The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 30, 1981-Page 9 State unveils school aid plan LANSING (UPI) - State School Superintendent Phillip Runkel announ- ced yesterday he is preparing at the request of state legislative leaders a measure providing receiverships' for, bankrupted school districts. Runkel stressed this would not in- volve any bailout of the affected distric- ts, and would not guarantee thalt schools there would remain open. AN AIDE to House Speaker Bobby Crim said one proposal would call for *the state receiver to operate the destitute district pending the outcome of a last ditch millage vote. If all else failed, he said, the district would be dissolved or incorporated into a neigh- Alpena ALPENA (UPI) - The day of decision arrives today in Alpena Count ty: Voters must decide whether they would rather pay higher taxes or see their public schools remain closed in- definitely. Alpena's countywide school district Oct.16 earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first Michigan public' school system since the Depression to close for lack of funds. All 14 public schools were closed, putting more than 6,800 students and 500 employees on the streets. VOTERS THREE times have refused boring one. An Education Department spokeswoman said the receiver could try to keep the. schools running on a bare-bones basis. Runkel said the legislation might be ready within a week._ CONCERN ABOUT the financial fate of Michigan schools has been mounting in recent weeks with news of closings and threatened closings coming from a number of communities. The Alpena schools in northern lower Michigan closed due to failure of, a millage vote - the first district to do so since the Great Depression. Voters there go to the polls again today. The Taylor schools in suburban Detroit are threatening to close some time next month for the same reason and several others, including those in Pon- tiac, are also in trouble. STATE OFFICIALS, including Gov. William Milliken, have staunchly in- sisted the answer to these schools' problems lie in the districts themselves' -not in Lansing which itself is strapped for funds. Attorney General Frank Kelley lent support to the stance Wednesday by saying the state has no constitutional obligation to fund schools in districts where'voters will no approve needed taxes. "There's no bailout and I want to be very emphatic on that," Runkel said of the latest proposal which would involve no increase in state aid. Runkel said he was asked by the "majority leader and the minority leader of both houses" to draft the receivership legislation. He called such a measure "an option we have to consider." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I votes on school tax today to increase property taxes. Today they will be asked to renew a levy of $20.25 per $1,000 assessed valuation and ap- prove an additional levy of $3.45 per $1,000. Both measures will provide the district with an operating budget of $15.2 million, an amount that would be reduced by approximately $1.2 million if the additional request fails. Bruce Connon, an elementary prin- cipal and administration spokesman, said schools could reopen as early as. Nov. 3 if the proposal is approved. The actual opening date depends on when the district is able to obtain loans or state aid in anticipation of tax money that will be collected later, he said. IF BOTH issues are rejected, the school board likely will attempt another election before the end of November, he said. In each of the earlier elections, the renewal and additional levies were combined because the school board said too many program cuts would be required if the district were to operate on the renewal alone. District officials pointed out that busing,, elementary music, libraries, extracurricular activities and athletics would have to be eliminated if ad- ditional taxes were not approved. Superintendent John Taylor said the question was split, however, to satisfy a great number of people who requested the option of simply renewing the taxes already levied. That split has created a deep division between City and rural voters. Many rural voters say they will oppose the en- tire tax question because their children will not receive bus service if only the renewal is passed. Support the March of Dimes 8IJJM DEFECTS FOtDATION FOL LETTAFS MICHG A N OOK STORE by Are offers too good to be true? (continued from Page 1) aid consultant in the Department of Education. "THOUSANDS and tlhousands of scholarship programs are available, but to a very narrow category of people," said Larry Gladieux,'director of the College. Board office in Washington. Lynn Borset, a represen- tative of the University's office of' Financial Aid agreed, saying that a wide spectrum of people and organizations offer scholarships, but that eligibility requirements for most are very narrow. While admitting that there are some odd scholarships - such as one for students who play the biagpipe,- there is also money for the average student, Rothenberger said. "There are some, oddball (scholar- ships) out there and every once in a while some one hits the bank," said federal official Peterson. THE BEST approach in finding scholarship funds, said financial aid of- ficials, is for students to look in their own backyards. Students should work with their families and draw up lists of clubs and organizations to which they belong and check with those organizations, they said. Next, students should go to libraries and financial aid offices and look through books that list private scholar- ships. ROSENWASAER, of Student College Aid however, claimed it would take an - individual student 4,500 hours to hunt down all scholarship sources. Financial aid officials disagreed. Source books are cross-referenced, they said, and students can eliminate quickly many scholarships that do not apply to them by asking themselves questions about their backgrounds and goals, they said. In addition to problems students can encunter in finding adequate sources of funds, financial-aid officials said they believe other claims made by locator services are misleading. FOR EXAMPLE, they dispute the claim that $135 million went unused during 1978-79 school year, saying they doubt that much money sits idle. "The (money) that goes unused might be for a Bennington left-handed catcher," said a, Huron High School counselor Rip Kenney."I'd love to have them show proof of that $135 million," said Kinney. Representatives of thejthiee com- panies varied in their answers. Rosen- wasser said the Christian Science Monitor conducted a study and found $135 million went unclaimed. MARY ANN MAXIN, executive director of Scholarship Search, said her service got the figure from a study done by the Counsel for Financial. Aid for Education. Rothberger meanwhile, cited infor- mation from her company's computer. In addition to those problems, finan- cial aid officials claimed that the money-back guarantee offered by sear- ch services is a ploy. A student should make sure that the "fine print" in the service contract guarantees private sources that apply to the student Peter- son said. Gladieux of the College Board said he doubted whether a computer data-base could be kept current enough to provide a viable service to students. "THERE IS A certain mystique about computers. You think you can just push a button and get infor- mation," he said. The.College Board, in conjuction with a private company, attempted to provide a similar scholarship search service, but found it too difficult to keep computed files current, he said. Company officials said research to keep files up-to-date was the most ex- pensive portion of their services, but added that it is not an overwhelming problem. "Unless you have a unique set of cir- cumstances in your background, I would be careful in dealing with these enterprises," Peterson warns. BYMMa PAPERFMATE tr.e44i. THE PEN THAT ERASES MISTAKES MAKE IT #380 IN CONCERT SUN DAY, NOVEMBER 8 HILL AUDITORIUM-8 P.M. Tickets are $15.00, $12.50 and $10.50 and are on sale now at the Michigan Ticket Office and CTC outlets. (Sorry, no checks accepted.) A MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTATION mmwmw ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. 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