The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 08, 1985, Image 10

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Easter
Pope decries human rights violations, war
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Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — More than
250,000 people jammed St. Peter’s
Square to rejoice in the resurrection
of Jesus. Tens of thousands more
marched through Rome to the Vati
can in cool but sunny weather to
pxotest world hunger.
Millions of Roman Catholics fol
lowed the ceremonies on live tele
vision in 35 countries.
John Paul looked refreshed, de
spite a midnight Mass at St. Peter’s
Basilica, as he celebrated Easter
Mass.
At the end of the more than two-
hour ceremony, John Paul moved to
the balcony over the main door of
the basilica to deliver his traditional
message “Urbi et Orbi” — to the city
(Rome) and the world.
The pope said that for nearly
2,000 years since Jesus rose from the
dead, leaving an empty tomb, man
kind looks upon all tombs and “ques
tions itself ... especially when the
tombs are the legacy of the hurri
cane of violence and destruction
caused by war.”
The Polish-born pontiff, who
lived through the Nazi occupation of
his homeland, said: “Spontaneously
our memory goes back to 40 years
ago when ... the Second World War,
unleashed by a mad imperialist ide
ology, was coming to a close.
“Forty years ago the war ended.
Has peace, as the result of a just or
der, been truly affirmed?”
He answered his own question,
saying that the answer was no, in a
world where,“human rights are den
ied ... where places of torture, segre
gation and camps of inhuman labor
continue to reap innumerable vic
tims ... where millions of children
and adults are left to die because of
want, drought and malnutrition.”
converged on Jerusalem’s Churchof
the Holy Sepulcher for a Mass con
ducted in front of the shrine vener
ated for centuries as the site d
Christ’s tomb. About 1,500 Proles
tants gathered for open-air senice
at the Garden Tomb, a skull-shaped
hill just outside the walls of the Old
City.
South African President PI
Botha told an assembly of more thu
2 million black churchgoers tht
blacks and whiles should stand to
gether against “messengers of ter
ror.” Botna spoke at the fastens
sembly of the Zion Christian
Churcn, a black fundamentalist
church.
Texas 1
At the end of his address, John
Paul delivered greetings in 47 lan
guages, including Cambodian for
the first time.
Elsewhere around the world,
Christians celebrated the resur
rection of Christ at joyous church
services and sunrise assemblies.
More than 1,000 Roman Catholics
In China, foreign Christians held
dawn services at the Great Wall. Tht
visiting Italian defense minister,
Giovanni Spadolini, joined thou
sands of Chinese for Easter Massat
Peking’s Southern Cathedral. Mem
bers of the state-sanctioned Patriotic
Catholic Church filled the cathedral
to overflowing.
serve o'
Omar S
feated tl
Mondale says he missed
emphasizing positive side
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Walter F.
Mondale, looking back on his land
slide defeat in the 1984 presidential
election, said Sunday he “fundamen
tally mishandled my case to the
American people” by failing to em
phasize the positive side of his mes
sage.
“They heard opportunity from
the other side, they didn’t hear it
from me,” the former Democratic
presidential nominee said in an in
terview on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
It was Mondale’s first apearance
in an national forum since the No
vember election in which President
Reagan carried 49 states for,one of
the most lopsided re-election victo
ries in American history. Mondale
carried only his home state of Min
nesota and the District of Columbia.
‘'The fact of the matter is.
President Reagan's ability
to communicate — even
things that I think arc
demonstrably not accu
rate — verges on genius. I
don't think anybody ac
cused me of the same ca
pability. ” — Walter F.
Mondale
Sundc
Week
Mondale said he continues to be
lieve “I was essentially correct on the
fundamental issues,” but, he added
that he was no match for President
Reagan when it came to commu
nicating with the American people.
“The fact of the matter is, Presi
dent Reagan’s ability to commu
nicate —- even things that I think are
demonstrably not accurate — verges
on genius,” said Mondale. “I don’t
think anybody accused me of the
same capability.”
In the future, he said the Demo
crats “must find a candidate who, in
addition to being right on the issues
and stating them correctly, can mas
ter this modern challenge of com
munication in this huge country of
ours.”
Mondale also criticized Reagan
for agreeing with Senate Republi
cans to a budget compromise that
would cut 2 percent from the cost of
living increase to program recipi
ents.
Mondale said Reagan “backed off
his commitment” made during the
campaign not to tamper with Social
Security.
He predicted Congress would re
fuse to go along with the proposal
that would protect Social Security re
cipients against the first 2 percentol
any increase in the cost of living, bui
not the next two percent.
Mondale disagreed with analysis
who contend he was particular!;
hurt by a perception he was tooch
sely tied to special interest groups
such as organized labor, teachen
and feminists.
“My approach was above all i
commitment to the public interesi
and not to the special interests," 1st
said. “But I’m not sure that’s the
it appeared to the American pco
pie/’
He said that “where I think 1 fuu
damentally mishandled my casets
the American people is that I dwell
unduly on the problems, the solu
tion to the problems, the penaltyanil
the sacrifice surrounding itandnoi
enough on what my real point was,
that we had to do these things in or
der to move confidently intothefu-
ture, to have the change thatwases-
sential and to have the jobs, tilt
hope, the opportunity, the es-
paneled prosperity that was itt
essary.
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