je 8/The Battalion/Thursday, January 19, 1984 7iilf Oil victorious wer Texas oilman Warped Z SPLMt m CHXIST^A^ 1.. COlWCl DENTALY, MOTHER VACATION FT. 4- OH, R'l THE W All START E D CAKKUNG A SE IDE- United Press International PITTSBURGH — Gulf Oil j^p. officially reorganized ■ider Delaware law Wednes- */, — a victory over Texas oil- tr n and dissident shareholder j r Boone Pickens after one of tr biSS est P r o x y battles in U.S. C( porate history. a( The reorganization gives the . 5 oil company an edge in a te entially lengthy war with the h< sa Petroleum Co. chairman, jjlargest shareholder. a j At a special meeting lasting ar s than five minutes, Gulf airman James Lee formally announced the results of a Dec. 2 stockholder vote approving the plan and declared the mo tion adopted. Officials of the No. 5 oil com pany then filed papers with Pennsylvania’s secretary of state, making the re-chartering offi cial. “It is clear that the sharehol ders understood the need to protect and preserve (our) prog ress and to continue our efforts to enhance their investment in Gulf,” Lee said. The move makes Gulf Oil a subsidiary of a recently-formed Delaware company. Gulf Corp :p it but UNDERGROUND DELI AND STORE THE DIET PLACE OPEN BREAKFAST LUNCH 7:30am - 10:30am 10:30am - 3:30pm Mon — Friday “QUALITY FIRST” and means Gulf Oil can keet headquarters in Pittsburgh operate under Delaware law, making it harder for Pickens or his allies to influence the com pany’s affairs. Without the change, Pickens — leader of a dissident invest ment group holding 13.2 per cent of Gulfs stock — probably could have placed two directors on the company’s board at the annual meeting in May. Spokesman for Pickens re fused to say if he would pursue his lawsuit to block the reorgani zation. Pickens lost a plea to postpone the plan in federal court Monday. But Pickens has vowed to keep pushing Gulf to boost its return to shareholders by plac ing oil and gas reserves into a royalty trust — a controversial tax shelter he pioneered. The royalty trust concept was the underlying issue in the $14 million proxy battle Gulf and Pickens waged over the reorga nization plan last fall. by Scott McCullar .. AAD, /A/ CLOS/A/6, X. RETURNED75 COLLEGE STATIOA, LEAV//VG ttY FAMILY FREE OF THE TERROR OF WONDERING WHAT ABOUT THEIR PRIVATE LIVE5 WAS SUBJECT TO APPEARING IN' A COMIC STRIP. Bell official says pricing policy threatening cheap phone service Gulf claims the idea won’t work at a big oil company, although Mobil Corp. has asked the Internal Revenue Service to rule on its proposal to establish a $1.5 billion royalty trust. United Press International ST. LOUIS — A Southwest ern Bell official said Wednesday that lack of a national pricing policy threatens the future of affordable local telephone ser vice. “Clear the air of uncertainties surrounding telecommunica tions policy,” said John Hayes, company vic-president for re venues and public affairs. “The confusion surrounding critical issues is sending the wrong signals to state regulatory commissions, the investment community and customers at a time when we can least afford misunderstanding.” Hayes said access charges and bypass of local networks are pivotal issues. Any phone system that does not use local telephone company equipment is a bypass. An example would be a com pany that installs its own private, telephone system. Without fair access charges or some clear national pricing poli cy, state commissions will con tinue to pile costs onto “interex change” carriers, said Hayes, adding that greater expenses will drive off large business cus tomers'. “The fewer people on the net work, the fewer customers over which to spread costs,” he said. “That means higher telephone prices for those remaining on the network.” The Federal Communication Commission’s order on access charges reduced the financial incentive of heavy users to bypass the network, Hayes said. “In fact, the FCC plan is our best insurance policy against a bypass,” he told a seminar for state utility commissioners and industry representatives. A study by Touche Ross and Co. found that at least 25 per cent of the Southwestern Bell Corp.’s large business customers in Missouri, Arkansas, Oklaho ma, Kansas and Texas already have installed bypass systems. “Two-thirds of all businesses surveyed are bypassing or plan to bypass within three years,” Hayes said. “Network bypass is a fact and a growing concern." Hayes said there are political incentives not to recognize a bypass problem, which would indicate the need for higher phone costs. Serving I \ Luncheon Buffet | Sandwich and Soup Bar Mezzanine Floor Sunday through Friday 11 a.m. to i :30 p.m. Delicious Food Beautiful View ^ Open to the Public “Quality First” ^ * First Presbyterian Church 1100 Carter Creek Parkway, Bryan 823-8073 Dr. Robert Leslie, Pastor Rev. John McGarey, Associate