idresi; tast Vft ' ho»i e," Sfe 'are;,. •cies. er g\:t :omes( r'’hett And], ill fonj k ) e s r the h s poiec remain | ere den areas a lomenn theG) Jihesini ‘thefc ing.tbti reel Ba i build: yingioi lls orspi rved li live ion aid, vaa irovidr: ation. e it is ur.2 preset irkin?: aercen; comb rg gar,;; [ forest ltd ak orkenn ,”ckypt e cityoi numbei Imarkta are sese to malt sbvtear is: regulas e pare more fc: ; to oto ats. increas ark des iiether i i he des k prof ly 31 r id tbei pan: I® rty owe ■iv o«f lesigiuc ill pre' f a build:' :ises a i- fade® 1 vatiorry atives.t forors* /will I* 1 n or l fi proper 1 - suck 1 ■ app rJS tore-yd itriiciii* irk dtf hatapr nburse ■ thecii' it is ^ n, Cad'’ 0 iya» pltl’ 5 5 paif Welfare bill passes despite objections WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate negotiators overwhelm ingly approved a historic, work- oriented welfare bill Tuesday de spite bitter objections by several House members who labeled it puni tive and fraudulent. The conference committee adopted their landmark compro mise 35-8 after conservatives and moderates had heaped heavy praise on the plan, designed to foster inde pendence and parental responsibil ity among welfare recipients. “A chance like this doesn’t come along very often,” Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the House Ways and Means Com mittee said. He said the $3.34 billion plan de mands that welfare recipients help themselves, but it also provides the training and work-related assistance that is needed for economic inde pendence. President Reagan, returning to the White House from New York, said he was very happy with the mea sure, the first major overhaul of the welfare system in 50 years. House insurgents led by Rep. Au gustus Hawkins, D-Calif., chairman of the Education and Labor Com mittee, condemned the bill for im posing a workfare requirement on some recipients. “It is simply a puni tive approach for forcing people off the rolls,” Hawkins said. Hawkins and others also charged that the bill fails to assure high-qual ity child care for mothers who would have to participate in a work, educa tion and training program. And they said people working off their grants in public work programs could be paid the equivalent of the minimum wage regardless of how much those working next to them were making. Rep. William Clay, D-Mich., asked for a roll call vote on the wage provi sion. His request was defeated by one vote after Rostenkowski said it would unravel the compromise so painstakingly worked out all sum mer. Most lawmakers agreed with Rep. Stephen Solarz’s assessment. “On balance, people who are on public assistance today will be better off with this legislation than without it,” the New York Democrat said. The five-year, $3.34 billion cost of the compromise bill is modest but its aims are not. Its architects say they want to move welfare recipients from de pendence to independence, to instill a sense of responsibility among par ents, to help them get the skills and services they need to support their own families. A large-scale Job Opportunities and Basic Skills program offering job training, education and work ex perience is the focal point of the new plan. Wednesday, September 28, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 Quayle’s looks baffle strategists WASHINGTON (AP) — Some may swoon, but others demand, “Can he type?” Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle is making an impression on women but it’s not always the one Republican strategists may have had in mind. When Quayle catapulted to prom inence as the GOP vice presidential nominee, it was hard to ignore two facts: Other Republicans were far more experienced, and Quayle, blond and fresh-faced, possessed striking good looks. I can’t believe a guy that hand some wouldn’t be attractive in some respect to women, Sen. John Mc Cain, R-Ariz., said at the GOP con vention in August. “Anyone that good-looking must stand for really good things,” a sup posedly surveyed woman in a recent Doonesbury comic strip said. “I think most women want a really hot guy to be in charge of the coun try,” her friend agreed. McCain wasn’t kidding. But the mock Doonesbury poll should have been “adjusted for sarcasm,” accord ing to the strip. Experts disagree on whether Police search for suspect in stabbing HOUSTON (AP) — Authorities were searching for a suspect Tues day in the stabbing death of a 57- year-old bar owner who apparently died during a robbery at her home. Mary Dobbins, described as a cau tious woman who usually entered her well-secured home with a gun drawn, was found sprawled on her living room floor Monday night by her 18-year-old grandson and a friend, police said. Investigators speculated that Dob bins, who owned nearby Mary’s Lounge, may have been surprised by her assailant because her