This appeal is from a district court school desegregation judgment. 1 Counsel for the appellants stipulated at oral argument that the only question before this panel is whether the district court erred in failing to include in its decree an order for periodic demographic surveys of Walton County. We think the district court was correct and we affirm its judgment.
Appellants argue simply that the instituting of zoning as the basic desegregation plan necessitates periodic surveying of the attendance areas. Although surveys may well be appropriate in cases involving the transition to zoning in urban areas when subtle gerrymandering might go unchecked, that situation is simply not present in Walton County.
2
Judge Bootle
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found that “[tjhere is no evidence of any gerrymandering for racial or other improper reasons in the drawing of these lines. All evidence indicates that they were drawn solely for legitimate educational reasons.” Graves v. Walton County Board of Education, M.D.Ga.1968,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants, a group of Negro students and parents, appealed from an earlier decree in the same case on several grounds. That appeal was consolidated with 43 similar controversies and relief was generally denied in an opinion issued
sub nom
Adams v. Mathews,
. The district court’s decree provides that: “The primary concern is that attendance zone lines be drawn on a non-racial basis and to this end the County Board and the City Board will conduct surveys and make required reports to the Court.” Graves v. Walton County Board of Education, M.D.Ga.1968,
