'ary 18,l; T up! Am, A fiRi, 5TE R AHE,; • This to l^JIU BE r. (rai tfi Wp AMTfli! ffe ON T»c To Sifc PARnciiw' • ^EAL.THEY AND IN M) W ENSOfKlAM VEiyiBEIHS M REUSE. TirfSDUPI Wednesday* January 18, 1995 ^^ASHINGTON : The Battalion • Page 5 , ■ ' ' Democrats maneuver to slow balanced-budget amendment WASHINGTON (AP) — In a prelude to the coming battle. Re publican efforts to pass a bal anced-budget amendment to the Constitution slowed Tuesday as it was attacked by a lone Democ ratic senator calling it “a hoax” on the American people. Invoking an obscure Senate rule, Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia forced the Judi ciary Committee to suspend its work in mid-session. Backers of the amendment said they would try again Wednesday. And even longtime opponents conceded that Repub licans in both houses likely will command the two-thirds support needed to send the measure — a key component of the GOP “Con tract With America” — to the states for ratification. But Byrd, 77 and an unsur passed master at using the Sen ate’s arcane rules to his advan tage, vowed to keep up the fight. “I may be run over by the stream- roller but I don’t propose to get out of its way or just jump upon it and ride along with it.” The struggle contrasted with the overwhelming bipartisan support behind what was cer tain to be the first piece of leg- islation to clear the new Congress. A final House vote was ex pected shortly on a bill to place Congress under the same work place rules it imposes on pri vate businesses. The Senate passed the measure 98-1 last week, and a similar measure previously cleared the House unanimously. The balanced-budget amend ment is the linchpin of GOP ef forts to shrink government and cut spending. Public,opinion polls show strong support for the concept after a quarter-cen tury of unrelieved red ink. Re publicans are hoping that once enacted, the amendment will provide the discipline needed to force lawmakers to make the politically difficult cuts. “Our children and grandchil dren are being shackled with an insurmountable burden” of debt, said Senate Judiciary Commit tee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R- — Sen. Robert C. Byrd Utah, as he convened the abortive session. Many Democrats are likely to wind up supporting the mea sure. But in the political maneu vering underway, the White House and Democratic leaders in Congress are demanding that Republicans specify the cuts they envision to wipe out the deficit. Their hope is that the voters will recoil when they con template reductions in programs such as Medicare, education, the environment and health. “Not discussing the options with the American people is like a suitor telling his prospective bride, ‘Marry me and I will make you happy,”’ Byrd said. “But when she asks what he has in mind, he simply answers, ‘Trust me, baby, you don’t need to know the details.’ “Why go through all these motions, why go to all that ex tent to fool the American people and to perpetrate on the Ameri can people a hoax?” he added. To stall the Judiciary Com mittee’s work, Byrd invoked a rarely used Senate rule that denies committees the right to meet after the full Senate has been in session for two hours. Hatch appeared unperturbed at Byrd’s maneuver. But Repub lican patience was wearing thin as Byrd and other Democrats also slowed progress of legisla tion on the floor designed to shield the states from costly new requirements imposed by Wash ington. “We have what we know as “Byrd-lock,” said Majority Leader Robert Dole of Kansas. In general, the balanced- budget amendment making its way through the House and Senate call on the president to submit a deficit-free spending plan annually, beginning in 2002. Deficit spending would be barred, except by three- fifths votes of both houses. ' ' ^ M = : . ' SIMiS HMMMMM HM "Not discussing the options with the American people is like a suitor telling his prospective bride, 'Marry me and I will make you happy/" Olive oil linked to breast cancer □ Researchers find that Mediterranean women less likely to develop cancer. WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists have long been aware that Mediterranean women develop breast cancer at one-half to 60 percent the rate of American women. Now they say the reason may be the use of olive oil. A new study “gives additional momentum” to findings in animal tests that olive oil, alone among fat types, helps protect against breast cancer, said Dr. Dimitrios Trichopoulos of the Harvard School of Public Health, author of the study. He doesn’t want to sound