The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 30, 1980, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 10 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1980
House probes military store fraud Hot lilies’popillarity Oil rise |ta
Advise runaways, homosexuals, students
United Press International
DALLAS — A House subcommittee plans to investi
gate allegations of widespread fraud and kickbacks
throughout the military’s exchange services, which pro
vide everything from perfume to major appliances at cut
rates for military personnel, a Dallas newspaper re
ported Wednesday.
The Dallas Morning News reported the House
Armed Services subcommittee will hold hearings on the
charges against the Army-Air Force Exchange Service,
as well as similar charges against the Navy and Marine
exchanges and military commissary systems.
The exchange services, with total estimated sales of
about $9 billion, purchase goods and resell them to
members of the military and their dependents through
outlets on most military installations. Goods are sold at
16,000 outlets worldwide at costs averaging about 21
percent less than retail prices, the newspaper said.
Subcommittee chairman Rep. Dan Daniel, D-Va.,
said the group planned hearings in Washington and
Dallas, where AAFES is headquartered.
Staff investigator Will Gofer said officials were con
cerned by indictments of high level officials, the news
paper reported.
Court documents and testimony indicate AAFES em
ployees took bribes in exchange for writing lucrative
orders from companies doing business with the ex
change service, the newspaper reported.
Twenty-six AAFES employees, including the top
civilian in the organization, and more than 50 companies
have been implicated in the scheme, the paper re
ported.
The newspaper reported a federal task force of agents
from the FBI, Internal Revenue Service, the U. S. Gen
eral Accounting Office and the Air Force Office of Spe
cial Investigations is continuing its investigation-
V.F.W. POST 4692 PRESENTS A:
COUNTRY MUSIC CONCERT WITH BILLY WALKER
FLOYD TILLMAN, FIDDLIN FARON EVANS, JANET LYNN, WITH C.W.
SLICK, BILL MACK AND SMILIN’ JERRY JERICHO
TWO BIG SHOWS 6:30 P.M. AND 8:30 P.M.
TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL U-TOTE-M STORES, TIP-TOP RECORDS, DOWN TOWN
WELBORN BAR-B-QUE, BANK OF A&M, LANGE MUSIC, AND 3900 OLD COLLEGE
#33 ADVANCE TICKETS $6.00 GATE TICKETS $8.00
By PAMELA RIMOLDI
Battalion Reporter
Help is only as far away as the telephone.
Help for what? Help for homework problems,
social problems, medical problems, and endless
other kinds of problems. There is a telephone
number — many times toll-free — for almost
every type of problem a person can have.
Hot lines are becoming more popular in cities
around the United States as a unique and valuable
source of help to the community.
A major attraction of hot lines is that many find
a sense of security in the anonymity of the tele
phone. Those having difficulty discussing a prob
lem with a friend might find it easier to talk to
someone who will never know his identity.
An organization in Bryan has created a hot line
for homosexuals. Homosexuals have extreme dif
ficulty expressing their problem to anyone be
cause they are afraid to reveal their sexuality, says
a spokesman for the group, wanting only to be
identified as Dale. This hot line, called Gayline,
helps homosexuals who need to talk, Dale said.
“It can be very lonely. No one understands
him; he may not even understand himself. He’s in
a real bind and that’s what we’re here for,” Dale
said.
A major attraction of hot
lines is that many find a sense
of security in the anonymity of
the telephone. Those having
difficulty discussing a problem
with a friend might find it
easier to talk to someone who
will never know his identity.
3. Dating
4. How to Have Fun in Austin on nextlj
thing
5. Relaxation Exercises
Students not only have problems will
or mental health, they often have trouble j
homework. DATALine was created in Phila
phia to serve public and private school dill
who have questions about homework. g>j S i
An article in Newsweek reports DATAliye.
originally used by parents attempting to full. S. Dish
their children, won a $32,300 federal grant, Sl^ught the
United
dhowns
judge W
jrnment
ged will
■at from 1
Jley turtle
for thei
most of the calls are from the children tlfLn abrupt
$1.00 OFF COUNTRY MUSIC CONCERT WITH THIS COUPON
BRYAN CIVIC AUDITORIUM NOVEMBER 6, 1980
(one coupon per ticket)
THE MSC HOSPITALITY COMMITTEE IS
INOW ACCEPTIHG APPLICATIOHS FOR THE|
The Gayline is geared toward a specific group of
people with special problems. Another hot line in
Bryan — the Crisis Hotline — serves people with
any type of personal problem. Crisis Hodine gets
calls from people with problems as minor as a
simple fight with a roommate to problems as ma
jor as attempted suicide.
