The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 11, 1983, Image 10

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    Page 10/The Battalion/Monday, April 11, 1983
4r WSC Cnafjt Centen
SPRING CR4FT
FESTIWAL
APRIL 12 & 13 Rudder Fountain Mall
Quality handcrafted items at prices you can afford
Pottery
Stained Glass
Jewelry
Weaving
Woodworking
Photography
... and more !
Floods continue
at Pearl River
Residence Hall Association Presents
10th Annual
A NIGHT OF GAMBLING, PRIZES,
AND ENTERTAINMENT
United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Hun
dreds of Louisiana residents
near the Mississippi border
braced themselves Saturday for
a Pearl River Hooding expected
to reach “levels never before re
corded” on Sunday as damage in
the South approached $300 mil
lion.
Elsewhere in the flood-
stricken South, waters receded
and sunny skies returned.
Louisiana’s trouble spot was
the Pearl River along the Missis
sippi state line. The river, which
was expected to crest Sunday,
steadily rose Saturday and
spread over its banks.
“This is an extremely serious
situation as water levels will
reach levels never before re
corded,” said the National
Weather Service in Slidell, La.
“The entire area east of Inter
states 10 and 59 will be
threatened by major flooding.”
Eleven deaths were recorded
during three days of flash flood
ing that stretched from near St.
Louis, Mo., to the Gulf of Mex
ico. Six people died in Mississip
pi, three in Louisiana and two in
Tennessee.
Damage estimates across the
South neared $300 million
Saturday. Louisiana officials
estimated damage at $50 million
in the Baton Rouge area and $50
to $100 million in New Orleans.
Dozens of other hard-hit areas
had not yet assessed damage.
Officials said it was impossible
to determine how many people
had been evacuated, but scat
tered estimates from Louisiana
and Mississippi — the states with
the most widespread flooding —
exceeded 30,000.
The Red Cross said 90,000
families in Louisiana had been
affected by flooding, either los
ing their homes or suffering wa
ter damage.
In Mississippi, 2,500 homes
were damaged or destroyed
statewide, and more than 10,000
people were evacuated. Towns
like Foxworth and Hattiesburg
were inundated, and Columbia
became an island fortified by
sandbags.
Hattiesburg alone reported
$108 million in damage. Esti
mates from other flood-ravaged
areas in Mississippi still are
being compiled.
Weather forecasters Saturday
said no rain was expected until
next week. Rains that began
Wednesday were so excessive —
more than a foot in Louisiana
and 17 inches in Mississippi —
that rivers crested at record
levels.
Alabama Civil Defense offi
cials said there was a possibility
that six or seven familes in low-
lying areas around Selma would
have to leave their Dallas County
homes Saturday because of ris
ing waters of the Alabama River.
Storms that hit Alabama during
the week forced about 100 peo
ple out of their homes.
In Missouri, a spokesman for
the St. Charles County sheriffs
office said about 80 percent of
the town of W'est Alton was
under about 2 feet of water
Saturday. The 500 residents
were advised to leave, but 200
stayed.
Last
staff photo bvO
but not least
Joanne Morphew, 49, finally rolls up to i
finish line after 4 hours and 12 minutes
grueling walking, running and biking at H
Texas Triathlon Two, held here Salt
Morphew was the last of 710 people
managed to finish all three events. 900 pe
originally entered the triathlon.
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♦*.
Friday, April 15th
8:00-12:30
t Pastoral letter completed
♦ "
Nuclear war principles
set
Major prizes donated by
DIAMOND ROOM 707
AND TOTAL PRIZE WORTH OVER $4000!
PLACE:
MSC, 2nd floor and Lounge
TICKETS:
$ 3 00 advance $ 4 00 door
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Two key
figures involved in drafting the
Roman Catholic bishops’ prop-
MSC, Sbisa, Commons,. Duncan, Rudder
T-S-O
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
BRYAN
216 N. Main 799-2786
Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1
COLLEGE STATION
8008 Post Oak Mall.. 764-0010
Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m.
Texas State
Oi^ticae CSC
osed pastoral letter on nuclear
war said Saturday that the latest
toned-down version is still ‘’sig
nificantly at variance” with
administration policy.
“Specifically, we could not
accept any suggestion that there
are relatively few and insignifi
cant differences between U.S.
policies and the policies advo
cated in the pastoral letter,"
Archbishop John R. Roach and
Cardinal Joseph L. Bernardin
said in a joint statement.
The proposed letter sets out
various levels of Catholic-
church teaching and attempts to
apply moral principles to nuc
lear war issues. The document’s
teaching has various levels of au
thority for Catholics.
When the statement was
made public last Tuesday, both
administration comment and
some media reports suggested
the bishops had caved in to
administration criticisms of the
document’s second draft.
Bernardin, at a news confer
ence, acknowledged the new
proposal was “more flexible”
than the second draft, but he in
sisted it has not “lost its prophe
tic character or basic moral
thrust.” |9
“These indude, foroB
advocacy of a policyoM
use’ of nuclear wej[
support for early andsL
conclusion of negotitiil
(he Comprehensive™
Treaty,” he said r I
They said no draft™
word “freeze.” ThesecwB
called for supportforl™
ate, bilateral, verifiable■
ments to halt theteswB
dm (ion and deploymenlP
nuclear weapons systeml
third draft changedikl
“halt” to “curb.”
DIETING?
Since 1935.
UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE
APPLICATIONS
Even though we do not prescribe
diets, we make it possible for many to
enjoy a nutritious meal while they
follow their doctor's orders. You will
be delighted with the wide selection
of low calorie, sugar free and fat free
foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa
Dining Center Basement.
ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1983-84
OPEN
Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM
QUALITY FIRST
“In both drafts diedjlif
tent is a call to captbeaif ei
and reduce the weaponiB
sides as rapidly as possi™
particular emphasis «■
daily destabilizingsysietw
said. - B
“As the secondt
endorse a specific freeitl
osal, so the third i
and should not
oppose any specific [»™
Roach and Bernardinsf
Roach and BernartH
second draft had been
f or seeming to putbotlj
ited States and Sovietl®]
the same moral fo
They said the upej
meets those objections^]
plicitly critical—again,'
reasonably so—of man' 1
elements of U.S. polio j
j™
summed up in theserj
ences: ‘A justifiable use™
“The basic morali
must be both discrimina
proportionate. Certain
of both U.S. and
gies fail both tests,'”tefs]
fu
COMMITTEES SUCH AS:
*WHO’S WHO SELECTION COMMITTEE
*HEAD YELL LEADER SELECTION COMMITTEE
*SBISA, COMMONS, & DUNCAN MENU BOARDS
*ATHLETIC COUNCIL
^CONCESSIONS COMMITTEE
TIUIE MSC
'VAiciiEirr
sinew
in cm it!
AND OTHERS ARE STILL AVAILABLE AT THE STUDENT PROGRAMS OFFICE (216 MSC)
OR AT THE STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE IN THE PAVILLION.
ireiiDAvy aVipiriiil id*, mm
FOR INFORMATION CALL 845-3051 OR 260-2560
"APPLICATIONS DUE APRIL 15TH.
eiEY reum YieiniEirs nc 1
vim e c c rri'C e s 3t .. CCS3 , (S€
. AILIL SEATS miESIEinVIEID