The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 02, 1981, Image 1
[The Battalion Serving the Texas A&M University community Jol. 74 No. 170 |4 Pages Serving the Texas A&M University community Thursday, July 2, 1981 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 The Weather Today Tomorrow High 93 High 95 Low 75 Low 75 Chance of rain 40% Chance of rain . . . . . . 20% Officer shortage attributed b non-competitive wages By KATHY O’CONNELL Battalion Staff wampus security may be threatened by a shortage of police *:ers unless their salaries are raised to competitive local dards. )irector of Traffic and Security Col. Thomas Parsons, said Texas A&M University Police are experiencing a shor- of J1 patrol officers. The shortage in officers is because of salaries, he said. 'arsons said they’ve lost several officers to the Bryan or lege Station city police forces. “I can name seven or eight [ers that have left us and gone to Bryan, because the pay is ler. In my opinion, most of them are leaving because of the |ey, he said. “It’s not that they aren’t satisfied with their tarting salaries for certified officers at the Bryan Police Jjartment are about $16,2(X); College Station officers re- |e $15,7(X) and University police officers, as of Sept. 1, 1 receive $12,7(X). |\Ve ve always been a little behind them (Bryan/College non), but it’s way out of line. A College Station police Jeant makes more than a major in our department,” he le said even an animal control officer in College Station |es more than a campus patrol officer, parsons said he has notified Vice President for Student | ices Dr. John J. Koldus III of the problem and hopes that lething can he done to make salaries comparable to the city police forces. Koldus said the University is in the process of having the personnel department investigate restructuring the classi fied employee system that sets a base salary for employees. Koldus said when the state legislature approved the Uni versity’s 1981-82 budget, there was a significant increase in the appropriation for security. Thus, there is money avail able to increase the salaries, but the process of upgrading the classified system must be done first. Parsons said if there isn’t an increase, some of the services provided by the officers may be limited. He said the officers often help students start a dead car battery and give aid when they’ve run out of gasoline. “Many people don’t realize we provide these services, and these are just the ones we ll have to limit; we ll just have to concentrate on security,” he said. Parsons said the officers will probably have to work over time to make up for the shortage. “We just can t keep doing this because the officers will be overworked. Many of them have families and you just can’t keep working them over time.” However, there are enough officers to handle traffic viola tions, he said. In fact, the department has hired four students to issue parking tickets. He said they only need to be autho rized by the University Police department, because they aren’t making arrests. “There is nothing uncommon about having non commissioned officers issuing tickets,” he said. “The meter maids you see writing tickets aren’t officers. ” University facilities change schedules for July 4 holiday Texas A&M faculty, staff and stu dents will observe Independence Day Friday with most University facilities either closed or operating on modified schedules. All Memorial Student Center and University Center facilities, with the exception of the post office lobby area, will be closed beginning at 5 p.m. today. The post office lobby area may he entered at any time from the MSC entrance across from G. Rollie White Coliseum. The MSC, including the guest rooms and main desk, will reopen at 4 p.m. Sunday. Bowling and games will reopen at 1 p.m. Sunday. All MSC and University Center facili ties will return to normal operating hours on Monday. The Evans Library will operate on a modified schedule during the holi day period. The library will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and from 1p.m. to5p.m. Saturday. Reg ular hours will be in effect Sunday, 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. The Medical Sciences Library also will operate on an abbreviated schedule, with hours from 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, 1p.m. to 5 p.m. Satur day. Regular hours will be in effect again Sunday. While University facilities are closed this weekend, a variety of fourth of July activities are sche duled for the state and local com munity. See today’s issue of Focus for details. 4st of presidential candidates xpected from regents today Afghan rebels carry out raids ■ Jokers t( of a 13-0 m Royder's If 3 for them By BERNIE FETTE Battalion Staff exas A&M officials are expected to —Iqsp the names of some 500 initial iiderations for the University pres- icy today. en working days have passed since ( rney General Mark White’s ruling Texas A&M would be required to the Bryan-College Station Eagle list of candidates’ names. /pegally, such information deemed a /Jlic record must be released within lays of the date of the attorney gen ’s decision. taken out oil he Bryan-College Station Eagle in iruary requested the list of candi- :s’ names from the Texas A&M Uni- negotiatioi _________________________________ four clays k i say if eitl* had a new ? :*ver, there iroposal ne side shut tion recent! rest in nieef lomething® ule d versity System Board of Regents. After the board refused to release the list. White was asked to determine whether the list was a public record. Glenn Dromgoole, Eagle editor, said he wasn’t sure when the newspaper would receive the information or whether the list would include informa tion such as the