\ |The Battalion Wednesday, June 6, 1979 News Dept. 845-2611 College Station, Texas Business Dept. 845-2611 Weather Mostly cloudy with a 50% chance of rain today. High in the mid 80’s and a low of 70. Winds will be S.E. at 5-10 m.p.h. onsol to submit special ducation plans to TEA By ROY BRAGG Battlion Staff A five-year plan for special education in te A&M Consolidated school district will | lubrintted to the Region 6 education mtt r in Huntsville Thursday. j,Al. school districts in the state are re- to have such a plan to submit for ■oval to the Texas Education Agency •EA). The plan, approved by the school board ijnclay night, was originally due June 1. . Bdue date for Consolidated was pushed more iorm fees By ROBIN THOMPSON Battalion Staff ■>4 Hirting this semester, dorm residents BfHio longer required to pay dorm ac- IjJ ■ fees. This means that if a student Blnot want to attend activities like par- H Bnd mixers sponsored by his dorm, he B B Bi t have to pay for them. S Bcording to the 1978-79 housing guide, R.'Bnts are required to pay activity fees ffore receiving a room key. But a petition presented at the April 4 IB Bing of the student senate revealed Pi B r equiring the collection of such fees is E/ Regal. me^T Brhara Thompson, president of the Re- Bce Hall Association, said in an inter- B dudng the spring semester that the ;s have been collected in the past to pay Bctivities such as social functions, Bkers, Sunday suppers and service Jtcts. Hi wever the senate bill states that BBIHlatory fees may not be legally spent ' the purchase of food and alcoholic bev- B e bill also states that the collection of Jk B activity fees was never approved by ^ItTexas A&M University Board of Re- Apparently when the fees were im- B ente d no one checked into the legal- Tf(Charging them, said Ron Sasse, as- _jte director of student affairs. |riu! students are working on trying to Bn explanation of where fees are going l§here won’t be any confusion in the ■ he said. Be said that previously students who Bi to pay the fees were not issued a key and were taken before a judicial jompson said the fees, which range $5 to $7.50 per semester, will still be but will not be mandatory. If a person doesn’t want to pay, he In’t have to,” she said. |{jhe said the dorms are planning to issue jfers to be placed on the back of ID for admission to and participation in i activities. inform students of the change, npson said there will be a mailout to nmen before they come in the fall and Iten material available when people Ik in. | Sksse said that each semester the dorms ate individually on whether to have a |ram and charge activity fees, pence was the only dorm last year that Tnot programmed, he said. forward to Thursday so the district trus tees could review the plan at their regular meeting. The plan is split into eight chapters and outlines the school’s responsibilities and goals for the 425 students enrolled in the special education program. The program aids physically, emotion ally or mentally handicapped students, Perkins said. The Special Services program at Con solidated served 11 percent of the district’s total enrollment during the last school year, said program director Phyllis Per kins. Students are referred to the program by teachers or admistrators at their resective schools. If the parents approve the recom mendations, the student is evaluated by a screening committee from the school. If the committee decides special educa tion would be beneficial, an Administra tive Review/Dismissal committee (ARD) consisting of educators, citizens and par ents from the smae school is formed. This group develops an Individual Learning Program (IEP) for the student based on the students individual needs. The IEP can involve a combination of alternative learning methods such as spe cial education, remedial training in needed areas, medical aid, or physical or psychiatric therapy. There is no cost to the student or his family for the special training. Every year, students in the program are re-evaluated by their ARD for eventual replacement into regualr school cur riculum, continued special instruction in their IEP or development of a new IEP. Parents who do not agree with the pro gram prescribed for their child may appeal through a district ARD, the school board, the TEA or several other channels. The process for admission to special education is outlined by state law. The five-year plan, Perkins said, calls for a small increase in staff and a large in crease in facilities and plans in the existing special education programs. The plan also recommends the school board establish a policy for implementing new special education programs. One of those new programs also men tioned in the plan is the initiation of emergency medical treatment plans for multi-handicapped students. Such stu dents are prone to choke when eating, Perkins said. Another new program mentioned in the five-year plan calls for a change in the