nl in iem,” ^es pi) 9 wl Kl The Battalion Serving the Texas A&M University community The Weather Today Tomorrow High . ...68 High ...70 Low ... .50 Low ...53 Chance of rain. . . . . . 10% Chance of rain . 10% Vol. 75 No. 69 14 Pages Wednesday, December 9, 1981 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 insition^ an a" the i .ntage. "ied ah nn ‘ggie$tt-jj onl 5, leavt monj eave toij d Strake running for Texas’ best kept secret’ job )er u By DANIEL PUCKETT Battalion Staff The lieutenant governor is Texas’ most powerful official and he is doing a bad job, a former Texas secretary of state said Tuesday night. Speaking to about 35 people in Rud der Tower, George Strake, who is a can didate for the 1982 Republican nomina tion for lieutenant governor, said the lieutenant governor serves as president of the Senate, appoints members of Senate committees, appoints their chairmen, assigns bills to committees and serves on the Legislative Budget Board. The board, Strake said, is re sponsible for determining the level of state spending. “In that job, he (the lieutenant gov ernor) has his thumb on the state’s spending level and the number of em ployees it has,’ he said. And Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby has handled the job badly, Strake said. He said Hobby allowed the recent proposal for a Texas water program to pass the Senate and then campaigned against it. Hobby also sent strong anti pornography bills to the Jurisprudence Committee of the Texas Senate, whose chairman, Strake said, is “an ultraliberal opposed to such measures.’’ In addition, Strake said. Hobby allowed the number of state employees to grow by 50 percent in the 1970s, while the state’s population grew by 26 percent. Saying he could do a better job, Strake said one of his purposes is to help carry out the conservative programs proposed by President Reagan and Gov. Bill Clements. If elected, Strake said, he will favor a number of measures to help solve the state’s problems. He said he would push for formula tion of a new water plan, one substan tially different from the one Texas vo ters defeated in November and one which can easily be explained to citizens. Strake also plans strong anti-crime bills and measures to reduce drug traffic through arrests of major pushers. He would also assist the passage of bills dealing with the problem of child por nography, a problem he said is epide mic in major urban areas. “If I become lieutenant governor, any bill which has to do with controlling drugs or pornography, which will stem the tide of crime or which will help ... small business .. . will get as much push through that Senate as (I). fan possibly give it,” Strake said. In an interview earlier Tuesday, Strake stressed the importance of the lieutenant governor’s race and called the power of the office “the best-kept secret in the state of Texas.” Even with a strong governor like Cle ments, Strake said, the lieutenant gov ernor has a powerful voice in shaping Texas policy. And with the problems Texas faces — water depletion, flood ing, energy costs and a rapidly growing population — the state needs effective leadership, which he said Hobby has not provided. The question of Hobby’s perform ance is one which affects Texans both young and old, Strake said, and he stres sed the importance of students’ involve ment in politics and in his race. “People your age have more to lose if things go down the drain; you’ll be around longer to suffer the consequ ences,” he said. When asked how much chance he Reagan considers anti-Libya moves United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan mulled over possible economic and political sanctions today against Libya in retaliation for alleged plots by that nation to assassinate him and other U.S. officials. White House Communications dire ctor David Gergen said Reagan would brief Democratic and Republican con gressional leaders either today or Thursday on options he is considering. Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy denies having made any plans to assas sinate U.S. officials, but the administra tion says it has evidence of such plots — including the dispatching of hit squads. The Republican congressional leadership was to meet today with Reagan on matters before Congress, but the Libya matter was expected to come up for discussion. Late Tuesday, Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker caused a stir when he said the White House told him a final decision on the entire situation would be made within 24 to 48 hours. The White House, however, said Baker misunderstood. It said no im mediate decision was expected and that a congressional briefing — not a final verdict — would be held within two days. Aferward, Baker won an agreement with Sen. Gary Hart, D-Col. to post pone a resolution cutting off Libyan oil until after the briefing. “I think it