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Page 13 text:
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of OM campaign week. President Reagan has moved to biant accusa- tions that be Is trigger-happy, too isolated, unwilling to accept blame for his administration's failures and surrounded by sleazy Just days before hi with Walter F Mondi acting like a man bent his opponent of his mo ical weapons — not 111 placent about his larg public opinion polls. In the last wee£TR« e Held his first m« high-level Soviet offl claimed his desire for dons with the Soviet I try be condemned la “evil empire e Made a point of ta. from the public and re brief and tightly cont By Maureen Johnso BLACKPOOL Engl sltlon Labor Party yesterday to an unco Icy of expelling US i and dismantling the arsenal. Under the policy, ment would be com Britain's 16 subman nuclear missiles, cai ▼stives’ order to boy US. Trident mlsslli NATO cruise missili US P-lll nociear b set don misMlecarry long besed In this c Labor Party leads smiled broadly as tl r because it stresses t noonced He has po..... van bring begin! By Mike Leary HOUSTON — Soai above the cloud flei ■ore than three h two astronauts venti space shuttle Challer to open a prototypi service station. Astronauts David and Kathryn D Sulll a slow start setting which will dispense I hydrazine rocket fue Seconds after both the shuttle’s air lock the shuttle streaked Atlantic Ocaan betwe lea and Africa, they thin metal tethers t from drifting off. As the two shook t ocher. Sullivan quip such is lift. Sullivan, who boidi geology, was the I woman to stroll it it, SvetlaJJK came the first space during a As a precaaiic extra whiff of nitrogen from ning her pressJ terday morningJ NASA setet speceweiker tibia to tbe bet up of uitrogen buT e Accepted i mond J. leave of word of '■barges iblic. Officii i of I mpeigni urged' tlonal Chari dor to conferet ’ clear poh by Brit Tile been dealing wit and doing with unc spectlve vision Intende good deal of countered with| the alliance Despite that the unliatef ment policy rope. 80 percent tbe British social] ence voted for Two a Lilts e: inz After untangling themselves, both astronauts rushed beck to work on the Orbital Refueling Station (ORS) at the rear of the cargo bay. near the shame s Large rocket motors. In the future. NASA expects tbe to routinely pump fuel into ie said, fve told you what should be done. I think this Isa taecof leadership, sad I think the American people know the differ taaa n u Then. tb« pec the broken tatn shaped KLrmc bounces tel Band 1 shuttle off vtaioil Earth statjo aau! By cootmL have nothin , on the ■ - 0 ii a A1 to cat it out of Social Labor .. President has t of ing Mondale (voided i of! OCBATK, from I A of both candidates. Reagan insisted that maamve federal budget ' deficits are the result of excesmve I government spending, while Mon- accused tbe President of seek- Jeld a news conference 'and was being kept out of • tig range of the traveling '-e jumped on tbe issue three [;o. accusing Reagan of oper- a question-free rone Ithen. the President has been juestions from the public and ig press in sessions that usu- flve or 10 minutes in answering questions, he a new area for criticism — |tlai refusal to admit any fault :urlty in connection with Ipt 20 bombing outside Beirut day of the bombing. Reagan in an Iowa soybean fthat security around the embes- was adequate week, be created twin furor after ha told reporters in New ng longer than expected; other when he suggested in Ohio that the bombing was linked to the near-destruction of our inteillgenca capability in recent years. Tbe remark provoked a strong pro- test from former President Jimmy Carter, who noted that be had in- creased federal spending for intelli- gence activities Reagan subsequent- ly said be had been misinterpreted and was referring to a decade-long decline in intelligence operations Reagan sought to lay tbe issue to rest Tuesday at tbe BrownsviUe. Tex- as. airport As reporters questioned him about Donovan. Reagan re- sponded by saying that he first want- ed to make a statement on Lebanon. T am responsible for the bombing, he said. Turning to Donovan. Reagan point- ed to the tradition in the law of our na present situation Pandora’s box. Callaghan beaded the last Laboi government, defeated by Thatchai in 1979 Labor delegates yesterday also re jected by ■ two-thirds majority a pro posaJ by the perry's fir left to cloe all US bases In Britain. Including conventional installations. There ari 23.000 US serviceman stationed lx Britain. Nationwide parliamentary also docs moat be held at leer every five years in Britain. In the last electioni in Jane 1981. Labor fought and lost heavily on a policy of unilateral nu- clear disarmament. The platform t wording was loose enough for Cali than and former Foreign Secretam Denis Healey to argue that a Laboi government would really use Brifl sin's Polaris missiles as a bargainin' chip in talks with the Soviets. Asked why he does not attend church regularly as president. Re (an said he is afraid his presence would be a security risk to other churchgoers T miss going to -church, but 1 think the Lord under- by opening up I stands. Reagan said to loud ap- plausa Last night s telecast was the culmi- nation of more than a month of hag- gling between tbe two campaigns over tbe format and the selection of the journalists who made up the pan- el. The League of Women Voters ini- tially called for a one-on-one con- frontation