Monday, November 30, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 Older students say adjustments to college life not hard to make SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current 10's 4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nlte" •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO MANOR EAST 3 NEED mop#:y??? Sell your BOOKS at University Book Store By Jackie Feldman Reporter Of the 39,079 Texas A&M stu dents, 642 students are more than 40 years old, Registrar Don Carter said. Middle-age students return to col lege for a variety of reasons. Some decide to raise a family be fore returning or starting college. Others return because they want to change their careers. Ruth Moore, in her 40s, is a senior history major from College Station. She decided to begin college after her children left home. Moore earned 42 hours at Blinn Community College and transferred to A&M. “Education is one of my highest priorities,” Moore said. “No matter if I had to take one course at a time, I was willing to do it.” Fifty-year-old Patricia Childress, a junior history major from College Station, returned to college after de ciding she wanted a change from be ing a real estate agent. “After the real estate business be gan to get bad,” Childress said, “I decided I needed an education.” Both Moore and Childress said it wasn’t difficult to settle into the col lege routine of studying and going to class. Childress said the biggest problem she faces is the loneliness caused by the lack of peers. Despite this, she gets along well with the younger stu dents and has formed lasting friendships. Moore said she hasn’t noticed any barriers between herself and the younger students. “Your attitudes, vitality and the way you handle problems influence the way people perceive you,” Moore said. Although Moore and Childress would like to be involved in degree- related clubs, they are not because of other commitments — Moore is married and Childress works. Moore and Childress agree col lege has changed their views about lim. “Learning has opened my eyes to preconceived notions,” Childress said, “and increased my self-esteem. School has strengthened my views on some subjects and changed my views on others.” Moore said, “The wide range of cultures allows me to develop my world views of many subjects.” Moore and Childress agree their lives have changed since they’ve been in college. College has made time scarce for both social and daily activities. Moore has found that college has forced her to organize her time bet ter. “I am more polished at getting things done,” Moore said. “The more I do, the better I get at finding time to do them. “Although I get frustrated at times because so many interests pull me in different directions, college is definitely an enriching experience.” Housing glut hinders selling in Dallas area DALLAS (AP) — An increase in the number of houses for sale in Dallas is making it harder to sell homes, with sellers facing competition from foreclosures in an already-glutted market. “Any time supply is generally exceeding demand, you have to say it’s a buyers’ market,” Benny McMahon, executive director for the Greater Dallas Board of Real tors, said. But McMahon cautions against painting the market with “a broad brush,” saying there are too many individual factors at work. At the end of October, there were 25,866 active listings in the board’s cooperative listing serv ice, up from 25,165 for the same period last year. That increase has helped add to the amount of time it takes to sell a home. In the first 10 months of this year, it took 101 days to sell the saverage pre-owned home in the Dallas area — up 21 days, or 26 percent, from the average 80 days on the market for the same time last year. In most neighborhoods, it takes an average 140 to 145 days for a home to sell. Realtors say sellers this year are starting at a lower list price, but the average sale price is up. That, they say, is because some of the more expensive homes are being sold and not because of an increase in overall prices. In 1987, the average home sold for $125,900, or 12.75 percent below the current average list price of $ 144,300. Some of the major factors af fecting the Dallas-area housing market this fall and winter in clude a glut in foreclosures, fewer single-family home being built, higher mortgage rates and the shock of last month’s stock mar ket crash. Restaurant’s ‘grand closing’ draws crowd with offerings FORT WORTH (AP) —Sam Al len and Bobby Platt wanted to do something grand to mark the closing of Sammie’s Bar-B-Que after 42 years of operation. Nickel beer and 25-cent sand wiches should have been enough to draw a crowd, but they advertised that Boots, a popular former car hop, and Big Red, a well-known for mer waitress, would also be there. The restaurant closed down after the “grand closing” festivities Satur day at the site where it has served Fort Worth residents since the end of World War II and will reopen next Thursday in a new location. The restaurant had to be moved because the old building can no longer meet safety codes. Allen and Platt stocked the restau rant with 2,500 pounds of beef, 500 pounds of ribs and set up three beer stations outside the building to pre pare for the eight-hour bash. Customers began lining up an hour before the “grand closing.” By 7 p.m., manager Frank Tyler said customers had consumed nine kegs of beer and the line to get in the res taurant wound around the corner. Platt said he never expected such a crowd. “Down through 40 years, there’ve been so many good, steady custom ers, we just wanted to do something where they could get a meal almost free,” he said. “We got them and a lot more.” Allen said, “We wanted to give them one last chance to come here and eat and look around. But with this crowd I don’t guess they had much chance to look around. Some of’em got to eat.” Charlotte Chatman, who was known as “Big Red” when she worked at Sammie’s as a waitress, came from her East Texas home in Lindale for the closing. “Boots,” a carhop for 15 years un til she left in 1969, wouldn’t give her real name. “It’s just ‘Boots’ Hall,”’ she said. “Besides, if you put ‘Beulah Fay’ in the paper no one would recognize it.” State legislator says attending UT bolstered support for education AUSTIN (AP) — University of Texas officials can rest assured that higher education funding is not just another issue to some state legislators. Especially reassuring