would be premature to have that kind of a vote before the re view is completed,” Gergen said. “We are not trying to stir this matter up ... to hype this thing, ” Gergen told reporters. “We’re trying to convey that the atmophere here is not one of high tension and great drama. ” Baker told the Senate the president may very well decide to embargo Li byan oil. Senate Republican sources said it would be part of a package of economic sanctions against Libya. The Boston Globe reported the administration will try to get the more than 1,500 Americans still in Libya out before taking any action. It quoted offi cials as saying the administration plans to call on U. S. oil companies to get their people out of Libya. State Department spokeswoman Anita Stockman said she knew of no such plans. Paperwork halts mailing of new schedules to 600 Staff photo by Dave Einsel Former Secretary of State George Strake has of becoming Texas’ first Republican lieutenant governor since Reconstruc tion, Strake said his campaign, though probably not as well financed as Hob by’s will be, has a stronger organization and a better volunteer base. “I’ve got an better organization than Gov. Clements had at a comparable point in his campaign,” he said, “and I have the advantage of running with a popular governor — who, polls show, has a 68 percent approval rating. “But I have the disadvantage of run ning against the name Hobby,” Strake said. “His dad was governor, his family owns the Houston Post and a television station. Recession won t hurt holiday buying By ANJALIE ABBOTT, PAM BARTA and JOHN WAGNER Battalion Reporters Area merchants are expecting a profit able Christmas season despite national predictions that the sluggish economy will condemn retail sales across the country to a slow year, especially during the Christmas season. Robert Ortner, chief economist at the U.S. Commerce Department, said: “Christmas sales will be mediocre at best.” And a Gallup Poll conducted in Sep tember for the U.S. Chamber of Com merce says 55 percent of the consumers polled feel now is a bad time to purchase expensive gifts. This is a 7 percent in crease in the number of consumers that have become pessimistic about buying, since a similar poll was conducted in June by the Chamber of Commerce. However, the prediction that retail sales will be down drastically this year doesn’t seem to be scaring area mer chants at all. In fact, many merchants are preparing for a holiday boom. Ron Morton, operations manager at J.C. Penney in Manor East Mall, said his store is enjoying a good year. He attributed increases in sales to what he calls a “pretty stable economy” in the area. Another local retailer, Judy Rush, owner of R. Rush & Co., said her store is doing excellent business. “I expect a 50 percent increase in sales this month,” she said. In contrast, Robert Mooney, corpo rate economist for New York City, pre dicts only a 3 percent sales increase after inflation, for the nation next month. The fact that more than 50 percent of the population here is employed by or enrolled in some kind of public educa tional facility is the main reason the re cession has not hurt locally, said Robert Nelson, spokesman for the Bryan- College Station Chamber of Com- ple to spend just as much, despite the slumping economy. “The one thing people don’t cut back on at Christmas is food,” he said. Dries- bach said he expects customers to spend less on major variety items and general merchandise and more on special holi day goods. But, unlike clothing and department stores, Driesbach said he expects his total business to drop 20 to 25 percent when students go home for Christmas. Jim Hayes, assistant manager for Re bels Restaurant and Bar in College Sta tion, said that although he will lose busi ness during the Christmas break, he expects to make more money because customers will spend more of their in come on entertainment during the holi day season. The fact that the Bryan-College Sta tion area is one of the fastest-growing areas in the nation keeps the economy booming in spite of a national slump. Nelson said. By STEPHEN M. WARD Battalion Reporter About 600 students who have prere gistered for spring semester classes at Texas A&M University will not receive a schedule with their fee slip in the mail. Effective this fall, the fiscal depart ment mails a copy of the student’s sche dule with each invoice. This is to let students know early which classes they are paying fpr and which ones they may need to add or drop. However, students with last names falling alphabetically between White and Wood, inclusive, will receive their fee slips in the mail but will not receive their class schedules, said Bob Piwonka, manager of student financial aid ser vices in the fiscal office. Those students can pick up copies of their schedules in the Coke Building. Piwonka said that because the added