alarmist. “We should be a little more careful in advising women what to do unless we are first absolute ly convinced,” he said in an interview Tuesday. “We are not at that stage yet.” But, he said, the findings provide “an expla nation for the paradox that Mediterranean women consume plenty of fats, and yet they have only 50 or 60 percent of the risk of breast cancer, compared with other women.” The researchers analyzed questionnaires ad ministered to 820 women newly diagnosed with breast cancer and an additional 1,548 cancer- free women whose age and area of residence paralleled those of the women with the disease. All the women were in Greece, where olive oil is widely used in cooking. The researchers found that women who con sumed olive oil more than once a day had a 25 percent lower risk of cancer when compared to women who ate olive oil less frequently. Trichopoulos said part of the reason olive oil is better for the body is that it is less easily oxi dized than polyunsaturated fats and contains plenty of antioxidant vitamins and other com ponents including Vitamin E. He was quick to add: “We don’t know whether this factor or an other, as yet-unidentified factor, is essential.” The analysis, published in this week’s Jour nal of the National Cancer Institute, said the data came from one of the largest studies that have examined the role of diet in the cause and origins of breast cancer. A number of studies, including the new one, show that vegetables and fruits protect from cancer of various types. “Rather than feeling hopeless against these cancers, at least we do know vegetables and fruits in this order and vegetables prepared in olive oil may actually provide an easy and rather pleasant way of reducing risk,” he said. Supreme Court to rule on affirmative-action programs WASHINGTON (AP) — Spe cial federal help for companies owned by minorities unlawfully steals business from white-owned companies, the Supreme Court was told Tuesday in a key show down on affirmative action. The potential stakes are enor mous. The court’s ruling, expect ed by July, could affect billions of dollars worth of federal contracts. Perhaps at stake also is the fu ture of all government affirmative action, some of it aimed at mak ing up for past societal bias against women. The court hasn’t handled a ma jor affirmative-action dispute since 1990, and its membership today is far more conservative. Serving as a backdrop are the 1994 election re sults, a rightward turn many com mentators attribute to the fester ing anger of one group of voters — white males. “That’s an impermissible racial stereotype ... that they (racial and ethnic minorities) need the help,” Denver lawyer William Perry Pendley argued in behalf of a white businessman challenging the affirmative-action program. He said his client “cannot compete on an equal footing” because of it. Under one of the many affirma tive-action programs required by Congress, the Transportation De partment’s Central Federal Lands Highway Division gives contrac tors on federal projects a 1.5 per cent bonus if at least 10 percent of their subcontracts go to “disadvan taged business enterprises.” Gonzales Construction is His- panic-owned and fits the Small Business Act’s definition of a dis advantaged business. Adarand, run by Randy Pech, a white man, does not. Pendley said Pech’s company bids on every guardrail contract in Colorado, but in the past has lost 12 such contracts to higher-bidding minority-owned companies. He said the problems faced by minority-owned firms have little to do with race, but more to do with their size. Such problems are shared by small, white-owned businesses such as Adarand, Pendley argued, adding, “race- neutral solutions are called for.” Solicitor General Drew S. Days III countered by saying the focus of the affirmative-action program is social and economic disadvantage, not race. A minority company can lose its status as a disadvantaged business by reaching “a level of economic take-off,” he said. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, David H. Souter and Stephen G. Breyer, all of whom have joined the court since its last major affir mative-action ruling, appeared most sympathetic to Days’ con tention that Adarand had not linked its lost contract to the racial presumption. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy appeared most hostile to Days’ ar guments. $ 9 8 1 5 0 0 IN ARMY R O I C SCHOLARSHIPS AT A & M NOW EACH SCHOLARSHIP PAYS TUITION, FEES, BOOKS, $100 PER MONTH, UNIFORM FEES & SR. 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