Pastor SUNDAY: Worship at 8:30AM & 11:00AM Church School at 9:30AM College Class at 9:30AM (Bus fromTAMU Krueger/Dunn 9:10AM Northgate 9:15AM I Youth Meeting at 5:00PM Nursery: All Events , ii iai ■■ lii ■■ ■■ ■■ h■ ir ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ Money hard to come by Funding plans studied BOB BROWN UNIVERSAL TRAVEL COMPLETE, DEPENDABLE DOMESTIC AND WORLDWIDE TRAVEL • Airline Reservations • Hotel/Motel Accomodations • Travel Counsel • Rental Car Reservations • Tours • Charter Flights • FREE Ticket Delivery 846-8718 • Agency is fully computerized* 410 S. Texas/ Lobby of the Ramada Inn/College Station United Press International DALLAS — With a scant six weeks remaining before its com prehensive report recommend ing an overhaul of the state’s schools is due, the Select Com mittee on Public Education Wednesday began grappling with the basic issue of how to finance the planned changes. Comptroller Bob Bullock, a member of the committee, un veiled an alternative method to fund public education which hinges on equalization of state funds distributed to school dis tricts. The equalization aspect re vealed rifts between members of the blue-ribbon panel’s over sight committee on what general form the public school overhaul should take. “This is up-front equalization of the state funds,” Bullock said of his funding proposal. “I think that for all students to get a qual ity education, they all have to start equal. “How can you talk about qual ity education unless they’re all equal.” Under Bullock’s proposal, school districts would receive three basic block grants for salaries and general expenses, educating special students and transportation. Districts now re ceive funds under several more complex categories. Bullock said his system would guarantee that districts with the greatest need are given priority in the distribution of state funds, meeting the concept of equaliza tion. He said if his plan had been in place during the current school year, 340 of the poorest school districts in the state would have received approximately $123 million in additional state aid without requiring a tax raise, primarily at the expense of the Dallas and Houston districts which would have lost a com bined $30 million under the plan. But Gov. Mark White, who attended the Wednesday meet ing of the committee, said the panel should concentrate more on a quality education for all stu dents and not an equal educa tion. “We need to be sure the kid in Cotulla is getting the same quali ty of education as the kid in Dal las,” White said. “If we just equalize the number of dollars spent on every child, we won’t be gaining a lot, we’ll just be spend ing a lot.” SIDEWALK SALE j* ije January 20 & 21 30%-60% OFF Exceptional Savings! Oxford Shirts Blouses, Skirts, Pants Coordinate Groups & Dresses Hurry In For Your Size! •MasterCharge ►VISA ►Layaway The Texas A&M University Singing Cadets are holding auditions for drummers. All interested should contact the Vocal Music Office at 845-5974 (003 MSC) White repeatedly proposed that the committee look to tele communications and other forms of technology to bring ab out uniformity in the Quality of education Texas students re- “Television is the most impor tant learning tool that is under used today in education,” White said. “Television is relatively cheap and we can uniformly apply it in every classroom across the state.” H. Ross Perot, the Dallas com pute magnate who chairs the committee appointed by White, said equalization would have to be addressed and indicated it could raise new issues. “If we have a good equaliza tion program, do we want fewer school districts or we more • school districts?” Perot said. ‘ “You could make a case for more school districts to put the schools back in the hands of the people.” \ But Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby ! deemed it “irrational” that Texas has more than 1,100 . school districts and said consoli dation would both ease im-- plementation of the proposed school reforms and cut costs. Though no cost has yet been put on the committee’s pre-;. liminary proposals, Perot has^ said that without a revamping of the system, state spending for education will increase from the current $8.3 billion a year to $25 billion annually in the year 2,000 with no improvement in quality. ■ But Bullock warned Perot that state coffers already are strained. “Just about any number (cost) ' you can recommend right now is more than we have,” Bullock said. “We still don’t think there’s going to be any more money than our last estimate last year.” ■ PEC K 6 PEC K* POST OAK MALL 764-0080 COLLEGE STATION, All roads lead to SHOE OUT 30%-50% OFF r-gxAg, Fall & Winter Shoes, Handbags & Legwear / THE SHOE STORE Shoe Out, where you’ll find your favorite shoes at traffic-stopping prices. 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