use of the “crisis room” at various schools. The crisis room, Perkins said, is a class room where emotionally disturbed stu dents are placed for counseling until they can be placed back into the regular class room envirionment. Presently, students placed in the room are withdrawn from their normal instruc tion. Under the proposed change, the teacher irt the crisis room would continue the student’s instruction in addition to counseling. Perkins said the plan also recommends a vocational plan similar to the existing one at the high school level be instituted in the junior high. The Special Services program in the A&M Consolidated distrcit is funded by a mix of federal, state and local funds. Last year, $362,000 in state funds and $17,000 in federal funds were used to administer the program. Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. The rains take their toll Rain water rushes from the Bryan Municipal Lake on South College. The lake, like most local bodies of water, has been swollen by re cent thundershowers. Discrimination issue still in dispute Veterans preference laws OK: Supreme Court ■K United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, over two dissents, Tuesday upheld veterans preference laws, despite claims that they discriminate against women. The 7-2 opinion reinstated a Massachu setts statute which gives an absolute pref erence over all other applicants to qual ified veterans seeking state civil service jobs. The decision bolsters veterans prefer ence laws across the country, since the court upheld the state statute believed to be the most susceptible to constitutional attack. The sensitive issue divided some admin istration officials and has been closely watched by veterans’ and women’s groups. The court conceded the law — the most extreme form of veterans preference in any state — has a severe impact on public employment opportunities for women. But it said the Bay State legislature had not intentionally discriminated against women — the standard necessary for find ing a constitutional violation. “Nothing in the record demonstrates that this preference for veterans was origi nally devised because it would accomplish the collateral goal of keeping women in a stereotypic and pre-defined place in the Massachusetts Civil Service,” Justice Pot ter Stewart wrote for the majority. Veterans preference laws “present an awkward — and many argue, unfair — ex ception to the widely shared view that merit and merit alone should prevail in the employment policies of government,’’ Stewart wrote. “After a war, such laws have been enacted virtually without opposition. Dur ing peacetime they inevitably have come to be viewed in many quarters as undemo cratic and unwise. “The substantial edge granted to veter ans” by the Massachusetts law “may re flect unwise policy,’’ he said. But he con cluded that challengers in the Massachu setts case have “simply failed to demon strate that the law in any way reflects a purpose to discriminate on the basis of sex.” Stewart noted that the status of being a veteran is “not uniquely male.” “Although few women benefit from the preference, the non-veteran class is not substantially all female,” Stewart said, “to the contrary, significant numbers of non veterans are men, and all non-veterans — male as well as female — are placed at a disadvantage.” Justice Thurgood Marshall, in a dissent Ricardo Cartejoso, a junior in mechanial en gineering, peers over the should of Greg An drews to catch a glimpse of his summer schedule while standing in a registration line at G. Rollie White Coliseum. Late registra tion continues today and tomorrow though there is $10 late charge Battalion photo by Clay Cockrill joined by William Brennan, said the Mas sachusetts law “so severely restricts public employment opportunities for women (that it) cannot be thought of as gender- neutral.” Marshall said Massachusetts could use a wide variety of other means which have a less severe impact on women. Nearly all states have some form of vet erans’ preference. Forty-one states and the U.S. government award preference points to veterans seeking public employ ment, and thus generally give them an extra edge in competition instead of an ab solute, lifetime preference. Even so. President Carter has proposed revising federal preferences to make them less unfair to women. A handful of states — like Pennsylvania, Utah, South Dakota and Vermont — and a few federal programs provide a heavier advantage for some veterans for some jobs. But Massachusetts’ 1896 statute, unlike any other in the country, places all appli cants who pass the civil service written exam on an “eligible list.” Wartime veter ans are hired first in order of their compo site scores, then surviving spouses or par ents, and finally all others. The law was challenged by Helen Feeney, a widow and mother of four from Dracut, Mass., who worked for the state Civil Defense Agency from 1963 until she was