paperwork involved in sending stu dents’ schedules with invoices is so ex pensive and time consuming, the fiscal office stopped with 600 students re maining. Those students were mailed only their fee slips. The fiscal office mailed the last of 24,000 fee slips Saturday, in order to mail them to each student’s local address before the end of school. Now the Coke Building office is start ing to receive a barrage of students who want to pay their fees before Christmas break. However, Piwonka asks that stu dents not make over-the-counter pay ments to cashiers at the Coke Building, but he encourages students to pay their fees through the mail or drop their pay ments in a fee slip box provided in the' ! building. Piwonka said the fiscal office cashiers, who are swamped with end-of- the-year paperwork, are not set up to handle the students who want to pay fees in person. He also said the cashiers 11 do not have direct access to the unpaid fee slip file. f However, a separate group of tem porary workers, primarily Texas A&M students, are presently employed to process payments received by mail. “This lessens the aggravation of stu dents having to stand in line,” Piwonka said. College crime rate indicated Other merchants in the Bryan- College Station area agree that the local economy will not suffer during the Christmas season. Dennis Driesbach, manager of the Safeway supermarket in Culpepper Plaza, said he expects peo- Projected deficit leads to new budget proposals United Press International WASHINGTON — Projections of a record federal deficit in 1982 has the Reagan administration again studying ways to cut the budget — by slashing defense, further cutting non-defense programs or raising taxes. Amid estimates that the 1982 budget deficit could reach $109 billion, Presi dent Reagan met with top economic advisers Tuesday to consider new aus terity moves and the increasing likeli hood of a tax hike. The president — who in September assured the nation he would hold the current deficit to $43.1 billion and have enough money to pursue a U. S. military buildup — got the bad news from budget director David Stockman. Chief White House spokesman David Gergen refused to confirm or deny that the bottom line for 1982 would be $109 billion in red ink, as official administration sources reported earlier in the day. The budget forecast, which Lawr ence Kudlow of the Office of Manage ment and Budget called “just staff op tions of no consequence,” also projects a $152.3 billion deficit in 1983 and $162 billion in 1984 — the year Reagan had hoped to balance the budget — unless further spending cuts are made, House Speaker Thomas O’Neill said he was not surprised by the latest deficit estimates, which bear out what he pre dicted earlier this year. Democratic leader Jim Wright of Texas called the deficit numbers “tell ing figures.” “It must be a terrible embarrassment to the president, who has staked his claim to a balancing of the budget for first deficit of his administration to be the largest in the history of this nation,” he said. Gergen acknowledged little can be done about the budget for fiscal 1982, which has already begun. The focus of the current discussions, he said, is on 1983 and beyond. Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, told the American Enterprise Institute Tuesday the administration is studying possible ways to increase tax revenues by overhauling tax breaks given to businesses or individuals for special purposes. Gergen confirmed that “the question of taxes is going to be considered se riously during this review process.” But he said it is clear the president “feels strongly that the tax decreases that are in place ... particularly those on the personal side ... should remain in place and are an important element in the recovery.” Weidenbaum also said the large de ficit now is not all that harmful, but must be reduced in later years. By DANIEL PUCKETT Battalion Staff Houston has not only been setting a new record for the number of murders this year, but it may also have been the location of the state’s most violent col lege campus in 1980. Figures released by the Texas A&M University Police show that, of the 33 colleges and universities reporting, the University of Houston led the state in the combined rate of murder, rape, rob bery and aggravated assault. But, in non-violent crime, the figures indicated that Texas A&M had the fifth highest crime rate of any campus in the state, with Baylor University leading in that category. Although numbers for some cam puses were not available, the violent crime rate at UH — 13.4 violent crimes per 10,000 students — was the highest reported in the state. Sul Ross Universi ty in Alpine was second, with 12.1 vio lent crimes per 10,000 students. The 1980 rate at Texas A&M was 2.8 per 10,000. A crime prevention specialist at UH, Dennis Buffington, said the