Arter: No Aid to Help Ducate Illegal Aliens

Arter: No Aid to Help Ducate Illegal Aliens

The Weather Yesterday Today ir facility yoy. f services y e-ups to coi/ WE areope! he attalion High................... ..........................96 High................................ .............97 T B Low...................... .......................... Low................................... .............73 Serving the Texas A&M University community 73 Humidity. ...................61% Humidity................... ..67% Vol. 74 No. 12 Tuesday, September 16, 1980 USPS 045 360 Rain................... Chance of rain . slight doon’ 14 Pages College Station, Texas Phone 845-2611 n: Tues.-Satl Sundays 8-11 693-8682 OFF arter: No aid to help Ross Volunteers m escort Clements 'earn Cone The Ross Volunteers, an honorary com­ the largest parade at the Mardi Gras Parade ise of sub pany of the Texas A&M University Corps of in New Orleans. Cadets, tonight will serve as the official upon) ducate illegal aliens The 72 members of the Ross Volunteers honor guard at a Reagan-Bush fund-raising were selected in the fall of their junior year of Blue Belt ceremony in Houston. based upon several factors, including their 'ream United Press International Carter said federal impact aid is designed al impact act to school districts harmed by during the hour-long meeting, and drew The company, the governor’s official character traits, academic and military CORPUS CHRISTI —Texas is not likely to assist school districts adversely impacted the court decision. warm applause for his commitment to honor guard, was invited by Gov. Bill Cle­ standing, social graces and disciplinary re­ ) avoid a court order to educate the chil- by activities of the federal government, and Carter, campaigning for the Hispanic maintain the Corpus Christi Naval Air Sta­ ments to the function. In addition to Cle­ cord, Brantley said. ■ v/0/iUJ(j|n of illegal aliens, nor should the state he said education of alien children does not vote that could be crucial in the battle for tion. ments, other well-known representatives However, this year for the first time ever 'OO Elect federal aid for those school districts fall in that category. Texas’ 26 electoral votes, greeted the pre­ There was talk two years ago of closing or of the Republican Party are expected to the company also has a 73rd member, Allen t'*' ®st affected, says President Carter. “I don’t believe there is any possibility of dominately Hispanic voters in what he cal­ moving the station, but Carter said Mon­ attend, among them former President Crowley. Crowley was selected as a Ross 0 C/nemali iCarter’s first question during a town federal impact aid applying. Other states led “Georgia Spanish” and received a bois­ day, “I can tell you there are no plans to Gerald Ford and John Connally, former Volunteer during his junior year in 1978, Bing Monday attended by about 1,400 provide this education and I believe Texas terous ovation. move the naval air station away from Cor­ governor of Texas. but he was forced to withdraw from the 1th Texans at Moody High School con- will do the same now that the court has The school gymnasium, which became pus Christi.” Captain of the Ross Volunteers, Roy Corps before his senior year, Brantley said. - 846 Bed the education of illegal aliens. ruled,” the president said. so warm many of those at the meeting re­ A student at Moody High School, who Brantley, said the group will perform a Upon returning this year, Crowley was other border states at this time are Texas Attorney General Mark White has moved their coats and used makeshift pap­ said he will be 18 in a few months, asked Queen Ann drill at the ceremony, a spin-off reinstated to the Corps as a senior, and the roviding education for undocumented appealed the federal court decision, claim­ er fans to cool themselves, was decorated Carter about draft registration. of the drill they did at Parents’ Day last Ross Volunteers voted unanimously to wel­ lien children, ’ Carter said. ing the problem of educating illegal alien with signs in both English and Spanish. Carter said he proposed the registration spring. come him back as a member of their com­ ■he state government, which has a sur- children is a result of inadequate enforce­ Some of the 1,400 south Texans who won as a symbol of American strength and unity, Later in the year the honorary company, pany, the captain said. but told the young man, “as long as our lus in its treasury, has maintained that ment of federal immigration policy by the tickets to the town hall meeting in a draw­ named after former president of Texas “It’s kind of like ‘Once an Aggie always an Iferal impact aid should be given to those Immigration and Naturalization Service. ing showed up as much as five hours earlier voluntary forces are strong and getting A&M College, Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Aggie’ — ‘Once a