The organizer of the Crisis Hotline, wishing to
be identified as Mary, says the majority of calls are
from those who are lonely. “We try and just listen
to what they have to say. Many people feel better
after talking it all out,” she said.
Mary said a number of callers are regulars —
they call back until a sort of relationship is formed
between the caller and the volunteers working
the line.
Operation Peace of Mind was set up in Texas
five years ago to assist runaways by former Gov.
Dolph Briscoe after 27 youths, mainly runaways,
were killed in Houston by Dean Corll’s torture
ring. This line works by passing messages from
the runaway to the parent without revealing his
whereabouts.
The main purpose of Operation Peace of Mind
is to let parents know their children are alive. The
1979 grant from the state of Texas was $174,000
and more than 80,000 calls have been handled.
Another type of hot line was formed at the
University of Texas in 1976 through which a stu
dent could call to hear tapes about mental or
physical health. This line now has 150 tapes on
different topics and Some of the more popular
requests are:
1. Timing problems in Male Sexuality
2. Infatuation or Love
lotions for 1
jeent on g
Jed to pro
['(The de
[lated cor
Wed turtle
selves. Evelyn Joell, an English teacher oil
staff, described DATALine to Newsweek ail”
the ideal situation. “You have someonev
information and will listen when you give t|
Dial-a-Grammarian is the nameofahoil
Emporia, Kan., where students can ask q«ej
about correct grammar usage. Time magazulTpast inspe
ports the most frequent callers here are sect;
ies having trouble with their bosses’ dictate
A completely different type of hot line W
using the telephone to diagnose potential)! i i
irregularities in the heart rhythm the mot tUCiy
they occur and to administer treatmeii
seconds.
The idea to use the telephone to I
lifesaving treatment by remote control ism
reality. Companies are interested in i
ing the trans-telephonic resuscitator as m, p
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration*: i united
out some of the liability problems. If sok DALLAS
dies while hooked up to this device, the hie ing paid
turer could be sued. sir male c
Using the telephone for solving problemi iddle anc
be useful and practical. With hot lines been els, a stu<
more widespread, it is comforting to bowl* ns sevent
only a phone call away. fhe study
in G. Sobo
MISS TEXAS A&M
Greenbugs
repelled by
new sorghum
SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT
APPLICATIOHS AVAILABLE AT THE MSC
ROOM 216. EHTRY DEADLINE IS NOV. 3.
w
No, Mr. Babcock. Yes, Mr. Burns. Never, Ms. Little. Never.
Five days of this and I bust loose with Cuervo & grapefruit.
Bust loose with Cuervo Gold.
Dash it on the rocks and
add a splash of grapefruit.
\bur mouth’s been
waiting for it all week
Dangers counter utility
Bi
Pesticide use weighed
United Press International
STILLWATER, Okla. — Oklaho
ma State University scientists have
developed a strain of sorghum resis
tant to a new greenbug discovered in
Texas five months ago, OSU officials
said.
OSU agronomist Dale Weibel said
the new strain, called bloomless sor
ghum, is disliked by the Biotype E
greenbug because it does not have a
waxy substance called bloom in the
stock.
"No one knows how long the re
sistance will last against the green-
bug’s ability to adapt,” Weibel said.
By LAURA CORTEZ
Battalion Reporter
Approximately one billion pounds
of pesticide are used each year in the
United States to help control insects,
plant diseases and weeds, which des
troy 33 percent of potential food
crops.
Pesticides are beneficial in that
they enable greater food production,
and thus lower food prices. A study
by David Pimentel, an entomologist
at Cornell University, says that pes
ticide treatment costs in this country
total $2.2 billion annually. However,
Pimentel adds, if pesticide use were
discontinued, there would be appro
ximately an $8.7 billion increase in
crop losses.
But in addition to the benefits,
there are problems.
In a report to Congress last year,
the U.S. General Accounting Office
said, “Although pesticides are be
neficial to the world’s health and well
being, they are not problem-free.
They can be poisonous to people and
animals, and damaging to the en
vironment where they remain active
for several years.”