reason for the school’s high crime rate is its loca tion. “We re in the middle of the Third Ward,” he said, “which has the second- highest crime rate in Houston; Houston itself has the fastest-growing crime rate in the nation.” Baylor, UH lead statistics — University crime figures — Violent crimes (murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault) School Number of crimes per 10,000 students 1. University of Houston 13.4 2. Sul Ross University 12.1 3. Pan American University 11.8 4. Texas Tech University 11.3 5. Lamar University 10.7 Non-violent crimes (burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft) School Number of crimes per 10,000 students 1. Baylor University 445.8 2. Sul Ross University 394.5 3. Southern Methodist University 387 4. Lamar University . 337 5. Texas A&M University 322.6 He attributed 90 percent of the crime on campus to non-students, but said that several new programs on the UH campus are already bringing down its crime rate. Among other measures, UH police are assigning police officers to specific beats and providing a 24-hour escort service for students. One of the most effective programs, Buffington said, is a surveillance patrol composed of students who work part time, walking around campus and sur veying parking lots with binoculars. “They don’t get physically involved in making arrests but they do keep in contact with us over police radios,” he said. Buffington said the new programs have already resulted in a sharp drop in most forms of crime on campus. When measured against figures reported at this time last year, he said, robberies are down 59 percent, assaults are down 47 percent and vehicle thefts are down 31 percent. And though three rapes have already been reported this year, as opposed to two all last year, Buffington said this is probably because more crimes are being reported. “Rape is generally under-reported,” he said, “and when people don’t feel the police can do anything about it, they report it even less. “But they see us out there now; they know we re doing something about crime, so they feel reporting a crime will get something done about it,” Buf fington said. Despite its high incidence of violent crime in 1980, UH showed a lower rate of non-violent crime — 218 per 10,000 students — than did Texas A&M, which reported 322.6 crimes per 10,000 stu dents. The categories studied were burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft. Baylor’s Director of Security Ser vices, E.B. Myre, said crime at the Waco campus was high because of sev eral special problems. He said Baylor students own more cars per capita than do students at other universities, and said professional car- thieves have been stealing cars and car- parts from campus parking lots. Furthermore, Myre said, Baylor has about 33 percent of its students living on campus, which is a higher percentage than at most other schools. He said the larger number of stu dents living in dormitories means a lar ger number of crimes of all sorts being reported on campus. Overall, Myre said, the most serious campus security problem is n students. “We’ve got a lot of people on campus who shouldn’t be,” he said. In sharp contrast to the high inci dence of crime on other campuses, Texas Women’s University in Denton reported the state’s lowest overall inci dence, with 1.3 violent crimes, 29.4 non-violent crimes and 30.7 total crimes per 10,000 students. John Erwin, captain of the Universi ty Police at Texas Women’s University, attributed the university’s low crime rate to one fact: the school’s students are all women. The non-violent crime rate at Texas A&M was the fifth highest reported in the state, but University Police Chief Russ McDonald said those figures could be deceiving. McDonald questioned the accuracy of reporting techniques at other univer sities, and said he was sure the techni ques at Texas A&M are totally factual, giving rise to the impression that the crime rate is higher than that at other universities. “The social norm is that females will not have as many problems with the law as males of the same age,” Erwin said. He also credited police crime- prevention and crime-awareness prog rams with holding the campus crime rate to a low level. Erwin said a very strong rape-prevention program, which includes a police escort service, has made TWU one of the safest campuses in the country for women. “I do not believe we have more crime at A&M than they do at UT or the Uni versity of Houston,” he said. Baylor University showed the high est rate of non-violent crime in the three categories studied: 445.8 per 10,000 students. “We encourage our students to watch out for people who shouldn’t be on campus and for suspicious activi ties,” Erwin said. “I think we’ve done very well.” He defended crime-reporting techni ques at TWU, saying they are as good as those at any other university.