V Wednesday, January 21, 1987/The Battalion/Page 5 I What’s ud !_ Thursday WELLNESS LECTURE: Dr. Raymond Buck, M.D., will speak on hypertension at 6:30 p.m. at Walden, 2410 Me morial Drive, Bryan. KANM: will hold a meeting for all interested disc jockeys at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST AND BAPTIST STU DENT UNION: will hold a rally from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. at Rudder Fountain. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: will hold a Howdy Party at 7 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center. TAMU POLO CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 604 A-B Rudder. TAMU EMERGENCY CARE TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in 701 Rudder. MSC SCONA: 1 lost and delegate applications are available in 216 MSC through Friday. Host applications are due Friday and delegate applications are due Monday. Friday CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will meet at 7 p.m. in 156 Blocker. INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will meet at 7 p.m. in 301 Rudder. MSC LITERARY ARTS: is now accepting submissions for Litmus. Call 845-1515 for more information. PARENTS WEEKEND COMMITTEE: applications for nominating 1987-88 Parents of the Year are available in the Commons, Sterling C. Evans Library, the Memorial Student Center and the Pavilion. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working days prior to desired publication date. Poor schools face off against rich in court AUSTIN (AP) — A court battle between property-poor and wealthy school districts over the way state school money is distributed got un derway Tuesday. The non-jury trial started at 2:20 p.m. before State District Judge Harley Clark. In the two-year-old lawsuit, 67 school districts claim that under the 1984 school reform legislation, state funds for schools are not being dis tributed equitably. The state, backed by 48 other school districts, claims state money is being spread evenly over the state, but districts are not collecting as much local school taxes as they could. During a December preliminary hearing, the attorney general’s office contended that any change in school financing should be made by the Legislature, not the courts. State’s attorneys said the poorer districts do not want equity, just more state money without having to raise local taxes. Attorneys for the low-wealth dis tricts said some school districts with wealthy assets can collect local taxes of only eight cents per $100 prop erty valuation and spend up to $19,000 per student in school. They said the poorer districts, which are limited by law to a tax rate of $1.50 per $100 valuation, can spend only $3,000 per student. obby: Texas should make ommitment to education QQh AUS'I IN (AP) — After taking the i^with for a fifth term, Lt. Gov. Bill I^Wobby said Tuesday that Texas ntAust take action to improve higher U^Hducation regardless of the state’s ess d: nd »| ■hide: i(h oil auihcr \ntoE jail, ml rryinij ipouri m Intf oil-dependent economy. I “If we join hands, if we make the ri Jit decisions now, if we make them on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico |nd don’t let them be made in the Persian Gulf, we can take Texas proudly into the next century,” ■lobby said in his inaugural address. I Throughout his speech, Hobby, who also is the presiding officer of the Texas Senate, stressed the need Jo improve education to meet future challenges. I “Education is as much a tool for die high-technology frontier of the l980s as those things (cattle and oil) iere tools for an earlier Texas,” Bobby said. I However, modern Texas is far from having an educated workforce to handle the complex problems of the future. “More than one-third of our adults don’t finish high school,” he “We need to support our public colleges and uni versities in a way that does not fluctuate with the price of oil. ” —Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby said. “Nearly one-fifth don’t finish the eighth grade. “The state is not doing its job if Texans cannot compete in the new economy.” Higher education is the key, Hobby said. “It is time to send a different mes sage to the nation, one that says Texas intends to have a world-class system of higher education,” Hobby said. “We need to support our public colleges and universities in a way that does not fluctuate with the price of oil,” he said. “It doesn’t make sense to let an Arab sheik decide the quality of education in Texas. It doesn’t make sense to balance our budget at the expense