The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 19, 1982, Image 12

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    etc
Battalion/Page 11
January 19,1981
Desegregation
(continued from page 1)
In years past, the Department
of Health, Education and Wel
fare primarily dealt with deseg
regation in public schools in
stead of those of higher educa
tion because it was easier to
accomplish, Bond said.
HEW first took on desegre
gation in public schools because
public schools are geographical
ly bound within school districts,
Bond said, which makes it easier
to control.
People wanting to attend in
stitutions of higher education
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HOUSTON TOOL
SHOW 1982
SOCIETY OF
MANUFACTURING
ENGINEERS
aren’t geographically hemmed
in, he said. Even though colleges
are state supported, he said,
they aren’t free as with public
schools.
Another element which
makes the problems of desegre
gation in higher education more
difficult is one stipulation of the
five-year plan which limits
methods to be used to desegre-
gate.
“Integration in public schools
was achieved in large part by
closing down what had been
typically all black schools and in
tegrating the students into white
campuses, or taking the two and
putting them together,” he said.
However, for higher educa
tion institutions, this approach is
prohibited by the five-year plan.
According to the plan, institu
tions pursuing desegregation,
must protect the unique role of
traditional black institutions.
Bond said that Texas A&M
cannot simply absorb Prairie
View A&M to satisf y its minority
enrollment goals. This is impor
tant, he said, because inherently
it increases the cdmpetition be
tween recruiting institutions.
Traditionally non-black insti
tutions are forced by the deseg
regation plan to recruit at pre
dominantly minority schools.
But they are faced with being
prohibited from cutting into the
traditional black institutions’ en
rollments, Bond said.
“Therefore, we must strike a
fine balance of recruiting prac
tices,” he said.
In late October or early
November 1980, Texas Attor
ney General Mark White felt the
For Texas A&M Uni
versity specifically, the
plan requires that 525
more black students and
675 more hispanic stu
dents than are presently
enrolled enter the Uni
versity by 1986.
greatest service of Texas was to
persuade the Office of Civil
Rights that Texas is capable of
dealing with its own problems.
Bond said.
“We felt that all laws in Texas
presently permitted totally inte
grated higher education and
acknowledged vestiges of the
past dual system that had ling
ered,” Bond said. “Recruiting
and goal setting may help eli
minate some of the vestiges.”
White hired a Washington
legal firm to assist with the
Texas Desegregation Plan.
Through the leadership of the
attorney general and governor,
Texas was able to energize an
enormous project for trying to
build the state plan, Bond said.
Texas was treated uniquely
by the Office of Civil Rights,
Bond said, because it received a
letter of conditional compliance.
The Texas Plan, which was sub
mitted to the Office of Civil
Rights in June, is still being re
viewed.
Herbert Stallworth, director
of equal education opportunity
planning at the Coordinating
Board of the Texas College and
University System in Austin,
said the state desegregation plan
requires state institutions and
schools to do what they can to
equalize participation between
minority students and the insti
tutions.
As for goals set by each insti
tution in the next five years,
Stallworth said, all departments
at the institutions contributed.
For example, he said, if 20
percent of the black high school
graduating seniors go to college,
and 80 percent of the white high
school graduating seniors go to
college, then there is a disparity
of 60 percent.
The disparity allows institu
tions and the state an opportun
ity to see the percentage increase
needed for an institution, he
said.
Hunt estate
ecr<
finally pays
arn
United Press International
SHREVEPORT, La. —Fra-
nia Ty Lee was allowed to col
lect $9.2 million from a north
Louisiana bank today, four
years after settling her suit
against the estate of Texas bil
lionaire H.L. Hunt.
Lee, who claimed she and
Hunt had been secretly mar
ried, won the money in a final
judgment handed down Mon
day by U.S. District Judge
Tom Stagg.
She had been awarded $7.5
million in an out-of-court set
tlement in January 1978 while
the jury deliberated at a civil
trial in Shreveport. However,
the money gathered seven
percent interest while Lee’s
son and grandson contested
the settlement.
Those appeals, which went
to 5th Circuit Court of
Appeals in New Orleans and
even to the U.S. Supreme
Court, failed.
In December, the Hunt
estate was ordered to pay Lee,
but Stagg said some question
arose as to whether the
woman’s grandson, Ronald
Cartledge, had dropped all
appeals.
Stagg ordered the mo
placed in a Shreveport
where it collected 12.2
cent interest — or $3,(
day — until the court
mined all appeals had
dropped.
