Tuesday, July 17, 1984/The Battalion/Page 5 ussed a su 100I days out :05 f'orele ) for secondi (lalf hourwN i lier for exrd irul prevtn issing the bs | Assistant I P. Ney sail h- disrupted!! said some st picked up >roblems will in, but mon tennine tlie ik 1 TempfaMj titcs wouldi ti ten and I ini no one elseia spelling. Ski s to keepexJ senior mariil >ge, says, 1 was a freslfl • Ijedroonul the sametbl wo bedrooal is newer,* y first one,*| ith." ■ knows of iH ■rated ata3l ■ last spring. Eagle that' complexes and locatioi 90 to 95 pet com ptrollen is Apartment the 25apat as, disclosed t, Longvie* igher occu| ■xpect no ci , while 13 tt i-College St ndwig says, icfore it the rental s report said: ■ building atli ■’ nd will befl 1 L‘ss decides ing depredal reduce half Around town Registration for Bastrop Fun Run begins The Bast rop Opera House Association is sponsoring a Lite Beer Fun Run in conjunction with Bastrop’s annua! homecoming festivi ties on August 4. Check-in time For the 3.1 mile race will be at 7:30 a.m. near the entrance of Bastrop State Park. All runners will be given a Lite Beer T-shirt. Trophies will be awarded to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place finishers in each division. The entry fee is $7. Entry forms can be obtained by writing to Lite Beer Fun Run, Bastrop Op era House Association, Box 691, Bastrop, Texas 78602. Preregistra tion is encouraged. Driver safety course begins Friday The TAMU After Hours Program will sponsor a Driver Safety Course on Friday and Saturday. This course may be used to have certain traffic violations dismissed and to receive a 10 percent dis count on automobile insurance. Registration is held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through Friday in 216 MSC. For more information, call 845-9352. Hyde named Baylor’s dean of women Sheila A. Hyde, administrative assistant in the Department of Educational Administration at Texas A&M University, has been named dean of women at Baylor University, according to Dr. A. A. Hyden, vice president for student affairs. The appointment is effec tive Aug. 1. “Miss Hyde’s duties will include coordinating sororities, discipli nary matters, housing, off-campus students and Baylor's more than 150 student organizations,” Hyden said. Presently enrolled in the doctoral program at Texas A&M, Hyde holds a master of education in health, physical education and recre ation from Mississippi University for Women, where she was awarded the Faculty Member of the Year Award in 1982. She is the author of two publications, “Preventive Law: Keeping Students Out of Court" and “Senior Adults Serving.” She has been involved in numerous community- and church-related activities. Olympic Torch on display at local bank The Olympic Torch can ied by Wil Worley on its recent trek across Texas is now on display in the lobby of RepublicBank A&M. Worley, a member of the College Station Kiwanis Club, which was one of his sponsors for the run, is an associate professor of elec trical engineering at Texas A&M University. Worley, who was selected by the Bryan-College Station Athletic Federation to participate in the across-the-nation torch-carrying, brought the torch to a recent Kiwanis meeting to give members a firsthand look. He was one of 4,(M)0 sponsored runners in the event, which covered 7,70Q*niiles and passed through 32 states. The run began on May 5 in New York City and the torch will arrive in Los Angeles on July 28 to open the 1984 Summer Olympics. Food distributed to needy Bryan families Bryan’s needy families will be able to receive free cheese, butter, powdered milk, and honey in cooperation with the City of Bryan, The Brazos Vailey Community Action Agency, and the Texas De partment of Human Resources food commodities distribution pro gram today. Families must be preregistered to receive commodities. Qualified parties not currently registered may do so on July 24 from 1 to 5 p.m. or July 25 from 8a.m. to noon at the Central Fire Station, 801 N. Bryan St. For more information, call 779-5622, extension 321. Reagan agrees with pope United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan opened Captive Nations Week Monday with a blistering de nunciation of “communist totalita rianism” and aligned himself with Pope John Paul II in singling out Ni caragua for special reproach. “We condemn all tyrants who deny their citizens human rights, whether they be dictators of the left or the right,” he said in ceremonies marking the signing of the Captive Nations Week proclamation. But his barbs were reserved for “communist totalitarianism.” He de manded a full accounting on the sta tus of Soviet dissidents Andrei Sak harov and his wife, Elena Bonner. And he sought to pressure Congress for money for CIA-backed rebels in Nicaragua. “Peace is our highest aspiration,” Reagan said. “But we stand for peace with freedom and for peace with dignity.” “To those who believe our policy must always be willful ignorance of ugly truths, must be silence in the face of persecution, and appease ment or surrender to aggression, I say that price is far too steep and we dare not and will never pay it,” he said. The East Room ceremony was at tended by ethic leaders — most of them immigrants from Eastern Eu ropean nations under communist dominion and many of them Catho lic. Reagan noted that the pope re cently disapproved of the Marxist Nicaraguan government’s inclusion of the Catholic Church on its list of “enemies.” “I know I speak for millions of Americans who join the Pope in say ing we, too, disapprove; and yes, people of Nicaragua, we, too, suffer with you,” Reagan said. He suggested that members of Congress who have refused funds for the CIA-sponsored Nicaraguan rebels “to reflect on the fatal conse quences of complacency and isola tionism.” “It’s vital for the sake of our own future that the Congress and the American people respond to the democratic aspirations of the Nica raguan people,” he said. He told the ethnic