Thursday, April 25, 1985/The Battalion/Page 13 —— Funky Winkerbean OU,OH... IT LOOKS LIKE THE RSHBAOM KIDS ARE. STILL |M THEIR HOUSE! i / WELL , WE SI/^PUP FOLLOW STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE FROM THE SCHOOL BUS DRIUER'S MANUAL... GIUE A LOUD HONK ON THE HORN... by Tom Batiuk Committee queries Hall on judgeship Valley residents to protest sea-burning of toxic waste to by SUE KRM tree were thrw ig cart. Associated Press BROWNSVILLE — With the help of state officials — including Gov. Mark White — environmental ists will square off against the EPA today to protest proposed ocean in cineration of toxic wastes in the Gulf ofMexico. Environmentalists say they expect thousands of people to attend a pub lic hearing scheduled for today. More than 6,000 people attended similar hearings in November 1983. The public response delayed at- sea burnings by Chemical Waste Management Inc. until further stud ies were conducted. Sue Ann Fruge of the Gulf Coast Coalition for Public Health, which trganized the opposition, said the roposed toxic waste burnings have mined Rio Grande Valley residents. “We don't really need to have an- ither blow to our economy,"Fruge aid. “We’re willing to fight for it.” The coalition has run newspaper md television advertisements telling New Funds (continued from page 1) The declining oil and gas taxes kre the main reason the future does pot look good for the Texas econ- Ibmy, says Dr. James Griffin, an fconomist at T exas A&M who spe- iializes in the international oil mar about the public hearing. A television commercial shows a family of four on the beach as the theme of the movie “Jaws” begins. “Just when you thought it was safe to go into the water — ‘Ocean Incin eration II,’ ” says the narrator. T he commercial then shows waste burnings on a ship, with smoke bil lowing from stacks and the narrator telling of the possible hazards and asking residents to attend the public hearing. The 30-second commercial ends with the same family on the beach wearing gas masks. “Ocean Incineration II, coming soon to a beach near you,” the narra tor concludes. Today’s public hearing will be preceded by a rally at Texas South- most College, including addresses by Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox, state Reps. Don Lee and Rene Oli veira and state Sen. Hector Uribe. The protesters then will march to the Jacob Brown Auditorium where the all-day public hearing is sched uled. The governor is expected to tes tify at the hearing at approximately 3:30 p.m., his office said Wednes day. Officials from Chemical Waste Management Inc. have been in the Valley to try to reassure residents the incineration is safe. The Brownsville hearing is the third in a series of public hearings being conducted across the country on proposed ocean incineration. Environmentalists have com plained the EPA is not making the public aware of hearings and is not making available the agency’s back ground reports on ocean incinera tion. Opponents also protest the pro posal of granting 10-year permits to companies to operate ocean incine rators, contending that the technol ogy has not been properly tested. Associated Press WASHINGTON — Democratic Rep. Sam B. Hall Jr., nominated by Republican Sen. Phil Gramm for a federal judgeship, told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday he will not “blindly follow” judicial rulings he believes wrong. Committee chairman Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., said the commit tee will probably vote on Hall’s nom ination today. Hall, a Marshall law yer, is expected to easily win confirmation to fill the seat of re tiring U.S. District Judge Joe Fisher of Beaumont. Both Texas senators, 15 Texas representatives and seven other con gressmen appeared at the hearing on behalf of Hall. Gramm called Hall “the most re spected member of the U.S. Con gress” and Democrat Lloyd Bentsen praised Gramm for choosing Hall. Responding to routine questions from Thurmond, Hall said that he would depart from judicial prece dents he beleived in error, citing the overruling of public school integra tion. After the judiciary committee votes, the nomination will go to the Senate for approval. According to the Texas Election Code, Gov. Mark White must then immediately set a date for a special election, to be held no earlier than 36 days or later than 90 days after the announcement, to fill the seat. Hall, 60, was elected to Congress in 1976. He is a member of the House Judiciary Committee and chairs the Subcommittee on Admin istrative Law and Governmental Re lations. He received his law degree from Baylor in 1948. a mail ■s can also target p leir mailings :)me, and whether^ >r regularly buvhs 1, which is one ng services in tM iled orders from I ieces. Koch said ;le day, more than! 1 if mail may move aid that in 1984,tk| ce handled ird-class mail, comp n pieces in 1 184 volume, mem! dvertising Seme mi ted for about m hing t ihead,” Griffin said. “Looking at the torld market over the next five ears, we’re looking at constant or leclining oil prices.” Combining constant or declining Irices with declining production is not likely to help the Texas econ- my, Griffin said. A Texas Railroad Commission |tudy indicates oil production and eserves in Texas are rapidly de lining. The study shows that in 984, 881 million barrels of oil were iroduced. Total reserve for 1984 as estimated at 7.6 billion barrels. But in the year 2003, oil production is expectea to drop to 525 million [arrels with reserves totaling only i.9 billion barrels. If oil production and reserves de ease as the study predicts, Texas face a 35 percent decrease in oil iserves and a 40 percent decrease in production over the next 19 years. A 40 percent decrease in production assuming the price of oil re- lained at $27 a barrel — would de prive Texas of over $16 billion in oil taxes over the next 19 years. “Based on constant prices, oil rev enues are trending downward at 3.1 percent a year,” Griffin said. “Pro duction in Texas has been trending downward for the last ten years and we’re going to see a continuation of that trend.” That downward trend in oil pro duction and prices is the cause of Texas’ financial troubles, Griffin