Page SAThe Battalion/Monday, April 16,1984 Ten people discovered murdered in New York United Press International NEW YORK — Ten people, at least seven of them children, were shot and killed Sunday in a Brooklyn apartment, authori ties said. A baby was discovered crawling unharmed on the floor. The victims were four boys, three girls and two adult women. Police had not immedi ately determined the age of the sixth female victim, said Police Inspector Robert Burke. Police said they had no mo tive in the killings, but that they did not appear to be drug-re lated. The bodies were discovered about 7:30 p.m. Sunday by Car men Rossi, owner of Rossi Bread Bakery located next door to the two-family house in the East New York section of Brooklyn, Burke said. Rossi told police a man ran out of the downstairs apartment screaming for help. When Rossi went inside the house, he found the bodies of the women and children lying on couches in the living room and kitchen, police said. Each had been shot and killed. Rossi also found a baby crawling on the floor un harmed. The child, said to be about one or two years old, was taken to Baptist Medical Center for examination and then to the 75th police precinct, police said. The victims were believed to be Hispanic and apparently were shot “sometime during the day,” a police spokesman said. All ten were dead when police arrived on the scene. The three-room railroad apartment was on the ground floor of the house located in a predominantly Hispanic low-in come neighborhood. /T Presentation on George Orwell's novel 1984. Warped by Scott McCu! Car rental site in Dallas Bankrupt firm begins anew! * Presented by Warren A. Dixon, Assistant Professor of Political Science * Public invited * Refreshments * April 18, 1984 * 7:00 pm. Room 701 Rudder Sponsored by Alpha Lambda Delta IN THE AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823 8051 United Press International DALLAS — Jartran, the truck and trailer rental com pany still emerging from Chap let 1 1 bankruptcy status, is carefully entering the car rental marke.l. The- Miami-based company will announce Monday that Dal las is the site of its first car rental center in a Ideation not far from Dallas-Eoi t Worth Air port and the busy Dallas Market Center. It will be a modest start wi th about a dozen vehicles. Chair- a special gift... for our Brazos Valley curomers only! 3828 Texas Avenue, Bryan PRICE BOOKS Reintroduce yourself to Half Price Books Texas Avenue location. If you haven t been in lately you re in for a lot of pleasant surprises! 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I I I I I I I I I I I J man J. kevin Murphy said, but Jartran plans to have about 100 vehicles by July 15, ready for the midsummer demands of the Republican National Conven tion. “What we’re doing is buying used cars at auction,” Murphy said in a telephone interview. “There will be a mix of Chrys ler, Ford and CM products ranging between two and five years of age.” Jartran’s car rental fees will be relatively inexpensive, priced at about $15 a day with unlim ited mileage, he said. Jartran also will rent pickups for about $20 a day and Murphy thinks they will be popular in the Dal- las-Fort Worth market. Murphy, 56, is familiar with the Dallas area. He lived in the city for six years where he estab- lihed and ran CTS Services Inc., a software firm. The ex panding economy of Dallas was one reason it was selected for the start of Jartran’s car-rental venture. But another reason is that a Jartran subsidiary, a trucking firm, has a major maintenance facility in Dallas. The car rental outlet will be at at the truck firm’s location on Irving Boule vard in west Dallas. “We’ll keep expanding. Our major focus will be in the Sun Belt. In three years we expect to have about 100 locations,” he said. Jartran will seek a niche in the non-airport market. A ma jor effort will be to get business through insurance adjustors, who often must provide rental cars for customers whose cars are being repaired. Mi said Jartran also will lain dealers who must providq mobiles to customerswhost are being repaired under rants agreements. Jartran was founded 1 the late 1970s by Jim l| who previously had sl{ Ryder Truck Rentals, anil into bankrupety in 1981.lil cember of that year it* quired by Frank B. Halil co., a large publicly held ance firm based in Brir Ma nor, N.Y. One of the ol the acquisition wastha Iran had to get itsell ould without using the funds new parent. “T he Chapter 11 prt ings have been conclude we’re expecting the iude Palm Sunday celebrated 1 pyK/ under increased securiti - / m pu United Press International JERUSALEM — Thousands of Christians pilgrims, guarded by an increased security force following terrorist attacks in Is rael, sang and waved palms Sunday along the path that Je sus took on his triumphant en try into Jerusalem. A police spokesman said se curity was increased for 10 days of religious observance that be gan Sunday and include the eight-day Jewish Passover and the Western and Eastern Chris tian Holy Weeks. The 1,000-member Jerusa lem police force was on in creased duty assisted by an un disclosed number of volunteers, border police and soldiers in thfe wake of recent terrorist at tacks, the spokesman said. Despite the security, the an nual procession was larger and more enthusiastic than the usual 5,000 to 7,000 who make the two-hour walk from Beth- phage to St. Anne’s Church. With dark clouds slacking up in the west and heavy winds, the crowd, singing hymns anti car rying palm branches, left the church at Bethphage, where the Gospel says Jesus mounted a colt for his ride into Jerusalem. Sheep grazed just behind the church. The crowd walked slowly up the eastern slope of the Mount of Olives, past the Church of the Ascension, down the west ern slope past the Garden of Gethsemane where Jesus prayed in agony until arrested only four days after his entry into Jerusalem. The marchers then wound through the Kidron Valley, into St. Stephen’s gate and ended at St. Anne’s. “How do I find words to ex press what I so deeply feel?” Evangeline Gantu, one of a ksGa group ol 28 from Mona |)j ne[ City, Mexico, said of thet: jeDo,,] Brother Gilbert Sindeu Adelaide, Australia, directl j, er studies at St. George's Setoff ™' Jerusalem, said last year's* dance was lower becauseo! r horror of massacres by 0 est * a > lian militias in the Beirut gee neighborhoods of ff?, ue and Chalilla. ams “There are people ft chco many countries, but the bi the people in this procession local Christians” from east) salem, Brother Gilbertsaid. )rive it the hte fs ar drier t< ■J Uy Ms, it Soft' haffe Among those who traff ^m furthest were Msgr. Paulff for corn y, who led a group offf' Yo pilgrims from the West AW nations of Ivory Coast, T< r ca l and Benin. A groupof85(l |* e Ga from Madeira, Portugal o pla tom LIVE! ON STAGE! BROADWAY’S SMASH HIT MUSICAL! BEST MUSICAL 1982 TONY AWARD NOMINEE GALLONS OF FUN! JUNE HENRY GABLE GROSS starring in “A FULL TANK OF ENTERTAINMENT. -WILLIAM RAIDY, NEWHOUSE NEWSPAPERS Presented by MSC Town Hall Broadway, April 16 & 17. Rudder Auditorium, Texas A&M University. For ticket info call MSC box office, 845-1234. Visa or Master Card. Original cast album on CBS Records and Tapes ——————————————ym i«i Get r select Musi: from hope live camp taiirai facilit