sale r h e Sound m - Tickets iy throu^, Torniance. and their etes ately $7oo n S fashion 10 dels and m be offered rce unit of oordinator 5S instruc- “Pth study laho 11 g seniors oratory in a research ccompany oad ccused of port Sun- 1 Monday a single- ilies ay that it ;on, Con- i — that >e of high itdown of gasoline r forcing o smaller oast ; aboard, ■ coast of sI.C., re- e no re- 11 at 9:30 rd cutter Liberian .tcw was jn rs Union lay from uirters in e pickets •s of the h Texaco After the > allowed p pickets 'g ter they exchange ,vith two iplices of ts of the en route d. lits new the another •ces said ase of an donday. . High :erly at iation Congress ..,Kim T y s0 “ .LizNewlin Andy WiUi^ David Bogg® ■ Scott Pendleton .Sieved Debbie Pars®- Doug Graha® «»y ^ h E!i ...-Lynn Budget hearing (Continued from page 1) spoken for the System and introduced the executive of each institution. But he had to leave early for business when the hearings original schedule was changed to put UT before Texas A&M. After Bell’s presentation, Texas A&M President Jarvis Miller outlined his re quests. Like UT’s Chancellor E.D. Walker, he asked for more funds for salaries — to at least keep up with inflation — better fringe benefits, more organized research and renovations. He also noted that only a small part of a university’s budget is under the discretion of the regents; about 80-85 percent of the budget is dictated by state guidelines. Delco, however, said, “You left out one sweet item — that beautiful Permanent University Fund.’’ The PUF is already under attack; at least five bills in the Legislature call for altering the constitutionally protected fund shared by UT and Texas A&M — from letting all system parts use it to aboli tion. Miller continued his recitation of Uni versity needs for more funds. After Miller, Prairie View President A. I. Thomas spoke to the subcommittee. He said Prairie View’s main priority to be come a first class institution — mainly through upgrading facilities. Following Thomas, at his insistence. two student leaders from that campus also asked for more funds. Then Richard Hanson, a white busi nessman who represents a group of indus tries that work with Prairie View, said, “It’s high time to do something about it.” There will always be a need for a black institution, he said, and the Legislature should improve this one. Three state representatives, including Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston, also supported Prairie View. Thompson, who is one of the main forces of the movement to repeal the PUF, also said that the HEW report on dis crimination in higher education will be sent to Washington today. That could not be confirmed, and she did not reveal what the report concludes. After the Prairie View session, other System officials asked the legislators for more money, stressing the needs to con tend with increasing enrollments and in adequate facilities. This was the systems’ first appearance before the House. The next hearings will be before the House Appropriations Committee. Then, sometime in May, the House will debate and pass the systems’ budgets in the appropriations bill for the entire state. This bill and the Senate’s version, forged in much the same process, will be merged and sent to Gov. Clements, who can still veto parts of it. African breeder studies A&M THE BATTALION Page 3 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1979 food output must louble. Miller says By BONNIE HELWIG Battalion Reporter American farmers must double arfood output in order to feed predicted population at the turn ike century, Texas A&M Univer- President Jarvis Miller said isday night. In the next short 21 years, the rage time you’ve been alive, we going to have to learn to produce inasmuch food as we’ve learned produce since man became a ivider,” he told the members of Collegiate Chapter of the Fu- e Farmers of America. The solution to this problem is to demand the very best we ie to offer,” Miller said. “That’s it is so refreshing to be dealing young people here at Texas M who still have a vision, who t know that things can’t be We must use the most precious wrce we have — the human id.” Idler said that the youth must vide the leadership to solve the lire problems of food output, momenta! standards and availa- ty of water because the trend in iety now is to ignore the facts are causing these problems, think we have got a know ing attitude prevailing in this iety,” he said. We don’t want to hat any facts.” Hiller said that earlier Tuesday fhehad appeared before the ap- ipriations subcommittee of the nmittee of higher education of Texas legislature on behalf of m A&M. At this hearing, offi- 1s from Prairie View A&M at- Texas A&M about the fun- igof the Permanent University id, The allegation is that this institu- ii)has prospered at the expense of aide View A&M,” he said. These people did not have the Is, did not want the facts, and re- iedto accept and believe the what facts were," Miller said. .Gary Welch a non-proP , rated b m JMzzm -Dmirs yrwywr Fast lunch, intimate booths, party rooms, draft beer, cozy atmosphere and old movies. HAPPY HOUR — BEER & WINE 2-4-1 open mon.-fri. 12 a.m.-midnite; sat. til 1 a.m.; I^ON.-FRI. 4:30-6:00 P.M/ sun. tiliip.m. luncheonspecialu a.m.-2p.m. mon.-fri. 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