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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1979)
4444444444444444444-4 Page 10 THE BATTALION MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1979 R. Clyde Hargrove DDS, Inc. announces the association of Dr. Gordon Walling for the practice of general dentistry. Patients will be seen by appointment from 10 a.m. until 8:30 p.m. 1313 Briarcrest Dr., Bryan (in Cedar Creek Plaza) Office 779-1933 Home 779-7462 Schools to confine suspended students ZACHAR1AS GREENHOUSE dub & flame parlor never a cover charge POOL TOURNAMENT TONIGHT 8 P.M. 1201 Hwy. 30 in the Briarwood Apts., College Station 693-9781 pool tournaments every Monday night backgammon tournaments every Tuesday night United Press International INDIANAPOLIS — A student caught using alcohol or drugs in In diana schools no longer can count on the “reward” of being sent home. Suspensions nowadays may take place inside the school. “In-school suspension programs range from intensive tutoring and counseling programs to confinement in an unconverted mop closet,” says Jon Bailey, a lawyer and legal con sultant with the Indiana Depart ment of Public Instruction. At Wawasee High School in Syra cuse, for example, students may be isolated for 10 days or more from their peers. Bailey mentions the mop closet in a paper on in-school suspensions, but admits it’s only a report he has heard and he can’t pinpoint the MSC Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.99 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. —4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Chegse and Onion Enchiladas w/chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w/cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner (f( PH )1) SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE CZIBfbir) ! Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Style) Tossed Salad Mashed Potato w/ gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee ^“Quality First”! SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served iwith Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable U.S. Mens Olympic Team VS Danish Mens Olympic Team Monday, September 17 G. Rollie White Coliseum 7 PM — Tickets: $1.00 See a little of Moscow in College Station! Sponsored by the MSC Recreation Committee & TAMU Team Handball school involved. His article advises school officials in-school suspensions may legally be considered punishments equal to conventional suspensions — so they ought to be imposed following due process of law. Isolating children in school for more than five days, he said in an interview, may amount legally to expulsion, requiring even more at tention to proper legal procedures. Some educators have tried to make in-school suspensions especially un pleasant to deter further mis behavior, he said. “Where such efforts include forced confinement to a darkened or locked room,” Bailey wrote, “re peated intensive interrogation about other disciplinary infractions or elimination of lunch and restroom privileges, the potential legal prob lems are too numerous to list.” Bailey urged administrators to “avoid conditions that are more punitive than educational. East Noble High at Kendallville is one of the schools using short, one- period suspensions. Indianapolis’ 10 high schools use in-school suspen sion usually for no more than a day, said Kenneth M. Smartz, assistant superintendent for secondary edu cation. Suspensions out of school are used less frequently than they used to be, he adds. The in-school disci pline sends students to a guidance learning center — GLC for short. Near South Bend, Wawasee High extensively uses what officials call In-School Supervision. The program, completing its first year, has been extended for two more years. The state has granted the school funds to run the program and report on it. “We no longer suspend students out of school except in very rare oc casions, usually involving emo tional or physical problems, said Wawasee Vice Principal Donn Kesler. An example is a boy who took a pill on the bus to school and arrived incoherent. No suspension is for less than a day at Wawasee. There is an au tomatic 10-day term for drug or al cohol offenses, but the program supervisor, Mike Jones, may lengthen or shorten anybody’s term. Offenses that can get a student sent to ISS also include smoking, truancy, fighting, vandalism or at titude. Past winters boot snowthrower sal United Press International MINNEAPOLIS — While most people have been tanning on beaches or mowing the yard this summer, Toro Co. has been making snowthrowers — and selling them. Mountains of snow have hit one part of the country after anothi recent years and booming snowthrower sales have followed eacli erable winter. “We’ve had early snows, and heavy snows, and we’ve hadal snow in metropolitan markets. And the heavy snow has been si around the country. God has been good to us,” one Toro spoki explains. So good, Toro officials say, that this winter will mark theyearoll “two snowthrower family.” People already are buying snowthrowers in Chicago, which belted with a record 89.2 inches of snow last winter. Heavy socked the whole Lake Michigan area. Snowthrowers