THE BATTALION Page 5A WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1976 arely done More school funding A g§ ie scooter gets second enefits not raised by penny on dollar Associated Press SHINGTON — School de- irds DM§ ation ' n Corpus Christi, Tex., to a “grueling legal battle” I . it resulted in virtually no violence Johnp'flsiuption, according to the U.S. tion i Commission. I) In a report issued Tuesday, the Dr E |W llliss ' on concluded that in the ^vid \|l Coast cit y a recalcitrant school lam J inistration an< ^ lack of' strong Hj" adership at the community level 1 M pB severe ly restricted the benefits •segregated education.” Iu Tfe report, whose general find- I J were critical of President Ford n y ’■members of Congress for at- Jt man) lo witli lation J forgmcl egesa«| ssing." assistedl te deaal mpting to curb court-ordered bus- grewout of a 10-month study of pi desegregation throughout the entsand >f the oi ipelining coal may aid rail labor gal efforts to desegregate public Is in Corpus Christi date back K" S and the school system has ■ |it) under federal court desegrega- '•orders since 1971. Up to now Wl '^desegregation measures have i only partially implemented. Jhroughout the entire legal pro- ieassuajj n gs up to the present, the ‘prorllifBiQj administration has opposed leJcgregation,” the civil rights i ^^BhOUSTON — U.S. Rep. Bob i ■Rhardt said Tuesday he believes I I ailroad labor has been misinformed Bit lurry pipelines. ■he Houston Democrat said rail- Bs oppose granting eminent do- nai" powers to such pipelines be- ause railroads hold a near monopoly n ransporting coal, iftdually, the pipelines would in- erndy railroad labor for the short jls to and from the slurry lines,” jhardt said. And they boost em- ilo\ ment in steel manufacturing and fall ruction crafts.” commission report said. It noted that this opposition ex tended to efforts to block the com mission from obtaining information about desegregation progress in the school system. “The superintendent refused to permit commission staff to interview administrators or teachers,” the re port said, adding that the superin tendent also refused to testify or allow his staff to testify at an open meeting of the commission’s Texas advisory committee. However, the report said that “despite the negative quality of Cor pus Christi’s educational leadership, there has been almost total absence of violence or disorder during the district’s limited desegregation ef forts.” It said this was “due, in large part, to the efforts of the business and reli gious community in Corpus Christi. The media also played an important role in keeping the community in formed. The local newspaper, the Corpus Christi Caller-Times, pro vided excellent coverage.” According to the report, the school system’s current partial de segregation plan involves busing about 5,000 students, with more than 2,300 being bused specifically for desegregation purposes. By con trast, a 1971 court order had esti mated that effective desegregation of the Corpus Christi schools would require busing about 15,000 stu dents. As of December 1975, the report said, the district’s student enroll ment was 57 per cent Mexican- American, 6 per cent black and 37 per cent white. The breakdown for the city’s over-all population of some 25,000 is 41 per cent Mexican-American, 5 per cent black and 53 per cent white. The commission said the Corpus Christi schools face a “critical short age” of minority faculty members. While two-thirds of the district’s en rollment is of minority background, minorities comprise less than one- third of its teachers, the report said. Also, the commission found that the system lacks adequate programs for bilingual and bicultural instruc tion to handle the needs of its large number of Spanish-speaking stu dents. Associated Press AUSTIN — A penny per dollar increase in the sales tax is most often suggested as the way to finance big ger state spending on public schools, the chairman of a House committee said Tuesday. Rep. Tom Massey, D-San Angelo, said such an increase — unaccept able under Gov. Dolph Briscoe’s no new taxes edict — would raise $945 million over the next two state fiscal years. Massey told his House Committee on Alternatives to Public School Financing that the next most fre quently suggested tax possibility is a penny increase in the four per cent motor vehicle sales tax, good for $145 million per biennium. The committee is seeking alterna tives to the present school finance system that relies heavily on local property taxes plus state aid. Massey and other committee members have indicated they favor full state financing, with mandatory reductions in local property taxes. Prospects for a major increase in state funding, however, would dim if the legislature adopts Briscoe’s plan to increase highway spending by $825 million. Public schools, Massey said, “have just as much claim on those funds in the treasury as anyone else. It is the bill that gets passed first that will get the funds. I’m not saying there will be a big contest for the funds, but all the leadership is con cerned with more funds for public education, and that’s as high a prior ity as we have in state government.” Texas A&M students as a design team won second place honors in a national competition sponsored by the American Society for Engineer ing Education. The competition was a summer event at the University of Tennes see. On the A&M team were Dawn Wakefield, William B. Ledbetter and Prasart Hothamrat of College Station; Robert G. Campos, El Paso; DanC. Sicking, Muenster; David C. Thomas, Brenham, and George A. Turk Jr., Lufkin. Wakefield and Ledbetter cap tained the team on design of an as tronaut mobility unit. They call it the “Aggie scooter.” Designed as a team project for Engineering Design Graphics 106, the Aggie scooter is a device to pro vide for astronaut maneuverability on extra-vehicular activities during space shuttle experiments. The scooter would operate much like a “flying chair.” Each member of the design team will receive second-place certificates from the ASEE contest committee. Faculty sponsor of the team was Dr. Robert A. Wilke of the En gineering Design Graphics Depart ment. Two other Texas A&M student teams received honorable mentions in the competition. Eckhardt was the keynote speaker at the first annual meeting of the Slurry Transport Association and told the group he believes an emi nent domain bill he is sponsoring will be approved by the end of the first half of the next Congress. “The bill was tabled by a 19-21 committee vote this year but I be lieve we will get it through next time, he said. At least five slurry pipelines have been proposed for movement of coal from western states to utilities in the south, southwest, and Pacific north west. “But railroads crisscross the coun try like cobwebs,” Eckhardt said. “Slurry lines must cross the railroads but can’t do so without the power of eminent domain.” Eckhardt said the use of natural gas to fuel utility plant boilers must be phased out because gas supplies are dwindling. He said there will be less gas in the future for intrastate consumption and that top priority for such supplies will go to residences and petrochemical plants. “There is plenty of coal to be hauled both by rail and by slurry pipeline.” jrpJi Big Results! CLASSIFIED ADS! Welcome Back Aggies — We're eager to serve you during this exciting year. I invite you to join us at meal times, any time, and especially after all the Aggie victories! We promise you the best possible food at the Lowest Possible Prices . . . Atmosphere too! COME TRY US! 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