■■■TexasA&M XX ■ S The Batta on t! C/i rt 0 Serving the University community 1.76 No. 52 USPS 045360 22 Pages In 2 Sections College Station, Texas Thursday, November 11, 1982 kezhnev dies, word comes late United Press International MOSCOW — President Leonid fezhnev, who presided over the met Union since 1964 and made it e military equal of the United ;es, died of an apparent heart ck or stroke, officials said today, was 75. The ruler of the world’s largest intrydied suddenly early Wednes- Jy, the official Tass news agency said today. It was not known whether Brezhnev was at home or in a hospital at the time of his death. Although Brezhnev’s Reclining health had been a source of growing concern in recent years, there had been no hint in recent days that he was ill. At his last public appearance Sun day, viewing the annual Revolution Day military parade from his custom ary post atop the Lenin Mausoleum in Red Square, Brezhnev appeared rela tively vigorous. The initial announcement, deli vered simultaneously by Tass, Soviet Radio and Television, said simply, “Leonid Brezhnev died a sudden death at 8:30 a.m. (12:30 a.m. EST) on Nov. 10, 1982.” The wording of the statement indi cated either heart failure or a massive hemorrhage felled the stocky Com munist Party general secretary. More complete medical details were ex pected later, however. “The name of Leonid Ilyich Brezh nev, a true continuer of Lenin’s great cause and an ardent champion of peace and communism, will live fore ver in the hearts of the Soviet people and the entire progressive mankind,” Tass said. No funeral arrangements were announced immediately for the Soviet giant who led his country dur ing the terms of five U.S. presidents. Brezhnev was both head of state and general secretary of the Com munist Party, whose leadership he took over from Nikita Khrushchev just over 18 years ago. There are no published guidelines indicating whether anyone would take over those offices on a temporary basis. There was no indication how long the succession process would take. Analysts said they expected the col lective leadership of the Soviet Union — the Council of Ministers, which is in charge of the government, and the Politburo, the top executives of the Communist Party — would rule the country until a clear line of succession is established Jnemployment becomes reality for many olitical promises could cost consumers InO o rt C/3 by Maureen Carmody Battalion Reporter For a growing number of Amer icans, unemployment is notjust a pos sibility, but a reality that must be coped with. Once out of work, people not only have to deal with the economic prob lems of being jobless, but also with the psychological trauma. In early September, the nation’s unemployment rate rose to a post- Depression high of 10.1 percent, leav ing 11.3 million Americans jobless. And that’s the number of Americans who can be accounted for. The statis- , tic does not include Americans who I have become so discouraged that they have dropped out of the job market altogether. And Brazos County has not gotten away unscathed. The total civilian labor force in Bryan-College Station grew from 49,800 in August to 50,500 in September. With unemployment at 5.8 percent, 3,000 people arejobless. But it’s people — not figures — that tell the real story. One young oilfield worker, 22, whose asked that his name be with held, talked about his problems while standing in the unemployment line. “You hear it all the time, ‘Thanks but no thanks,’ or ‘we’ll call you if we need you,’ and they never do,” he said. “It’s getting so I can’t take it any more. I got no place to go and no money and no place to get it. What do you do?” Patricia Arbuckle, service control specialist for the Department of Hu man Resources in Bryan, said the in crease in the labor force is causing an increase in families requesting help. She attributed this, in part at least, to people coming into the state hoping to find a job. “We are dealing with a more tran sient population,” Arbuckle said. “Many people are coming into the county without any support.” And support is tough to get in Texas. The maximum unemployment in surance a person may receive is $160 a week. But according to a 1980 re port released by the Labor Depart ment, to live in moderate comfort a Houston urban family of four needs at least $ 19,025 a year — nearly triple the amount received through unem ployment insurance. Arbuckle, who deals mainly with the Aid For Dependent Children program, said that child abuse also is increasing. The increase may not di rectly relate to increasing unemploy ment, but it seems to be correlated, she said. Even though Bryan statistics on the crime rate as compared to unemploy ment contradict each other — the crime rate has shown a small decrease in Bryan — national statistics show a definite correlation between the two. A 1981 report by the National Advisory Council on Economic Opportunity showed that a one per cent increase in unemployment in 1970 accounted for a 3.8 percent in crease of all homicides, 5.7 percent increase in robberies, 2.8 percent in crease in larcenies and 8.7 percent increase in narcotic arrests. And a re cent study done by two labor econom ists showed that with every one per cent increase in national unemploy ment more