THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APR. 14, 1976 Page 9 SlVallace tours Texas /- Associated Press BlLENE — Alabama Gov. 'Ilportfc Wallace was to move to West j-xas today in search of votes in the . ite’s May 1 primary with speeches mned here, in Lubbock and El Hill ace came to Texas Tuesday ere neiidlvas in Fort Worth and Dallas 400An)eiHe he opened campaign head- 1 byacuiiarters. d Christian Dallas late Tuesday, Wallace i, the li ged Texans to provide him with ilecruisenioigh votes to give him a chance at and a r e Democratic nomination and the U,S, *ki sure the middle and lower in- r, severalclasses are represented in the !ubmari«|rt> s platform. ^Rdlace will be facing Georgia then or ov - Jimmy Carter and Texas’ “favo- ndtwoes te s o n candidate Sen. Lloyd Split,' mtsen, D-Tex. the vid^-Widlace told a crowd of supporters is g r{)1 |p triDallas: “If you’ll go out and give 1 90 warplii : ' : Zl^olitical roundup 'al operal George Wallace your vote, and work, and I’ll work in other states, we’ll go to the convention with enough votes that we will not only have a chance at the nomination, but we will also see that the party plat form is one that represents the aver age middle class, low income citi zens of the United States that they (the party) forgot and looked down their cultural noses at in 1972.” In Fort Worth Wallace told sup porters he felt, “we are going to do well in Texas ... I have a better chance of being the nominee of the Democratic party than Mr. (Ronald) Reagan has of being the nominee of the Republican Party.” Reagan will face Ford in the Texas Republican primary. Wallace declined to comment on reports that some of his supporters were switching to Reagan because they did not think Wallace has a ‘realistic” chance of getting the Democratic nomination. In his appearances in Fort Worth and Dallas, Wallace told his listeners that the major issues were un employment, inflation, internal sec urity, national defense and crime and government spending. He said the party should not be afraid, “to attack big government, the bureacracy in Washington that is overgrown and glutted. The matter of crime in the streets which we have always said was a great domestic issue eating the internal security of the United States and threatening the largest cities of our countries.” Wallace disagreed with Sen. Bentsen’s prediction that the Demo cratic convention will be a “brokered convention.” He said: “I don’t know what a brokered convention is, but nobody is going to the convention with a majority of delegates. Ford and Connally meet Still no Connally endorsement for Texas primary candidates Ford rejects ethnic term . By HOWARD BENEDICT k S| Associated Press Writer 1 HaSHINGTON — President 1 H says he rejects the term “ethnic n il hut believes “an ethnic heri- ge is a great treasure” that should >t he destroyed by federal housing ws Asked about Democratic candi- ite Jimmy Garter’s reference to tlmic purity of neighborhoods, t jJBr sa ' c ^ Tuesda y> I would not use 1 s . an< lai term to describe any of my usse i oticies.” r , antl ' At a White House news confer- linmos nel, he said it is “not the way to .Hrihe the practical situation in- '."8’•, (Wing government housing policy. heW «M; lr ter stirred controversy last Sm0 j H k b y saying ' n an interview that 1 helgovernment should not pursue Dandid l() |j ( .j es ji ul t f orce the alteration of a ^ <)l etjmic purity of neighborhoods. 1,1 !i,l ' ome critics claimed there was racial l 0 ivei tones in the statement, i jr^B ar t er later apologized for the use ijisetn kg term, but said he remained thee >pp OSCC l to the “arbitrary use of fed- 1 :ral force to change a neighbor- (“II, th( 100( |’ s e th n ic character. His com- ! jp™ perns were in regard to legal efforts o onii () force the government to finance instruction of low-income housing n allluent suburbs as well as in poor niier-city areas. H’ord seemed to support Carter’s >tand on allowing neighborhoods to pines a: retain ethnic identity, saying, “I here ttttt 1 1 think that federal action should iiiers fmHused to destroy that ethnic trea- sun ingkob||r ut b e sa ' ( l he is sworn to uphold DC8 alr4 sent f eder ‘ d housing laws, which r (n , I( , give local governments a great deal the oii|®f u tonomy and responsibility as to , aj where low-income housing should 0 theofepocated. ^word said Carter will face a test in is hijaC' dle Apdl 27 Pennsylvania primary, \irlini w ^' c h will determine “whether that I )m i ( remark will have any impact on the support that he has heretofore got ten in the black communities of the o Lib Vl T ous states ” ^Carter was campaigning in ( hJ, Philadelphia where he said, “I am nip epe pines airo ppy to have aroused the interest jJ and the opposition of the President. ■The former Georgia governor said Ford “has often expressed his pref erence not to have me as an oppo nent and I guess he has now joined the stop Carter movement.’ But what he should know from me is that I am going to stop him in No vember.” iTeague opens . Bn headquarters rom Hrhe Teague for Congress county , headquarters has opened at 2915 Hall: Texas Avenue, Glynn A. Williams, “•* "'local campaign chairman, an nounced yesterday. ■Rep. Olin E. (“Tiger”) Teague, who is seeking his 16th term in the U.S. House of Representatives, faces Ft. Worth television weather man Ron Godbey in the Democratic Bimary May 1. In other political developments Tuesday: VFord met with former Texas Gov. John Connally, their second White House talk in 12 days, but said he neither sought nor received Con- nally’s endorsement in the May 1 Texas primary. Ford nominated Ross N. Sterling, a member of Con- nally’s Houston law firm, to federal judreship on Monday. Ford called GOP challenger Ronald Reagan a formidable oppo nent, but said “We re winning and we re going to keep on winning. ” He also praised Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinrer and