The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 06, 1981, Image 8

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    Page 8
THE BATTALION
MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1981
Local / State
Food fair and show please crowd
By SHEILA FRAZIER
Battalion Reporter
On the tables were culinary de
lights from all over the world. In
the air was a babble of differing
languages, and on the stage was
WHAT IS A
PARALEGAL?
A paralegal is a person with one of the most exciting
new careers going I
A paralegal is a lawyer’s assistant who is able to do
many tasks traditionally done by attorneys. Not a
clerical or secretarial role, the paralegal is a new
legal specialty with excellent job opportunities in
law firms, corporate legal departments, and blanks.
Three months of intensive training in courses taught
by law professors and lawyers can give you the
skills to interview witnesses, conduct legal re
search, prepare pleadings, draft transaction docu
ments, and prepare cases for trial under the su
pervision of an attorney.
The Basic Legal Assistant Course begins June 1,
1981 and September 14, 1981. A representative
will be on campus on Monday, April 13,1981 at the
Career Planning and Placement Center. Call 845-
6551 to schedule an individual or group interview.
The Southwestern Paralegal Institute
5512 Chaucer Drive
Houston, Texas 77005
(713) 528-3803
Approved by the American Bar Association
color, glamour and talent.
Close to 1,700 people came to
be fed and entertained at the Food
Fair and Variety Show sponsored
last week by the International Stu
dent Association. They left with
full stomachs and dazzled minds.
The evening began with
assorted dishes from 29 countries
laid out like a huge family picnic.
To maneuver through the crowd,
one had to dodge heaped up
the talent show were competing
for awards presented to the win
ners at a ceremony the following
night.
The first place prize went to
three Bolivian musicians who
played mandolin, guitar and a na
tive drum. By the time they
finished their medley, including
“El Condor Pasa,’’ the audience
was clapping in rhythm to their
captivating beat.
plates, upraised forks and happily
working jaws. There were dainty
appetizers, soups, fruit salads, ex
otic desserts and more variations
of beef, seafood, poultry and pork
than could be tasted.
Immediately following the
Food Fair was a fashion show
featuring I.S.A. students dressed
in ruffles, sequins and gold-
trimmed silks. Slides of palaces,
countrysides and cities shown be
hind the models took the audience
to the foreign homeland settings.
To conclude the show, three chil
dren dressed in gold-threaded red
velvet suits from Sumatra simply
smiled and brought the audience’s
applause to a peak.
Second place went to a Korean
who strummed two songs which
he said exemplified the attitude of
the new generation in his country.
The words he sang were in a lan
guage foreign to many there, but
his message of love came across
clearly on his spellbinding guitar.
Third place went to another
guitarist, a Nicaraguan, who
hushed the crowd with his own
love song entitled “Give Me a
Smile.”
A talent show brought all the
color, culture and pageantry to a
climax. There were lilting guitars,
delicate Oriental music, sensual
belly dancing and foot-stomping
South American folk dancing. Be
sides entertaining, the entries in
All entries in the Food Fair also
were judged that night on their
overall appearance and flavor.
There were two classes grouped
according to the number of club
members of that country. Win
ners of class A were: first place,
Hong Kong; second place,
Taiwan; third place, Venezuela.
Winners of class B were: first
place, Puerto Rico; second place,
Bangladesh; third place, Turkey.
CHILDREN'S
EASTER PARTY
DATE: April 7
TIME: 7-9 pm
PLACE: Rm. 231 MSC
REFRESHMENTS
EASTER EGG HUNT
GAMES
ARTS & CRAFTS
PINATA
PLENTY
OF
FUN!
Sponsored by MSC HOSPITALITY
MANOR EAST 3
WtfjgflErtarim
Starting Friday
Seattle Tempieton doesn't have a dime,
but be makes everyone feel Uke a mUUon.
ROBERT DE NIBO
“RAGING BULL”
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A new high
in being low down
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lues., April 7, 7p.m.
for
freshmen & sophomores
interested in joining a
SORORITY
NEXT FALL...
meet representatives from
10Texas A&M sororities
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In a demonstration of the Rescue Gator
system of forcing doors open on wrecked
cars, Alan Jenkins, left, a Texas A&M stu
dent and emergency medical technician for
Beutel Health Center, assists a Rescue
Gator representative in removing the door
of this car by Rudder Fountain. The rescue
device, which works off an air-hydralic
pump, develops 12,000 pounds of force at
its tips. It can also move the seat and raise
the car off the ground. The demonstration
was part of the Emergency Care Team
Seminar held this past weekend.
CAMPUS
THEATRE
Now Showing
Ralph Bakshi’s
American
Pop
New mayor
plans end
of ethnic g*
Unitci
shrev:
lentified
loto of a I
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linckley J
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7:35-9:50
United Press International
SAN ANTONIO — Henry &
neros, the first Mexican-Americai nen in th
elected mayor of a major Ai» National S
cian city, said Sunday he plansti ca at a n
help narrow the vast economit
disparities between his Mexican'
American and Anglo constituent
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
Midnight
Alice In
Wonderland
xxx
All Tickets $3
.Of-/
Starts Friday:
“ORDINARY
PEOPLE”
Winner of three
Academy Awards
Including Best Picture
v Get
ACTION
*it/>
mm
ADS
i am i
Miittom,
Cisneros, who recieved de ^ ^
grees in urban planning from W
Texas A&M University and Har
vard, trounced seven opponent!
Saturday, carrying eight of the & ^ " un p r
ty’s 10 voting districts.
Neither Cisneros
closest rival, insurance executi'f
John Steen who Cisneros sound!
defeated by a 62 percent margin
made ethnic backgrounds
issue. The six other candidate ^ p/J
drew less than 1 percent of tk
vote.
dear if he
e stated,
normally 1
A political moderate wk
served as a White House fello*
during the Nixon administration
Cisneros said the widespread sup'
port he received from both tk
Anglo and Mexican-Amerit*
electorate would make his jo!
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