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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1979)
vei Day: global rite THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1979 Page 13 United Press International •om the traditional parade on -ow’s Red Square to memorial 1(1 ca bineti tes for the war dead in Israel, ™ ate traB,^ spanning the globe Tuesday ade an a F;ted May Day — an annual rite of lational Aiydf— with marches, rallies and Shoun s< c hcs; lna uy. WBjde the Kremlin, about 2 mil- 0acl1 - So'iets marched, cheering and ‘bedinlying banners emblazoned with than 3 mibgflive the unbreakable alliance r chased iJ@|working class” and other slo- aiform f 0t a : takes a the first time in a decade, but deniAetltroops took part in the parade risks, military drill teams staged fancy citing in front of President the one Brezhnev and the Kremlin ai d. I Jj r Ihip sitting atop Lenin’s Tomb relaxed, ^ Square. J<c peoplef portrait of Lenin painted on a t the neitK&ocnt floated in the air and ,ol[ children, athletes, workers invited citizenry carried flowers, {floats and chanted authorized after theta f the sd liversity parity riticized s unfair rgc O vter culminated in the 1890 “Haymarket Massacre.” Iranian Workers Ayatollah Ruhol- lah Khomeini, shouting ‘‘Death to the communists!” scuffled and pushed left-wing demonstrators dur ing a May Day march commemorat ing the Islamic Republic’s “first spring of freedom.” But in Israel, solemn celebrations marked the day with memorial trib utes honoring some 14,000 soldiers who have died defending the Jewish state since its birth in 1948. At sundown Monday, sirens wailed throughout the country and many Israelis stopped to stand at si lent attention for two minutes. Many cafes, restaurants and cabarets were closed for the holiday. “We want peace with all out hearts,” Prime Minister Menachem Begin told bereaved families in a na tionwide May Day message. “But we will defend this land, these children with all our might and courage of spirit.” President Anwar Sadat scheduled a major May Day speech at Safaga, a mining town on the Red Sea about 300 miles southeast of Cairo. Reporter ordered to inquest elicit countries mark May Day as a honor its workers, com- ndrating the strikers’ march •propmJ^ 1 ' the streets of Chica g° that b now g# s no chanitj bool. It rtf ution wh be last twj ady and £ TvUnited Press International MLLAS —The United Way, Mf the nation’s best-known ■table organizations, has a oopoly on donations from ess and their employees, itends a spokesman for a group John Al phonal charities, the indkJF* t ^ ie donated funds are not Iran Ltd ^ t0 the majority of charities, m Co I flfding to a coalition of 47 char- sland bk* organizations holding its at es and •*|jnational meeting in Dallas an R^lwcek while the United Way h Ball vkh 'ts annual volunteer leaders ayette, t ^ence in the city. I nrinW Our goal is to make the public :ount incj 1 the United Way (officials) n;lrn . alize the very deep dissatisfac- -tiered C’fi with the limited number of janizations the United Way I ^nds. ’ said Robert Bothwell, ecutiurector of the National ftmittee for Responsive nthropy He and other charity directors intend United Way, which is an nbrella organization funding l|3$ ^out 37,000 charitable agencies itionwide, has an unfair advan- pers ge by obtaining funds through lyroll deductions solicited dur- drives within corporations. J f*Liey say other charities aren’t al- *^^"wed such drives and can t atch the funding, even though nited Way only funds a per- mtage of the 6 million charitable 'encies existing today in the g,nited Stages. Bothwell said his group’s goal is ■jive employees a choice. SB'here has been a thrust the ““ist two or three years to end ptpd Way’s monopoly,” said 1 Jilj|well. “Four states — ;l alifornia, Wisconsin, Pennsyl- | ^ mia and Iowa — don’t allow the onopoly (in their state govern- ts). The federal government h t allowed it foryears, n contend [ion bars feme photo ■ United Press International pNVER — An attorney for p men who claim their religion vents them from having their 7:00rrPg ra phs taken for drivers’ ,nSes intends to ask the U.S. Su- ttle Court to review the