DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE March 22nd & 23rd Ramada Inn Pre-register by Phone: 693-8178 FEE $20 Ticket Deferral and 10% Insurance Discount kinko's A NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF ELECTRONIC PRINTSHOPS. Copies • Reductions * Enlargements - Self Service • Collating • Folding & Drilling • Binding • Letterheads • Brochures & Flyers • 'transparencies • Passport Photos • And Much More! 201 College Main 846-8721 nri WWW rirw* BpfWCTW *V W§ iWi* i 'Solon' Photo Contest ^Sponsored bu MSC Camera Committee! -} * J Prizes: 2 Color enlarging Kits, Trophies, Ribbons--- , Top UUinning prints exhibited in MSC Lounge ; April 1 -5. ! Rules: All prints must be ot least 8"xl0" mounted ; on o board ot least 1 1 "xl4". Nothing larger than 16"x20" print ond/or mount mill be oc- ceptoble. Matting is optional. Fee is onli^ $3.00 per print. . 9 Prints will be accepted for judging Monday-Friday, March 18-22 * ond March 27-29 at MSC first floor tables from 10 a.m-2 p.m. • Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, March 19, 1985 Courtyard Ap artments “PRE LEASING SPECIAL” •Great location...Walk or bike to shopping malls •Shuttle bus to campus •Extra large...Roomy enough for 4 •Easy living extras •Air conditioned laundry room swimming pools, tennis court, party room, laundry room, cable TV, on-site stor age, security program, fulltime maintenance 2Vi acre courtyard with large oak trees For Summer, or Fall and Spring or move in today 1 & 2 bedrooms available all utilities paid except electricity, cable TV, partial or full furnishings at nominal extra. Ask about utility options. Sat. 10-4 Sun. 1-5 693-2772 Office Hours 8-7:00 600 University Oaks Hwy 30 at Stallings College Station SUBMIT TO CATEGORIES: Fabric Art, Collage, Pastel, Drawings, Paintings, and None of the Above! no photo ENTRIES WILL BE TAKEN). Entries will be accepted in the MSC Gallery from 11am until 3pm on April 22-26. The entry fee is SA.00 per piece. JUDGING DATE: April 27, 1935. For more information, call 345-1515 -JO VISUAL ARTS f^NOWOPeN, SW fwS .S BBOWN'3 oUC .„cho^^ l .., h ^-^ (o r JA E M s"«-4000 »r« - REg price Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10:00-6:00 Nin to AcMlfioy REDMOND TERRACE COLLEGE STATION IXSO — This l» «n ou* 1 ** • , °|n VyiTb* hi'h »'<'’• "1" daily *o »h« r,cl1 ' , r , comlnfl in from Te*a» continually changina. Shoa alwayt '•» auAL,TY NAM good ••l•C t,on * BRANDS. v AT io^ Rack” SSi- 1 SHOE OUTLET ' .mi' I mi i .1 , liiliitiiiiitfii . 1 Warped by Scott McCullar i-iovsiDy, IT-S.. IT'^ THE L k A&5ltb* CL05& EHCOUh/TEf MOTHEf? 5HIP/ wevM travelled many LIGHT YEARS TO VISIT you I? SCIEWCE FICTjOA 1 GOWVENT.'O/YjAufi/tCOW, BUT NOW. •JMFOI^-fUNME- LY, WE WON'T BE A/3LE TO SEE. IT- NO, NO, PLEASE, WHV CAH'T VOL) COME POWW F^OM t)0R SHIF ANP VISIT WITH U5 ? CAUSE EVE A! ON THIS C AIM PUS THIS SHIP IS A MOTHER TO PARK- dttnruinn Bullock (continued from page 1) talked to the TDNA, told reporters he was “somewhat surprised” at Bul lock’s remarks. White said that he thought the Legislature had the responsibility “to see to the direction or these funds and that they are well spent on our priorities.” Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby said he had talked with Bullock and already had his staff working to see how much of the local funds could be brought un der the Legislature’s spending proc ess. However, Hobby said he would not favor bringing all local funds un der legislative oversight. Rep. Wilhelmina Delco, D-Austin, head of the House Higher Educa tion Committee, said she thought Bullock “was mixing apples and oranges.” “He’s talking about local funds that are generated for causes for which the state will not pay and mix ing them with causes that the state does pay,” she told reporters. Kenneth Ashworth, commissioner of the Texas College Coordinating Board, said, “It’s not like a huge slush fund. To say that they’re able to apply the funas for instructural purposes is inconceivable.” Bullock said the money in the lo cal funds of colleges and universities comes from everything from library fines to football tickets. He pointed out that the $13.4 bil lion the schools got from the as sorted programs, business enter prises and gifts almost equals the $3.8 billion the Legislature gave higher education over the past two years. “In other words, the Legislature’s appropriations to higher education are only half the picture,” Bullock said. He said the local funds cannot be included in the comptroller’s reve nue estimate. “It is money that never goes through the state treasury,” Bullock said. “It is money that isn’t account able to the Legislature. How it is raised and how it is spent rests solely in the hands of college officials.” He said income from these out side enterprises is growing by as much as 17 percent a year. Despite the schools’ spending from the funds, there is now a balance of $2 billion remaining from the 1983-84 period, Bullock said. Bullock stressed that he is not say ing there is anything wrong with the or how they spend it. “But it would make good business sense for the Legislature to get an accounting of this money and take it into consideration in setting priori ties for the limited state tax dollars they have available,” he said. “Politically, I think a tax bill is out,” Bullock told the newspaper ed itors and publishers. “In the next two years we will have a 14.5 percent more money than the past two years. We can live within it. “In conclusion, Texas ain’t broke, but sometimes I wonder why it is not. A little more of this and it damn sure will be.” White told reporters that a college tuition increase was a matter for the Legislature to decide. He said he had always opposed to increasing tu- tion for Texas residents unless the state sets aside money for qualified students to afford a college educa tion. “For out-of-state residents, I think a tuition increase is called for," White said. “There certainly needs to be a tu ition increase,” Hobby told report ers. White: more can be don! in drug war Associated Press AUSTIN — Texas does not t as much danger from an invasionij another country as it does fromJ invasion of drugs, Gov. Mark Wit said Monday. “If we cannot stop a DC3com across the Mexican border drugs) how can we stop an I f rom another country?’’ the g nor asked the Texas Daily Newjjj per Association. White said he thinks muchi could be done to stop the drug!] into Texas and other Gulf slates “Our federal government isi doing all it can to protect us/’s White who has taken part in ret anti-drug conferences in Newl leans and Miami with others nors. “I cannot understand howi| can spend as much as we do and? so little protection.” White told the daily newspaJ editors and publishers that theci rent Legislature has problems' cause our revenues have notj as much as expected and we I very significant shortage.” He said the continued dedintj the growth of oil and gas revei has convinced him and legisla leaders of one thing. “The most important purposen have in government is to mi, broader base of revenues," Wk said “and I predict we will beabltj do this." He stressed the fast growingtai eration between the state’s lished industries and the newl tech electronics. Spring Spectacular On Sale Now! Stuffed Shirt* $ Oversized Shirts Big is better with our oversized camp style shirts! 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