Ross Volunteer always a stronger, I see no prospect at all for a man­ ■icts affected. This is illegal and will not White asked Texas’ two U.S. senators to to get front row seats. will also escort His Majesty Rex, leading Ross Volunteer,” Brantley said. sponsor legislation guaranteeing the feder­ The president answered 16 questions datory draft, so you need not worry.” Presents IN Oil oday last multi-primary day of campaign season lair Desiqnl United Press International gaining on the incumbent rapidly in the past month and is given at abortion, and the influence of the religious leaders could be a In Oklahoma’s runoff primary, Robert F. Kerr Jr., 53, son of the . , . [Washington’s Cov. Dixy Lee Ray is fighting to keep her job for a least some chance of pulling off an upset. deciding factor in the races. late senator, faces attorney Andy Coats, 45, in the Democratic eCiallZiriQ llpond term, politics and religion are mixed in Massachusetts Should Miss Ray, a former chairman of the Atomic Energy Pope John Paul II told Jesuit priest Robert F. Drinan, a House Senate primary for the seat being vacated by Republican Henry if Shaoina iirS311^ a senator’s son wants to follow in his father’s footsteps in Commission, survive the challenge, she is expected to face King Bihoma. Democrat, to retire from his 4th District seat. Drinan and Sen. Behnon. In the GOP race, state Sen. Don Nickles, a 31-year-old County Executive John Spellman. Four years ago, she beat Spell­ Edward Kennedy back state Rep. Barney Frank, a liberal bornagain Christian, backed by the “Moral Majority” group, is native rcH1 ‘Washington, Massachusetts and Oklahoma hold primaries to- man, who is favored for the GOP nomination over two opponents. opposed by anti-abortion conservative Arthur Clark, mayor of favored over John Zink, an industrialist who once promoted race lorina And M last multi-primary day of the campaign season. Waltham. Clark is supported by Gov. Edward J. King. cars. , , |Polls open at 8 a.m. EDT in Massachusetts and Oklahoma, and Sen. Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., and all seven House mem­ bers are expected to win their primary races. State Attorney minizing, itl()a.m. EDT in Washington. They close at 8 p.m. in the first Ranking Catholic leaders have targeted Frank for defeat, but In the only Oklahoma congressional runoff, in the 4th District, General Slade Gordon has the edge on broadcast commentator I Hprimaries and at 11 p.m. EDT in Washington. Turnouts of Drinan, although asked by one church leader to stay out of the state Rep. Jim Townsend and former assistant state attorney Lloyd Cooney for the GOP nominaton to oppose Magnuson in the nut 50 percent are forecast in Washington and Oklahoma. The race, kept up his campaign for Frank. general Dave McCurdy are in close race for the nomination to fall. our Hair" Iksachusetts turnout is projected at 40 percent for Democrats The other race in which religion and politics were mixed was replace Rep. Tom Sneed, a Democrat retiring after a 32-year md about 25 percent for Republicans. The influence of the Roman Catholic Church among Democrats the close contest between freshman Rep. James Shannon and career in the House. The winner will face Republican Howard c |The Democratic Washington governor, seeking a second term, was tested today in two Massachusetts races. In both contests, Robert F. Hatem, an executive of Raytheon Corp. who opposes Rutledge, a former Vietnam prisoner of war, in the November ■ challenged by state Sen. Jim McDermott, who has been church leaders asked parishioners to reject candidates who favor abortion. general election. ys to be friendly Clayton may get 4 weeks of FBI testimony; ggies say howdy jury selection in Brilab to conclude today By BECKY SWANSON “What we want is to make sure that aids everyone is saying ‘Howdy!’ and being United Press International witnesses, more than half of whom would The FBI recorded hundreds of hours of it was forced upon him by a virtual stranger I® Battalion Reporter HOWDY!” friendly,” Seward said. HOUSTON — The 12 jurors and alter­ be FBI agents who devised or supervised conversations involving Clayton and his co­ in the company of a political ally, Houston his week is “Howdy Week” at Texas Saturday is the first Aggie home game, so nates chosen to hear the federal govern­ the scheme to “ferret out” corruption in defendants beginning in July 1979 when labor leader L.G. Moore, the man who WdVl University, and the Traditions Coun- there will be many visitors and parents on ment’s Brilab case against House Speaker labor and politics by using an informant to Los Angeles-afea racketeer Joseph Hauser, introduced Hauser to Clayton and who was pis encouraging everyone on campus to the campus, she said, and students will Bill Clayton and two Austin lawyers can find office holders willing to take bribes.

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