of higher edu cation. “We need to give our universities the flexibility they need to manage their budgets and people. And the universities must make the best uses of the resources provided. They must react quickly and responsibly, directing those resources to the needs of the future rather than the needs of the past. “We need to reaffirm our commit ment to educational opportunity for every Texan. Our goal should con tinue to be a higher education for every qualified student.” octors trying to delay decisions bout participation in Medicare id i plasitj aid. anwf! gencp ilainis- Idbd able f JRC 4 I the H the all IV of “bread ore it I DALLAS (AP) — A federal judge Tuesday rejected a bid by the Amer ican Medical Association and other groups to delay new rules forcing doctors to decide whether to partici pate in Medicare. ■ An attorney representing the AMA said the group would press on with the suit, despite U.S. District Judge Barefoot Sanders’ refusal to issue a temporary injuncton. I Sanders had been asked to halt enforcement of a requirement that doctors decide by Jan. 1 whether to sign Medicare participation agreements locking them into a fee structure set by the government. ■ “The appropriate forum for plan- tiffs’ grievances is the Congress, not the courts,” Sanders said. B The plaintiffs, which also in cluded the Texas Medical Associa tion, the Lubbock-Crosby-Garza County Medical Society, seven Lub bock doctors and three of their pa tients, had sued the U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services. The doctors argued that they should not be required to decide whether to participate yet because it may be March before they get all the information they need on fees they can charge. The doctors argued the rules were unconstitutional because Medi care recipients cannot use their own money to buy more expensive medi cal services. The AMA contends the regula tions create a “two-tiered system of medical care.” Medicare participants who go to non-participating doctors are re imbursed only 96 percent of what is paid to patients of participating doc tors. The fees of non-participating doctors for such patients also are limited by the government. The new rules are part of the Om nibus Budget Reconciliation Act signed into law by President Reagan on Oct. 21. Sanders and U.S. District Judge Halbert O. Woodward of Lubbock earlier had issued temporary re straining orders that postponed un til Tuesday the deadline for doctors to decide whether to participate. “The court finds no violation of plaintiffs’ federal constitutional rights and no improper action or omission by the secretary (of Health and Human Services),” Sanders said. During a two-day hearing last week, government attorneys argued that the budget bill did not require HHS to release immediate details of the Medicare fee structure. EM PLACE A FULLY LANDSCAPED PARKING FACILITY FOR AGGIE FOOTBALL FANS. ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★ A PRIVATE CLUB FACILITY FOR PARKING SPACE OWNERS AND FACULTY AND STAFF OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY. LOCATED ON THE CORNER SO JERSEY STREET AND WELLBORN WITHIN EASY WALKING DISTANCE OF KYLE FIELD. ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★ FINANCING AT 9% AND MONTHLY INVEST MENTS AS LOW AS $50. 63 . ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★ 1988 OWN YOUR OWN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT NEXT TO TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY. Please send me FREE INFORMATION about the advantages of GIG-EM PLACE. Street: l 1 FIRST SERVED City:- State Zip ' 1 Phone: 1 LIMITED NUMBER Mail to: 1 1 OF GIG-EM PLACE P.O. BOX 3987 BRYAN, TEXAS 77805 1 1 1 1 SPACES AVAILABLE DON’T WAIT FIRST COME VIEW OF THE DOGANA AND SANTA MARIA DELLA SALUTE by Michele Marieschi (1696-1743) oil on canvas, 21.25 x 32.5 in. Texas A&M University Art Exhibits presents Five Centuries of Italian Painting 1300-1800 From the Collection of The Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation January 22-February 21, 1987 J. Earl Rudder Exhibit Hall 8:00 am to 11:00 pm daily 9/ SIGMA NU Don’t Stop The Dance Special Guest DJ The Motivator” Wed., Jan. 21 8 pm Sigma Nu House “ey Sundance Apts Rd. Opening Lecture by Dr. Carolyn Valone Chairman, Department of Art History Trinity University 77/e Language of Renaissance Painting Rudder Tower, Room 301 Thursday, January22, 1987, 7:30pm Opening Reception Rudder Exhibit Hall Immediately following lecture Docent guided tours of the exhibition are available by calling 845-8501.