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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1984)
t ARE YOU PAYING AN ARM AND A LEG TO PUT YOUR KIDS ON YOUR GROUP HOSPITALIZATION? If so, contact Mickey B. Lenamon ’80 for information about Mutual of Omaha’s low-cost children’s plans of life, health Sc accident insurance. We also have individual plans for adults of all ages. Call 822-1321. Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 26, 1984 Campaign ’84 SHOE by Jeff MacNell) 105 Holleman Drive Telephone 693-5737 Across Texas EVERY THURSDAY NITE CHRISTIAN - # SKATE ^ NITE Only CHRISTIAN music will be played and suggestions of groups and/or artists will be accepted. 7:00 EM. to 10:00 EM. $3.00 Mon dale, Hart agree to meeting OKAV, eo Wk NV\V NOT CONTROL A LARGE. OF PEL6GATES.. VOE’LL 6TILU ££ A FORCE TO £E RECKPNEP WITH AT7NECONVENTION, j United Press International One Bdrms. from $325 Two Bdrms. from $405 FREE Cable and HBO • Pool • 24-Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On Shuttle Bus Route • Laundry Rooms ■ Large Walk-In Closets 1001 Harvey Rd. College Station 693-4242 §3 METRO PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT INC Walter Mondale and Gary Hart will meet in New York Tuesday for a summit meeting that could bring an end to their bitter contest for the Democratic presidential nomination. The meeting was set up by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who en dorsed Mondale in a St. Paul, Minn., speech in which he said it is time for Democrats to end their feuding and get on with the job of defeating Ron ald Reagan in November. Prospects for Democratic unity brightened when Hart announced he will not press his challenge to hundreds of Mondale delegates he said were “tainted” because they were elected not with Mondale funds, but with special interest money channeled through special delegate committees not subject to campaign spending limits. Mondale has more than the 1,967 delegates needed to win the nomi nation on the first ballot in San Fran cisco next month, but Hart and Jesse Jackson have not conceded the nom ination. Hart said he realizes a challenge to Mondale’s delegate could splinter the party. “Therefore, for the good of our party and our chances this fall, my campaign will make no challenge be fore the credential committee or at the convention to these delegates,” Hart said in a letter Monday to Dem ocratic National Chairman Charles Manatt. With the party platform pretty much agreed on over the weekend, the only major dispute left unre solved for the Democrats is Jackson’s claim he should double the number of his delegates because he won about 20 percent of the vote in the primaries but has only 9 percent of the convention votes. Jackson did not attend the con vention rules committee meeting in Washington to press his case, since he is in Central America on a six-day trip including a visit to Cuba late Monday. After he arrived at Mondale’s sub urban North Oaks, Minn., home late Sunday, Kennedy placed a tele phone call to Hart, spoke to him for a moment then turned the phone over to Mondale. The two rivals spoke for about five minutes and agreed to have breakfast in New York Tuesday. A Mondale-Hart meeting has been expected for some time, with the probability increasing in recent days. After spending the night at Mon dale’s home, Kennedy gave his for mal endorsement in a speech in the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul. “I am here today to offer my com mitment, my energy and my voice to the election of Fritz Mondale as the next president of the United States,” Kennedy said. The Massachusetts Democrat said he had “a real and abiding respect” for Hart and Jackson, who chal lenged Mondale for the nomination. “But we have had our full and open debate within the Democratic Party and now is the time for us to stop de bating ourselves and to start debat ing Ronald Reagan,” Kennedy said. SHOE i m RANWEP TOGO TcJIHE. convention I A FANOWS &»... &JT THAT ALC f&Lmzpteu ON FKIPAY... jbiNkpm by Jeff MocNel Jackson plans for peace United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Jesse Jackson presented a leftist re bel-backed “moral” plan for peace Monday to Salvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte Monday and Duarte said he would “inform my people” of the appeal. Duarte, following an hour and 15 minute talk with Jackson at Presi dential House, would only promise the Democratic presidential candi date to take his peace initiative to the Salvadoran people. “I have to be very careful how to take steps toward peace. I have to be careful in solving the problems to heal the situation of my country,” said Duarte, standing beside Jackson on the steps of the white-columned house. “Therefore, my next step is to in form my people on what this con cept of the moral offensive means,” Duarte said. Jackson met Duarte during his six-day tropical peace mission, next stop is Cuba and aides saidilf expect President Fidel Castro to a tend the unusual gesture of an is port greeting later Monday. The black candidate plans to peal to Castro to release poll prisoners as a humanitariangesti Jackson met with represenlatiu of the FMLN-FDR, a Salvador leftist rebel coalition, Sunday. Panan President Reagan defends civil rights record United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan defended his civil rights re cord against “do-nothing Demo crats” Monday and trumpeted his economic policies, blaming skittish Wall Street bankers for troublingly high interest rates. In separate White House meet ings with black administration ap pointees and farm community rep resentatives, Reagen sounded the same theme — that economic recov ery helps everybody and that his pol icies aid economic recovery. Meeting with blacks, he re sponded to charges by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., that he has “scorned the rights of the minority who are not white, the majority who are women and so many others who suffer irrational discrimination.” “Contrary to a lot of demagogu ery that we’re hearing, our adminis tration has moved with vigor and vi sion on this front,” Reagan said. “In this job, I have no higher duty than to defend the civil rights of all the citizens of this country,” he said. He said economic expansion “is doing more to help black Amex icans than all the other (social) programs put together.” He accused “those do-nothing Democrats in Congress” of denying blacks thousands of potential new jobs by blocking passage of his “en terprise zones” plan — which could provide for tax breaks and other in centives to lure businesses to de pressed urban areas. “They may have successfully blocked us so far,” he said, “but we’re not going to give up.” During a ceremony on the South Lawn, Reagan reached out to farm ers who supported him in 1980, but since have encountered rough times because of low farm prices and high interest rates. In the session with some 600 “ag riculture communicators” — jour nalists, industry representatives and government officials — Reagan painted a rosy economic outlook. With economic recovery the cor nerstone of his paign, he wasted re-election no time blamir skittish Wall Street bankers for worrisome new rise in theprimera — the fourth this year. Conceding interest rates “aresi higher than you and 1 would Reagan said the financial marlr have yet to realize “that we’reserk about keeping inflation under® trol.” He predicted rates will drop ifik Federal Reserve permits adequa money growth. n Two bee peps\e wW.V\ \ ar\\j pizza. One coupon pet pizza. Expitea7l3IS)A NOTICE New Summer Rates Eff. Start at $150 1 Bedroom Start at $175 2 Bedroom Start at $210 Additional Discount on 12 month Lease SUMMER SHUTTLE BUS TUillouiick 430S ^^ way apartments Fast, Free DeUvary C300P at iisted iocabons. \m__ ..j Get Your Xerox Copies wzffi 10 ’* KUVERS At home? At a friend's? a hurry, or just hungry? Domino’s Pizza delivers tm ~ Liciivers a hot, delicious pizza in 30 minutes or less. Hours: 11:00 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun-Thurs. 11:00 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 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