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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 7

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 7A THE EL PASO TIMES, Monday, November Wt Inconsistent Speeches Mar Carter Campaign Jaunt "Losing Hair? Try This At No Risk" The Oval Office baldness and cannot be helped. But, if you are not already slick bald, how can you be sure what is actually causing your hair loss? Even if biildness may seem to 'Tun in the family," it is certainly not proof of the cause of VOI hair loss. Hair loss caused by sebum can also run in your family, and many other conditions can cause hair loss. If you ait until you are slick bald ami your hair roots are dead, you are beyond help. So, if you still have any hair on top of your head, and would like to stop your hair loss and grow more hair now is the ime to do something about it before it's too late.

Loesch Laboratory Consultants. will supply you with treatment for 32 days at their risk if they believe the treatment will help you. Just send them the information listed below. All inquiries are answered confidentially, by mail. Adv.

HOUSTON. Texas -If you don't suffer from male pattern baldness, you can now stop your hair and grow more hair For years "they said it couldn't be done''. But now a firm of laboratory consultants has developed a treatment for both men and women, that is not only stopping hair loss but is really growing hair! They don't even ask you to take their word for it. They invite you to try the treatment tor 32 days, at their risk, and see for yourself! Naturally, they would not offer this opportunity unless the treatment worked. However, it is impossible to help everyone.

The great majority of cases of excessive hair fall and baldness are the beginning and more fully developed stages of male pattern purpose. Success or failure in that category depends more on the political advance man than on the president. A presidential visit is a lot like a road show just about everything is staged and has been rehearsed through repetition. The principle job of the advance man Is to create a setting in which it will appear and sound as if the president is about to be mobbed by hordes of delirious voters, In New York City last Thursday, the rally site was the foot of Wall Street, an intersection where the streets are unusually narrow, The result: even though only 10,000 to 15,000 people showed up, it looked like a much larger crowd because the streets were filled in three directions. In Flint, Niles, 111.

and here in Duluth, the advance team chose small arenas holding anywhere from 3,000 to 10,000 people. In Sacramento, the rally was held in an open, downtown mall and, in a suburb of Portland, in the courtyard of a community college. In every case except Oregon, where a group of school kids kept up a constant chatter, the site produced a echo-chamber effect. Even if only half the audience was cheering, it was car-splitting. Even if there were not enough people at the six rallies put together to fill a good-sized football stadium, the two-day trip was a television triumph for the advance men, the local candidates and the president.

And there were the extra dividends. On the front page of the Chicago Tribune Friday morning there was a picture of Carter and Mayor Michael Bilandic standing on the steps of Bilandic's home waving to a crowd of several thousand people. They both had their arms around the widow of Chicago's best-loved mayor, Richard Daley. A picture like that can more than make up for a Jimmy Carter speech. But on the campaign trail, he is usually equipped only with a list of platform guests and with some pertinent figures about the local economic scene.

(At his stop in Oregon, for example, he noted that "72 new businesses have been brought into Oregon to provide jobs for you and those you care about; 175 existing Oregon businesses have expanded." At his stop in Michigan, on the other hand, he rattled off a list of statistics about what the governor of Connecticut had done to improve the economy In her state.) The result of not using extensive notes is that Carter sometimes returns to the same subject two or three times in the same speech. In trying to blend the three elements of his speech plugging local candidates, Slugging his own programs and exhorting is listeners to go to the polls he sometimes ends up with a mishmash. If he hasn't forgotten anything, he has reminded his audience that two-thirds of the American people voted In 1960, and warned that two-thirds may not vote on Tuesday; he has taken credit for cutting a SG6 billion deficit by more than $25 billion, for adding 6.5 million new jobs to the economy, for reforming the civil service, for maintaining America's number one strength, "militarily, economically and politically," and for having made this country one that is "now looked upon as the nation that stands foremost in the protection of basic human Those are supposed to be reasons for his listeners to support the Democratic "team" this year, but whether Carter has any "coattails" is an open question. About the most that can be said for presidential stumping is that it focuses a lot of attention on one or more candidates and the president himself for at least a day If, as a result of that, more people suddenly feel motivated to go to the polls on Election Day, it has served both a political and a civic Comii Nii feme DULUTH, Minn. By the time Jimmy -j Carter reached the last Hop in his hectic tcross-country campaign blitz last Friday night, the painfully obvious question was whether it made any political sense.

