The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 10, 1978, Image 6

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    Page 6
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1978
Safety, fences
Consol board OKs improvements
By STEVE LEE
Battalion Reporter
The A&M Consolidated Board of
Education Monday acted on three
measures that will work towards
campus improvements.
Landscape architect Michael
Murphy presented to the board
long-range improvement ideas for
the five district campuses.
The board voted unanimously to
ask the City of College Station to
close Holik Street to traffic between
the old and new middle school cam
puses. Murphy suggested that this
measure would prevent traffic
hazards and allow further improve
ments to the middle school area.
Accordingly, the board voted to
authorize Murphy to work with the
city to resolve other traffic problems
around the middle school.
Murphy presented plans to im
prove the fencing around South
Knoll Elementary School, which the
board also passed.
Rumors surround
John Paul’s death
fu
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A-J
MUST BE TAKEN THIS WEEK (OCT. 9-13)
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NORTHGATE
United Press International
VATICAN CITY — Roman Catholic cardinals, upset over rumors
of foul play, have ordered the Vatican to publicly clarify the cir
cumstances surrounding the unexpected death of Pope John Paul I,
an Italian newspaper said Monday.
The moderate Turin daily, Stampa Sera, said the cardinals were
deeply displeased with the way the Vatican’s secretive bureaucracy,
the Curia, handled the pope’s death.
The cardinals were particularly angry, Stampa Sera said, about the
terse official announcement the Curia released after John Paul s de
mise. The fact that no medical certificate was obtained pinpointing
the exact causes of death also upset the cardinals. Stampa Sera said
the Curia had been ordered to rectify the situation and answer all
“questions aroused in public opinion’’ before the secret conclave of
cardinals begins Saturday to elect the next pontiff.
Father Romeo Panciroli, the official Vatican spokesman, said he
was unable to comment on the reports at this time.
Pope John Paul died of an apparent heart attack alone in his bed
room Sept. 28 — after only 34 days on the papal throne.
The cardinals returned to the formality of Vatican Palace meetings
Monday after an inconclusive round of informal, but frank weekend
discussions about the choice of a successor to the late pope.
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Trustee Rodney C. Hill, chairman
of the Long-Range Planning Com
mittee, reported that the high school
will most likely face an overcrowd-
ing problem in the next few years if
no preventative action is taken.
32.
The findings were based on a
needs assessment that showed op
timum enrollment projections and
figures for each school in the dis
trict. Of the five campuses, the high school.
school faces the “most critical
pending enrollment,” Hill said
Hill had earlier indicated that'
building of a new elementary sd, ° 0
would possibly take precedence
There will be an open meetim
the Long-Range Planning Com,
tee Thursday evening at 7 p,^
nge
; mild
in (|
ns a J
the Special Services buildingoni ^°H
sey Street. Suggestions will be J bike
cussed for expansion of the or
Postal strike
likelihood less
lining
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Jkers
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Rep.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The nation’s
second largest postal union has
overwhelmingly ratified a three-
year contract imposed by a special
arbitrator, sources said Monday,
greatly reducing chances of an il
legal nationwide mail strike.
But rank-and-file members of the
180,000-member National Associa
tion of Letter Carriers also voted to
oust president J. Joseph Vacca and
elect a new, more militant leader —
New York branch president Vincent
Sombrotto, the sources said.
Official results of the contract
vote are expected to be made public
Tuesday.
Union sources said the members
voting in the last three weeks over
whelmingly approved the contract
decision of special mediator James
Healy.
Healy took on the role of arbit
rator when he could not bring about
When I
a negotiated settlement durin j j 11 "i
special 15-day bargaining
set up to avert a strike by threeB’ r , ■
ions representing 500,000 poi® ve t ,
workers. Hou
In his “final and binding" i® 65
sion, Healy awarded the pm
workers unlimited cost of livini
creases, slightly higher salar 311 i
lifetime job security for those * 11
rently on the payroll.
But ballots for the unions
tion of new officers were mailed
fore Healy issued his decision, J
union members voted to n
Healy and two other officers
slate.
But hel
Is' plagif
Officials of the union P re( to^uj s
that the largest and most miliH . a
postal union — the 280,0®* 1 ? 6 ’
member American Postal Wort® i° l ‘ S
Union — also would voleton® a
the contract. Its balloting is due 1
be completed in about a week.
Jobs ensure flo
of illegal aliens
■ere sto
■ Even ;
Jjmmuti
[g the
Bur
w the non-p
■ Separat
U'O-l
More than 1,000 Mexicans move into Houston every week, makim
it second only to Denver in illegal alien population, says a migratioc
expert with the U.S. Catholic Conference in El Paso.
Louis Alfonso Valarde, southwest director of Migration and Re
fugee Services, made his observation during closing speeches at thf
Town and Country Church Conference held at Texas A&M Univer
sity.
About 100 ministers and lay leaders attended the two-day session
held last Thursday and Friday.
“I don’t think there is a solution to the undocumented alien prob
lem,” Valarde said. “Congress can put patchwork legislation togethei| Slir
• • " • ■ Vu
to help alleviate it, but there is no permanent solution.
We could erect a Berlin Wall along the U.S.-Mexico border to
morrow and it wouldn’t stop the flow of illegal alliens,” he stressed
“The reason most of them come into the U.S. is jobs.
“If our economy wasn’t so much better than their own, they would
have little or no reason for being here,” Valarde said. “For eve
created in Mexico today, there are four people horn that need it to
survive.”
Valarde said a conservative estimate of the number of illegal aliens
living in America today would be between five and six million.
Aliens are also moving farther into the interior of the United
States. The farther they live from the border, the less likely thei:
chances of beine caught, Valarde said.
Valarde also cited studies that showed only a small percentage
undocumented aliens were using America’s welfare system illegal!,
One of the reasons is that many are in hiding and don’t want to!#
caught.
I ni
BELGI
ites anc
Ipushin
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In a way
:ure on
isurance
gosla^
MSC ARTS COMMITTEE
presents
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viet Un
rkets so
iant or
momic
penden
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The Un:
new it
reachin
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Trade b
showi
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(The Ur
F — t
A NIGHT OF POETR'
WITH
DAVE OLIPHANT
[est Ger
klgrade
Irtners.
|>d, “it’s
iur.”
At last
THURSDAY
OCTOBER 12
/
T
8:00 p.m.
MSC BASEMENT COFFEEHOUSE
ADMISSION: FREE
LOUPOT’S
QKSTORE
Ri
Ju
IT
K
NORTHGATE
Point Spread
Discount
on selected Styles of
Name Brand T-Shirts
After The Game ’til
6 p.m. Wed., Oct. 11
IN
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