THE BATTALION Pago 3 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1979 campus & city Sea Grant publication offers Gulf fishing tips ountyunit to streamline taxing //7|.u By NANCY ANDERSEN lUWy Battalion Staff last spring the Texas Legislature dge retunjed a law designed to consolidate on Raver, appraisal offices in each county, isions.” nstead of each school board or be verdict! appraising property for its own could be "Poses, Senate Bill 621 would prison of; to a county-wide appraisal dis- Havera’s strHrhis will eliminate the current tlight on I lation of appraising the same iat of Roj.perh as many as two or three Juple ofi; e s- t his threA e taxing district would follow am him. lines of the county and be gov- een estrajfd by a five-member board of di- hildrenaif | l ors While the district will not !Ct taxes until 1982, Brazos Coun hen, thal appraisal district is beginning to tyetcaufJ sha P e now - ; ly l3 ecauS( |ie Bryan and A&M Consoli- viewed e( ! independent School districts, cities of Bryan and College Sta- igagointbj : ex-wife fc-j ir son. SuJ iecutor sail them, chi] lers hd Brazos County are the tax- iits forming the Brazos County fal Appraisal District. [inty governments are not re- ictl to participate in the district, °^Bve the option to do so. .1 j Mii )n the recommendation of Coun- the F™, I 5 " Assessor-Collector Gerald “Buddy” Winn, the Brazos County Commisioners Court has decided to join the district. The reason, Winn said, is to save county taxpayers from paying for both the district appraisal board through school and city taxes and the county’s appraisal unit. The governing board of each tax ing unit is allowed to nomimate one candidate for each board position. The board will be elected by a cumulative voting system, which bases the number of votes each unit receives on the amount of taxes levied. County Clerk Frank Boriskie is responsible for calculating each unit’s entitlement. The calculation is as follows: the amount of taxes each unit levied dur ing the preceding year is divided by the total amount levied by all the participating units. This is then mul tiplied by 5 and then by 1,000. For example, the Bryan Indepen dent School Board levied $5,078,718 last year. This is then divided by $12,904,253 and multiplied by 5,000. This results in 1,968 votes or approximately 39 percent of the vote. A&M Consolidated has 1,420 or 29 percent, Bryan 697 or 14 percent, Brazos County 560 or 11 percent and College Station 355 or seven per cent. These votes can be split or used as a whole to elect the board. The mini mum number of votes a taxing unit needs to guarantee a director’s elec tion is 834, and 4168 votes are needed to guarentee all five dire ctors. The nominees’ names are re quired by the bill to be submitted to the county clerk by Oct. 30. The nominees and their respective units are: Dietrich W. Bengs, City of Col lege Station and A&M Consolidated I.S.D., Arthur Davila, Bryan 1.5. D., Henry Seale, Bryan and A.C. Vinzant, A&M Consolidated 1.5. D. Only the names listed alphabetically will appear on the ballot. Since there are five nominees and five positions, Winn said the election is just a formality. But if one nominee failed to receive one vote, a special election with five new nominees will be held for the fifth position. Each board must vote be- rafts displayed in MSC ■ " V— 1 -- Jewelry box wins contest By TODD HEDGEPETH ( Battalion Reporter JgGillette Burger’s wooden jewelry box was judged st-of-show in the MSC Crafts and Arts Comittee’s Student Juried Craft Competition. ■In a reception at the Memorial Student Center Gallery Monday night, ribbons were awarded to the top four entrants in each of five categories: wood, clay, fibre, jewelry and glass. ■Burger’s winning entry, which also took first place in wood, featured three levels and four drawers with ebony handles and brass dials. The drawers were made from rosewood and the rest of the box was ash. Kurt Buck’s wooden box won second place in wood, Wayne Heaton’s coffee table was judged third and Ed Hull’s spalted bowl earned honorable mention, iljody Landry’s poppy bowl won top honors in clay and Bobbie Baker’s wind chimes were second. Land ry’s coffee pot earned a third-place ribbon and a pitch er by Pamela McCowen took honorable mention. In fibre, Valerie Wilks claimed the top two ribbons, with her wool hanging winning first place and her fibre basket getting second. Andrew Jordan took third with a wall hanging and Clint Isbell received an honorable mention for his macrame. A glass terrarium by Lynette Ham won top honors in glass. Barb Vinson took second with an etched dragon and also won honorable mention with a stained glass window. John Baker’s tiffany lamp won third. In jewelry, Clint Isbell’s dinosaur bone ring won first place and his belt buckle was judged third. Land ry won second place with an agate pin, and Cindy James was judged honorable mention for her obsidian drop. Five judges, each an expert in one of the catagories, evaluated the entries, all of which are on display this week in the MSC Gallery. Mack Engineers to host conference this weekend / l tlky ANGELIQUE COPELAND Battalion Reporter iys to