laid off in 1975. When she considered entering the mili tary during World War II, her mother re fused to give her the parental permission Windfall tax could be bad for Texas United Press International AUSTIN — Land Commissioner Bob Armstrong Tuesday said Texas could lose more than $100 million in royalty income if Congress imposes a windfall profits tax on oil. “As absurd as it sounds, the federal gov ernment would be taking dollars out of our permanent school fund and university funds to pay a windfall profits tax on our royalty oil income, unless the law clearly exempts us,” Armstrong said. The land commissioner said he con tacted top state officials and the California land commissioner to push for adoption of an amendment removing states out of the windfall profits tax bill. The House Ways and Means Committee begins work on the President Carter proposed bill on Wed nesday. Armstrong said he would try and contact Department of Energy officials and top Carter administration aides. Armstrong said oil decontrol would pro duce an additional $245 million in royalties for Texas during the next five years, but the windfall profits tax would require the state to give half the royalties to the fed eral government. “It simply doesn’t make sense to equate a state performing governmental service with a corporation,” Armstrong said. “Ev ery dollar we get from oil royalties will go to education, not into someone’s pocket.” which was required for young women while young men were being drafted into the armed services. When male veterans who scored lower than she did on promotional exams were awarded better civil service jobs on sev eral occasions, she decided in her mid-50s to do something about what she viewed as a continuation of military sexual discrimi nation. She went to court. Exterior design blamed for building collapse United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A city engineer Tuesday said the controv ersial exterior design of an arena that housed the 1976 Republican national convention may have created wind drafts as high as 125 mph and caused the building to collapse. City officials, however, said there were more questions than an swers to Monday night’s collapse of the massive Kemper Arena roof and that national building consultants would be summoned for fur ther opinions. About 15 to 20 maintenance and security workers were inside the 5-year-old, $23.2 million building when a torrential rain and wind storm struck the city. Moments later the arena roof dropped 95 feet into a pile of rubble. All the workers escaped injury. City officials first indicated the 4-inch rain that accompanied the storm was the probable cause of the roofs failure. But later city engineer Don Hurlbert said the high wind was the most likely con tributing factor. “The way the building is designed and where it is built, the winds have to climb and rise up to get to the arena,” Hurlbert speculated. “Because of that they speed up about 50 percent. So if you’ve got a 75 mph wind, it could be 125 mph at the arena.” Wind gusts during Monday night’s thunderstorm were clocked at 74 mph. Several windows were blown out in other buildings in the Kansas City stockyards. Hurlbert, however, said it might be several days before an actual cause could be determined. “We re going to try and reconstruct what happened,” he said. “We need to find out what kind of breaks we had at the various steel junctures.” Bill Dunn, the president of G.E. Dunn Construction Co. of Kansas City, the general contractor on the building, said to his knowledge there had never been any structural problems with the building al though tests had been conducted because of problems with high winds. “They put a model of it in a wind tunnel,” he said. “They had problems with the wind swirling around some of the doors. But they built some buffers and as far as I know that took care of the problem. “It is an unusual building and the unusual shape of the building causes some unusual problems in aerodynamics. But I think all that we would be doing on trying to figure out the cause would be coming up with conjecture.” The building’s design had been controversial from its inception because all of the support beams and structures were built on the outside of the building — instead of the conventional inside supports — for an unobstructed view of the arena floor. Yet, in 1976, the building was given one of six national honor awards for design by the American Institute of Architects. “There are a lot of things we don’t know the answer to, but we re going to bring in some national consultants to try and answer them,” said Berkley. “We re very optimistic about the future of Kemper Arena and it’s a facility that we will be putting back into use.” Authorities said they had not been able to determine an exact damage estimate but mayor Richard Berkley said initial reports indi cating the damage would top $1 million were “probably on the low side.” hi i