Wednesday, June 5, 1985/The Battalion/Page 3 UZT.? ' ' y y ” . : r xv- • ATF AND 1 OCAI Mm m Iwmi Jrlul mjLiF lm« i A&M maid loves dorm residents By SHERRIE COUCH Reporter By appearance alone, Ora Carter is just another maid at Texas A&M. She’s almost unnoticed as she enters Spence Hall. Her uniform is just like the oth ers’: maroon polyester smock, white polyester pants and black, rubber wading boots. Appearances, though, can be misleading. Last fall Carter turned 60, but her face shows no dramatic signs of ag ing. And her hair is still black. There’s a slump in her shoulders as she walks, and at times she looks run-down, but her smile is always there. Carter married early and had five children in eight years. All of her children are grown — the youngest is 34. And, she’s been divorced for the past 33 years. In the late 1930s, it was not un common for poor families to take their children out of school to help with the work, and Carter was one of those children who wasn’t able to finish school. “I just got through the eighth gra de,” Carter said. “But I don’t feel bad about not finishing school. Somebody’s got to do the hard work. “I’ve been working here at the University for 17 years now,” Carter said as she shrugged her shoulders and laughed. “I’ve got nothing bet ter to do.” cigarette and reading The Batta lion,” one Spence resident said. “For a while there she gave up smoking because she couldn’t afford to keep buying cigarettes. But I guess she just couldn’t kick the habit.” Carter said she wanted to quit smoking because her job was on the line — not because the work she was doing was below standard, but be cause she was getting old. She knew she couldn’t afford to buy cigarettes if she lost her job. But her job is a little more stable right now. Spence Hall residents threatened to petition for Carter’s job security. “I like Spence,” she said. “There’s a bunch of good-timing girls here. They’re not stuck-up or nothing like that.” At times Carter goes beyond her line of duty, doing extra work in the dorm. She repainted one dorm hall way in her free time during Christmas break. This summer, Carter is working in Dorm 3 because Spence is closec for repainting. Carter is a self-professed worka holic but admits the most important thing in her life will probably be her retirement. “That’ll probably be when I’m 80 years old,” she said with a laugh. Day in and day out, Carter vacu ums, cleans shower stalls, scrubs toi lets and takes out the trash that 108 young women accumulate over the week. At times the trash doesn’t even fit into the trash can. jersonal Carter has her own closet on each of the four floors in Spence. The girls in the dorm have given her signs, cards and memo boards for messages to decorate the doors. Clements predicts oil boom in Texas by the year 2000 Associated Press AUSTIN — Former Gov. Bill Clements predicted Tuesday that by the year 2000, Texas produc ers will have technology advanced enough to recover as much crude oil as the state has produced so far. “It will have enormous implica tions for the economy of the state as well as our national security,” Clements told the Texas Inde pendent Producers and Royalty Owners Association. “We’re talk ing about in the future producing from the known reservoirs of the state the equivalent amount of oil that we have produced to date.” Much of the state government revenue in the past has come from oil and gas taxes, but that has declined in recent years due to the oil industry’s economic downturn. Clements founded SEDCO Inc., an international oil drilling firm in 1947. SEDCO merged with Schlumberger Ltd. in 1984. Clements, who as Texas’ only Republican governor this century served from 1978 to 1982, said he was making h non-partisan effort to stress the importance of the oil and gas industry to the state and nation. “I’m not running for any thing,” Clements told reporters after his speech, but he did say he thought Democratic Gov. Mark White, who defeated him in 1982, is very vulnerable. Clements, a former deputy U.S. defense secretary, also said the nation could not afford the luxury of not having an energy policy. He said the nation’s $63 billion trade deficit, of which about half was caused by imported oil, is a serious problem. “It not only affects our national security from a logistical stand point, but it affects our relationship with both Canada and Mexico,” he said.“If Mexico is to recover from the doldrums it is now in, it will be through its relationship through energy with the United States. He predicted that crude oil prices will remain relatively stable at about the “current levels and then gradually increase by about 50 percent by the year 2000.” Photo by ANTHONY S. CASPER Ora Carter, a maid at Texas A&M, reads The Battalion while on her break in her closet in Briggs Hall. During lunch. Carter usually takes a break to watch “All My Chil dren” in the dorm lounge. “You can always catch her taking breaks in her closet too, holding a On one floor, Carter left the mes sage, “You are so neet.” Though the word was misspelled, the message was clear. There’s a lot of love be tween the dorm residents and their maid. Judge: state violating mental health order Associated Press B-CS population rises by 25 percent Census Bureau releases statistics Associated Press ■WASHINGTON — The popula tion of Bryan-College Station has risen by 25 percent to 117,400 since the 1970s, making this community one of the fastest-growing metropol itan areas in the nation, according to the Census Bureau. The bureau reported Tuesday that some smaller metropolitan areas such as B-CS, with less of a population base to start with, showed even greater percentages of growth than large areas. Florida and Texas accounted for 10 of the II fastest-growing metro areas, the