auditors say the att( The government still does not much furniture it has. Moreover, it does not know pens to millions of dollars in usajs KANM ture that is routinely listed as’ station wl which auditors suspect is bans day from junked. M>rth side 99.9FM, eminent £ I Despite eption KANM sc eration 1 Station explained to a combi the cable < the radio s pany wire the cable Midwes CBS reporter still has sense of humo By RICHARD H. GROWALD United Press International News persons in television talk muchly of Dan Rather’s gross salary and succession of CBS anchor Walter Cronkite. More wordage concerns Phil Jones, like the late James Dean, a celebrated rebel from Fairmount, Ind. The straw-haired Jones has won Emmy and other awards for his reporting for CBS news. But lately there has been howling. A Washington Post critic said Jones is too aggressive. He said Jones is “exhibitionis- tically scrappy. ’ He said Jones hits politi cians with “sneak attacks. Oh, how awful! Politicans, being so ap plauded in the republic, should, of course, be shielded from dead cats and eye gouging. Jones’ great crime is that he fights for access to what our leaders are saying and doing behind shut doors. Let us zoom in the camera: — At a 1970 Atlanta meeting of the American Bar Association Chief Justice Warren Burger said no to Jones filming his speech on prison reform. When Jones approached Burger and asked why he was being nixed, the chief justice: 1) tried to take possession of Jones’ microphone; 2) asked police if they and not he were going to oust Jones; and 3) said the next day any interview would be given first to ABC and NBC and only then to Jones’ CBS. Burger did not make immediately clear why he objected to having his words on prison re form being televised. And Jones became a television Mr. Nice Guy. — Later, in Southeast Asia, Jones mo tored among U.S. Air Force bases in Thai land, filming B-52 bombing mission takeoffs and other ill-kept features of a not- so-secret war and doing it without benefit of Defense Department permission. He won an Emmy for it. But Air Force public relations officers did not make whoopee. — There was the time in Delaware, when then-Vice President Gerald Ford was starring in a $l,000-a-person Republican fund-raising reception and being trailed by Jones. A Delaware GOP field marshal ordered Jones out, for what goes among politicians should not be necessarily seen. Animated discussion followed. The Repub lican lunged for Jones. CBS camera crew men held him back. Jones, ever the sweet fellow from James Dean’s hometown, re marked the Republican was a “political punk.” The Republican struggled. Vainly. Of course, Jones is sometimes a victim. CBS this season put him much on the trail of presidential candidate Edward Ken nedy. One of the things the Mi'- 3 * senator has not lost in his camp 1 *' 1 sense of humor. One frigid morning in Maine, noticed Jones standing among 1 work reporters, waiting for a worY candidate at a factory gate where tor was greeting voters. Kenned) had stepped away for a minute Kennedy hurried to a Jones’riff saw this and ran, reaching Kennel, just as the senator was saying, '‘J : all I’m going to say about thePresi) not going to say another worr Carter!” Jones sensed he had lostapri saw Kennedy turn toward him Jones laughed. Even Mr. Nicef ^ one occasionally. IF (D THOTZ By Doug WHaVRE YOU PLAY!MG TH\S 19 OEUGIU Aft£ ROOKS, AMD 6£A4l0£.9kS Afc£ kui&HT; HCAaJ CjO^E THE Little (bUYs oto tv\E fgoMT ftOW AR£ 3HP.1HPS