than 300 men commit suicide. Walt Baker, office manager of the local Texas Employment Commis sion, says the reason employment is at such a low is simply a collaboration of events such as high interest rates, a decrease in oil production and de mand, and a decrease in construction. “It’s like tossing a rock in the mid dle of a pond, you don’t make just a splash, you make ripples all over the pond,” he said. Even though Bryan-College Sta tion’s unemployment rate is down from 6.8 percent in August to 5.8 per cent in September, there are still 2,950 people unemployed, Baker said. The decrease in unemployment is mainly because of seasonal hiring at Texas A&M, but even at the Universi ty the job openings are less than in previous years. From September 1981 to September 1982 the number of people applying for either employ ment or unemployment insurance in Bryan-College Station has increased 383 percent, he said. Baker also said he didn’t see any relief in the near future. And how do the unemployed feel? Well, the young oilfielder agrees with Baker. “I’ve been out there,” he said. “There just isn’t anything. And it’s not like 1 haven’t been looking be cause I have, I have. I doq’t want to go on welfare or anything, but you have to eat.” See Jobs, page 5 White’s policy may raise utility bills, prof says by Brian Boyer Battalion Reporter Eliminating monthly fuel adjustment arges as proposed by Governor-elect Mark hite in the recent election campaign would ad to higher utility bills for consumers, cxas A&M researchers say. "We’ve been hearing a great deal during mu political campaigns about eliminating ie right of the utilities to pass on increases in id prices to consumers,” said economics ofessor Dr. S. Charles Maurice. “If you did that, you would have a far gher increase in rates because the com mies would request additional funds in case ie costs for fuel jumped higher than they iticipated.” This viewpoint is shared by Texas A&M Electric Power Institute director John De nison. “I don’t really believe, that Mr. White or anybody that looks into the situation carefully will disagree with the basic idea that anybody who is selling energy is entitled to recover the cost of their fuel,” he said. Utility bills in most Texas cities include a base rate for electricity — plus the controver sial fuel adjustment charge. The fuel adjust ment fee is one way energy producers cope with frequent changes in the cost of fuel used to produce electricity. To compute the fuel adjustment charge, a rate at which the utility company expects to be able to buy fuel is set. If the cost of fuel rises above the predetermined rate, the additional expense can be passed on to consumers through the fuel adjustment charge without changing the base rate. A drop in the cost of fuel below the predetermined rate would re sult in a corresponding credit to customers. College Station buys electricity from Gulf States Utilities Co. rather than generating its own power. The city uses a power adjustment clause to pass changes in the cost of power along to customers. Denison explained how the system will deal with an impending increase in the cost of pow er supplied by Gulf States to the city: “I’m not sure we know how much that in crease is going to be. When it occurs, rather than us having to change College Station’s rate structures very rapidly and without a thorough analysis, we will merely use the pow er adjustment clause to pass on to the custom er whatever increases we have to pay Gulf States over and above the level that was built into the rate structure.” The increase in the cost of power eventual ly will lead to an increase in the base rate charged to College Station customers, but with the power cost adjustment the base rate change doesn’t have to be made imjmediately, Denison said. Companies that sell conventional goods and services can increase their rates as costs increase. But utility companies must have Public Utility Commission approval before in creasing base rates. Research on the issue by Maurice and gra duate assistant Jane Hobson indicates that eli minating the fuel adjustment clause could lead the utility companies to bankruptcy. The economists said forcing utility companies into bankruptcy would only cost taxpayers extra money, because the state would have to sal vage the companies. “If politicians really want to help consum ers, they will deregulate the utility com panies,” Maurice said, “but I don’t think you’ll hear anybody in Texas talk about deregulat ing these companies anytime soon.” Dennison notes a potential for abuse in the system as it stands now, since there is no incen tive for utility companies to hunt for the best price for fuel. olumbia launches smoothly; ins a 5-day space mission JO, 0) United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Four ronauts flew the space shuttle Col- into orbit today, carrying two timercial satellites for paying cus- ners for the first time. The big winged space freighter ikoffontime at 7:19 a.m. EST and eaked into a normal orbit for the th time in a year and a half. It was a spectacular Veterans Day idoff for astronauts Vance Brand, ibert Overmyer, Joseph Allen and lliam Lenoir, the first four-man tee crew and the first to fly a spa- hip on a charter flight. Air Force space