sold lil cakes last winter and Toro, which makes more than half the woi snowthrowers, expects hotter sales this fall. “Some models, particularly big, heavy-duty machines, likely be sold out there before Thanksgiving. Matter of fact, some already are sold out of the big machines, ” the Toro spokesman In addition to Chicago, sellouts of heavy-duty snowthrowers hit other Lake Michigan cities, like Milwaukee, which had inches of snow last winter, and Grand Rapids, which had 96inc “We re also having heavy sales in St. Louis, Southern 111 Kansas City and Iowa. All these places had more snow than usual winter.” A rumor got going that Farmer’s Almanac was predicting) inches of snow for Chicago next winter. The Almanac doesn’t ptei exact amounts, and its projections have not yet been released. Even the Toro spokesman admits “there’s no way they could 200 inches.” “But,” he notes with elan, “the rumor may have affected salts The Cow The Biggest Burger Bargains in B-CS! y called model for U. v ^ ~ . ... 4..., ....i GIANT 1/3 b HOMEMADE BURGER served with a pile of real French Fries or salad. Dress it yourself at our salad bar. Lots of extras too BBQ SANDWICH 1/3 lb. of delicious hickory-smoked BBQ on a bun. served with a pile of French Fries NACHOS 3/4 lb. plate of homemade chips, real Cheddar & Monterrey Jack cheese & lots of Jalapenos ;..... 30 V2 BBQ CHICKEN 1/2 a giant chicken served with a terrific sauce & pile of French Fries 75 N CHEF SALAD j) Unbelievable 1 lb. salad plate with 6 delicious ingredients and 25 dressing of your choice / CHICKEN-FRIED STEAK SANDWICH ^ Our newest item, served on a bun with a pile of French Fries & gravy if you like , 70 Sodas — Teas (30-45c) — Longnecks Beer (60c) 846-1588 317 UNIVERSITY DR. (NORTHGATE) Cleveland busing pi Saylor hal ;ies’ numb !07 yards £ Abercroml defensive i n United Press International CLEVELAND — Public school desegregation — bitterly opposed for years by school administrators, parents and students — has become a source of community pride and a basis for educational reform in three major Ohio cities. In Cleveland, Board of Education President John Gallagher said the United I tranquil start of a court-ordeit cial balancing plan last wed “re-establishing the imageolC land. In Columbus, the imeventlL ginning of desegregation m j , , scribed by history teacher rc *toadulo’ Krider as “a model for the rd y arder to 1 nation.” ' n .’ n ® r rd time S oi l Ai M MSC TCWN phesente UNIVERSITY HALL Sunday Sept. 30 G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM ,8?3# pm In Dayton, School Superi ri . dent John Maxwell said attk wb °y s a of a fourth straight peacefulr lca ^° , at racial balancing this fall lb segregation had restored "a , fashioned enthusiasm fors ,tau)acitl tion ” tionsand: But the harmony thathasd terized the busing of 62,DM 11 e 1 ll dents in Ohio this fall contr ‘f 3 ? 0 c l lKul sharply with events that Mr jV . ans ’ ma the start of racial balancing Ia ) ai ,, ’ ) l anti-busing advocates couS make a stand. land ac5 ' Schools boards hired hii r c ' own P‘j wered law firms and spent hiis e secon of thousands of dollars in leg! ^ J a ' ne j - to fight the NAACP’s efforts:: ' racially discriminatory policie ! ie a 11 Cleveland, Ohio’s largest! * ss after district, was typical. The W ' ow K) y i filed its original desegregata at U.S. District Court in K federal judge issued his in i against the school board in lSLTC But it wasn’t until this fall ll! segregation actually got under Delaying tactics by thes „ hoard actually lasted untilotl , before the start of the 15! '"tV academic year. But a last® , e ara , 111 scramble by administrators to , l ni f 1 , pare the 91,000-pupil system! ' r c . ai , cial balancing proved adequl 0 ian s Desegregation was impte m piecemeal fashion on P ,i M . Tuesday and Wednesday. Tb ‘ T ‘ l 101 was the first day in which J ” le dents at desegregated schools' P e ; a '' due to report for classes J ^ t0 put: 10,000 students were sla| cross-town busing, in a progiflj signed to racially balance! one-fourth of Cleveland’s schira tern. “No news is good news. 1 higher declared. “The peopM city of Cleveland can be pi Cleveland has gone a longls ward playing a leadership ro« the nation in the area of schwj segregation.” Anti-busing forces, meatl| kept a low profile during I week of desegregation. 333 Ur m /upfnarnl\ TICKETS 4 0.56,43.50, TICKETS \ IMK>, MSC BOX OFFICE TICKETS 00 014 SALE MOKf. SEPT- IT Eddie DomingueL Joe Arciniega'! 1 Thanks to you, I still have a home. For over 30 years, Smokey has been asking you to be careful with fire. During that time, you’ve helped cut the number of careless fires in half. So from Smokey Bear and all of us who live in the forest, thanks for listening. And keep up the good work, A Public Service of This Magazine & The Advertising Council When Is Your Selling No Secret At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE I—READ IT IN ra THE battalion If you've got something to fll . . . we’ll get your mes sage across! And our big readership guarantees you lots of prospects! 845-2611 If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It ‘Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 c Vi h Yi fr< Fe Te: ly i