between Mondale and Reagan, but the President's cam- paign staff instated on a panel of questioners. thi tar Then both sides rejected the names of almost 100 Journalists sub- mitted by the league, prompting the organisation's president. Dorothy Ridings, to angrily charge that both «dee abused the selection process — a point that moderator Walters also mentioned at tbe beginning of the debete Rea ngl Watching the deba with a critical eye By Thomas Patrick Jr. Did you wetch the first debate on television between President Ronald Reagan and former 1 Vice President Walter F Mondale’ Exactly wbo won tbe debete and how much It matters will probably be argued heatedly in the days and weeks ahead, even though Mon- dale was generally considered tbe winner Reporters who cover political campaigns keep a sort of scorecard when they watch these debates, with items they check off to measure the performance of tbe debaters Here la a rundown of a few of those items. You might want to keep them tn mind to help you Judge the candidatas tb next time they debete. • Are the candidates relaxed and in com- mand of the situation? President Reagan and former Vice President Moo dale have spent years and years In politics. They are used to before large crowds and used to b on television. They always try to project a image before a TV audience — that they end capable men. able to lead tbe igt is a very Important thing tn ly It could hurt them if they appear id unsure of themselves. If they over their sentences Idldates give direct answers to tlons? Sometimes reporters candidates do not want to fully to the questions and V candidates give good If a candidate is asked le gel jobs and he talks licy toward foreign to trying toavm was moderated by Barbara Wal for ABC TV Newt Months before It was held, rl of both candidates met for b bow tbe debete should be run a long time about little details of tbe pod I urns Both sides srgu minute over which reporters » to ask questions In tbe days before tbe even and Mondsle each took time of schedule to prepare They ev debates. where aides asked th« tlons they could think of All of this work is a sign of the debates are to tbe candidi The first presidential debates on television were beld in 196 John F Kennedy and Richard nedy went on to win the electio a lot of political experts said hi ance in the debates — and Nixo ance under the TV lights — suade the voters. Again In 1976 and in 1980. ta played an Important pari in races Even in the years berwee when televised debates could n tbe question of whether a deb pen was itself an Issue of som Why Well, for oi vision gives ent bis st| milllo Th''' a ™ 3 Jl»- r fir™' 1 V, o' -.0 ,h candidates it only for a ir before the p A debate is nc bard to tell wbo won .art tbe ones who make t! vote for the president |r choice on Election Day , a sense, a debate is a like
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Page 12 text:
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J. Hinkey, Custodial Staff Supervisor '0n' K. Wilson!'
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Current Events Cries Ethiopia cried tor a decade because its people were suffering from drought, civil war, and starvation. For an estimated one million, the help from the U.S. and Great Britain was too late but the remaining ac- cepted their generosity with open arms. Vanessa Williams' cries can't bring back her title as Miss America. She was pres- sured by the pageant committee to resign the title after sexually explicit pictures of her were featured in Penthouse. Cries of glory were heard from Los Angeles as the U.S. Olympic teams left the XXIII Olympiad with a total of 83 gold medals. From Lewis on the track to Retton in the gym the feeling was mutual as they all felt the glory of winning not only for themselves but also for their country. Cries from a San Ysidro McDonald's were heard on July 18. James Huberty, an unemployed security guard, scarred the lives of many people who were the inno- cent targets of his three weapons. Of his 40 victims, 19 were wounded and 21 died. Huberty, himself, was a victim of his own massacre. Olympics (see CRIES) Mondale Ferraro (see POLITICS) Statue of Liberty (see EXTRA! EXTRA!) Politics Despite the persistant ef- forts of the Mondale Ferraro team, Reagan won by a land- slide! For the next four years he promises no tax increases and a lower deficit. Geraldine Ferraro made history as being the first fe- male vice presidential nomi- nee! Her credentials were strong, her enthusiasm con- tagious, and her views realis- tic. Yet the outcome of the 1984 election showed that her well-rounded criteria was not enough for the American public. Vic DiSylvestro, deter- mined to prove his compe- tence as mayor, organized a re-call election which put Ostrander out and DiSylves- tro in office as the mayor of Wildwood. What's Up Doc? If Americans watched with great concern as Baby Fae became the fifth human and first infant to receive an animal heart. Unfor- tunately, like the other four recipiants, Baby Fae's system rejected the alien organ which resulted with the infant's death. £ Zoe Leyland made her claim to fame at a very young age. She was the first baby to be conceived from a frozen embryo. On November 25, William Schroeder, 52, became the second recipiant of an artificial heart implant. Modern medicine made it possible for a healthy baby boy to be born from an embryo transferred from one woman to another.
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