The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 26, 1983, Image 12

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    national
Battalion/Pags'l
January 26,1
TAKE THE RIGHT STEPS TO
FURNISH YOUR HOME
TWIN CITY FURNITURE
TWIN CITY FURNITURE
AFFORDABLE
LAYAWAYS ACCEPTED
ONE DAY DELIVERY
AREA’S LARGEST SELECTION
FRIENDLY STAFF TO SERVE YOU
IN-STORE FINANCING AND CREDIT DEPARTMENT
219 N. Main
Varisco Building
Downtown Bryan
Free Parking Just North of Store
VISA - Mastercard Accepted
WHY GO ANYWHERE
Wednesday
What’s Up
BUSINESS CAREER FAIR BANQUET: Tickets are on
sale ($5 per person) from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. now through
Friday in the foyer of the A&A Building. Reservations for
companies are available.
A&M RUGBY CLUB:Practice and training is held every
Monday through Thursday at 5 p.m. on the Main Drill
Field.
BRYAN HOSPITAL: Bryan Hospital is sponsoring a Car
diopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) course, certified by
the American Heart Association, today and Thursday
from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Bryan Hospital Conference
Room. The course is taught by Naomi Giroux and costs
50 cents per person.
POLITICAL FORUM :Sign up now for the annual trip to
Washington D.C. A $200 deposit is due by Feb. 9. For
more information, call 845-1515.
MSC HOSPITALITY’.Today is the last day to interview
for membership. Get your applications in the Hospitality
cubicle in 210 MSC (SPO of fice).
STUDENT GOVERNMENT (STUDENT BOOK
EXCHANGE):Today is the last day to pick up books or
money from the Student Book Exchange f rom 8:30 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in 210 MSC.
PRE-LAW SOCIETY: Local attorneys, William R. Vance,
Steve Rodgers and Gaines West, will participate in a panel
discussion at 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder.
CANADIAN CLUB:A new semester, new prime mini
and new events will he discussed in a meeting at/p.
401 Rudder. All newcomers welcome!
ABILENE HOMETOWN CLUB:Club pictureswl
taken at 7:80 p.m. in the MSC Main Lounge.
SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS:LiilianEhl
Shell Oil will speak, plans for a conference will be
ized and registration for the regional conferencewl
held at a meeting at 7 p.m. in 102 Zachry.
PS1 CHI (PSYCHOLOGY HONOR SOCIETY):
first meeting of the semester will be held at 7 p.m.in
Academic Building. Old members and anyoneinten
in psychology are welcome.
INTRAM U R A L- R E C R E A IT ON AL S PORTS:
7i
machine weight lifting clinic and guest speaker wi
presented at / p.m. in 262 G. Rolhe White Coliseu
Coliseum.
FLORICULTURE CLUB:A general meeting withgi
speaker Dr. David Reed will be held at 7 p.m. in 106P:
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL:A Candlelii
Communion Service will be held at 10 p.m. at thel'nn
sity Lutheran Chapel, 313 N. College Main in Coll
Station.
SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS:.):
cussion on mini-indy car, alcohol car and upcotnint
gional meeting will lx- held at 7:30 p.m. in 12/-BZacn
BLACK AWARENESS:Black History Month plans
he discussed in a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 308 Ruddi
by Job
; Batt
For the fir
fexas A&M':
Tuesday, the
iglu where
eating SMI
imping.
S&ut by tin
inished its g;
iggus wer
iawking.
^■lawking
hat is.
: I Arnold
iantledly bn
^vs back I
soiilt deficit
Congress considers aid
7-510 victors
Arnold si:
I, points on
fom the lie
Jobless lose health benefit
rst 11 TCU
ut 1 is 15 reb
Mutant f;
age’s of the
Floriculture-Ornamental Horticulture Club
Plant Sale!
Saturday, Jan. 29
United Press International
WASHINGTON —Congress
is considering aid to the nation’s
more than 5 million laid-off
workers who have lost their
health insurance, but budget
officials warn any program will
be costly.
Alice Rivlin, director of the
Congressional Budget Office,
told a House Energy and Com
merce Health subcommittee
Monday, 10.7 million laid-off
American workers and depen
dents had no health insurance as
of December.
Twelve million Americans
were unemployed last month,
and the jobless rate was the high
est since the Great Depression.
Rivlin said 7.4 million of those
workers had been laid off, and
5.3 million of them lost their
health insurance.
Health benefits usually con
tinue for up to three months af
ter job loss. But Rivlin said
almost 70 percent of those who
lost their jobs have been out of
work five weeks or more, and
most have exhausted extended
health benefits.
United Auto Workers Presi-
'AT! l
Floriculture Greenhouse
COMMONS
Quad
Lubbock St.
A AA 4r '‘ T f
Meld
(SLAB)
Lamar
p.m.
Qi
Plant
1 Sale
PL
10-2
4N?
is
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
SPRUNG RUSH
ISecM* Bust
Wednesday, January 26
AIX THi: BREW
YOU CAST DRINK
' i
i 1 !
N| !
I •
BEER
WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY MEAL.
(Limit 5 beers per person.)
Our new menu can’t be beat and you sure can’t beat
penny beer! Come on by, seven days a week, lunch or
dinner, and try our juicy steaks, homemade cobbler,
shis-ka-bob with wild rice, or any of our new menu items.
If you haven’t tried Hoffbrau lately, you
haven’t tried Hoffbrau!
steaks
The best thing that ever happened to beef!
317 So. College Avenue, 260-9172
Mon.-SaL, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. f$* Sim., 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m.
Banquet facilities are available.
dent Douglas Fraser, rep
ing the labor-backed
Security Action Council,fl
Congress to act. Hesus
requiring longer covenM
l.iid-of I workersandshonTle Texas
lays in insuring pew ornfiaen’s swi
workers, expandingMedir.s|>place vi
include the unemployedanel meet ft
\idiug funds for groupiitiisday nig
insurant e or a basicone-ilithe won
nel ii package. ie|i best me
“Literally thousand)in| 11 of 17
thousands of people amg ihe Owl
poning their health care.'iptured 13
er said. vents to wit
But Rivlin warned: ||Philis B
“Any program forprophinauch
coverage to those who art. ■
rentlv unemployed, »»
public or private, woulH
costly.”
11 would cost $61
current fiscal year to |
Medina re health coverage)
employed workers, wh
“add significantly tothell
deficit.” she said.
The panel heard Iron |
laid-of f workers who 1
their health insurance.
Isaac Emerson ofYorll
who lost his truck-drivingl
year ago, said he cannotiT
to take his twochildrenlo:|
to pay the $2,300inmedki
Calif, told the laid-offtvo!
said in a statement/;eitiij
cen lives for employers wl
ployees.
845-13