Page 2 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APR. 2, 1976 School board endorsements Of the eleven persons seeking three seats on the A&M Consolidated School Board in tomor row’s election, none are incumbents for the pos ition. In Place 1, ELLIOTT BRAY is the best choice. A manager of data systems at A&M, Bray would be a valuable asset to the board in coordinating the sale of bonds and other ad ministrative duties. He is well-informed on the issues and has served the past year as president of the College Hills Parent-Teacher Organiza tion. He was on the Citizens’ Advisory Commit tee which prepared the bond issue in a thorough manner. His concerns about the district’s needs are genuine. Lambert Wilkes has served on the board for five years and also seemingly under stands the district’s urgent needs. Yet, he is the only board member who is not supporting the bond issue. In Place 2 we support the candidacies of two candidates, ELIZABETH NAUGLE and HOY RICHARDS. Both are well-informed of the dis trict’s needs, and the voters would be well- represented by either one. Naugle is a former elementary schoolteacher and is well ac quainted with the school eurriculums. She has attended board meetings for four years and her involvement indicates that she’s a candidate who is genuinely concerned about the school system. Richards is a transportation economist at A&M and his expertise would be invaluable in the area of fiscal responsibility. His experience on the Board of Equalization and as a former board member gives him knowledge of the re venue needs of the district. His non-support of the bond issue must be questioned however. Roger Feldman is also concerned, but while he supports the bond issue he is a lackluster candidate and offers few specific programs for improvement. George Boyett opposes the bond issue on the grounds that its figures are inflated and some of its provisions are unnecessary. As a member of the city planning and zoning com mission he displayed an indifference to careful zoning measures. We believe careful planning is needed on the school board also. HELEN WILBORN in Place 4 appears to be the best candidate for Place 4. She is a lifelong resident of the city and was educated in the school district. Her young age, 23, gives her a close familiarity with the present situation in the schools, and a better understanding of the stu dent’s needs. As a black woman, she would give able representation to a large segment of the population. A drug abuse counselor, she stres ses the need for counseling in the schools, and increased community awareness of board ac tions. Bruce Upham, Fred Bouse and William Was son are also competent alternatives. Upham is an A&M student and has only been out of the Consolidated school system a couple years. Again, his young, responsible voice would be helpful in evaluating school programs and needs. Bouse supports stronger community re lations. In his support of the bond issue he em phasizes the importance of a strong vocational program. Wasson is a systems audit manager for A&M and his experience would help in the area of financing and administration work. William Fitch has been spending a lot of money during the campaign, stressing the al leged extravagance of the bond issue. He is a local land developer, so we must wonder where his experience and expertise were when those construction estimates were first made. His criticisms of enrichment and special education programs and “spendthrift” ways are examples of knee-jerk obstructionism. Vote yes on bond issue While many students may regard the $6.4 million school bond issue on tomorrow’s ballot as unimportant, it will affect them directly. If the issue is approved, property taxes would be raised to support the bonds. Although very few students own property locally, two-thirds live off-campus, and you can be sure that land lords will pass the increased taxes on to their tenants. The proposed bond issue was unanimously recommended by a Citizens Advisory Commit tee and also unanimously approved by the school board. Eight of the 11 school board can didates support the issue. All admit there are serious needs in the school district. A new vocational facility is drastically needed, especially considering that nearly 50 per cent of the Consolidated students are not going on to college. Classrooms alone can’t prepare some one for a job. If anyone doubts the overcrowding and maintenance needs covered in the bond issue, walk through any of the district’s four schools. Erosion is eating away at foundations and coun selors have offices in janitor closets. A similar bond issue last November was nar rowly defeated. Some are urging that this one be similarly tabled. If some think the present cost estimates are too inflated, they should check them again in a few months when inflation has increased some more. We support the bond issue and urge its ap proval. To