said. “Even if oil prices are constant, your tax base is declining at 3.1 per cent a year,” Griffin said. “That’s taking a big bite out of state reve nues. “The state has got to cut expendi tures or find new ways to generate revenues.” The state shouldn’t count on oil and gas taxes as a significant source of revenue in the future because chances are slim that the oil industry will turn around soon, Griffin said. But, he said, certain possibilities do exist. “The only thing that could change the current situation is the price of oil going up,” Griffin said. “And the price of oil can be driven up by a number of factors.” A major energy crisis would be good for Texas, but it would be bad for the nation as a whole, he said. It is unlikly that the world soon will ex perience an energy crisis or a war that wipes out the Middle East, caus ing an oil shortage and increasing its price, Griffin said. “Barring those reactions, I think Texas is going to have to look at other means of generating reve nues,” Griffin said. One proposed means of generat ing revenues that would affect the oil industry is raising the tax rate on every barrel of oil produced, Griffin said. According to a U.S. Department of Energy study, 12 of the 26 states that tax crude oil production have higher tax rates than Texas. Of the three biggest oil producing states, Alaska’s 15 percent tax rate is the highest, followed by Louisiana with 12.5 percent, and Texas with 4.6 percent. Dr. Thomas Plaut, manager of economic forecasting at the Univer sity of Texas Bureau of Business Re search, also said Texas has to look ahead and investigate other ways of generating revenue. “The basic problem with the Texas budget is that it has major structural problems,” he said. “It’s way too dependent on oil and gas revenues. Twenty-four percent of the budget relies on oil and gas reve nues. That 24 percent is five times the national average. ic myths thathasl* ink mail” ist reed to subsidize 4 VBrien and Kochs) , third-class i ten some, they said j myth, Koch s aot like junk mail, r all is said andd^ s still just junk to fil Ivertisers to remosi i their lists. O' tvel an average of] id trip for the shod $10 for tickets fo | w that typically entertainers, ei 'om one to three sot? its boondocks chat* iw presented inanat million auditorium'] :, $23 million park' .” It was moved ft* town Ryman ... i too small, stuffy a«l :n in the fancier sot tudience can still sit pews and hear uita : Roy Acuffs fanw 1 nonball.” tingly enough, the earsed. The petf 1 at time they’re dim irtained stage am ngs to sing, ipplement the 0| band, which uses 1 1 to play tunes d 11 quartet of backup )1 Lee Singers, a needed. Texas A&M University Faculty, Students, Staff Computer Discount Plan from ComputerLand 38% Discount on IBM, AT&T, Compaq complete systems Also printers, modems, and software Pick up a price list and order form at our store. Ask for Cindy Post Oak Village Hwy 30, College Station Books & More Parkway Square Between Kroger and Baskin-Robbins Reference * l** to‘S 00 Paperbacks 1/2 Price Trade Books 1/2 Price Records ’l** up Tapes ‘Z** up Aggie Souvenirs Mon.-Sat. 9am-9pm Sun. Noon>6pni & f cp^wnt? FREE PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING Adoption is a viable alternative SOUTHWEST MATERNITY CENTER 6487 Whitby Road, San Antonio, Texas 78240 (512) 696-2410 TOLL FREE 1 -800-292-5103 Sponsored by the Methodist Student Movement through the Wesley Foundation H -—u*---- :->tK MC KK= memeieg Nline-A-Key'1p DISCOUNT MUFFLERS 1 AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST F.AW,AOTC Installed by Trained Specialists FROM AS LOW AS... * FITS MANY SMALL CARS * AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS Featuring One of the finest names in automotive parts! ' BRYAN 408 South Texas Avenue (Corner of 3Dth Street) 775-01 88 Individually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8-6PM Copyright©1985 Meineke v/SA “In the future the state will have to increase taxes and find other sources of revenue. We can get through this session (69th Legis lature) with the measures already taken, but that won’t be the case in the next session.” Plaut said cuts in expenditures and the proposed increase in college tuition are part of the reason Texas lawmakers didn’t have to implement new taxes in the 69th Legislature. But the next session, as well as other sessions, will be a little different, he said. “We are running out of short term things to do,” Plaut said. “We adopted an accelerated sales tax dur ing the special session, but we can do that only once.” Texas is facing some serious fiscal problems jin the approaching years. With the declining price of oil and declining production, the oil and gas industry aoes not look like the sig nificant source of funds it once was, Plaut said. The solution to Texas financial problems is something Texans might not like, but it’s something they’re going to have to accept, he said. “Taxes will have to be increased to make up for the declining produc tion and prices,” Plaut said. I Pizzaworks^ Thirsty? It’s Thirstday! FREE PITCHER With Large Pizza Purchase Save $3.00 696-DAVE ay St (Next to Rother’s Boo 1 326 Jersey St. ikstore) OPEN 11 a.m. Monday-SMU ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★^ A- Students: Your Suggestions Please! * * + * * + * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * A Special Task Force on the Quality of Student Life was appointed this spring and jJ. it will continue to meet next school year (1985-86). One method to be used next fall is an indepth Student Questionnaire, to assist in its preparation your assistance is needed to identify concerns, problems, and issues in four major categories of student life: * * * * * (1) Academic (2) Traditions (3) Services for Students (4) Student Organizations, Activities and Programs All Suggestions Please send or suggestions to: are solicited, bring your Special Task Force on the Quality of Student Life Office of the Vice President for Student Services 110 YMCA Building Texas A&M University College Stations, Texas 77843 if * * * * * * * if * * * 4 * * + * * if + Advertising in The Battalion is as There’s only one flomber One. Good as Gold! CALL 845-2611