An awareness of the potential
hazards of pesticides became wide
spread during the early 1960s, and
has continued ever since.
Synthetic pesticides, including
DDT, were introduced during
World War II and were highly suc
cessful because they were inexpen
sive, easy to use and potent long after
application.
But in 1962, Rachel Carson’s book
“Silent Spring” created public fear as
well as concern.
Carson warned of hazards related
to pesticide use, including pest re
sistance to certain insecticides and
the concentration of insecticides to a
lethal level in the food chain.
In 1970, the newly created En
vironmental Protection Agency took
over the enforcement of regulation
concerning pesticide use, which had
been the responsibility of the De
partment of Agriculture.
The EPA banned DDT in 1972,
and has banned 15 other pesticides
since.
The agency is continually review
ing chemicals for possible hazards to
humans, and sets tolerance levels —
the maximum residue allowed in
food.
The responsibility to assure that
marketed food is safe, pure and
wholesome lies with the Food and
Drug Administration, which con
ducts monitoring programs.
But a question arises: Is what is
legal necessarily safe?
The GAO has criticized the EPA
for setting tolerances without adequ
ate testing, and the FDA for moni
toring only a small percentage of food
crops.
But Dr. Perry Adkisson, vice pres
ident for agricultural and renewable
resources at Texas A&M University,
said he does not think consumers
need to be worried about pesticide
residues on food.
He said the best scientific evi
dence available indicates residue on
food is not harmful to humans.
Adkisson said that pests are a se
rious problem to the $300 million
Texas crop industry. He added that
Texas, the third largest producer of
vegetables in the country, could not
produce most of its crops without
pesticides.
“Although we realize the need for
chemical pesticides, we don’t want
[iversity’s
licates the
proving I
jir payche
n their in
[he study
Ito May 1 c
is betwee
manap
k.
iFemale r
edian inc
thirds o
ie, $30,2
i also
ipment a
as many
to put our principal reliance obi
micals,” he said.
The Agricultural Extension
vice is working with altei
methods of insect and disease
trol, such as development t: -'At top man
varieties that are resistant to r iad a medi
and disease, and managementplsmpared tc
dures that would reduce the i-The stud)
dence of pests, Adkisson said [fleeted dis
Dr. Ralph Hanna, associatefeld by the
fessor of entomology at Texas ife.
said he takes a risk-to-benefilp)isparitie
attitude concerning the use
cides on food crops — he feek|
risk is low in relation to thebei
He said that most chemicals
in use are non-persistent, *tgers had co
means they break down e;8tiondid nc
There is a waiting period foal
time of the last application ofap
cide until the crop can be
to allow for this breakdown,
But despite the chemical k
down, residues remain on food,
as raw fruits and vegetables.
When asked if washing these
ducts removes residues, Hannai
“Unless a batch of something!!]!
avoided the regulations
there is not enough on themtoi
off.”
But not everyone accept
need to worry” attitude whi
es to pesticides on food,
General Accounting Office
eral consumer groups ar
category.
Although alternatives to cfc
use — biological control of iti •
and crops resistant to disease
being studied and in some case
plied, the abolition of pesticii
not in sight.
W
Dining
Duncai
during
Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased Willi
These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods
Each Daily Special Only $2.13 Plus Tax.
“Open Daily”
Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. —4:00 P.M. to 7:OOPJ
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
with
Mushroom Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Your Choice of
One Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
•- Coffee or Tea
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/chili
Mexican Rice
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
One Corn Bread and Butter
WEDNESDAY
EVENING SPECIAL
Lai
Chicken Fried Steak
w/cream Gravy
Whipped Potatoes and
Choice of one other
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and But
Coffee or Tea
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS.
FRIDAY EVENING
SATURDAY
SUNDAY SPECIAL
SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
NOON and EVENINt
BREADED FISH
SPECIAL
ROAST TURKEY DINNL F
FILET w/TARTAR
Served with
SAUCE
Yankee Pot Roast
Cranberry Sauce
Cole Slaw
(Texas Salad)
Cornbread Dressing
Hush Puppies
Mashed
Roller Corn Bread-Buttef
Choice of one
Potato w/
CoffeorTea
vegetable
gravy
Giblet Gravy
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
And your choice of any
Tea or Coffee
Tea or Coffee
One vegetable
MSC
NT!
i“Quality First”i