delay a solution any longer would be an insult to the educational process. Up Homosexuality not crime or sin Editor: In response to Ms. Fisher’s letter (March 25), I would like to point out a couple of misleading statements she made. First, homosexuality is not illegal. In Texas, homosexual sex acts are illegal. Thus, in order for someone to be arrested under that law, a gay couple would have tc5 be caught in the act of having sex. Considering that most sex acts (gay and straight) take place in private homes, the law is virtually useless. Secondly, one can find a quote in the Bible to condemn virtually any thing one does not like. Over the centuries, the Bible has been through many translations, altera tions and adulterations. I know of few Christians who pay much atten tion to the books of Numbers, Leviticus and others. If Ms. Fisher thinks homosexual ity is immoral, then she has an obli gation to uphold her belief. Her ob ligation ends when she begins to dic tate her morality to others. Michael J. Garrett Good coverage Editor: Three cheers for the Battalion’s extensive coverage of the upcoming local elections! This campus has a reputation for being apathetic in politics, and I think it’s great that the Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the university administration or the Board of Regents. The Battal ion is a non-profit, self-supporting enterprise operated by stu dents as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Add Texas LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject to being cut to that length or less if longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guaran tee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verifica tion. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. ELECT FRED BOUSE A&M Consolidated School Board Trustee Position 4 • Scout leader - 8 years • Pack 802 and Troop 380. • Little League Baseball - 5 years - Director, President 8 Trustee. • College Hills PTA (Playground Renovation Project). • College Station Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee. David S. Broder Carter omits some of the fact am Battalion is doing its best to generate student interest. It also gives those interested a good look at the candi dates on some important issues. I hope every student who votes has considered the candidates and the issues seriously. Given the past record of voter participation, there are three students who don’t vote for every student who does. That means, of course, that each vote is four times more powerful than it would be with full participation. With statistics like those, the choices suddenly become very important. So if a student is going to vote, I hope to goodness that he reads up on the issues. Susie Turner MILWAUKEE — An incident at the Vel Phillips YWCA here one af ternoon last week may shed some light on the paradox of the Jimmy Carter campaign. It also shows why some who have been watching him have trouble deciding whether they are covering the most promising political figure to emerge in the 1970’s or the most skillful de magogue. As is often the case when he has a black audience. Carter spoke with an eloquence, a simplicity, a directness that moved listeners of both races. He spoke of the fundamentals that unite this country — of restoring “those precious things we’ve lost,” like love of country and trust and pride in its government — “the things that made us all proud in the past and have kind of slipped out of our hands.” He reminded us that peasants in Latin America and villagers in Africa “felt when John Kennedy was in the White House that our country, big and powerful as it is, cared about them.” He suggested that “those small countries, new and struggling and poor, want a friend. They could respect us if we respected them. They would trust us if we were trustworthy.” And then, having intimated his empathy for the nations on the other side of the great North-South divi sion in the globe, this son of the American South reached out across the great barrier between the races in this land, and said: “If I’ve got one solid base of sup port in this election, it’s been among the black people of this na tion . . . and I cherish it as much as anything I’ve had in my life — that confidence — and I would never do anything to betray that confidence. 