candidates’ ages and occupations. White ruled June 17 that the list of 500 initial considerations for the post must he released but that the list of 20 finalists could be kept confidential. At that time Dromgoole said the Eagle would publish all 500 names upon receipt of the list. A presidential search committee be gan its screening process of th nomina tions and applications for th presidency following the dismissal of Dr. Jarvis Mil ler by the regents a year ago. The 22- member committee in January recom mended a list of 20 candidates to the board. Since that time, a committee in cluding Board Chairman H.R. “Bum” Bright, Vice Chairman John Blocker, Regent Clyde Wells and system Chan cellor Frank W.R. Hubert have inter viewed candidates for the position. Bright said in May the presidential search is running slightly behind sche dule but he still anticipates the selection of a new president by Sept. 1. United Press International NEW DELHI, India — Islamic insurgents gunned down several Soviet and Afghan communist officials in daring day light raids in Kabul during the last week, diplomatic sources reported. The diplomats quoted reliable sources Wednesday, who also described widespread death and devastation in Kanda har and Herat, Afghanistan’s second and third largest cities. Soviet troops tossed grenades into irrigation tunnels near a village outside Herat recently, killing about 60 people hiding from a bomb attack, they said. Relatives then lured the Soviet personnel into an ambush and killed many in revenge, the sources said. Four rebels shot four Russian soldiers in central Kabul June 22, before fleeing on motorcycles, two diplomats re ported, quoting eyewitnesses who fled before learning if the soldiers died. In another incident the same evening, two Afghans shot and killed two Russian soldiers in front of the Soviet Embas sy, the diplomats said. Soviet troops captured one gunman. Another Afghan officer was shot in front of the Interior Ministry building in downtown Kabul and rebels also mur dered several Afghan leaders who attended the meeting two weeks ago of the National Fatherland. Attacks on those who attended the assembly, organized by Soviet-backed President Babrak Karmal in an attempt to muster popular support, were seen by Afghan sources in India as a rebel warning to avoid contact with government activities. In other violence in the Afghan capital, heavily armed Soviet troops moved into positions around the residence and offices of Karmal following a gun battle June 26, one of the diplomats said. Karmal is in Czechoslovakia. A witness reported “long bursts of shooting” in the area around the presidential palace, followed by cries of what sounded “like wounded or frightened people,” the diplomat reported. The same evening troops ready for combat arrived to guard the Bulgarian and Indonesian embassies and both entrances to the residence of Prime Minister Sultan Ali Keshtmand, he said. The diplomat did not know the reason for the troop movement and gun battle. ifter-death arrangements can be costly Pre-planning may be the answer there lia' f J out by llit’ re now tli® itar Game.* id, will bep i u:«T!!ER> ^ Staff photo by Greg Gammon CO. decisions facing family and friends after death can be very com- icated and very expensive. One group the Memorial Society of Bryan- -^aw^^ollege Station Inc., work to pre-plan their own after-death arrange- ents. By SANDRA K. GARY Battalion Reporter While people often trouble them selves with the minute-by-minute organization of their everyday lives, many overlook the need to make arrangements in the event of their deaths. “In order to spare their survivors the added grief of deciding what should be done with a loved one who has died, more people are coming in ahead of time and, at least, finding out what their options are, ’said Bill Zieren, owner of Memorial Funeral Chapel in Bryan. “A funeral director is a business man,” said Ann Bury, former presi dent of the Memorial Society of Bryan-College Station Inc., “an orga nization of people who wish to pre plan their after-death arrangements.” Bury likened the funeral director to the car dealer who tries to get his cus tomer to buy the car with “all of the extra gadgets. “The problem with funeral dire ctors,” she said, “is you don’t have time to shop around.” Inevitably, however, someone has to make the often costly decisions, the most consequential of which is what should be done with the body. There are three basic types of dis position — ground burial, cremation and the donation of a body to scientific and medical research, said Ray Jones, funeral director at Callaway-Jones Funeral Home in Bryan. If ground burial is decided upon, costs will initially include the grave space, fees for opening and closing the grave, some type of burial container and basic service fees. In the Bryan- College Station area this initial costs stems upward from $300, Jones said. A grave space in the city cemeteries costs $100, Jones said, “and it costs $100 to open a grave and $100 to close one.” The Bryan City Cemetery also re quires that at least a wooden grave liner, which costs $90, be used in addi tion to the casket. Other types of liners range from a $250 concrete liner to a $4,495 steel vault, Jones said. He ex plained that they are supposed to keep the ground from sinking as the coffin settles. Grave spaces in Restever Memorial Park, however, cost “on the average $275,” said Zee Murphy, a represen tative for the privately-owned, cemet ery. This fee does not include the $200 charge for opening and closing the grave, Murphy said. Although no grave liner is required, she added that a flat bronze marker “running aroung $1,000” is required. The cost of the burial container is often the