is the fact that one representa tive thinks enough of the university to commute there weekly from Laredo, about 250 miles southwest of Aus tin. After completing his first legislative session, which ended this summer, Rep. Henry Cuellar began doctor ate-level government studies at the university. Cuellar, D-Laredo, said UT instructors and the class room experience reinforced his vote for higher educa tion funding. “Now I know why it’s important that those (faculty) salary increases were given,” he said. Having a 32-year-old state representative in class does not intimidate Cuellar’s instructors. “I have lots of different people in my class with dif ferent backgrounds, and he’s just one of them,” govern ment instructor Gavan Duffy said. “There’s also a guy who works in a record store — it’s no different.” But Cuellar’s experience is sometimes useful in the classroom, government instructor Mark Graber said. “It’s come in handy a couple of times when discussing issues about the relationships between local and state governments,” Graber said. Back home in Laredo, Cuellar is his city’s connection between state and local government. Cuellar represents a new class of South Texas politicians, replacing the old “patron,” — Spanish for boss or chief — politicians in Laredo and other areas of South Texas. Cuellar said, “Now, in Laredo there is no single entity that can deliver the votes.” So far, Cuellar said, his position as state legislator permits him to change Laredo more than if he were a politician in his city. His legislation influencing the La redo district “is easier to pass over here, but politically not always popular,” he said. Those new laws passed during Cuellar’s first term in cluded measures that created a public defender posi tion in Laredo’s Webb County, prohibited the Webb County district attorney from participating in private practice and increased the penalty for removing ballots from a ballot box. Raul Vasquez, Webb County court-at-law judge, said Cuellar’s efforts to update the political structure should go smoothly. “I don’t even think he’s (Cuellar) going to get opposi tion” in the next election, Vasquez said. Texas’ mentally retarded adults suffer from shortage of community services Manor East Mall TEB WOLf TOO pq £8 TNRS MB & A BABY pq owmauQ JI 7:1» BABY ROOM PQ PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy | •FATAL ATTRACTjOjl r | PLANES, TRAIRS& AUTOMOBILES r Northgate 8c Culpepper Plaza M m UKE FATHER UKE SON pgi3 ffl PRINCESS BRIDE pg-is i§ $ DOLLAR DAYS $ STAKEOUT r £8 CAN’T BUY ME LOVE 77 £8 THE PICK UP ARTIST pg m THE LOST BOYS r Auto Service “Auto Repair At Its Best” General Repairs on Most Cars & Light Trucks American & Import OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:30 846-5344 Just one mile north of A&M On the Shuttle Bus Route lllRoyal, Bryan Across S. College From Tom’s B-B-Q fitf 7571 TAMU SUMMER ’88 STUDY ABROAD MEETING Have you heard about our programs in Britain, Paris, and Italy? 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Now on sale in our bookstore- day season. the perfect gift for this holi- $49.95 AUSTIN (AP) — Slowly and re luctantly, Darryl Gottschalk is disap pearing from society. Day after day, the young man sits alone in idleness, a captive in his own home because of circumstances be yond his control. Gottschalk, 22, is mentally re tarded and has no job at which to re port, no school to attend and no one to share the loneliness while his mother works two jobs. The only things to help pass the time for Gottschalk are television, the music of Willie Nelson, George Strait and other country singers, and a few household chores. Although his mind is like that of a 5-year-old, he takes care of himself and keeps out of mischief. Gottschalk is fading from the pub lic’s eye because there are few op portunities for retarded adults in Texas. He is one of hundreds, prob ably thousands, of retarded people in Austin who have finished school and now spend day after day inside their homes because there is no where else to go. “He’s just sort of down in the dumps,” said Barbara Gottschalk, Darryl’s mother. “He doesn’t want to go anywhere or do anything. What does he have to look forward to? That’s what I think all the time. It’s pretty dim. “But he’s not the only one. That’s the sad part.” A recent state-by-state survey found Texas has the biggest short age of services for the retarded. Gottschalk is one of nearly 22,000 retarded Texans trying to get help, according to the survey by the Asso ciation for Retarded Citizens of the United States. Many of the retarded people awaiting services never have been in an institution. Instead, they grew up in the community, attended public Are you reading this? This could be an ad for your business Think about it... The Battalion 845-2611 schools and are searching for a way to make a contribution to society. It never has been easy for a retarded adult to find employment, but par ents say it is even harder since the re cent decision by the Texas Depart ment of Mental Health and Mental Retardation to move large numbers of retarded people out of institu tions and into community programs. Competition for community services is keen. The Association for Retarded Cit izens’ study found that the system of public services for retarded people “has not been able to cope with in creased numbers of people leaving institutions, a new generation exit ing school special-education pro grams and the growing number of older families who have kept family members at home for years but who now need services.” Many parents of retarded adults in Austin say they willingly provide room and board for their children at home but would like to see more jobs and supervised activities available during the day for retarded adults. “We didn’t burden the state with raising our kids,” said Barbara Gottschalk, who is divorced and makes ends meet by working full time as a receptionist for a state agency and part time as a sales clerk at Foley’s. “We’re not asking the state to feed and clothe them now, but just to give them something so they don’t have to sit at home.” Jackie Roberts’ 22-year-old daughter, Donna, is set to graduate in the spring from the Jerry Mac Clifton Center, an Austin Indepen dent School District training center for retarded students aged 16-22. “We who have kept our children at home feel discriminated against,” Roberts said. 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