At Monday’s hearing,
)resented Stagg with a tJ
re’s a sign outsi
ads, “We supj
It sticks ou
Itestimonial to
e Texas A&M
11 drove past at
to laugh. It seei
Wilson most nei
's of College Si
line letter from her gran% e lt ,
indicating he had droppdIL heard of th
appeals. Cartledge, howe hy father, and
had printed the wrong c m y first react
number in letter, so a pk nc ious anger t
call placed to him in Atlat Jr. “Bum” Br
After receiving oral con a former studc
mation, Stagg ordered d hard to earn
money paid out, including 0 wer that he
percent of the $9.2 million m0 re in college
Mrs, Lee’s attorneys. Ip any prestige o
The woman filed suitW 13 ^ ai W tight t
1975 asking to be deda» cnow ldV 1
“putative wife” of H# 011 - an t d Y 61 * ’
whom she said she had nJP sure 1 lat a yp
ried in Hillsborough Gout r garnes. He
Fla., in 1925 while “unawl
of his preexisting marria|
Lee alleged she had!
children rvhile she lived
Shreveport during
arrangment with Hunt fi
1925 to 1934, when
learned he was married
another woman in Texas.
mg, as long as tl
[ght wants to r
and can find s
ouon, that’s fine
lat is so frustrati
as handled. H
\Lost continent object of new search
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THURS. JAN. 21
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United Press International
TRINITY — A Texan whose
discovery claims include the Ark
of the Covenant, the resting
place of Noah’s Ark and the true
site of the Tower of Babel has
lowered his goals — he’s going
underground in search of evi
dence leading to the Lost Conti
nent of Atlantis.
“We believe our work in
Trinity will expose the fact there
was an Atlantian civilization and
they migrated throughout the
area,” said Tom Crotser, leader
of the Institute for Restoring
Ancient History International.
Crotser, 49, led an expedition
last year which made a disputed
claim of finding the gold-
covered Ark of the Convenant
in the Middle East. He is follow
ing what he, believes is a subter
ranean shaft to rooms once used
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“So far we’ve found some
pretty good drawings and writ
ings,” said Crotser, a native of
Denton, Texas.
“We’ve been searching for a
number of years. We believe
Atlantis existed — that it was a
real continent and there’s been
migrations to this area.”
For centuries Atlantis has
been believed to be a mystical
island inhabited by an advanced
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race in the Atlantic Ocean and
was mentioned in Plato’s
Timaeus. Legend holds that the
island empire was destroyed and
disappeared during an earth
quake.
As a youth, Crotser learned
his parents’ sleight-of-hand
trade from the vaudeville circuit
and at age 17, was ranked the
third best illusionist in the world
by the International Brother
hood of Magicians.
But he also is a former minis
ter with the Disciples of Christ
and now heads a mission of ab
out 150 believers with communi
ties in Glenbuck, Scotland; Win
field, Kan.; Pauline, S.C.; and
his present base of operations in
nearby Frankston, Texas.
Crotser’s latest venture was
generated, he said, when he
came into possession of a por
tion of an ancient map during a
visit to Istanbul, Turkey. He said
the map reveals sites of ancient
centers across the world, includ
ing the area about six miles
north of Trinity where he is ex
cavating.
The map indicates a shaft will
; lead his party to two large rooms
carved deep below the rolling
red-clay hills and thick pines
that mark the east Texas terrain.
“We’ve found a real soft area
that just keeps on going down.
We’re down about six to seven
feet right now.
“We’re sifting through all of
the dirt and things as we go. It’s
taking a while,” said Crotser. He
estimated excavation would be
completed in about 30 days.
Crotser said he had been en
couraged in the discovery of
what appears to be ancient writ
ings and drawings on the sides
of the shaft, and a small porce-
lainized stone.
nited Press Intern
LAS — Bobb;
o coaching wir
ims. That is an
illins, because 1
a must-win
ay.
llins, who spe
years as head c
Irsity of Soutlu
took the sat
“It’s got several linesjl ern Methodist
the sides and a carved-oisl 3 )'’ saying he
ture that sort of looks likea|M en § e i ac i n 8
blossom,” he said. The
blossom was a symbol often
by the Atlantians, he said
Crotser said he spent 1
with area residents inadvai
the excavation, uncovering!
legends and lore about the
U posted a 10-
md the bulk o
reduced that
. The Musta
their seconc
est Confereu
be among thos
He said he was led to theS
two elderly brothers
hunted in the area as f
men.
“As young men they*
this place, saw ancient \vi
and remembered a deep
Crotser said.
“I know we’ve found the
nel shaft. We probably
another 12 feet to go,”said.- ..
ser. He said he was notcet lal v,
what the rooms contained®
than writings and drawings'
believes the site could bests
to a time capsule left by
Atlantians.
Last year, Crotser heads
expedition which claimel
have discovered a cave
the Ark of the Covenant hi
mained untouched for
turies.
t the national
Id like to be able
said Collins
a five-year cc
kes the job
Ron Meyer t
loach of the Ne
its. “But it has b
y to tell the r
f team we hac
efelt weshouh
ranked
ern Mississippi
;etting that cor
hen the peop
ire should be ■
le championsh
‘ wwwwwv
Crotser’s group also dais I
have discovered the trues! \
the Tower of Babel and tk I
sting place of Noah’s Ark |
David Graf, a professoral |he TA^
University of Michigan'jpt iiri
associate editor of BljvLUO lb
Archaeologist Magazine sac || Qq]y $ *-
was “highly skeptical” of
claims. Jeremiah Unterm®
assistant professor of relip i; I
Wichita State University,’I
Crotser’s claims are “a ho#|
Crotser said he was
bothered by criticism andf |
ned to release photograpl
the Ark “pretty soon.”
w
Co
Thousands put
their fingers on it
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