The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 13, 1980, Image 8

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PageS THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1980
Kennedy steps up his attacks
on Carter after Maine caucus
AH would fight for Amen
United Press International
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Sen.
Edward Kennedy, buoyed by his
second-place finish to President Car
ter in Maine, stepped up his attack
on the president Tuesday, saying
Carter postures “as the high priest of
patriotism” while fumbling his pow
er away.
In a speech at Harvard Universi
ty’s John F. Kennedy School of Gov
ernment, also delivered a harsh
Armed forces
get women
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The armed
forces are having no problem attract
ing women recruits.
The quarterly Pentagon report on
recruits Monday showed the Army
attracted 5,860 women from October
to December, or 132 percent of its
objective of 4,450 women.
The Navy attained 102 per cent of
its goal by recruiting 2,840 women,
compared to its 2,770 goal.
The Air Force made 100 per cent
of its goal of 3,450, and the Marines
hit 95 percent by enlisting 450
women, instead of the 480 they
sought.
Overall, the military fell 28,000
persons short of its planned goal.
Pro-abortion
review asked
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Groups
opposed to the congressional ban on
federal funding for abortions for poor
women have asked the Supreme
Court to review a New York ruling
they say will provide a “clearcut”
solution to the controversy.
The New York-based Center for
Constitutional Rights asked the
court Monday to review a Jan. 15
ruling by Judge John Dooling strik
ing down the Hyde Amendment as
unconstitutional.
The Hyde Amendment — named
after sponsor Rep. Henry Hyde, R-
III. — bars federal funding of abor
tions for women on Medicaid. It has
been attached as a rider to a federal
appropriations bill every year since
-1976. i yljf;rro:'’ < o c f 1
Pro-abortion organizations, in
cluding the American Civil Liberties
Union and the Planned Parenthood
Federation of America, urged the
high court to consider Dooling’s rul
ing at the same time it hears argu
ments sometime this spring in an Illi
nois case also raising the constitu
tionality of the Hyde Amendment.
After two years of deliberation,
Dooling held the Hyde Amendment
infringes on a woman’s religious free
dom to choose whether she wants an
abortion, and denies women on wel
fare equal protection of the law.
If it only considered the Illinois
case, the court could decide the nar
rower issue of the constitutionality of
state abortion funding restrictions
and sidestep a decision on the consti
tutionality of the Hyde Amendment,
said Rhonda Copelon, a lawyer for
the Center for Constitutional Rights.
Lubbock’s
jobless rate
nation’s best
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Lubbock had
a jobless rate of only 2.4 percent of its
population at the end of 1979 — the
best in the nation — while Ander
son, Ind., at a 15.2 percent rate, was
the worst city in which to find work.
Anderson also experienced the
sharpest increase during the year,
jumping 8.7 percentage points from
a 6.5 percent rate in December
1978.
Lubbock was one of 33 metropoli
tan areas that experienced a drop in
the jobless rate of at least 1 percen
tage point over the year, declining
1.5 percent from 3.9 percent in De
cember 1978.
Kenosha, Wis., saw its rate plunge
3.6 percentage points — the largest
in the nation — from 8.1 percent to
4.5 percent, due to gains in transpor
tation equipment manufacturing.
The Labor Department, in a re
port Monday, said 10 states suffered
over-the-year increases in their un
employment rates of at least 1 per
centage point during 1979.
At year’s end, Alaska had the high
est state unemployment rate, 10 per
cent, while New Hampshire and
Wyoming tied for the lowest rate at
3.4 percent.
The data includes statistics from
49 states and the District of Col
umbia. Figures from Minnesota
were not included.
The 10 states with increases in the
jobless rate of at least 1 percentage
point were Alabama, Indiana, Iowa,
Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, New
Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon and
West Virginia.
Indiana had the largest jump —
2.2 percentage points — going from
6.0 percent in December 1978 to 8.2
percent in December 1979.
attack on Carter’s “Rose Garden’’
campaign strategy.
“The Rose Garden is a place to
grow flowers, ” Kennedy said, “not to
harvest votes.”
“The meaning of Maine is that the
presidency can never be above the
fray, ” the Massachusetts senator said
in his prepared remarks. “A presi
dent cannot afford to posture as the
high priest of patriotism; he must be
a public leader as well as a political
one.”
