March 4, 1988 The Message -- forCatholics of Southwestern Indiana
Christ the King team wins tournament
13
Christ the King
Crusaders
Christ the King Crusaders won
the seventh and eighth grade
diocesan basketball
tournament last weekend.
Members of the championship
team are kneeling, Joey
Smith, Jeremy Heidorn, Ryan
Browulee, Robbie Kent, Jeff
Nags, Jason Compton, Dirk
Melton and Mike Maier,
standing, Matt Collins, coach,
Glenn Muhlbhuer, Andy
Kremer, Andy Gries, Tim
McBride, Steve Gilles, coach,
Ryan Barrett, Paul Barton,
Chad Gries and Chad Ruston,
coach. Christ the King
cheerleaders are Jane
Wimberg, Britt Garuett, Mary
Ann Beckwith, Gretchen
Anderson, Dana Gries, Emily
Kemper, Angie Scholz and
Kierstan Wollenmann.
-- Message Photo by Barbara Paul
c,
Holy Rosary
Rams •
Members of the Holy Rosary
basketball team were runners-
"ap in the seventh and eighth
grade diocesan basketball
tournament last weekend.
Teams members are Matt
Bullock, Scott Fisher, Brian
Henning, Brock Russell, Jeff
Fisher Shawn Merkel, John
Sartore, Chris Aquart, Matt
Swanson, Troy Unified and
Mark Mattingly. Team
coaches are Bob Emig and
Charlie Voight. Holy Rosary
cheerleaders are Lisa Boyken,
Nicole Clark, Allison Miller,
,rin Cobb, Christine Blake,
Lori Schenk, Jama Will.iamson
and Ami Flynn.
-- Message Photo by Barbara Paul
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© 1987
Vatican employees stage job protest
By AGOSTINO BONe
NC News Service
VATICAN CITY (NC) --
Vatican lay employees on Feb.
29 held their first on-the-job
protest action since their
association was formed in 1979.
Preliminary figures show that
about 90 percent of the lay
workers pm-Ucipated in the pro-
test, said Mariano Cemllo, head
of the Association of Vatican
Lay Employees. The association
was protesting what it regards
as unilateral management deci-
sions which adversely affect
employees.
Meanwhile, a Vatican official
involved in labor-management
negotiations called the protest
"unjustified," citing a mixed
commission which allows for
worker-management dialogue.
The protest consisted of a
work slowdown for the first
three hours of each work shift,
with participants authorizing
management to donate their
wages for theperiod to Pope
John Paul 1I for use to alleviate
world hunger.
The association represents
1,400 of the 1,800 Vatic/mlay
employees. Total adherence
would have meant a $33,600
contribution to the pope.
Cerullo said the job action
was not a strike because the
workers were at. their posts for
the full workday and
guaranteed normal operations
"out of respect for the pope."
But workers were "morally
on strike," he said. "It was a
symbolic act of protest."
The major'complaint is that
Vatican administrators make
unilateral decisions, often pre-
judicial to employees, he said.
"We are no longer in the
1800s," he said.
"We are not willing to have
decisions imposed on us,"