Friday, April 29, 1983/The Battalion/Page 9 Crop plan will cut back farm supplies romise.†Leader Hi dnesday, “I| C will retain 'e taxcuU'd indexing. Jublicans (j e meeting^ differences 'se spenditii ud GOP - reate a s] * to try to member onservativa] xes next yean n want to nt of taxes, k to seel; a i Ttbackti dershipMral not 51 Rtfs ort of am n the moite get Cor ie Domenia ter the ua )on al effontoij .Texas United Press International WASHINGTON — Farmers will cut back significantly on the use of fertilizer, seeds and other products because of the govern ment’s new efforts to reduce crop production, officials said Thursday. “Farmers will use less seed, fertilizer, fuel and pesticides and will need less operating capital,†J. Dawson Ahalt, acting deputy undersecretary of agri culture, told a House small busi ness subcommittee. “Farmers will also reduce use of farm equipment, thus ex tending its life and reducing the need for repairs,†he said. He predicted an overall re duction in the use of those pro ducts ranging between 5 and 7 percent because of the new pay ment-in-kind program, which promises to give farmers gov ernment-owned surplus crops in exchange for idling large por tions of cropland. In some in dustries, sales may be reduced by more than double that amount, he said. The payment-in-kind prog ram is intended to use up ex isting surpluses and increase the prices paid to farmers for their crops. A decision is likely by early summer on whether the prog ram will be extended into 1984, Ahalt told the subcommittee. Frank Swain of the Small Business Administration told the energy, environment and safety subcommittee that the payment-in-kind program may inadvertently hurt some agricul tural support industries. Derailment injures 12, disrupts train service is together, signitant on. Theisa | 3ig issue,"ht! “r of the members teiH i, “We will Smith, a seven month employee with A&M, sprays water on the freshly laid ement Thursday which will become Moses Hall’s new bicycle rack. Three dorms, Moses, Moore and Davis-Gary, have received new bicycle racks. Smith is from New York. hfenators support proposal mdget ; budget to be Droip 1 the fui After-school prayer urged get get plan las ise >! United Press International ASH1NGTON — Educa- jri Secretary Terrel Bell said ling the firiffhorsday high school students :agan’stbM )U *d stay late at school for Bi- ;ram anJ fie study and prayer groups — >osed defe j Ust as they now stay after their from 1(1 p ftsses for sports or debating, also would i;X Bell spoke to the Senate Judi- )n more oi (I 31 v Committee, which began >tic spenditii® 66 days of hearings on prayer | school. Hearings today and passedai Monday will focus on President norespeniflNga 11 ’ 5 proposed constitution- rams andf I atnen dment to permit volun tary prayer in the classroom, ing toprottoBThe hearing Thursday con- he tax cull fronted milder proposals, spon- rker, and fred by Sens. Jeremiah De- ct indexiDp|l°n. R-Ala., and Mark Hat- Roth, R-Df Wd, R-Ore., to permit religious rs ofthei feetings at school during non- third a public school allows stu- menttotht fcnts to meet before or after America,' Ijfrool to discuss or engage in it nn rhait-Blitics, social activism or athle tics. why should the rule change because the students hap pen to be religious?†Bell asked, iyvnpi The American Civil Liberties ^lluv Onion’s argument against the proposal was made by one of its * 1 ^ice presidents, the Rev. W.W. '131 i n ‘- r Ra^igh, N.C., a 40- par Southern Baptist preacher, il Speaking emotionally, Finla- ~*f'pH toi compared the proposals per- ^LvUBtting religious meetings after |ass hours to legislation for tui- ;s intemation l 0n tax credits and requiring Bi- fON—Afiflie reading in classes. 'mentoffcB Saying h e believed in the abil- sday on d il of churches and synagogues 2,000 forpi t| teach religion, he called the ation abouiWoposals a means of “surrepti- 3 convicted Bus entry†to get religion into VilsonandlJ the public schools. ■Denton, who presided at the grand jin'B en-count i lengthy hearing and was the only senator present for almost all of it, said, “I fear that a new wave of intolerance is rising and that those who avowedly speak on behalf of civil liberties are in volved in a systematic effort through the courts to limit reli gious freedom and speech.†Reagan long has advocated an amendment that would over turn 1962 and 1963 Supreme Court decisions that prohibit prayer in the classroom. The committee will hold hearings on that amendment today and Monday. Reagan initially made the proposal in the last Congress but it failed to get out of congres sional committee. He repeated it in his State of the Union address should have been expelled from America’s classrooms.†The hearing Thursday was on two compromise proposals by Hatfield, a liberal, and De nton, a conservative. Both would permit prayer and Bible study groups in classrooms after school hours. Hatfield’s bill would apply to students at high schools only. Religious organizations already may meet on state college cam puses under a 1981 Supreme Court decision. But the Supreme Court re fused to consider a ruling pro hibiting the Lubbock school board from permitting high school students to hold such meetings at school during non class hours. Pegged to the First Amend ment rights of free speech, Hat- support f rom both conservatives and liberals. Suppiorters said it did not include elementary pupils because they would not be mature enough to make wise decisions about religious groups. United Press International CLINTON, Conn. Amtrak’s main line from New York to Boston was closed today while crews removed four de railed cars from the Yankee Clipper and repaired 1,000 feet of track ripped up by the acci dent. Twelve people were injured — none seriously — and one car was left dangling precariously over a bridge in the accident Thursday, which occurred dur ing the Yankee Clipper’s Washington-Boston run. The accident was being inves tigated but federal and state officials said there was no evi dence vandalism had caused the wreck. “I heard a noise that was not quite normal when the train went by, and I ran out and saw the last three cars coming off the rails at a 45 degree angle,†said Mike Brooke, who works at a gas station near the derailment site. Kathy St. George, 30, a Bos ton actress who was a passenger in the first car to derail, said, “I was jolted right out of my seat and then sat right back down. “It felt like — what is it — a scrambler at an amusement park. Oh, I wanted that car to stop.†“There really wasn’t time to be scared,†said Carol Kunzey, 30, who was traveling from Washington to Boston in one of the last two cars to derail. “We did sort of have time to compen sate, to brace ourselves. The train tipped and all the cushions fell on the floor. It was very strange.†The 10-car train, which had stopped in New Haven, was headed east with about 200 pas sengers under warm, sunny skies at about 2:30 p.m. EDT when the four cars jumped the tracks on an overpass, Amtrak officials said. One of the four cars was left dangling over the side of the railroad trestle about 10 feet above Route 81, creating “a pre carious situation,†police said. The rear of the car remained anchored at one end of the trestle. 'Ijotuta Jhie- “All you can eat!†Hotcake Supper Monday May 2 5:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m. BIG SAVINGS LOOK YOU'RE LOOKING FOR. If you haven't enjoyed the Command Performance experience lately, there'll never be a better time. 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