improve achievement g minorities will be the main of the regional conference of the ble” and itional Society of Black Engineers i Texas A&M University this ler Threeiekend. r dumpiii Seventy-five delegates represen t- scienctf seven charter chapters and five ted schools will meet in work- and discuss methods used in programs. e A&M chapter will speak on of the malaise-] )er full (f| there has 1 other iii cause emovalof] :ure. “Pit ther draf eats a “k interviewing techniques while the University of Houston and Lamar University present programs on tutoring and high school interaction. Annie Carter, president of the loc al chapter of NSBE, said Texas A&M currently has an interaction program where members go to local high schools and talk about engineering careers. They also speak to their home-town schools over the Christ mas holidays. “Many of the high school students have never been ex posed to engineering and we try to tell them something about both the careers available and A&M,” Carter said. The local chapter, which was offi cially recognized in 1978, also pub lishes a book containing resumes of its members each year. Leroy Callender, guest speaker for the conference, will discuss edu cation as a means of upward mobility in society. Callender is with the largest black engineering consulting firm, located in New York. MSC TOWN HALL and ON THE AISLE, INC present uring tk ound Hat ng public' have the! openly tically, Mon., November 26 8:15 p.m. Rudder Auditoriu fore Nov. 15, and the county clerk will tabulate the votes and declare the winners before Dec. 1. The directors will serve a two-year term beginning Jan. 1, 1980. The members will not receive a salary, but they may be reimbursed for ex penses. When the board takes office Jan. 1, it will appoint a chief appraiser. He will be paid in accordance with the budget, establish an office and may hire a staff. The board has the option of creating a new office or contracting with any existing taxing unit in or out of the district or using the services of a professional apprais al firm. The chief appraiser’s duties will be to appraise all the taxable property in the district and to prepare a budget and an appraisal roll for each taxing unit. The roll will list the total appraised values within a unit’s area. The assesors for each taxing unit will then assess taxes on the basis of 100 percent of the appraised values. This will abolish the use of assess ment ratios. Currently both cities and both school districts in the appraisal dis trict are using an 80 percent ratio; the county is using a 20 percent ratio. Tax collections, like the assess ments, will be handled by each tax ing unit. The appraisal district will be fi nanced by the taxing units. Each unit will be allocated a portion of the budget based on the amount of taxes it levies compared to the total amount levied by each unit. The taxing units will make four equal payments, which are due at the end of each quarter. Overall taxes will not be in creased, Winn said, because any in crease in appraised values will be result in a corresponding decrease in the tax rate. Under the present tax system, a house in Brazos County valued at $40,000 and not taxed by any other governmental bodies would be appraised at $8,000. At the current county tax rate of $1.15, taxes would be $92. Under the proposed system, the house would be assessed at its full value — $40,000. At a reduced tax rate of 23 cents per $100 valuation taxes would still total $92. These figures do not include any city or school district taxes. In addi tion, the figures do not include the homestead or old age exemptions for taxpayers. If you’re a novice Gulf surf fisher man and think most fish look pretty much alike except for the flounder (which, of course, looks with both eyes on one side of its head), then Texas A&M University’s Sea Grant College Program may have just the thing for you. It’s a free publication called “Fishing the Texas Surf’ and the 24- page booklet continues to be one of the most popular items ever printed by Sea Grant. More than 2,500 requests for the loose-leaf booklet have been re ceived since this spring. Sea Grant officials said. Written by Tony Fedler, a Texas A&M graduate student majoring in recreation and resources develop ment, the booklet has illustrations of 20 of the most common fish varieties caught while surf, wade or pier fishing and many other helpful fishing hints. Copies of “Fishing the Texas Surf’ may be obtained by writing Sea Grant College Program, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843. 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And the MoneyStore pays your bills direct — after you authorize payment by telephone. No more checks to write, no envelopes to address, no stamps to buy. Just call the MoneyStore, tell us who to pay and how much and we ll pay your bills. MoneyStore is new. It’s completely safe, it’s confidential, it saves time and it earns interest on everyday funds until you need them. For information about MoneyStore, call or visit: Savings College Station Branch: Ttexas Ave. at Southwest Parkway • 696-2800 Main Office: 2800 Texas Avenue / Bryan, TX 77801 / 779-2800