1 woidd rather die first. ” He said, as he has done before to white audiences and black, that Mar tin Luther King, Jr., had liberated the whites in the South as much as he had the blacks, by freeing them from the burden of guilt and segregation. And he said that his candidacy for the presidency would be quite literally impossible had Dr. King not “re moved from the South the stigma of being preoccupied with the race is sue.” One would have to be made of stone to be unmoved by the surge of emotion — the communion — bet ween those black listeners and that white speaker who hopes to be their President. And one would have to be blind not to see what a boon it would be for this country to have a Presi dent who inspired that trust in blacks as in whites. And that irresistible surge of hope and belief is what made it all the harder to accept what happened in the next few moments, because if Carter did not “betray that confi dence” he had built in his audience, he did little to merit it. He had been asked, he said, his views on “school integra tion . . . and I’ll give you the same answer I gave in Jackson, Miss., and Biloxi, Miss., and Montgomery, Ala., and Asheville, N.C., and in New Hampshire.” But the truth is he did not give the same answer he had given in those. He did not even give the same ans wer he had given three hours earlier to a predominantly white audience at Marquette University, or would give an hour later, to another white audi ence at a fund-raiser at the Red Car pet Inn. He gave the blacks at the YWCA about one-third of his standard re sponse, then turned to another to pic. And when a reporter, who had been caught up in the emotion of the gathering and had begun to believe that this man was all that his admir ers say he is, realized what had hap pened, the sense of betrayal was as sharp and painful as if someone had punched him in his stomach and knocked the air out of his lungs. Carter began by saying, as he al ways does, that the passage of the civil rights acts had been “the best thing that has happened in the South in my lifetime.” He told how his daughter goes to “a typical south Georgia school” and how “last year in the second grade, she had 13 white classmates, 16 black classmates, a black teacher. She’s getting a good education. She goes there because she wants to, because her momma and daddy want her to. And typical and it’s good and I’m prou it. So school integration, I’m for hasn’t hurt us; it’s helped us. He stopped his answer therea YWCA, turning to a discussio welfare reform, and leaving un (See OMISSION, Page] 2 FOR 1 SUNDAE SAL March 30 - April 4 Buy One, ■Get Due 7 Cl (Contin Located on S. Texas Ave. Between K-Mart and Gibson Dairii Queen both th citing h arter ir Imandatc didn’t w< !he child and th preferre volunta reased v id which ed agair Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. Mail subscriptions are S16.75 per semester: $33.25 per school year: $35.00 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Mail subscriptions are $5.00 per semester; $9.f>Q per school year; $10.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 5% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. ‘ 1 Vess: Thc Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, 77843. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatched credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of reproduction of all other matter herein are id so reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. Acting Editor Roxie Hearn News Editor T. C. Gallucci City Editor Jim Peters Contributing Editors Sandy Russo, Steve Gray Sports Editor Paul McGrath Photo Director Douglas Winship Staff Writers Carolyn Blosser, Ray Daniels, Pat Edmondson, Tony Gallucci, Lee Roy Les- chper, jerry Needham. WHAT ARE YOU DOING THIS SUMMER? NOTHING? Well why don’t you do something and spend your summer with us at Camp Stewart — the south west’s oldest continually operated private summer camp for boys. Our representative will be interviewing prospec tive staff members on Tuesday, April 6 in the Placement office in the Rudder Tower. Contact the placement office for an appointment or just come on by. MSC CAMERA COMMITTEE in effe< 'you’vi 'lack par nt of the what I j hat as Pr ourt ord 'l with tl rt an anti Iment, b Presents: A Black and White Short Course on development, printing, and theory. I is a per ant if am A unders iew, the) >fdivinati( he had ss At 2:00 p.m. 301 Rudder Towe Sunday, April 4 Free! - Everyone Welcome s it accidi omissior standard integrat : a, when ace in ano ith that v, sitadelih fortuitous left his ] 'at the se 'for s seco Fred Bouse for Exploring all reasonable alternatives to assure maximum return for our tax dollar. A strong preventive maintenance program for all school facilities. Professional planning of building site for all new facilities. Adequate, well-planned and efficient facilities using only durable construction materials and methods. Renovation and repair of existing usable facilities. Planned development to realize our community's educa tional goals. Community involvement in determining the needs and goals of our school system. COMMITTED TO QUALITY EDUCATION VOTE SATURDAY, APRIL 3 Paid for by Frad Bousa Committee, Fred Klatt. Chairman. 1014 Madera Circle MSC ARTS COMMITTEE presents “Fellini’s Roma Monday, April 5 J 5 at 8:00 p.m. Rudder Theater Dr. Paul Christense informal discussion afterward led by Dr. Dennis Berthold MSC ARTS COMMITTEE presents POETRY READING by Dr. Jack Hardie "I s >4