leaders at the ceremony that they had seen “the full gamut of totalitarian terror” and pledged, “I’ll be proud to stand by you always.” r . White speaks to ‘shirt-sleeve’ democrats United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — Gov. Mark White, in one of his first appear ances before a national audience, said Monday the Democratic Party is "a shirt-sleeve parly” that embodies the aspirations of the poor, minori ties and the elderly. “We have never been a slick-pack aged party or a lockstep or a rich party, or a party whose platform is dictated from the citadels of power” White said during his introduction of New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, the convention’s keynote speaker. “We are a big, brawling, diverse, vi sionary shirt-sleeve party. We are the party to which people turn when they want to be heard.” White, who defeated former Re publican Gov. Bill Clements in Texas’ 1982 Democratic landslide, also blasted the GOP as exclusionary and unresponsive. “The Republicans have proven that theirs is a government of the privileged few. Ours is a govern ment of the many,” he said. “The Republicans have given us govern ment that says to the people, ‘no.’ We have always led from the convic tion that our clarion call is ‘the peo ple, yes!’” White also dismissed some politi cal analysts’ suggestion that the Democratic Party is out of touch with American voters. “The hopes and dreams of the Democratic Party are the hopes and dreams of the American people,” he said. “And that is why in 1984 we are going to elect the first woman vice president in American history — Geraldine Ferraro.” White was effusive in his praise of Cuomo and said there were parallels in their respective political careers. “I take special pride in introduc ing Gov. Cuomo tonight, because we are both new governors, elected by broad coalitions over reactionary Re publicans straight from the Reagan mold,” he said. “There is not a better person to sound the keynote for this convention in this year.” Cuomo won office in 1982 by de feating GOP candidate Lewis Lehr- man, a millionaire drugstore mag nate. Democrats * V (continued from page 1) House “one by one, the agreements negotiated in the past, by both Dem- Wf ocrals and Republicans, have been either repudicated or ignored.” “A new nuclear arms race is al ready well under way,” Carter warned thousands of Democrats packing the Moscone convention center and millions more watching on television. Carter also brought up a central part of his own administration —hu man rights. “Our government, I am sorry to say, has withdrawn from this battle in recent years,” he said. Following Carter was New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who in a barn burning keynote address denounced the Reagan administration for allow ing millions Americans to suffer in poverty, hunger and dispair while giving tax breaks to the rich and big business. He painted a stark philo sophical contrast between the na tion’s two political parties. “The Republicans believe the wagon train will not make it to the frontier unless some of our old, some of our young, and some of our weak are left behind by the side of the trail,” Cuomo said. “We Demo crats believe that we can make it all the way with the family intact. We have. More than once.” “Ever since Franklin Roosevelt lifted himself from his wheelchair to lift this nation from its knees. Wagon train after wagon train. To new frontiers of education, housing, peace. The whole family aboard.” Cuomo said Reagan has turned American into a “tale of two cities,” with policies that “divide the nation into the lucky and the left-out, the royalty and the rabble.” Bob Beckel, Mondale’s campaign manager, met with Jackson Monday and said afterward “it’s possible” a three-way meeting among the Dem ocratic rivals could be set up, but in dications were that one-on-one ses sions or a group get-together might not come until Tuesday or later. “We believe the key to success, to victory in November is open and ac tive communication and cooperation now and we believe that communica tion has been established,” Beckel said. Earlier, at the Powell and Market Street intersection where the city’s cable cars begin their “climb halfway to the stars,” the ticket-to-be greeted cheering supporters and Mondale’s introduction of Ferraro, a three- term New York congresswomen, elicit wild cheering. Mondale and Ferraro’s first stop was at a Democratic women’s group where they received a tumultuous, screaming welcome. Mondale told the audience the election is “above all about our fu ture. To be an American is to believe in the American dream. It must be a dream for everyone — not just about some. That’s what the Mondale-Fer- raro administration is all about. “Every time America has opened the door, we’ve found that we were stronger,” he said. He added that Ferraro “symbolizes this next door that we are about to open in Amer ica.” i Paraphrasing a John Kennedy line, Ferraro said, “What this ticket is all about ... is not what America can do for women, but what women can do for America.” “We need your help,” she said. “Are you with us?” “Yeah,” the crowd screamed. The audience then began clap ping in cadence and shouting, “Ger ry, Ger-ry.” The 3,933 voting delegates gath ered in a gigantic underground con crete convention hall named after late Mayor George Moscone. Some 50,000 peace advocates tried to gain the attention of the del egates by matching the hoopla inside the hall with a giant rally with music and speeches outside. Jackson, in a pep talk to 200 of his delegates about the platform fight, he said, “We don’t have to win. We just have to keep our self-respect.” As he roamed the city in a largely vain search for delegates. Hart warned Democrats not to wage a “checkerboard campaign •” $35.95 We won’t be undersold! Check us first! Leather aTm Kaepas also available $39.95 EXAMINATION JITTERS? 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