Thursday, JO; nuary 13, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven School funding controversy coming to a heady"EA°T"ESPE TRUM OF LOVE By LINDA DREEBEN In recent weeks, developments on both the state and national levels have again raised the is- sue of funding public schools through property taxes. It now appears the controversial question is headed for ultimate resolution by the United States Supreme Court. Late last month, a three- judge federal panel ruled the Texas public school financing system was unconstitutional be- cause of unequal expenditures between different school d i s- tricts. The panel ordered t h e Texas legislature to devise an alternate to the present proper- ty tax that will meet the equal protection provision of the Fourteenth amendment. Because a direct appeal to the Supreme Court is permitted from such a panel, the Texas ruling appears to have set the stage for a federal ruling. *C.C. Little, former 'U' president, dies 'Clarence Cook Little, former University president and a pioneer in cancer research died in late December at the age of 83. President of the University from 1925 to 1929, Little also headed the University of Maine for three ,*ars. He died at his home in Bar Harbor, Maine. Little's revolutionary ideas about undergraduate education made him a controversial figure. Soon after he became University presi- dent, he proposed to divide under- graduate education in half. This 4s to be done by assigning all students to a "University Col- lege," much like a junior college, for their first two ryears of study. The best of those students would then be selected to continue working toward a bachelor's de- gee. The plan met with resistance by the faculty and, to some extent, the Regents. After being studied and discussed for several years, however, most of Little's propos- als for a University College were implemented during the term of is successor, Alexander Ruthven. Little also inspired comment with his contention that women were ]earning little at the Uni- versity to help them become good wives and mothers. He maintained that women were offered onlyE t:7chnical and educational courses , nch would help them In pro- 'N ssional or business careers. Meanwhile, the State Supreme Court agreed last week to take jurisdiction over a circuit court suit filed by Gov. William Mil- liken and Atty. Gen. Frank Kel- ley challenging the constitu- tionality of financing s c h o o I s with local property taxes. Milliken and Kelley origin- ally filed the case in Ingham County Circuit Court in Octob- er, but asked the Supreme Court to bypass the lower court and handle the case directly b e - cause of its potential impact on the state. At issue in the state case as, well as nationally is the dis- parity in the value of taxable property among the different state school districts. Those who oppose the present meth- od of financing contend it tends to penalize students living in areas with little taxable proper- ty and industry to support schools. The challenge to property tax funding for public schools has gained national momentum since a precedent-setting Cali- fornia Supreme Court decision last September ruled that state's system of financing public schools with local property tax- es was unconstitutional. The ruling was made on a class action suit which charged that the differences in the quality of poor and wealthy communities resulted in "sub- stantial disparities in the qual- ity of educational opportunities in different school systems" and made a child's education a function of the wealth of h i s parents and neighbors. Sincethat ruling, courts in Minnesota and Texas have handed down similar decisions, and suits have been -filed in at least 20 states. $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 According to Sen. Gilbert Burseley (R-Ann Arbor) prac- tically all of the determining factors and the inequities in per-pupil expenditures in t h e California decision are paralel- led in Michigan. "In light of the strong sim- ilarities, there can be li t t 1e doubt that the logic of the Cali- fornia decision, if applied to Michigan, would necessitate a drastic restructuring of o u r school financing system," he stated. Legislators in almost every state have begun to deal with a multitude of problems which would arise should property tax funding be declared unconstitu- tional. State legislators would have to devise a more equitable financ- ing plan than the present com- bination of local taxes, equali- zation, per pupil aid and state funds in most states. This is seen as imperative in Michi- gan, which placed 41st in a re- cent ranking of the 50 states according to the degree of "equity" (or equality of com- bined state-local funding dis- tribution.' Milliken has preposed t h a t the state eliminate property taxes for school funding and re- -- -------- HAI RCUTS and THINGS Michigan Union place the lost revenue with a boost in the state income tax. Another plan calls for t h e state to take over all property taxation and distribute money to cities in direct proportion to enrollment. Variations of this plan would make provisions for schools with special needs, in- cluding schools with many poorer handicapped students, or urban schools where basic ex- penses are normally higher. Another source of revenue may come from the federal gov- ernment in the form of the val- ue-added tax (VAT), collected from manufacturers and mer- chants on the value added to a product at each stage of its processing and distribution. It is reported that President Nixon plans to push for' passage of this tax, and that he would turn over the proceeds - an estimated $20 billion - to state and local governments to help run the nation's schools. Whatever method legislatures adopt, they will still have to find a formula for distributing and allocating the funds. One criticism leveled at the institution of centralized finan- cing system is that it will di- minish local control of t h e schools. However, a statement issuedj by Kelley and Milliken w h e n then filed the, suit said that it is fashioned "to bring fairness to the financing of schools with- out altering in any way our tra- ditional system of local control." Another concern expressed by some educators is that instead of raising the quality of the educational systems, a central- ized system will lead to general mediocrity. - - - - r - - - - - -I "I love you." There is a much greater motivation than simply my spoken words. For me to love, is to commit myself, freely and without reservation. I am sincerely interested in your happiness and wellbeing. Whatever your needs are, I will try to fulfill them and will bend in my values depending on the importance of your need. If you are lonely and need me, I will' be there. If in that loneliness you need to talk, I will listen. If you need to listen, I will talk. If you need the strength of human touch, I will touch you. If you need to be held, I will hold you. I will lie naked in body with you if that be your need. If you need fulfillment of the flesh, I will give you that also, but only through my. love. I will try to be constant with you so that you will understand the core of my personality and from that under- standing you can gain strength and security that I am acting as me. I may faulter with my moods. I may project, at times, a strangeness that is alien to you which may bewilder or frighten you. There will be times when you question my motives. But because, people are never constant and are as changeable as the seaxons, I will try to build up within you a faith in my fundamental attitude and show you that my inconsistency is only for the moment and not a lasting part of me. I will show you love now.. Each and every day, for each day is a lifetime. Every day we live, we learn more how to love. I will not defer my love nor neglect it, for if I wait until tomorrow, tomorrow never comes. It is like a cloud in the sky, passing by. They always do, you know! plus 3 more beautfiul paragraphs after above BIG 341" long, 11?" wide. SPECTRUMOF LOVE POSTER $1.50 plus 25c pp., PRINTED ON PARCHMENT. Send Check or M.O. Money Back Guarantee. Dept. M., 210 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10010 CLAUDIE ENTERPRISES LTD., SJpectrum o COve SAVE! up to 3313% Buy USED TEXTBOOKS AT FOLLET'S Michigan Book Store State St. at North U. C. C. LITTLE, in 1928, when he was President. In recent years, Little was bestr known for his work as scientific director of the Council for To- bacco Research, an organization sponsored by the tobacco indus- try. Little insisted that so far no firm laboratory evidence associat- ing cigarettes with lung cancer and heart disease has been devel- oped. Little was born in Brookline,r Mass.. on Oct. 6, 1888. He was a great-great-grandson of Paul Re- vere. He earned undergraduate! and graduate degrees at Harvard College, and studied medicine at the Harvard Medical School. t WEL ME SACK, STUDENTS, TO A CLA SICA L ..- i at NAT. SCI. AUD. PHILIPS 99 per disc SALE! Our entire classical catalog of Philips records are now on sale at MOZART-MARRIAGE OF FIGARO (4-LP's) Jessye Norman (U of M's own operatic superstar) , Mirella Freni, Yvonne Minton, lngvar Wixell, Wladimiro Ganzarolli, B.B.C. Symphony Orch. & Chorus Colin Davis, cond. 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