I Mt tSA I I ALIUN FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1979 Page 7 Union organization bid planned in San Antonio w'un Thursi icentraticiii j.. gethatwasj y at the Island, two .U.S, s was plai ay in Coi susinessi i fishera economici ised by tliei United Press International SAN ANTONIO —The American Federation of Government Em ployees says it will try to organize 10,000 federal contract employees in San Antonio’s five military installa tions, doubling the membership of the AFL-CIO union in Texas. Glen J. Peterson, national vice president of the AFGE’s 10th Dis trict, told reporters Wednesday that long-time local labor leader Henry “The Fox” Munoz has been hired to direct a recruiting program that will begin among workers at the huge cafeteria at Lackland Air Force Base. Peterson estimated 750 to 1,000 persons who formerly were civil service workers are employed at the cafeteria by Greyhound Bus Lines, which has contracted with the Air Force to teed Lackland personnel. “All they (Greyhound) do is supply the people. The utensils used are still the same. The government is fooling the public by saying it is re ducing costs at military installations at a time when the contractors are out to make money,” Peterson said. The AFGE official also alleged Greyhound and other companies with govenment contracts were tak ing “several millions a year out of San Antonio and it is time our city fathers woke up.” “Organized labor is on the threshold of something vibrant,” Munoz said of the organizing effort among employees of government contractors. “We are going to be in volved in politics up to our eyeballs. ” WALTON Stained Glass Studio Announces new classes beginning week of Sept. 10. Each class is 3 hours for 6 weeks. Fee $20. Morning classes 10-1 Afternoon classes 2-5 Evening classes 7-10 3810 Texas Ave. Bryan 846-4156 :em provi y unqualitj Sole survivor disinterest ^ one blooming bush overlooks the empty lot damaged in a fire last spring, and the University t dedicated there the University Board of Directors house Board of Regents ordered it bulldozed. stood for many years. The building was heavily Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. DC staff In ist Nigliaa Snt! W° ns clash over representation enge forS an said the names fessional J ote sought in teacher strike fay said It rs, indi rector L sti guilty ofi nest coi Nigliaa Id 4 elt i public, k rgi to er consu prat:i di United Press International OKLAHOMA CITY — A rival ion withdrew its support of the lahoma City teachers strike mrsday and announced plans to an election certifying it as the jaining agent. dangerin!||Mary Hepp, president of the As- iation of Classroom Teachers, isl^idthe ACT Executive Board voted seek the representation election a court declared the striking erican Federation of Teachers lost its br ‘ng rights. ACT i. ..liated with the klahoma Education Association id National Education Association. leAFT is affiliated with the AFL- 10. School officials reported all but ,300 teachers had returned to ork on the 16th day of the strike Wsday, a slight increase of re- imees over Wednesday. AFT offi- ials disputed the figures and said iy would not take part in what they led a “numbers game. ” igliazzo a ter ho perfons t whose w id tblemsforl The uers vie g i0of2 tfei (In,,- all. lational i cab wing dii he city act topich i Intern .id one of ednesdayl a Yellow C ort. aza CatO for the si said Laml the righ who ordei :he contra Cab drill city lawy YellowCl atiental ble to red said, br ourrigl airport, Drably/ iverforSl dependal port, askle said “There is no one who can legally bargain with the school board until we have this election,” Hepp said. “The teachers have no representa tion, and we can’t wait forever.’ Another district court hearing is scheduled Monday in which the school hoard is seeking an injunction to prohibit it from bargaining with the AFT'. The State Supreme Court earlier refused to overturn the lower court’s temporary order which ban ned future bargainng on grounds the AFT had violated the law by striking. Hepp said the ACT, while with drawing organizational support for the strike, would continue to suoport teachers in their individual deci sions. “The association will not urge teachers to forsake the strike and re port back to work, she said. “We will support every individual teacher in whatever individual decision they will make.” Dr. Thomas Payzant said if the ACT won a certification election, it National briefs United Press International ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The Department of Energy has scheduled additional public hearings in Texas and New Mexico next month on the proposed Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in southeastern New Mexico. The DOE said it had received requests for additional hearings on the proposed nuclear waste disposal site following hearings on the environmental impact statement earlier this year. The additional hearings are scheduled Oct. 1 in Odessa, Oct. 2 in Hobbs, N.M., and Oct. 5 in Santa Fe, N.M. LITTLE ROCK — Classes began Thursday at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock but Dr. Grant Cooper, the self-proclaimed Marxist professor ordered reinstated at the school, wasn ’t among those teaching history. A federal judge has ordered that Cooper, dismissed from the UALR faculty'in 1975, be reinstated with back pay. But the case still is tied up legally and the school has not yet offered Cooper a formal reinstate ment offer. John Bilheimer of Little Rock, one of Cooper’s attorneys, said the legal precedent in reinstatement cases is that a person will be offered the first vacancy that occurs. Cooper currently is an English teacher in the Houston school system. would become the bargaining agent but said he did not know whether it could continue to bargain this year’s disputed contract or would have to wait until next year. Payzant said he also did not know whether the law would forbid the AFT from resuming as bargaining agent if it won in a new election. Rio Cubans want asylum in Houston United Press International HOUSTON — Two Cuban men who stowed away on a Russian ship from Cuba jumped overboard Wed nesday and swam 100 yards to shore in search of political asylum, officials said. Immigration and Naturalization Service officials said they were un sure of details, but sources said the men had not eaten in six days when they jumped overboard about 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Goodpasture Inc. grain dock. Officials said two other men and a woman reportedly were being held aboard the 500-foot-long Geroi Pan- filovspky by the ship’s crew. The men who jumped overboard said they faced 10-year sentences for fle eing Cuba. “We don’t have any facts yet, but we ll give them due consideration for political asylum if they request it,” said Paul O’Neill, INS district direc- Next time you're in Mexico, stop by and visit the Cuervo fabrica in Tequila. Since 1795we ve welcomed our guests with our best. A traditional taste of Cuervo Gold. 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