Texas Common Cause plans Lobby Day’ in Austin Feb. 21 By JUDIE PORTER Battalion Reporter I Special interest groups come in all sizes, shapes and causes, ffliose lobbying in Austin during b ie 66th Texas Legislature include and gas companies, realtor as- iations, women’s groups and any er group that is pushing for a Iwse or trying to kill someone tlses, said Theo Brown, Texas di- ttor for Common Cause, a na- inal citizens’ lobby. Brown was in town Thursday to :et with local members and to. omote a “Lobby Day” Feb. 21 for Jxas Common Cause members to It to legislators in Austin. “We have made a fairly significant contribution to effectively opening up the Texas government, but I feel that more needs to be done, ” Brown Under the financial disclosure law, for instance, any citizen of Bryan-College Station could see the campaign contributions or personal finances of Sen. Bill Moore of Bryan by checking with the secretary of state’s of fice in Austin. said. “How successful well be in Austin, I don’t know.” Texas Common Cause currently 1 37 Aggies to compete b games tournament Texas A&M University students will join representatives of 30 and dan Aer schools at the Association of College Unions International and ha; lames Tournament Feb. 15-17. he pair; 1 The event will be at North Texas State University and will include : poinlt! nmpetitions in billiards, frisbee, bowling, foosball, chess, backgam- nsion® |ion, bridge and table tennis. Thirty-seven Aggies will attend. ;tch. Roger V. Messersmith, vice chairman of the Memorial Student . But et Center’s Recreation Committee, says Texas A&M usually does well ook aw; in the tournament. in “do* Year before last we got what is called the traveling trophy, which ancingl is given to the school that accumulates the most points, ” he said. ;id. {Elimination tournaments were held at Texas A&M during the fall and , whateEPrly spring to select students to compete. oourse, I itM geologist to lead meet has six priorities for the 66th ses sion: — Reapportionment reform, which calls for a citizen’s committee to draw district lines instead of legis lators. This would help end ger rymandering in Texas. — Initiative, which would give citizens the right to pass laws through petitioning. However, strict rules would be necessary to protect the initiative process from well-financed special interest groups. — Property tax administration re form, which would consolidate ap praisal districts. Common Cause wants one office per county without any overlapping districts. — Sunset Texas Law, which was created by Common Cause in 1977. If it goes into effect, the law will re quire state agencies to go out of exis tence every 12 years unless re created by the Legislature. — Strengthening the Public Utilities Commission by creating a public council to represent the people and — Extending the time limit on utility rate decisions to increase public input. Brown said that in 1973, Common Cause pushed for open meetings in the House and Senate committees and for open records. The group also supported extension of the ERA ratification period, and worked for financial disclosure of public offi cials. Under the financial disclosure ir< applies of uranium sought In the next five years, American and for uranium to fuel atomic rgy plants will surpass current [plies, says a Texas A&M Univer- geologist. is means one of three things: ning supplies, importing them [finding new deposits and new 's to get them out of the ground, researcher Wen Huang. ince the latter seems most prac- and least controversial, both ustry and government are anx- to see what research centers are eloping. exas’ uranium deposits, discov- ey real !t ^ n 1954, provide a multimillion •y young gely is i scents in /ersitv of sturbed lines aal' lolescent the total d young: far more dollar surface-mining industry in Karnes, Live Oak and Gonzales counties, but such methods will not provide enough to keep existing nu clear equipment going in the next few years, says Huang. Huang has been asked to chair the Texas Gulf Coast Plains’ first American Association of Petroleum Geologists conference on uranium discovery and production, scheduled April 1 at the Houston Convention Center. The meeting, which will include more than a dozen speakers from government, industry and universi ties, will focus on topics from min- 1 United Press International USTIN — Few speakers receive attention of all 150 members in Texas House of Representatives, in fewer are applauded, he Rev. Gerald Mann has won attention of lawmakers with his norous but pointed prayers at opening of the daily legislative sions, and Thursday was •lauded by laughing House nbers. Our Father, help us remember the only difference between a it and a sinner is that one has n caught and the other hasn’t,” nn prayed. louse members smiled, then ickled, then light applause broke as Mann, pastor of University itist Church, stepped from the lium. t was not the first time his invo- ons have brought smiles to the es of legislators. lis prayer at the opening of the »ate session was, “Lord, deliver from evil, ourselves, and long- ided prayers.” ouse applauds minister r non-Texas-size prayers A week ago he opened the Senate session with this prayer: “Lord, de liver us from people who never make mistakes, and also deliver us from people who make the same mistake twice.” Last month his invocation for a House session was, “Our Father, may we find the strength to stand for our principles today, by remem bering that only a mediocre person is always at his best.” Although the House and Senate each pick a chaplain for the session, both houses this year chose Mann. ing plans and problems to environmental and regulatory con cerns. Huang has been conducting studies at Texas A&M into in-situ leaching as a means of extracting Texas coastal plains uranium from deposits of lignite and sandstone, in which the uranium is intertwined unpredictably. Perfection of such methods, he predicts, could make Texas the na tion’s second leading producer of uranium ore in just a few years. In that case, a third of all uranium ore would originate in Texas. . Huang, who already holds two pa tents for recovery of aluminum from coal ash, says Texas A&M’s recogni tion nationwide has increased since a University of Nevada-sponsored uranium mining conference in Reno last November, when Huang and graduate student Ken Pickett pres ented research findings. Another thing that has contrib uted to Texas A&M’s leadership has been development of ways to analyze uranium in lignite concen trations in order to tell miners if top layers of coal contain the radioactive material as well as pinpointing other pockets. Before Huang was asked by AAPG to head the Houston meet ing, scientists from Japan, West Germany, Israel and Taiwan has re quested permission to come to Col lege Station for training. law, for instance, any citizen of Bryan/College Station could see the campaign contributions or personal finances of Sen. Bill Moore of Bryan by checking with the secretary of state’s office in Austin. Common Cause is a public inter est citizen’s lobbying group. Brown said. It is non-governmental, funded by contributions and mem bership dues. “We try to make the process of government more accountable and efficient,” Brown said. “We try by supplying information about bills and issues currently in the Legislature to our members and urging them to write or call their Congressmen.” The Texas Common Cause started in 1972 and now has about 6,000 paying members around the state. The Austin office has one full time lobbyist, Shiela Cheaney, who attends the Congressional sessions; an overall director, Theo Brown, who works on fund-raising and visits the local Common Cause groups; a part-time office manager and other volunteers; and a board of directors that chooses issues to support. Bryan/College Station has a local Common Cause group of about 85 members, said Mrs. Mildred Lowy, network and telephone coordinator for the local group. “We started with about 150 members right after Watergate, be cause there was a lot of activity to open up the government,” Lowy said. “We don’t have any meetings of our own because everyone is al ready involved on other organiza tions. We get our information fiom the printed page.” The “printed page” is a newslet ter sent by Texas Common Cause to inform its readers. 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