body was found just inside the front door with her money bags and her purse be side her. She had been stabbed re peatedly, police said. The attack came despite Dobbins efforts to secure the home by nailing down windows and dead-bolting doors. Investigators believe an in truder entered the house by prying open a washroom window that had been nailed shut. Robbery may have been a motive because cash was believed to have been taken from the four or five money bags found near Dobbins’ body, Houston homicide Sgt. M.E. Doyle said. Some small change was found in the bags as well as a .357-caliber Magnum gun Dobbins carried for protection. A large butcher knife, covered partially by leaves, was found in a ditch in front of Dobbins’ home, but investigators were not certain it was the murder weapon, Doyle said. “She had always been real cau tious since she’d been burglarized so many times,” Jan Bethune, a family friend, said. Quayle will help attract women to the GOP ticket headed by Vice Presi dent George Bush. He’s been credited with narrow ing the gender gap, but he’s also been compared to a “Ken” doll — “Barbie” doll’s friend — and labeled a hindrance rather than a help for Bush. When actor Tom Selleck escorted Nancy Reagan to the podium at the convention, “I saw grown women faint and moan,” GOP consultant Ann Stone said. “There are a lot of women where (physical appearance) still is important. ... I don’t think Quayle has the charisma of Selleck. But that still has some impact.” Ann Lewis, a Democratic consul tant and Ms. Magazine columnist, sniffed at the thought. “Candidates that would pass a Hollywood screen test do not do noticeably better than candidates that would flunk it. Looking at the House of Represen tatives will bear this out,” she said. On the other hand, former actor Ronald Reagan has had some politi cal success. Recent polls showed Bush had erased a 20-point gender gap and was winning as much support from women as Michael Dukakis, the Democratic nominee. Democrats say Quayle had noth ing to do with this development. But GOP consultant Eddie Mahe said Quayle has been the only variable in the race since the conventions; thus you could hardly make the case that he’s not a factor. At rallies across the country, Quayle has encountered a mixed re ception. Some placards carry mes sages such as “But Can He Type?” and “Women Don’t Vote For Men Prettier Than They Are.” But many women eagerly press forward to hear and touch him. Lewis predicted Quayle would at tract women who would have voted for the GOP ticket anyway. “He may cause some excitement at parties and gatherings, but he doesn’t cause vote-switching among undecided or independent women voters,” she said. “Right now he is the biggest single danger to George Bush’s election. He is a land mine that George Bush planted in his own territory.” Republicans claim Quayle has more than sex appeal to offer women voters, and hold up his mar riage as exhibit A. Quayle’s wife, Marilyn, is a lawyer taking off more than a decade to raise the couple’s three children. “A lot of women in that age group of his wife, professional women stay ing home to raise the children, can relate to that family,” Mahe said. “They feel that he understands working wives, women as profes sionals.” Lewis said, “If I were a partisan Republican desperately looking for something good to think or say about Dan Quayle, Marilyn Quayle would be the best example I could think of.” Mrs. Quayle herself blamed the pretty-face controversy on the news media and recently declared, “George Bush wouldn’t have se lected someone who could not stand in his stead for president.” Lotus 1 -2-3 One-week classes for students who want, to learn this popular spreadsheet program Cost $35.00 Sterling C. Evans Library Learning Resources Department Room 604 845-2316 Oct. 3-7 Oct. 24-28 Nov. 14-18 5-7 p.m. 2- 4 p.m. 3- 5 p.m. 4r MSC TOWN HALL PRESENTS I o T Z* M TUESDAY OCTOBER 25. 1988 G. Rollie White Coliseum 8:00 P.M. TICKETS GO ON SALE SEPT. 24 Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office & Dillards in the Post Oak Mall For more Information call 845-1234 - Tickets are $14.00 Alpha Kappa Psi Professional Business Fraternity Announces the 1988 Fall Pledge Class Laurie Bolt Shannon Elmer Judy Falcon David Hanna Phillip Howard Doug Liedecke Kasey Mayfield Marybeth Messineo Christie Myers Kristin Otte John Pfeiffer William Price Todd Redeker Anne Rial Yufen Su Congratulations Iota Pledge Class! Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 don't let your business bomb. call 845-2611 to advertise at ease Special Edition Maroon MasterCard Now lor a limited time, Texas A&M University faculty, stall and employees who qualify can get a SPECIAL Maroon MasterCard from the Texas Aggie Credit Union. 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