For Carter, it was the 14th hour of a day which had begun In "Chicago before dawn, had taken him to Ore. and then to Sacramento, and now here, before the flight home i to Washington. I -r, gthe stop here, at the behest of, and for a "joint appearance with, Vice President Walter Mondale. was a last-ditch effort to salvage the election of Democratic Sen. I Wendell Anderson, the former governor who alienated Minnesotans by having himself appointed to the Senate seat vacated by About 3,000 people filled the Duluth Arena to hear Mondale and a long list -'of' Minnesota and Wisconsin politicians L.warm up the crowd for Carter.

Then Carter spoke and everyone realized that the warm- up speeches were better. Several of the White House reporters traveling with Carter agreed that it was one of the most incoherent, rambling talks they had eve heard him make. With a few exceptions, that has been the story of Jimmy Carter on the campaign trail this fall. Earlier Friday, in Sacramento, was one of those exceptions. Perhaps feeling challenged by the presence on the same platform of potential rival Cov.

Jerry Brown, Carter delivered a crisp, well-structured speech praising the ac- nomplishmcnts of his hosts and himself, and appealing to his crowd to go to the polls on Tuesday. A week earlier, in Portland. Maine, the president had stirred his audience and even the press cynics who accompany him with a compassionate, revivalist appeal for help in the re-election campaign of Democratic Sen. William Hathaway. But as a rule, the Carter stump speech is a collection of several thousand words which has no orderly beginning, middle or end.

Here is one sentence from Carter's speech in a Chicago suburb Thursday night on behalf of the Illinois Democratic ticket. He is speaking of U.S. Senate nominee Alex Seith: "When the Democratic Party has met in its annual conventions or its mid-term conentions, we have chosen a man from Illinois who was not well known even in his own state to come and give us advice and counsel in shaping the policies and the goals and ambitions of our party in foreign affairs and I am very grateful to have a man here with me tonight who intends not only to continue using his great knowledge and ability and Influence to have a better success in dealing with other countries, but who has pledged himself to cut the deficit every year, to cut taxes and he will, to have fiscal responsibility in his administration as a U.S. senator, and his casting his own future on a door-to-door campaign in the Senate and one whom my mother, Lillian, loves, Alex Seith." One of the reasons Carter rambles so much is that he likes to speak off the cuff, relying on his computer-like mind to remember all the points he wants to make. When he speaks from the White House, Carter reluctantly has learned to use a Tele-PrompTer, and when he makes major, non-political speeches around the country, he reads from a text.

NO OBLIGATION COUPON To: Loesch laboratory Consultants, Inc Box WOOL 3311 West Main St. Houston, Texas 77006 ail! 9UUIIIIlllll IMC lUHUnillH imu, mHWll derstanding that it will be kept strictly confidential and mat i am unuer no ooiiKauon wnauwvcr. Does your forehead become oily or greasy? How soon after washing'1 Ito you have dandruff? Dry or oily? Does your scalp itch? Wnen? lima, hue trrtur huir tuun thinning? i v. i.iit juhi j.w.i mvi, i i Does hair pull out easily on top of head? wiiiii H'ii flutter oi nan remains "i ncau. Anv thin arpas? Where? Meany Gives Local Labor Leaders Prerogative On Carter Inflation Plan Any slick bald areas? liere sum 1 1 ui d.

