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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1980)
THE BATTALION Page 7 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980 ational eagan attacks President’s foreign policy: arter responsible for Persian Gulf conflict t loss, program i ig I ' , schedule i| e salon, s not rq ries on ission oil e$, asmostil Schulte £| ow to eats United Press International EL PASO — Ronald Reagan said nesday President Carter “must pt some responsibility” for the ent Persian Gulf conflict be- e his administration pursued a lign policy that invited instability ran. In an interview with a Houston ideast outlet in Tyler, before ing in El Paso, Reagan leveled his harshest attack to date against the administration’s conduct of foreign policy. Specifically asked his feelings about the Iraqi-Iranian war that threatens the world’s oil supply, Reagan said, “We have to hope it will not spread and that it will settle back down to just a border dispute, particularly if Iraq gets back some of the land that they believe has been taken from them. “But what I think we can say about this tragic situation is it could never have happened had our own government’s foreign policy been more sensible than it has been.” So you place the blame on Presi dent Carter, Reagan was asked. “Well it’s foreign policy,’ Reagan answered. ic source i| sating irefore, m’t revertli ibits." iportantb ich Symi in a smu!! curtain, ore Cubans go to Chaffee United Press International ITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Gov. |1 Clinton and federal officials fcde final arrangements Wednes- for more than 6,600 Cuban gees to be transferred to Fort , ™aaffee from three other resettle- 11 ' 1! ' #ient camps beginning today. linton said his concerns about ging “troublemakers” from the |ort McCoy, Wis., camp to Fort ee — his chief concern about government’s initial consolida- plan — were resolved. Both ps have had riots and smaller urbances among Cubans who restless to be released, ederal officials said the 613 Cu- s at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., Id be flown to Fort Chaffee toy. Transfer of about 3,500 re al Fort Mccoy will begin ay. After a “breather,” about refugees at Fort Indiantown Pa. will be transferred to the tern Arkansas military post. nsolidation efforts will be corn ed by Oct. 15, officials said, ging Chaffee’s population to jut 9,600. federal officials said that the pro- :ed closing date of Fort Chaffee is still Dec. 31 and that authorities e morefre: would work diligently to meet it. . faster tlie#!We are still under a resettle- tiso added!-merit plan to close Fort Chaffee by iteed. 1® en d °f calendar year. ” said an the primaries Cane, director of operations 5 i s n ot a .if the Cuban-Haitian Task Force. jfessionulsisRane was one of four federal s to get tk-Aials who met with Clinton and Ite deserilK lady's » d hat sbeb. is is possa| e privacy ii he physidi| popular tya ofherpataj :d, wealw a all aspectii n — weakfcl program tmentsesi id. Eadi sts $4, and iave at lea his advisors for about IVz hours Wed nesday. About 90 percent of the refugees who will be sent to Fort Chaffee from the three other camps are single males, Cane said. Refugees at Eglin have “bags packed and are wondering when they are going to get out of there,” Cane said, so they will be taken first. The inclement Wisconsin weather is the reason Fort McCoy will be closed before Fort Indian town Gap, he said. Clinton commended federal offi cials and aides for improving the security plan. “A key to the satisfaction of reser vations I expressed has been the willingness of federal officials and the findings of the group I sent to Fort McCoy” Clinton said. Clinton was promised by the White House no additional refugees would be sent to Fort Chaffee until he approved the proposed security plan. Clinton expressed 19 reserva tions about the plan blocking trans fer originally planned to begin Sept. 1. Clinton said he had been assured no minors, mentally disturbed re fugees or “hardcore drug addicts” would be sent to Fort Chaffee, “There is no way this plan can be perfect” Clinton said but added it “headed off every perceivable problem.” Clinton said refugees whose sponsorship did not work out — prompting them to return to Fort Chaffee — would not be given the option of remaining outside the post and would be re-admitted to the refugee population. Presently re turning refugees are not allowed to re-enter the camp and some are being housed by volunteer agencies at a nearby motel. Clinton had ob jected to that practice. Clinton said officials had agreed to bolster federal forces to transport refugees from Fort Smith Municipal Airport to Fort Chaffee. He said he also was satisfied adequate federal personnel would be available out side the post. The local security advisory group would receive a head count of re fugees at the post as often as neces sary Clinton said and the arrivals had been spread out to ensure prop er security. After the transfer of the refugees at Eglin no more than 500 would arrive at Fort Chaffee daily. Hours of arrival would be 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. although the Eglin transfer would exceed