Kennedy said Carter and his pre
decessors, who have failed to leave
the White House to campaign, “disc
overed, to their regret, that hiding in
the bushes only left them impailed
on the thorns of the Rose Garden
strategy.”
Kennedy said he sought a “diffe
rent kind of presidency — sensitive
to the lessons of the past, confident of
the possibilties of the future.”
He said that in three years of
observing Carter in the White
House, he had seen “the effects of a
president who fumbled his power
away. ”
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Muham-
“If a president does not forge and
fight for a national agenda, the Con
gress dissolves into a selfish collec
tion of powerful but petty special in
terests.”
mad Ali, who lost his
heavyweight title for refusing to
fight in the Vietnam War, says he
would be “first to join” if America
needed him to fight Russia.
Ali was in Washington to re
port to President Carter on his
trip to Africa to get support for the
U.S. boycott of the Moscow
Olympics.
“Now, when we were in Viet
nam, I figured we were wrong.
Now we re right. I’d be the first to
join. I’d get a rifle and jump in an
airplane and jump out,”
“Say Russia attacks
and America has to
stop Russia, I’d be thefirstti:
into an airplane to
— especially when they’re
ing Islamic Muslims,
the draft is right."
.—the Wonderful Mob
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Fresh Whole Fryers
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Margarine s ^r uv U l 9 b 37<
Canned Biscuits ro rs co«n ri t 9h, .‘. 6 ca« $ l
Pkgs.
Lucerne, American 120z.$l
meese Pasturized Processed, Singles .. Pkg. ■ • ■ .
, Pre-Stirred or
Fruit on the Bottom O Ctns.
Party Dips f™ P s ‘cm 1 :
Yogurt!
3ctnl: $ l
39*
Macaroni & Cheese^ i
Hamburger Helper &. . p£ 73*
■ .• Town House Short 24 Oz. Q O C
macaroni cut ubow pk 9 .o3
Egg Noodles '“T73<
Yellow Popcorn'C. ’.'i 49'
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Bel-air Pizza p^edi ,3 p?g $ l .09
Fish Sticks f"* ^ 59*
CONDC-.S-W^'— : CO».OCr.»>3
CHICK!! condense CHICKEN
^ NOODt' CHICKEN NOODLE
soup ^ NOODLE
Sam-- SQUPy,
ncKen
Noodle Soup
Town House
Mrs. Wright's
13 Oz. HamburgerQy||
11 Oz. Hot Dog
Chunk TunaugM ^, 45 &69*
Vienna Sausage hZ. 5 £39*
Beef Stew h 0 .*,". 24 &*1.09
Plain Chili I, 0 .:,". ,5 £79*
Crackers !r„ h e By '£49*
48
Grain Belt Bread
.WrigM'sX’lJ
Italian Bread wr^..
Crushed Wheat Mrs. Wright'l.
Honey Buns
Pecan Twirls?" Wr,9b, ‘
Garden Fresh Fruit and Vegetables at Safeway!
Grapefruit
Ruby Red
"Texasweet
Lettuce
Iceberg
Head
Salad
Time!
• • • • •
f $1
Apples
Golden
Delicious
Washington
Extra
Fancy
Beautiful Plants and Flowers!
Pothos Ivy
:99
Potting Soil
Foil
MumS Wrapped
6" Pot
20 Qt.
“HT1.39
D'Anjou
Northwest
Large Size!
More Low Prices!
v Mushrooms
8 0z 004
.... Pkg. O #
^ Green Onions ThXch
61.,*1
» Navel Oranges c.iif.rni.
3 u.,*l
Carrots <2 ib. Bog..^?’)
...pi b :19*
Russet Potatoes isib B«,69 ) 8 B. b g 99*
Red Delicious Apples
Ex,ra .. AQ <
Fancy . lb.*T #
Vlasic I
Kosher
Ripe 01
Salad C
Mayon
Prices Effective Thursday, 14 thru Wednesday, February 20, 1990 in Bryan-College Station
QuantiTy Rights Reserved — 19 Copyright 1960, Safeway Stores, Inc.
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At Safeway, it isn’t just meat... it 5
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