Attach any other information you feel may be helpful two or three men appointed by the president know anybody who's for it." Meany said. NAME DDRESS WASHINGTON (AP) AFL-CIO President George Meany repeated his belief Sunday that President Carter's anti-inflation program will not work. But he said it will be up to local union leaders to decide whether to go along with it. "I don't think it's going to work. I don't wages while having little effect on prices.

He repeated those charges Sunday and again called for Congress to enact mandatory wage and price controls, "This is the responsibility of Congress," Meany said. "This is not the responsibility of and who have failed before. But in another interview Sunday, the administration's top inflation fighter urged labor to give the program a chance and maintained that it could succeed. "On the other hand, every union has to make its own decision. We haven't gotten any word from anyone as to what they're going to do." Meany rebuked Carter last week, saying the president's anti-inflation plan would be unfair to labor because it would hold down ZIP.

STATE CITY dvertlwment Oil Storage Plans Hurt 13 Setbacks WASHINGTON (APi -Although plagued by setbacks and red tape, the Department of Energy expects to have one billion barrels of crude oil salted "away for emergency use by 1985. Known as the strategic-reserve program, the project is designed to give the United States an adequate supply of oil in the event of another cutoff of "supply such as the Middle oil embargo of five years ago. 'At current consumption levels, one billion barrels would serve the nation's crude oil needs for about 53 days, and cover about four months' worth of imports. government planned to have 250 million barrels stored by the end of this year, but a series of problems has cut that target by more than 60 percent. "We're looking at something closer to 100 million barrels," said a DOE official who did not want his name used.

Experts outside government say the total could be closer to 70 million barrels. But they share DOE's optimism about meeting the 1985 deadline. "I think it will work out in the end because the problems in the program are technical ones," said John welcome the breath of fall with softdressing fashioned from Ahhhh Arnel Sue Brett autumnwear reflects the new fashion trend of free-flowing frocks and exciting new dimensions in texture, as typified by our terrycloth dresses fashioned from a blend of Celanese Arnel" triacetate and nylon, Whispersoft V-neck dress at far left, in lilac or straw, Lichtblau, executive jr SI -J 1 Hi I H. director of the Petroleum Industry Research Foun dation. "They can catch up, They're only what, six months behind? They should have their end-of-1978 number by the second half of ffl '6 1979." $48.

The cardigan dress, at right, in rose, plum, 6-16, $50, at Dillard's The $20 billion program I I I 1 7l was set up by Congress in 197S in reaction to the 1973-74 embargo. It required that 500 million barrels of crude oil be stored for emergency Dress Shop. use. most of it in abandoned jut fli ik I Jf I 7 tYl, I A. salt mines along the Gulf of e- --f i mW' jlw SHOP DILLARD'S MONDAV Mexico.

The original target was for 500 million barrels jf is rm i' 'tit ui i ij a ifcv aci by late 1982. That was later SATURDAY IO-9 CIELO VISTA MALL 1 revised to one billion by the end of 1980. I rtT.j f'l I HIJ, I If 1 A-J i Construction and development delays have i occurred at several key 1 sites, however, including one I at Week's Island, which had been scheduled to take 75 million barrels by the end of this year. The site now is expected to be ready for oil i early next year. Mi 11- II I The government also has trouble getting necessary i permits to store the oil in the salt domes, mostly because i of environmental fears, and delavs have occurred in bdildina the pipelines.

In addition, a fire at the I West Hackberry site in Louisiana in late September burned for six days; and although relatively little oil was consumed, valuable time was lost putting the tjm facility back into service. The choice of salt domes as storage sites posed a problem because of the brine toat is pumped out of the salt mines to make room for the oil. The brine, caused by water seepage into the salt now is pumped back into the ground at other sites, but there are tears that will not work for all the brine. Possible solutions include is a trademark of Celanese Corporation I A ARNEL I storing the oil in abandoned coal mines or in ground storage tanks..

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Pages Available:
1,966,882
Years Available:
1881-2024