'Page 16 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1981 Features Budget cuts may hurt city improvements, services United Press International NEW YORK — City dwellers face a drastic reduction in services they have come to expect because of Reagan administration cuts in federal funding. “There’s no way out of the bind and cities will have to cope,’ said Arthur J. Hausker, senior muni cipal analyst at Fitch Investors Service, Inc. “Cities were ex periencing problems even before Reaganomics came into effect and now they’ll find those problems worsening. ” Not only are local governments being forced to postpone or forego capital improvements or construc tion, Hausker said, unless they are willing to pay the bill locally they also face layoffs of police, firemen, sanitation men, restrictions on public library service and schools among other things. Fitch Investors Service, one of the oldest full-service rating agen cies in the country, hasn’t lowered its current rating on any of the municipal issues it lists, but “it is monitoring all of them closely,” Hausker said. “We know the problems and we re waiting for individual reac tion to them,” he said. Fitch doesn’t see temporary budget problems as a reason to lower the credit rating on a city or state. “We look for factors that make a seemingly permanent change in the ability to meet debt.” James J. Lowrey, head of a firm that advises cities on raising money, agrees that cities “have been on a collision course for years and Reaganomics only accelerated the process.” As Lowrey sees it, cities face two separate problems: “how to deal with social responsibility to those who cannot fend for them selves and the problem of capital investment which is a prerequisite to maintaining the quality of life.” Lowrey said the social factors pose a problem for politicians and indeed, he said the politicians “created the problems in the first place, driving out the rich with high taxes and the middle-class because they let the schools and the streets deteriorate. “Now they’ve spent cities into a corner, and the public is saying look, we want something done,” Lowrey said. “The population won’t blame Reagan for de teriorating services; they’ll blame the mayor and the city council.” Lowrey feels cuts in social prog rams, although politically and in some cases morally repugnant, won’t affect cities’ ability to raise money and in some cases might even help their credit rating. Hausker, although taking a more liberal view toward social programs, blames people for “not becoming outraged about rotten politics, about waste of their money. If enough people cared to affect politicians’ choices it would make a difference.” But it won’t make an immediate difference in the fact that cities and states are faced with raising money to pay for needed services. Hausker said cities whose re venue sources are not inflation- sensitive, such as from sales taxes, and. cities with statutory limita- Halloween Hysteria FOR EACH OR RECORD SALE! The Hottest Hits On The Streets - On Sale! FOREIGNER INCLUDES URGENT/JUKE BOX HERO/NIGHT LIFE WAITING FOR A GIRL LIKE YOU STEVIE NICKS § Bella Donna ALABAMA Feels So Right JOAN ARMATRADING Walk Under Ladders COMMODORES In The Pocket ELVIS COSTELLO Almost Blue CHRISTOPHER CROSS Christopher Cross DOORS Greatest Hits E.L.O. 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High interest rates, lack of in vestor interest, and competition with federal and corporate bor rowers have hindered all but the best-rated cities from raising long term money in the bond market. Lowrey said investors are hesi tant because “it’s quite evident courts are not going to say ‘pay the bondholders, not the police and firemen.’ If they’re credit con scious they’re going to stay away from cities with lower ratings.” Lowrey also noted, however, investors “are being compensated with very high yields for buying riskier bonds.” Hausker said long-terminteij rates won’t come down until federal deficit is reduced. doesn’t see this happening^ inflation is brought down and |J thinks taxes will have to ter creased to achieve this. “A win, “It isn’t the federal progras such as Social Security, '' The iday » causing the trouble as muchastl w one escalating cost of programs cai® , it w by inflation, ” Hausker said, fa S of th College women paid less than male drop-outs on saic j’d b< stand the 1 game, ' this United Press International NEW YORK — The average salary of working women with col lege degrees is less than that of male high school dropouts, says Phyllis Harrison, president of tbe National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. In a recent survey for the 165,000-member organization, she found married working women rarely receive any benefits from the Social Security taxes they contribute — and only 21 percent of the nation’s 41 million working women are covered by pension plans. About 56 percent of all women with children under the age of 18 are in the labor force, the survey shows. More than 16 million women of child-bearing age are in the coun try’s labor force, Harrison said, and more than 70 percent of work ing women who give birth are re turning to work. The greatest increase in ( U. S. labor force over thepaslt river s cade has come from women!i! but tween the ages of 20 anddO.I of the organization’s research shows Women employed by thelet? isporti al government make up haKI eRazo government’s work forcehutkt early less than 7 percent of the ie Tech agementlevel jobs. ire, th down that 1 howdc ie tear her ter nthe p 1975 “It is a national embamssmi that women have been unable make any real gains in wages the past 20 years,” Harrisonh| “Currently more than halfol^ country’s women are in the force, with another two mi women securing jobs every yi Nevertheless, 65 percent ol women with fulltime jobs stills less than $12,000, compared t( percent of all men with fi jobs. Nearly 80 percent country’s working women kl low-paying clerical, light factory jobs.” Unitef WY( if the jeLope should egami service ge rs n Peanut butter prices drop [here’s rrors, 1 went i game nesday e Doi ew Y the is to t\ United Press International TIFTON, Ga. — Peanut butter prices have begun dropping in some supermarkets across the Un ited States as manufacturers try to sell off what’s left of the 1980 supp ly to make room for the new crop. Price decreases ranging from 10 to 25 percent in a half-dozen cities are reported by J. Tyron Spearman, coordinator of the Georgia Peanut Commission and a member of the Peanut Advisory Board, as manufacturers resume brand promotional efforts. The cities are Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, Boston and San Fran cisco. The 1981 peanut harvest is ex pected to be substantially higher /opes a than last year’s weather-daiM Series, crop. The U.S. Department ds for Agriculture has raised its estinu id hi to 1.93 million tons, onlydfi negroi cent below the record 1979 on lan a 1 and .08 million tons above ®ut in t year’s. Growers are less optimists Bruce Daniels, ofOcilla, Georgi expects an 80 percent normal sb id the crop. And James Earl M president of the Alabama Pe» rfectio Producers, says Georgia, Alabai tack in and Florida growers, who prods 61 percent of the nation’s peafflt are about two weeks behind harvesting. Mobleys says 4 Rtogetl southeastern crop did not malm brass ri as quickly as usual becauseofi® beyhav very late in the growing sea* fyPed onCey Evening Specials:” “Bar Be Que £ Platter” Mon. Tues. 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