Wednesday, September 11, 1991 The Battalion Page 5 ^ Williams ^ •) : Informaito 'ilormation 11 Teahouse, |f *•6517 for T 1 - 9 to Oct | ) Cabana. Peaker, Dr,! •Mark atBfr; Jjpeachers await superintendent's plan ’rotests of DISD continue sral meeting j| DALLAS (AP) — More than 200 teachers laid off in a Dallas In- iependent School District budget :runch awaited word Tuesday of the superintendent's plan to put [them back on the job. About 75 teachers picketed the )ISD administration building ionday to protest the 270 layoffs. Superintendent Marvin Ed- /ards has announced he will sub- lit a plan to school board trustees 'during a meeting Tuesday jvening that will restore the job cuts. "We kind of have to be in a iwait-and see attitude," said Bob Baker, the president of Classroom Teachers of Dallas. "I've heard just about every thing in the way of rumors about the plan. But the bottom line is that the teachers have to go back to work." A state district judge last week declined to issue a restraining or der requested by the teachers' union and other groups. But Judge Frank Edwards said the layoffs would not be effective until after trustees met to review the budget and, if necessary, ratify the job cuts. Edwards has been meeting with staff members since his an nouncement Saturday. Larry As- cough, a DISD spokesman, did not immediately return a telephone call Tuesday from The Associated Press. "I don't think there is any thing, anywhere, that can make everybody happy," Edwards said Monday. "We're just trying to solve the immediate problem." Baker said trustees could de cide to raise property taxes by 19.5 percent, rather than the 17.5 per cent tentatively approved last month, to make up for a $47 mil lion shortfall in state aid. is Friday bys ; i p 0 at thews; irst general ihops andmoj ■6062 fonw. AD * Universities could award faculty salary increases, association says AUSTIN (AP) — Texas college , ^faculty members deserve a 5 per- 200 Hektaiit; i cen t pay raise, and most public mSe t Juniversities have the funds tucked Country Stott awa y to P a y for lt ' the Texas Fac ' )n ulty Association said Tuesday. University faculty and staff jhave been awarded a 2 percent [salary increase from the Legisla- Iture. But faculty association mem- [bers said universities should pitch in another 3 percent from their lo- [cal funds. During his audit of state gov- sor of 104 Rudder' and new for more ernment earlier this year, state Comptroller John Sharp criticized universities for holding more money than necessary in reserve. He said they should use those local funds for faculty salaries, in stead of asking for more state tax dollars. Charles Zucker, director of the Texas Faculty Association, said a 5 percent pay hike would "barely cover the rate of inflation over the next academic year." "Clearly many of our universi ties have been saving money for a rainy day. From the faculty's per spective, it is now pouring," Zuck er said. Failure to increase faculty salaries will hurt attempts to re cruit and retain top professors for Texas schools, he charged. The faculty group criticized Southwest Texas State University in particular, which members said had amassed more than $13.5 mil lion in unrestricted current funds. Legislator seeks job as Speaker of the House AUSTIN (AP) — A state repre sentative said Tuesday he will run for House speaker in 1993 in hopes of reforming a legislative body now too easily swayed by special interest lobbyists. "What we've got is not right. It's not democracy," said Rep. Bil ly Clemons, D-Pollok. "The system should be one that caters to the will of the public and not to the will of special inter ests," he said. "The public wants ethics in government. And for some reason, we're not represent ing what the mainstream of soci ety of Texas wants." Clemons, first elected in 1982, said his beef isn't with five-term Speaker Gib Lewis, D-Fort Worth, but with the rules under which the House operates. He also branded as "unfair" a Travis County district attorney's investigation of Lewis that led to two misdemeanor ethics charges. Lewis has pleaded innocent and a trial is pending. "I'm a big fan of Gib Lewis ... (But) he doesn't feel like the sys tem's broke, so he's not going to want to fix it," Clemons said. Lewis responded that all law makers, including himself, some times are frustrated by the legisla tive process. a.m. to 4 p* ij peakerand 752 for mat Mars continued from Page 2 ive. Eveiyov 23-5266(0' ! . 6:30 p.a;| yone is inv