Battalion/Pags October 19, state Battalion/Page 5 October 19, 1982 e r Bush says Republicans will further Reaganomics mean monthly e might be coolerj rees, but people ra lies, not means,"! . "Last January, ;s got down to degrees but theai :ht have been akt y said, while ova s for an entire rep tain the same.ccn ray experience i ceather, but the use same areas Ider weather. United Press International I DALLAS — Vice President George Bush says Reaganomics has cut taxes, inflation and the fedeaal budget, but noted only the election of fiscally conservative Republi cans will keep the system on track. “The question the electorate must now decide is whether the gains will be per fected,” Bush told a partisan crowd late Sunday at a Dallas-Fort Worth airport fund-raiser. He said the average American family paid $2,000 less today in taxes than it did during the Carter administration and that interest rates and inflation were headed down. He ticked off a list of GOP achievements made in the economy during the last two years, proof Republican policy was super ior to its Democratic alternative. “In the last two years our administation has cut the rate of growth of federal spend ing in half,” he said. He said Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, a fund-raiser guest, was an example of how the election of conservatives had produced changes in defense policy: “Because he (Tower) is there, we’re able to move forward on sound de fense policies for America. But in the same committee (Armed Services) in the House, it’s like pulling teeth.” The speech, part of a campaign swing through Texas, was on behalf of Republi can congressional candidate Jim Brad shaw. Guests paid $150 per plate. The re ception was attended by such conservative luminaries as Texas Rangers baseball team owner Eddie Chiles and Fort Worth mil lionaire T. Cullen Davis. A campaign aide for Bradshaw called the November congfuonal elections a pub lic judgment on Reaganomics. “It’s a referendum on President Reagan, his program and his administa tion,” he said. “It’s close. We don’t have any trouble admitting that.” Classic photos displayed United Press International FORT WORTH — A recently discovered 1849 daguerreotype of President James Knox Polk is featured in “Masterworks of American Photography: The Amon Carter Museum Collec tion,” museum officials said Monday. The images, made by a vaga bond American photographer in Mexico in early 1847, are not only the earliest photographs of war but the earliest examples of photojournalism, since photo graphy was invented just eight years before, officials said. ntrast tothescieia h, folklore, to »la > rarely give any )een used to pn her for centuries. Ex-cop arraigned nteni* 11 °il man shooting * * * * * * SCHULMAN THEATRES $1 off adult ticket 1st Matinee Mon-famlly night Sch-6 Tue-tamfly night M E. Ill SCHULMAN6 ;ays tncern for thesti* eed for students belong, ten focused on •ms involved inii administration, re often conditii ie assertive stui l. “We overlooltk ?nts.” added that is into colleges . He said someui o concerned at only students mything are ad ie challenge and eating the unpn mcern of the uni' be the highest the most Nobel Astin said. Hesai mcern at univs e working United Press International ■ AMARILLO — A private in- Itstigator and former police- pian accused in the “planned ■ssassination” of a west Texas ftnlman was to have been re- Mitned from Houston Monday Jnilowingarraignment proceed-i tijigs, police said. LR. Wynn was arrested at a ouston hotel early Saturday in the fatal shooting of Earle Win- ton Mathis, Wynn, who has worked as a Jrivate investigator since leaving ihi Amarillo police department, was to have been arraigned Mon day on charges of shooting Mathis, 62, at a busy Amarillo in tersection Friday, Houston De tective Ken Williamson said. Amarillo investigators de scribed the shooting as “a plan ned assassination.” Police said Wynn would be escorted to Amarillo Monday by Amarillo police officers. Wynn, who was attending a convention of the Texas Asso ciation of Polygraph Examiners when he was arrested, had been named in a warrant after witnes ses positively identified him as the gunman who shot Mathis, said Ft. Jimmy Boydston of Amarillo. The shooting apparently stem med from a “bad business deal” between Wynn and Mathis, an in dependent oilman and retired vice president of Pioneer Pro duction Co., Boydston said. Mathis was in his pickup Fri day when a gunman jumped out of his car, strode past a line of vehicles in noon-hour traffic and fired as many as six shots, police said. 7:15-9:40 Garp 7:15-9:50 hurch suit over tax oney for war put off for ll* iys se ; United Press International NEWTON, Kansas — The eneral Conference of the Men- omite Church has tentatively ended to hold off on a lawsuit ianned against the Internal Re- enue Service to protest the col ection of tax dollars for war. Vein Treheim, speaking for he church, said the denomina- ion’s general board decided arlier this month to hold off on the lawsuit. However, the final decision is to be made in August at the church’s triennial session in Bethlehem, Pa. Since Mennonites oppose war, the church wanted legal permission for employers to honor the requests of employees who did not want federal taxes withheld from their paychecks to be used for war. “The main reason (for the de lay) was that we were told by our legal counsel that our chances of accomplishing what we had hoped were very slim,” Treheim said. He added that the church lawyer, William Ball of Harris burg, Pa., doubted the Menno nites’ case would be successful be cause of a recent Supreme Court ruling on religion and tax. * * -fc 2000 E.29-775-2463-775-2468 * U Every Thurs-Senior Citizens ^ Shows at 3:30. Price H.OO and ^ v* only Senior Citizens wlk be ad- ♦ ri* mitted. Sch. 6 Only.. jA- •K IT— ]+. { The Best Little J * Whorenouse in * J . 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Si was later impo! adge William Se' ! esiding at this U is to be tried laiei murder. Vood’s death, Harrelson ontf i him that Wood 1 icide by the people.” Robinson quoted aying: “Killing^ ig away with iti 1 t.” DENTS VI101/111 2/112 I0D imer 1961 tge areas, we and individual 2. If you have tion of a grade an during this nest at Room November 24, nsidered after ^ersity appeal onnor of First Year stry Program Town broke, but two-man oolice force vows support {MANOR EAST Mi; Manor E. Mall 823-6300 ^ {An Officer and a } 4c Gentleman J { 7:15-9:50 ? 4c 4c 4c 4c. { ROCKY III j 4c 7:20-9:40 ^ * * { Campus } { * I NIGHT SHIFT J 7:15-9:30 * 4c * United Press International RISING STAR — The city’s :offers have only $14.86, but the hief of police — whose two-man bree has a higher annual budget han the entire town’s revenues says he’ll stay on the job as long I’m going to hang on as long s i can even without pay,” said hief Curtis McGlothlin, who ans the department along with fficer Dennis Hill. “We will con- ihue to support the citizens of Rising Star as long as we can.” Mayor H.L. Killion said only $14.86 was left in the general fund that pays police, fire de partment and administration salaries in the community of 1,000. No paychecks were distributed Friday. The proposed budget for fis cal 1982-83 allots $53,000 to the police department. But, Killion said, tax revenues will total only about $44,000. “We need a police depart ment, but we also need a budget we can live with,” Killion said. Robin Reed, a cafe owner, has formed a committee to try to se- until the town meeting next Monday. Reed attributes the town’s problem to the unwillingness of present and past councils to in crease taxes and utility rates. Teel the luxury . . . Warm water running through your hair. Cleansing. Massaging. Gentle suds rinsed out, leaving a soft, sweet scent. Now, the cut. Crisp. Precise. Fresh. Perfect. Feel the luxury at. . . 707 Texas Avenue 696-6933 Culpepper Plaza 693-0607 nurse • town • hat j, -—w You Jammers Come Win Free CHEAP THICKETS Air Band Contest