The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 24, 1980, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1980
Tired of the Campus Confusion?
%
apartments
Enjoy Quiet Country Living
In The City
Year-round Shuttlebus
SUMMER STORAGE
$50-$75 Per Apartment
Pre-leasing for Summer and Fall
Friendliest Staff In Town
502 Southwest Parkway
College Station
693-1325
MANOR EAST 3
MIDNIGHT MOVIE
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
Unusual farm quota
benefits landowners
PBraianPoinsFVraertsACtNEflOnBffiWProdUdDi A fBBERT MS F*n STAR TIB-TKMOTtNPCTlK
Sarmg WlUAM SHATffR IfCNAflCMMOr OrfOREST KEUiY Presertrg Pf(SB KHAMBATTA at Samng STERCN CHINS as Dedcer
Use by JERRY GdOSMTH Scrrancby by HAHttD IVNGSHW Story by ALAN DEAN FOSTER Pradua) by GENE ROOOENBERRY
OraaBd by ROBERT WISE Cw«>« c MO«.x«l« b» Pwmvnrt. Rmtnma
CE
DOLBY STEREO
*•¥■**¥¥*¥*** ^••Y-Y-¥-¥-¥-Y-¥-Y-¥-¥-¥-¥-¥-¥-'¥-'¥-¥-V-Y-Y-¥-
Men
Women
Children
“Hello
Summer”
Shoe Sale
Three Days Only
All of our
ATHLETIC,
NIKE, ADIDAS, CONVERSE,
BROOKS, KEDS, MERCURY,
Entire Stock is included!
CANVAS,
ZIPS, KEDS, GRASSHOP
PERS, CONVERSE, more.
Entire stock for men, women,
& children.
and
SANDALS.
FAMOLARE, DEXTER,
LEVIS HUSHPUPPIES more
Entire stock of men's, women's
& children's Barefoot Flat
Sandals
IK IT
NIGHT
r
—\
FRI.
5-11
p.m.
<
>
PRE
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
SENTS:
FIGHT NIGHT IV.
APRIL 25 & 26 BRAZOS COUNTY PAVILLION.
ADMISSION: $2.00 PRESALE $2.50 GATE.
17 OPEN, CORPS, GREEK, AND DORM TEAMS HAVE EN
TERED.
Door prizes to be given away by Diamond Brokers International.
FOR INFORMATION CALL: EVAN CORWIN 693-6024
FOR WOMEN,
United Presj International
RALEIGH, N.C. — Tobacco
planting season has barely started,
but David and Pat Proctor already
have made $9,600 on a crop they are
not going to grow.
The couple has leased their quota
— their federally granted right to sell
24,000 pounds of the leaf. With the
40 cents they got for each pound, the
Proctors developed the grain crop
they are growing on the land where
the tobacco would have been.
Cynthia Harris is leasing her
12,869 pounds of tobacco. Unlike the
Proctors, Harris is not a farmer. She
said she has the quota because she
inherited a farm from her father, who
rarely tilled the soil, but still had the
quota because his father was a
farmer.
The Proctors and Harris are
among the more than 170,000 prop
erty owners nationally who capitalize
every year on one of America s most
unusual property rights: the tobacco
quota.
Created in the late 1930s, the
quota for both flue-cured and hurley
tobacco has evolved into a means for
some landholders to make money off
the work of others.
Last year about 121,000 of the
193,500 farm owners with quota
rights to flue-cured tobacco leased
their quotas, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture said. Among hurley
tobacco growers the proportion was
smaller: about 52,000 landholders of
the 305,000 leased.
Some agriculture officials claim
those leases are offered predomi
nantly by retired farmers who need
the extra cash to hold onto their
farms.
But Billy Yeargin, executive sec
retary of the Tobacco Growers’ Infor
mation Committee, says many quota
holders are lumber and paper com
panies, churches and other nonfarm
groups.
“I would say a very large percen
tage of those quota owners are not
involved in tobacco farming what
soever,” he said.
growers should have quota rights.
But as to whether the present system
is unfair, he says, It would almost be
like saying ‘Would it be fair for you to
rent an apartment that you have in
herited from your family?’ Who can
argue with you that you don’t want to
live in that apartment, you want to
rent it out? It (the quota) is a proper
ty right owned by you.
Mrs. Proctor said quota rights are
fair because it adds to her farm’s
value.
basis in 1934 in an attemjji,/
tobacco production from IlL !■
market and thus cheap^jf
crop. The system was m ’
tory in 1938 and then
1939.
