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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1984)
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August 22. 1964 Republicans not threatened by Ferraro GOP leaders limit debating DALLAS — Rrpubfc for their na- leaders the Repuftdkan — for the of Genddsne Ferraro as W mo preasdenaal a Lrt survey deieeatAuns tn NauoevaJ - A- T —L s wtifCfi or ||an port feet the i Many, however, voice worry about newly registered blocks who were (•oiimally aroused by Jesse Jackson s pr<>r»lrm we utat also ap- “I think the bsg have in Georgia is plies to the rest of the that Mate's Republican Party chair man. Bob Bell, “and that m the feei- ing of compUcency and the idee that we have won ■ already He said the GOP wall have to mount “a massive effort so get out the vase in November If see fail to do that then we can lose «.* This fear of a Republican At hides heel seas echoed repeatedly by state party offtcaab dunne the nation wide survey conducted the week before “Goaapiacency is something see can't stand or tolerate.'* says New York Chairman George Clark, whose state is Ferraro's home base He sasd the chief GOP task wtU be “getting out every bst of the middle- class vote and the vote that u on its way to being middle class. “ Virtually all those interviewed want a minimal number of debates between President Reagan and Mon dale and urged the Republican in cumbent not to bow to Democratic taunts for as many as a half dozen showdowns on pnhie time television “I would prefer ndMp see any, or the Alaska positive things on both ible," sasd Ken Stout, te chairman. “I don't <e bessefit so M. What so debate about? We of the derogatory and ith udes " an of the delegation and co-chair agan Bush ramp sign in | homeland, thinks a few debates would be fine “Once or twice n alright. " she said “I think hr (Reagan) can finish Mandate off m one snot. I see no reason to avoid a “I think once w enough.*' said Pat ricia Saiki. the chairwoman in Ha- wan. "I think all the subjects that hrvr to be covered can be done m one session. I think they cam capture the attention of the public m one ses sion rather than two." Arizona Chairman John Hunger sasd there should be no more than two debates “I think the issues on this campaign are to clear. Everyone who is interested knows what the dif ferences are This isn't the Kennedy Nixon election where nobody knows ... the differences % Disc ussing the “potential overtim faience" of the parry. Texas Chair man George St rake suggested: "We can combat that by replaying the Jesse Jackson speech from the po dium tn San Francisco, showing our people the dedication he sites up in his people." J ackson's influence worried srve state leaders, particularly in the South, where the civil rights leader\ bad for the Democ rauc presidential nomination generated a massive m crease in new black voters. Louisiana Chairman (•eorge Des pot said hu chief problem will hr “the black vote because of a total inmmitmmt of all (black) pohutal leadership with a Democratic taker irrespective of the merits. ' “It is a national problem" lot Re pubhtans. Despot said Asked how to correct n. he said: "It cannot be * Buyers don’t want dirty wheat; clean-up may be impossible UMsad Perns laiirairtiasl TOPEKA. Kan — World grain buyers want the United States to dean up dirty exported wheat, but a milling expert says what the buyers really want is cheap, high-quality wheat and a study says wheat dean- up can be coady Roger Johnson, associate editor of “Milling and Baking News," said a Kansas City.. Mo . meeting of east ern and western European wheat buyers and U S wheat industry rep resentatives Aug. S was a “non-event m terms of the gram industry " Overseas wheat buyers said at the conference they want U S exporters to reduce dockage, the non-mtllable pans of wheat, in the wheat they sell to the overseas buyers Kansas State University week showed that remov al the local elevator is ly feasible only if the el evator has capacity for at least MO.OOObushets Johnson says buyers get what they pay for “Of course, the United States has good or dean wheat for sate,“ John son said "For the moat pan. the countries that attended the seminar UirWMJf API like II Program at Kant and originally a the Netherlands. a small percentage of world wheat buyers. They want high-quality wheat at a low-quality pner Ntcolaaa Kontjnendijk, associate director of the International Grains at Kansas State University ly a wheat buyer from arranged the Kan sas City conference He said European buyers are in sisting on quality and Canadian grain imports have increased, while U.S. wheat sales have dropped by 11.3 million metric tons since 1981. The buyers said at the conference that U S wheat quality has declined in the past few years, with weevils, fumigant a, dust and shrunken ker nels mixed in with the wheat. They complained also that official grain inspection certificates showing de fects do not always match tests by mills that receive the exports A major problem is dockage, which is removed most economically in the United States at mills where wheat is cleaned and treated Buyers from Germany. Norway. Italy and France want the dockage removed at the country elevator level, where the wheat is at its highest point of qual ity, Konijnendijk said. Johnson maintains the problem is not serious, and if elevators want to sell their grain directly to foreign buyers, they should invest in clean ing equipment "Tne smaller countries buy small quantities of wheat, and the quality is rt price, recent telephone interview from the magazine s Kansas (aty headquar ters. “Some of the fussiest buyers in the world are the Russian and the Chinese, and they buy enormous amounts of U.S. wheat." he said. “They know exactly what they are getting and they wouldn't be buying it if M weren't clean. “1 don’t think this is a serious problem because the U.S. is so read ily dominant in world grain markets. We sell 40 percent of all the ex ported wheat in the world, and that figure hasn't changed miiTh in the past few years." \ A Kansas State University «tudv showed that removing dockage at the local elevator is eronomxallv fea sible only if the elevator has more than a 300.000 bushel capacity The project included a specific civ of a high- country elevator which proved dock- age removal could be profitable The net price for the wheat min is the dockage increased, while clean ing upgraded test weight and de creased transportation costs. The re moved dockage also was sold for feed The study cautioned that the va lue of the dean wheat and the re moved dockage will alwavs depend on the market for the products. Another K-State study said if an export elevator were to try install a small-volume cleaning system, it would take a $24 million investmem to mamtam the average large Kale export elevator. Dale Minnie k of the Oklahoma Wheat Ca>mmission, moderator of the Kansas CRy conference, said at the conference some countries want dockage wheat because of its lower price, and there is still enough com pet it Km among U.S exporters to al low countries to buy either dockage or high-quality wheat. But he arfcnowledged the prob lem of wheat quota v. saving coaler ern e participants should «onsider what tne foreign buyers said. r Buy the Best of BROADWAY and get 7 BRIDES MSC Town Hall Broadway announces the beat deal ever on a Broadway season at Itexas AfeM! The 1904-85 season brings five great performances straight from Broadway to you! At a season ticket discount that gives you "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers" free! 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