trackers calculated : Columbia would come within 60 miles of the two-man Soviet Salyut 7 space station in darkness over the In dian Ocean at 11:16 a.m. National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials hailed the five-day, $250 million mission as an important step toward shifting much of the shuttle system’s operational costs from the government to com mercial users. Satellite Business Systems and Telesat Canada, the owners of the twin 7,300-pound communications satellites hauled up in the shuttle’s cargo bay, are paying NASA $18 mil lion for carrying the satellites into orbit. The shuttle, weighing a record 4,488,000 pounds at engine ignition, left a long trail of smoke and flame in its wake as it climbed into the cloud less sky. The next shuttle flight is scheduled for January. It will be made by the second shuttle, the Challenger. The weather was perfect for Col umbia’s launch, and Brand told the control center before takeoff: “I appreciate you guys ordering it for us.” The lakebed runways at Edwards Air Force Base in California’s Mojave Desert were under water from recent rains, but officials said the Columbia will be able to land on a paved runway there next Tuesday. inside iroundtown 4 falsified 6 lational 11 Ipinions 2 pom 13 Ute 5 Ehat’sup 12 forecast Today’s Forecast: Chance of bowers today. Cooler tempera- ures expected as weekend iroahes. ap- Chemical plant blast injures several men United Press International LAKE CHARLES, La. — An explo sion rocked a southwest Louisiana chemical plant early today, igniting a fire that critically burned at least one worker and forced officials to close a stretch of interstate highway. The blast tore through a portion of the Olin Chemical Co. about 6:30 a.m. CST, said State Police trooper J.B. Singer. The extent of damage and the cause were not known, but the blast apparently was confined to an ammonia unit. One worker suffered burns and was taken to West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital in Sulphur. The fire apparently was under control about one hour after the ex plosion and officials reopened an 8- mile area of Interstate 10, said troop er Gary Viator. One man was killed and 58 other workers injured at the plant June 2 in a leak of toxic nerve gas. Discharges of phosgene, a deadly gas used dur ing World War I chemical warfare, occurred twice at the plant in as many days. The gas, used by Olin as a chemical catalyst, spewed into the air for 2'A minutes June 2. The accident killed Frank Rodgriguez, 50, of Fresno, Texas. Two Olin employees, eight workers at an adjacent Conoco plant and 48 construction workers con tracted by Conoco were treated for respiratory discomfort. No one was injured in the second leak June 3. Russell Sanders’ modern art is displayed staff photo by Robert Snider on the Academic Building’s front lawn. Paper plate art stolen by Patti Schwierzke Battalion Reporter To Rbssell Sanders they were pen nies from heaven — or modern art. To persons unknown they were pap er plates to be disposed of — stolen, in Sanders’ point of view. To someone who knows who took them, they’re worth a $1 reward. This fanciful set of circumstances grew out of Sanders’ personal cam paign to put a little art into the every day life of the Texas A&M University campus. He had hoped to remain anonymous in his efforts, but he went public this week after his latest paper plate sculpture — which he called “Pennies From Heaven” — was stolen from the front lawn of the Academic Building. The sculpture—or environmental painting — like two previous ones, was made of paper plates arranged to represent a musical composition. “The idea I’m trying to portray is visual music,” said Sanders, a senior enviromental design major from Abilene. “I happen to be doing it with paper plates because they are cheap. We are in an art vacuum here at Texas A&M. You can’t get a total edu cation without that art element.” Sanders said he started his cam paign when he decided that substan tial art — such as sculptures and paintings and a museum to put them in along with large-scale enviromen tal structures — wasn’t in Texas A&M’s immediate future. Sanders said he wanted something now and decided to do something about it him self. “I don’t have $50,000 or $100,000 but I do have a brain and an imagina tion,” Sanders said. “After I did the first one — ‘Primary and Secondary Colors in C Major’ — I had a vision for the next four. I decided to call the whole series ‘Greatest Musical Hits: A Five Part Series.’” The problems started when San ders realized his art was being stolen from in front of the Academic Build ing each time he put it out. The latest incident occurred Tuesday with the theft of “Pennies From Heaven.” “If the art thieves are not caught, then we may have to move the next two paintings and possibly guard them,” Sanders said. “I don’t under- : stand why people are stealing it. “At first, I thought it was the trash people, but I found out it wasn’t them.” Sanders said he had permission from the ground maintenance de- E artment to display his work on the iwn. “Are people stealing it because it is that bad?” he asked. “I wasn’t sure if it was art at first but now I am. I’m reacting to nothing because there is nothing here for art. ^^mjillingthat^void^y^^^^^^