case. JDAY be Colorado Suprc me Court, in a PPflAL dec i s i° n Monday, rejected ms of David Johnson, Anthony 00 btc«|Iand Brent Perkins, members of Pravu I?, U P ca Hed the “Assembly of Gravy WHHOSHUA.” The court said Jtoes an- re Was a compelling state interest 16 othef r f9 u iring the photographs as ble ^ihcation. id and e argued their right to re- -|- fia 5115 heedom was being infringed If by a demand they be photo- gped before they could receive fers licenses. TPHard Borchers, a Denver at- b)r the religious group, said Pay he will ask the U.S. Su- Pe Court to consider hearing the II an t tell you the exact details at said Borchers. “But I can ■ H. ^ m 8 0 f n S to Washington p e if the U.S. Supreme Court will p this case.” #, three men said the Bible di- || ney not allow any photographs ffi of them and based that belief peciai ,i ; oral interpretation of the sec- VENliu ( s mrnandment P ronounce< ^ f n V oommandment states: “Thou V jth 1 not make unto thee any graven Sauce or any likeness of any thing reSSM s m heaven above, or that is in d - a, fh beneath, or that is in the iTea P under the earth.” iW p°r! • ^ Sa * d fbe small group is e of ^ki Ul ^ 0 °ne, Colo., a suburb of ahle ‘i-p i°'- sai( f the group was ■ab' e Jed m the late 1930s and took ^unpronouneable name because e mf God s name shouldn’t be n on earth, i a ■«**.!*. mmmiip.! PICNIC PACKINS ARE GREAT United Press International TOPEKA, Kan. —A United Press International reporter has been or dered to appear Friday for a closed- door attorney general’s “inquisition” into a UPI report that state senators consumed liquor in the Kansas Statehouse on the last day of the 1979 session. The office of Attorney General Robert Stephan delivered a sub poena Monday to Elizabeth Leech, 24, who covered the Legislature for UPI during the just-ended 1979 session. The document cited the state in quisition statute granting the attor ney general authority to subpoena a person to appear at a closed-door in terrogation. The subpoena was de livered to Leech at UPI’s Kansas City area bureau in Mission. UPI reported Sunday that Sen. More Then A Mouthwash |!li$ierine...!^ ,l V9 g?:;:!! Anti-Perspirant List *2.' 9 «§SOFT* DRV....l zv Neil Arasmith, R-Phillipsburg, was observed, during a Senate recess, mixing, drinking and serving screw drivers — vodka and orange juice — in the office of Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia. Doyen appar ently had been unaware of the inci dent. State law prohibits consumption of liquor on property owned by the state. Such a violation is a mis demeanor, punishable by a fine be tween $50 and $200 and up to six months’ imprisonment. In a Monday news conference, Stephan said it is the duty of a citizen who witnesses illegal activity to re port it to authorities, regardless of whether that person is a reporter. He criticized UPI lawyers for ad vising Leech not to appear voluntar ily, but to await a subpoena. He said he did not fauPeech for following that advice, tlowever, he com- plained that it would slow up the inveqtion. Leech witnessed the incident when she entered the president’s of fice with Doyen for an interview. She said Arasmith offered her a drink, which she declined. Later, questioned by another UPI reporter, Arasmith confirmed he brought a partial bottle of vodka to Doyen’s office and confirmed he served screwdrivers to “several” un named senators. “I brought the bottle, but this thing was not of my own design entirely,” Arasmith said. Doyen, who was on the Senate flor or in meetings most of the time, said he knew nothing beforehand about the cocktails. 25 tablets 111?* Off Label ij! ALKA-SELT2ER fcliisBanquet Assorted Frozen C00K-IN' BAGS Minute Maid Frozen ORANGE JUICE these prices good Thursday, Friday, & Saturday May 3,4 & 5. pbonhbs t Swift Proten Full Cut ! ROUND i STEAK iiii i Holly Creek lb. *1.’ 8 lb. *1.“ ti Tenderized |J Boneless h !■ BAKING HENSI USDA Grade 'A' 4-6 lb. pkg. (0 11 mi ffji i;i iii «§ II II Cl ii i ii ™ TIDE COFFEE Halves or Sliced HUNTS ™ PEACHES 2-1/2 29 oz. can ■ zy oz. can zht ■ V Wm mmmm m m.m. m TOMATO KETCHUP Heinz C!1N0| 32 oz. btL ShaiW Lne Marachino . 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