That year farmers grew so,
the price plummeted. Mj|]
farmers voted the program J J
during 1940 and have kept?! 1
since. "
Agriculture officials say
farmers need more tobacco U
order to make the expensh?! »|
equipment worthwhile. AltlJ
US DA regulations do permit,
new quotas, most farmers
found they must buy up leases}
farmers and their descender3; *
have dropped out of agricult^L .
held onto the land, and thus: ®l
their quotas. f
A lot of people are upset i rtt |
lease prices, but that has neverk ’
translated into a move to scnpl
allotment system,” said EdWaj
legislative assistant to Rep. W* < \
B. Jones, D-N.C. and head of! lth |
House Tobacco Affairs Subi
mittee.
“When we bought the farm, we
paid a lot more for the land to get the
quota,” she said. “We need the
leases to help make our payments.”
Found elsewhere only in peanuts,
rice and a form of cotton, tobacco
quotas matter because of the high
price that crop brings. In eastern
North Carolina an acre of land can
easily yield $2,860 worth of flue-
cured leaf, compared to just $287
worth of corn and $200 worth of soy
beans.
Ernest Miller of the federal Agri
cultural Soil and Conservation Ser
vice said quotas began on a voluntary
Runathon helps
heart patients
United Press International
NEW YORK — It’s Americans
running to help other Americans.
The first National Run For Life
Day, held last year, was regarded as
a major success. People all across the
United States came out and ran to
raise $500,000 for the American
Heart Association.
If the organizers have their way,
the second annual event — which
ners in last year’s event,
sponsored by the AHA and theQ
necticut Mutual Life Insurant^
in cooperation with the Presida
Council on Physical Fitnesu f or
Sports. ,
“National Run For Life Day mi y,
a significant contribution to Am
icans all across the country,"
Olympic gold medal winner F '
Shorter, the events nationaldi } Wi
man. “By stressing the di
fdiq
\\l
will take place Saturday — will bring _
in twice that amount. More than 30 competitive aspects of rummi
cities are taking part that day, with at enables everyone to take that cm
least 20 more set for scattered dates
Yeargin says only full-time tobacco_
Run For Life is billed as the
first step toward achieving fitra
LAST DAY
THURSDAY!
world’s “largest non-competitive
athletic event” — a “runathon.”
Anyone can run for as long as he
can for sponsor pledges to contribute
to the Heart Association.
There were more than 28,000 run-
“Through raising money for
much-needed heart research,
tional Run For Life Day will help
American Heart Association is
fight to stamp out America’s Ni
killer.”
isd
natiol
he 1
apt
iiont
Te
i've i\&vermet
telike*
Starring
JOM
EARECKSON
as herself
Screenplay by James T. Collier
Based on the
best-selling booK. |
7:00
9:20
CHURCH SPONSORED
DISCOUNTS ONLY!
6th Week!
COAL MINER’S
DAUGHTER
All Athletic, Canvas and Barefoot
Flat Sandals reduced 15%
this weekend
Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With
These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods.
Each Daily Special Only $1.99 Plus Tax.
“Open Daily”
Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M.
MEN,
Same goes for
men, too.
CHILDREN
Includes all Stride Rite
Kids' sandals.
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
with
Mushroom Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
One Vegetable
Roll or Com Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/chili
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
One Com Bread and Butter
15% OFF
Save 15% Off Entire Stock of
Canvas, Athletic and Barefoot
Flat Sandals for the Entire Family
Ends this Saturday
Entire Inventory not reduced
Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611
MANOR EAST 3
MANOR EAST MALL
822-8300
Each local event will be orgam
as a 10-mile, or less, untimed
run.” To date, 25 governors la
proclaimed Saturday National 1
For Life Day in their states.
apan
itmk
D
Participants in last year’s e«
ranged from a dog with a pacerai ^
running in Minneapolis, to and
mo track team who traveled!
miles from a remote eskimo vilk
Anchorage.
This year, Los Angeles Ramsp hangt
old
••'RYNUWJ* PROOUCtlC
terback Vince Ferragamo, apre-i
student, and chairman of the Oil Kince
County, Calif., event, plans to* rallioi
part. So do members of the 0
Olympic Torch Relay Teain
As
; S sm
See him
before he sees you.
runners from each of the 50 id i
who carried the Olympic flaa ippear
Lake Placid.
M C QUEEN
An honorary celebrity com
TOM HORN
Based on the True Slory
for the day includes Edward Aaj
:• M
I
550'
Tony Bennett, Angie Diddnsonj
DiMaggio, Willie Mays andj
McMahon.