said Kis singer will remain in his job, despite criticism from political opponents. V Carter countered speculation that the “ethnic purity” remark might have cost him support from blacks, appearing in Atlanta early in the day with the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr., father of the slain civil rights leader. VKing told several thousand per sons at a rally that Carter “has been for equal justice when it wasn’t an easy thing to be for in southern Georgia.” King said of Carter, “I love him and believe in him.” V Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan charged in Texas that Ford is “proceeding to give away the Panama Canal” and said he had a transcript of recent closed-door tes timony exposing that plan. He quoted from what he said was a transcript of testimony by Ambas sador At-Large Els worth Bunker, chief U.S. negotiator in the Panama Canal talks. Reagan said Bunker ad mitted he had guidelines from Ford to surrender both the canal and the Canal Zone. VSen. Edward M. Kennedy said again he would not be on the Demo cratic ticket. At a fund-raiser in At lanta, he said he thought the flap over Carter’s “ethnic purity” remark was “overblown.” A compromise bill to restructure the Federal Election Commission and return its power to disburse fed eral matching funds to presidential candidates was announced in Con gress, but backers of the measure said they feared Ford would veto it. Enjoy this great new drink from Mexico! We're passing along the recipe used by Mexico City’s famed Las Piramides bar. The secret is in the way these two great liquors blend so well with orange juice. Try one, there's nothing like it. Caramba! 1 oz. Southern Comfort V2 oz. tequila Orange juice Fill a highball glass with ice cubes. Add the tequila and Southern Comfort. Fill with juice, stir and add a cherry. You know it’s got to be good... when it's made with Southern Comfort SOUTHERN COMFORT CORPORATION. 100 PROOF LIQUEUR. ST. LOUIS. MO . 63132 VSen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, a late entry in the race for the Demo cratic nomination, said in Nebraska that Ford has been “saber-rattling in relations with Cuba. VRep. Morris K. Udall said in Pennsylvania that his money-tight campaign has been damaged by the failure of Congress to get a Federal Election Commission bill passed. “It will definitely hurt us here. It’s like campaigning with half the money,” said Udall. He said he may be forced to scrap a planned advertis ing blitz if he cannot raise more funds. V Alabama Gov. George Wallace was in Texas, telling a Dallas crowd that with their votes “we ll go to the convention with enough votes that we will not only have a chance at the nomination, but we will also see that the party platform is one that repre sents the average middle-class, low- income citizens of the United States that the party forgot and looked down their cultural noses at in 1972.” ^Sen. Henry M. Jackson courted labor support in Pennsylvania, say ing, “Jobs and employment are the overriding issues in this campaign. I have great faith in what this nation can do, but it’s a tragedy to see that it’s so mismanaged.” Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Ford and former Texas Gov. John B. Connally have held another long ses sion at the White House, but the President says Connally still has not volunteered to support him in the Texas May 1 primary. Ford and Connally met for 40 minutes Tuesday. There was no offi cial announcement of what was dis cussed, but President Ford said later that Connally “was not offered a job. I did not ask him to support me. He did not volunteer.” Connally has declined to make any public statements in favor of either Ford or Reagan in the Texas primary although reportedly the two have sought his help. The former governor has said he intends to work to help strengthen the Republican party’s congressional delegation. Connally drove away from the White House without discussing the meeting with waiting reporters. Although Connally has said he will make no endorsement in the hotly contested Texas campaign between Ford and challenger Ronald Reagan, the President and his advisers are known to be hopeful that Ford and Connally will make at least one joint public appearance before the May 1 balloting. Ford is scheduled to return to Texas for another campaign appear ance April 28-29. Ford has classified himself as the underdog in Texas. He has won six of the seven primaries he has entered, with Reagan beating him in North Carolina. A White House spokesman said that Ford telephoned Connally in Absentee voting is now underway Absentee voting for the May 1 county, state and Presidential primaries is underway and will con tinue through April 27. Registered voters who will be out-of-town on election day are urged to vote absentee at the tax assessor-collector’s office in the Brazos County Courthouse. Texans this year, for the first time, will be voting on party presidential preferences in the primary. Also on the ballot will be primaries for county, state and Congressional of fices. College GOP polls students in MSC today The Texas A&M chapter of Col lege Republicans are polling voter support today for Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. Students may vote on MSC’s first floor from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students must present an A&M student ID card to be eligible to be polled. College Republicans is sponsoring the poll to increase interest in the May 1 Texas Republican primary. THRU SAT. SALE WOMEN’S WOOD-WEDGE SANDALS Our Reg. 5.97 3 91 4 Days Only Toe-loop wedgie in vinyl with latigo trim, composition sole. Brazil tan and white. 2700 South Texas Ave. Is it sick to love Not if it’s an extraordinary Pilot Razor Point marker pen. A fiber-tipped pen so precisely balanced, it will always feel comfortable in your hand, even after hours of writing. 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