that by an hour. Cane said efforts were being made to place unaccompanied minors with relatives in the United States. He said the State Depart ment also was working with child care agencies to find homes for underaged Cubans. Clinton said he had presented a bill in excess of $150,000 to the federal government for expenses of local officials because of the resettle ment operation. He said other ex penses would be documented and submitted to the government. H crime rate highest in state scientists y designed^ majors nl# nterests iterests, 1 political irse ce 489 is 1 only rurse is 1 id if the the x chance it United Press International OUSTON — The FBI says e statistics show the University ^ Houston campus was the most gerous in Texas and among the st dangerous in the nation in 9, but UH officials questioned e fairness of the assessment. FBI statistics released in hington Tuesday showed no re ed rapes and no murders but 32 jer violent crimes against persons id^619 property crimes. e FBI showed UH central cam- is in 1979 recorded 18 robberies, 4 aggravated assaults, 36 burg- s, 47 automobile thefts and 536 _jer property thefts, purse snatch- t preside ing and on the UH central pus in 1979. courses are sgldH Security Chief George Hess ts of interest said statistics alone do not prove Hill said fH, located in a high crime district ial topics Pcf toe city that recorded the nation’s will be -“gliest homicide rate in 1979, is re dangerous than most cam- ses. e chief said UH spends $1.1 lllion annually on security and loys 43 commissioned officers 2 other employees. He argued is doing an adequate job provid- security. 1 think we are adequately staffed ge catalog icomparison to most universities” mt which oaf-l said. e following sjj\y e are j n the process of spend- watch for $100,000 on lighting right now. course s c nnmk we are in the second-highest Witie district in Houston, so that —-Accounts for most of the robberies.” 16 So3^ ^ ess sa *d UH is one of 250 in- ? RENT ^' ons reporting separately to Wtii UgN* 1 Him • B*" 11 * 1 n Colltgf 51,1 age St# 1.3551 the FBI. He said statistics from the rest of the nation’s 2,000 colleges and urtiversities are lumped with the city where they are located. Comparable crime statistics showed Texas Tech University re ported 14 violent crimes, the Uni versity at Texas 2 and Southern Methodist University in Dallas 10. The rest report fewer crimes. 3 is a pro! its knowat^ rses since r Do You Need A Good, Honest Mechanic? Then, we are the automobile care and repair facility you have been looking for. 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Asked if the president was doing enough by warning other nations to stay out of the conflict, Reagan answered, “He’s probably doing all that can be done now — because of our own defensive posture. “But my own feeling is that he must accept some responsibility that goes back a ways. This could not have happened if our govern ment had not helped in the fall of the Shah.” During a brief stop in El Paso at the end of a two-day tour of the South, Reagan continued his attack on what he has said will be the focus of his campaign. Carter’s record particularly in encouraging domes tic oil exploration. He toured a clothing manufacturing plant, meet ing with Mexican-American and Anglo workers, before moving on to Colorado. ' During the interview, Reagan was reluctant to say how he would handle the crisis explaining, “I don’t think you can answer that because first of all no one, unless you’re actually there in the job as presi dent, no one has the knowledge of all the options that you might pos sess.” Asked if he would use force in the conflict if he were president Reagan said, “No I would not. I’m not looking to use force anyplace unless it is absolutely necessary to our national security.” Reagan further accused Carter of “practicing diplomacy in the news papers and on the air” and said that Carter has “no choice” now but to remain neutral. “He (Carter) has allowed the de fensive capability of the United States to become so weakened that it’s like when he said that we would use force with regards to the Persian Gulf and two weeks later had to admit we don’t have the force,” Reagan said. Reagan said the war “could never have happened under the govern ment of Iran that was an ally of ours for so many years. There would never have been this kind of hostili ty between the two countries even though there was hostility between them in feeling.” Midway through his campaign trip, Reagan shifted from a defense of his previous remarks on military force, Social Security and the Ten nessee Valley Authority to an attack on Carter’s administration. In Springfield, Mo., before flying to Texas, reporters had asked Reagan about a list released by the White House of international crises in which he advocated using Ameri can military strength. “I’m not going to bother every day trying to answer those things,” he replied. “The issue of this cam paign is his record and I’m just going to keep talking about it.” The Cow Hop AT NORTHGATE The Biggest Burger Bargains in B-CS! .13 ^ GIANT 1/3 LB. HOMEMADE BURGER served with a pile of real French Fries or salad. 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