bureau said. On a percent age basis, the bureau also listed these Texas metropolitan areas as three of the fastest growing in the nation: Midland, 113,600, up 38 percent; Odessa, 144,500, up 25 percent and Austin, 645,400, up 20 percent. The bureau also reported that Houston continued its phenomenal expansion to lead major urban growth in the United States. Close behind Houston was Dallas- Fort Worth, with 14.2 percent f rowth to bring its population to ,348,000. It ranked tenth in both 1980 and 1984. But San Antonio was not to be outdone. One of the 37 largest me tropolises in the nation, it was one of eight that grew by 10 percent more between 1980 and 1984. or Metropolitan statistical areas are generally defined as regions of com mon economic interest with a city of at least 50,000 people at the center. DALLAS — A federal judge, who ruled that Texas is violating an or der regarding the release of mental patients, said he won’t take action until after he gets a community serv ice plan from the state mental health department. In a 12-page ruling issued Mon day, U.S. District Judge Barefoot Sanders said the state’s community mental health services are only “min imally adequate” and blamed the Texas Legislature and local govern ments for not providing enough money for them. Sanders ruled that the state has been violating his year-old order that mental patients be discharged only to proper community pro grams. The Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation has tried to comply with the order, he said, but hasn’t had enough money. , The agency has not, however, been discharging mental patients be fore they are ready to re-enter so ciety, Sanders said. The judge said he must find “an appropriate remedy for failure to comply” with his order. But Sanders said he will wait until he receives a plan next month from the mental health department, which is supposed to include a blueprint for developing community services and complying with require ments of a 1981 settlement of a class- action lawsuit against state mental hospitals. in M I asked ci rs Hurt ilerson Smith old rtin wfxr of* reP- acuhr per(° r class* ,rds i” dit¥ e ? ma* a,n am* vritet’ Frida/ holidf flP fat aid TX Jd- rS4i attal- 784) "II We Have A Special For You MARGARITA MONDAY & TEQUILA TUESDAY gl.00 Margarita’s Frozen or Rocks all Day Monday & Tuesday Mon.-Sun. Happy Hour 4-6 p.m. 4501 Texas Ave. South in Bryan 846-3696 gp-l -^11“ "(2=$’U a'p'plau't) anyone mho can make a livina toe-$ancina oznoun&iny elevhant teeth. Mr. Twain admired few things more than a well-turned note or dance. His special brand of wit and satire highlights the 1985-86 season of the Opera & Performing Arts Society of Texas A&M. Hal Holbrook’s famous one-man presentation “Mark Twain Tonight” is just one of eight magical performances the Opera & Performing Arts Society (MSC OPAS) will bring to Bryan-College Station for the 1985-86 season. Several may be available only to season ticket holders. Each brings its own magic to Texas A&M’s Rudder Auditorium. Make this the year you experience the magic of MSC OPAS. This year make the magic yours. The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra September 12, 1985 “Leonard Slat kin and his Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra must be considered major forces on the American muscial scene. ’’—Karen Monson, Chicago magazine. The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center October 8, 1985 “The musical success story of the generation!”—Harold Schonberg, the new york times. Hubbard Street Dance Company November 14, 1985 “...the cat’s pajamas, the bee’s knees, the fastest gun in the West, the sexiest gal in town...groovy, dreamy, peachy, perfecto... ”—Richard Christiansen, Chicago tribune. Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain Tonight! January 29, 1986 Mr. Holbrook has breathed life into Mr. Twain in this one-man show for almost 30 years. His skill at becoming the beloved story-teller of A merica ’s youth is uncanny. He is Twain. Through him relive the wonder of one of A merica ’s great writers and humanists. The Vienna Choir Boys February 11, 1986 “Above and beyond the musical virtues of this group...they put on a heckuva good show.”—John Schuster-Craig, LOUISVILLE TIMES. Young Uck Kim, Violinist February 21, 1986 “. ..Kim’s real glory is the sound he produces: an individual voice, plangent and expressive. los angeles times. Katia and Marielle Labeque, Piano Duet March 27, 1986 “Far and away the most exciting two-piano team before the listening public today. los angeles times. The Houston Ballet performing “Peer Gynt” April 9, 1986 “...fine dancers, spirited, unashamedly popular, and very good at providing the sort of ballet a big public wants to see. ’ ’—John Percival, the London times. MSC OPAS 1985-86 TICKET ORDER Mail to MSC Box Office • Box J-l • College Station, TX 77844 • For Information,Call:845-1234 SEASON TICKETS 1985 - 86 Zone 2 (Orchestra Zone 3 (Balcony) Season Ticket Regular or Balcony) Prices $71.00 $56.50 Student $56.25 $45.00 List my (our) name in the following manner: NAME Category Zone Price Ho. Seats $ Regular (Adult) Student (All) Handling GRAND TOTAL 2.00 ADDRESS, _APT. #_ □Charge to my Interbank MasterCard CITY/STATE/ZIP. PHONE #_ □ I choose to retain same seats as last year. (Benefactors, Guarantors and Contributors Only) □ I wish to be assigned best available seats. Orchestra Balcony No Preference I wish to donate of my season tickets for use by students. □Charge to my VISA mTT T T T Account No Mo. Yr Card Expires II 1 M 1 1 1! 1 1 T 1 Account No. Mo. Yr. Card Expires Card Holder's Name, □ Check Enclosed (payable to TAMU MSC) Programs and performance dates subject to change without notice. We regret there will be no refunds or exchanges.