Funds for scouts unequal Boys get more than girls By BARBARA FRICKE Special to The Battalion There are more girls than boys in scouting in the Brazos County area. Yet the Boy Scouts get $3,600 more than the Girl Scouts from the Bryan-Brazos County United Way and College Station United Fund. Marilyn Randall, Girl Scout district adviser, said there are nearly 1,100 registered Girl Scouts in Brazos County alone. The Boy Scout enrollment in Brazos County and in parts of Burleson, Robertson, Grimes and Madison counties reaches about 1,000, said Omar Smith, Boy Scout district chairman. Marianna Bond, executive secretary of the United Way, says the Boy Scouts of America will receive $18,300 this year from the Bryan-Brazos County Fund and $5,000 from the Col lege Station Fund. The Bluebonnet Girl Scout Council will get $13,700 from Bryan- Brazos County and $6,000 from College Station. Randall voiced a concern say ing the Girl Scouts are depen dent on the United Fund money for their programming. She added that the amount appropri ated is only about half of what was requested. The Boy Scouts also will get less than they requested. Smith said the difference is about $6,000 or $7,000 between the amounts requested and appro priated. To balance the totals as in past years, the Boy Scouts will conduct their “Friends of Scout ing” drive, he said. “We go back to past scouters and others interested in scouting to raise what we’re short,” Smith said. He added the drive is usu ally very successful. Both Randall and Smith ex plained that the money, funded and raised, goes directly to their district councils. The councils provide the majority of pro gramming and training for the scouts in the county and pay for any professional personnel. Indi vidual scout units usually have small dues that pay for their spe cific unit activities. Judy Rychlik, president of the Bryan-Brazos County United Way, said the fact that the Boy Scouts receive money than the Girl Scouts has always been a controversy. ‘T don’t know, but I think way back they decided the little boys needed more money for their programs than the little girls,” she said. Whatever the reason, the practice has continued ever since. Rychlik explained that the 10-12 member Budget and Ad missions Committee appropriat ing the fund has been working in recent years to balance the dif ference. The Girl Scout appro priation has increased from 1977- 78 to 1978-79 by 9.6 percent, while the Boy Scouts will receive only 5.7 percent more money, she said. “Our thinking is that it will even itself out,” Rychlik said. She said it would not be fair to the young people already in volved in the Boy Scouts to cut their funding and give the extra money to the girls. Such a cut would decrease the boys’ pro gramming drastically, making it impossible to have activities for even the present membership. The Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, as well as other agencies, do not get the requested funding for several reasons, Rychlik said. These groups are like any other organizations or people — they probably ask for more than needed, she said. Rychlik explained that each requesting agency must fill out financial forms explaining budget requirements and program forms explaining service in the com munity when applying for funds. Then a representative from each agency appears before the board for an interview. The committee members’ de cisions are based on three criteria, Rychlik said. First, they consider the serv ice the agency renders to the Brazos County community. There is no real concern about what the group does elsewhere. Then the organization’s re sponsibility is studied. Each agency must show prudence in its management of financing and programming. “We don’t want them going hog-wild,” Rychlik said. Finally the committee deter mines appropriations according to money availability. Rychlik said the committee makes a realistic guess of how much money can be raised in the area based on how much was col lected in previous years. When considering these as pects, Rychlik said committee members often discover pro gramming problems that could be improved within the agencies themselves. She explained that the members would like to point out these problem areas, but they want the agencies to re quest the information. To increase the efficiency of the United Fund, Rychlik ex pressed her desire for a single, county-wide drive. As it is now, one community waits to see how much the other is going to give before pledging an amount, she said. This causes delay and con fusion. She added that a country-wide drive and fund would eliminate “one community carrying the ball for the other.” According to figures from the agencies, Rychlik said 59 percent of the Brazos County Girl Scouts are from the Bryan area and the other 41 percent live in College Station. Yet Bryan gives 69.4 percent of the funding, while College Station gives 30.6 per cent, she said. The funding and membership percentages for the Boy Scouts are closer, Rychlik said. While 79.4 percent of the Boy Scouts live in Bryan, 20.6 percent live in College Station. She said 77 percent of the funds come from the Bryan area. The remaining 23 percent is supplied by College Station. Beer smashed, fizzled at dump United Press International RIFLE, Colo. — It wasn’t easy for some of the spectators to watch a huge yellow bulldozer crunching 1,077 cases of perfectly good beer at the city dump. The beer was smoke-damaged in a recent fire at a Glenwood Springs warehouse. The contents of the cans and bottles were not damaged, but the manufacturers refused to allow the tarnished Con tainers to be sold. Officials said in order for the distributor to recover taxes already paid, amounting to about half the cost of the beer, the brew had to be destroyed in the presence of an agent of the federal Division of Al cohol, Tobacco and Firearms. THE BATTALION Page 3 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1978 A new medium of exchange. REPS ON CAMPUS: TODAY - WEDNESDAY INFORMATION BOOTH: MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER Interviewing seniors/grads at Career Planning & Placement, Rudder Tower, 10th floor. I HOUSE OF I “1 ^ T w ^ „ © SENIORS & GRAD STUDENTS YEARBOOK PICTURES MAKE-UPS MUST BE TAKEN THIS WEEK (NOV 6-8) b P YOUR SUPERMARKET FOR NEW AMERICAN CARS Can Broker any American made car straight from Detroit & save you hundreds, possibly thousands! 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