most expensive. The least expensive casket that can be purch ased in this area is, in most cases, a cloth-covered wooden box which based on the average is $295. “In most cases, however, we find that most people spend about $1,300 to $1,400 on a casket,” Zieren said. Other costs are incurred from the services provided by the funeral home that handles the body after death. “A licensed funeral director is required by law to offer the consumer an itemi zation of the costs and services pro vided by him so that the consumer has the opportunity to refuse any of the services,” Jones said. Before this law was adopted, Jones said, some directors were quoting a single service charge fee. “Some peo ple were paying for items they weren’t getting,” he said. “And by the same token, some directors were giving away things that hadn’t been paid for. ” The services which are itemized by a funeral home, generally, include professional staff services, embalm ing, cosmetology and restorative treatment of remains, general use of the home’s facilities, use of facilities for visitation and for funeral services, initial transfer of the deceased plus use of other vehicles including a family limousine and a flower coach. The cost of the death certificate and a few other miscellaneous charges are also added. “All of these services are not re quired,” Jones said. “If we pick up a body at the hospital or rest home, fill out the necessary forms and take the body immediately to the cemetery for burial, many of the costs will be sub tracted,” he explained. If all services are desired, the average fee is close to $920. Families can bury their own dead if they wish, according to a pamphlet published by the Texas Funeral Dire ctors Association Inc. Jones said, “right now at this moment, there is no law requiring embalming in the State of Texas. ” Most funeral homes, however, will not perform a public funeral service for bodies which are not embalmed and have been dead for over 24 to 48 hours, Zieren said. He said this is be cause after that length of time, human flesh is like any other dead animal — it starts decomposing and the stench can become unbearable. With the coffin purchased, services selected and place of burial decided, consumers consider other, sometimes less expensive, details such as flowers or other types of memorials. Flowers, if desired, again add to the cost. A simple casket spray begins, on the average, at $20. This cost can sky rocket to $7,000 for a blanket of roses and orchids. On the average, most loc al florists said families spend between $75 and $100 for an arrangement of flowers to place on the casket. All things considered, the least ex pensive burial without a funeral will be near $650. Many people think that cremation is more economical. “Really, in dollar bills, you’re not going to save a bundle,” Jones said. He pointed out that the Bryan- College Station area has no crematory. Transportation expenses push crema tion costs up into the same bracket as an inexpensive burial, he said. A simple cremation, including trans portation to Houston, where the near est crematory is located, was $577 in 1980, Bury said. This price has in creased, however, she said. The least expensive and most useful means of disposal, she said, is to don ate a body to science or medical re search. We have had some requests (by members of the local memorial socie ty) that their bodies be left to the Texas A&M Medical School, Bury said. “In most cases the medical institu tion will pay for all expenses,” she said. “If requested, they may also re turn the cremated remains to the fami ly after research is complete. ” Council says more federal help needed A national organization of universi ties involved in transportation research has agreed to take action to increase federal support for its efforts at finding answers to transportation problems. Tbe federal government is consider ing “substantial reductions” in funding for transportation research and de velopment programs, said Dr. C. V. Wootan, a member of the board of dire ctors for the Council of University Transportation Centers. Meeting at Texas A&M University, the board of directors for the council agreed to develop a set of position pap ers pointing out the need for transporta tion studies. Wootan said the federal Department of Transportation currently devotes only 2 percent of its overall budget to research programs. Because funding has remained at a constant level during the 1970s, transportation research cen ters and other research groups can con duct only about 40 percent of the work now with federal dollars that they could 10 years ago. Wootan, director of the Texas Trans portation Institute, a research agency headquartered at Texas A&M, said the cuts would hit programs when research is needed most. “We are facing a choking of our eco nomic system,” he said. Wootan ex plained that 21 percent of the gross na tional product is linked directly to trans portation. The council also elected three new officers for one-year terms and voted to accept seven new members, bringing total participation on the council to 22 institutions. CUTC was established two years ago to help pinpoint areas where research funding is needed and to pass the find ings along to the various agencies re sponsible, Wootan said. Wootan said CUTC representatives also discussed the declining enrollment in graduate engineering programs nationwide. Engineering students, lured by $20,000-plus salaries immediately upon graduation, are deserting further study for financial benefits. Wootan said the situation is seriously affecting the type of research programs that provide en gineers with innovative breakthroughs. CUTC will hold its next national meeting in Washington during January,