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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1983)
Wednesday, May 11, 1983/The Battalion/Page 11 HELP WANTED \LL\S now hiring, all positions, 693- 151t3 LIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED it have own car, at least 19 yr age, $3.75 hr. plus 6% commis- . Apply in person at PIZZA RESS between 2-5 p.m. .-Fri., 319 Patricia or 2314 'exas Ave. S. . J30tfn 3.W Houston lifeguard needed, prgrove Subdivision needs life- ‘ ds for summer-hiring now- lact Coach Jack Janse (713) le to of^82-9874 or write 6249 Piping , pk, Houston, 77057-ACT ' er the*. ek! DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN (COUPLES for present and fu- ire Houston post routes. Early irning hours. Papers rolled by chine. $200-$750/month, 846-2911 846-0396 . 24tin. cndous (Jr ., J un > or or Senior girl to help profes- CT school age children and home Hay 15-Jnly 8, 696-7709. 150t4 u to costfl iking for students interested in xidermy work this summer, nt to hire one male and one iale. Inquire at Palermo Tax- ‘ y, 846-0141. 150t3 FULL OR PART TIME Shift Night shift (til 10 p.m.) ekends jxible hours to fit your schedule ■R|pid advancement hier experience helpful Starting Salary $3.65/hour Apply in person only. p:30-11 ;30 a.m. (if possible) WHATABURGER n College Station 101 Texas 105 Dominik 190tfn LP it FIELD REPRESENTATIVE GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORP. [Challenging & diversified (imum opportunity to advance Excellent Benefits Apply 4103 Texas Ave. Bryan An equal opportunity employer M/F ent 1. eded Immediately for summer ployment-experienced WAIT ^SONS. Apply at CENARE TALIAN CUISINE, 404 University Ve, College Station between 2 ] 5 weekdays. pounting Students to represent nerica’s most successful CPA pview course (76% pass rate)i Dompensation includes a freei arse. Call collect (713) 789- 08. 127t1S ed OFFICIAL NOTICE Job opportunity for Journalism najor. College work study needed to manage publicity for programs. Position available immediately, ease call Mickle at 845-7814 for iformation. 15015 ill :ian zoology inical hnology' ,, j Si and'»° |, l MAY GRADS iyou have graduated and are still 3king employment contact the acement Center. We have a i alumni service which can help in your job search. Call 845- 139 and ask for the Alumni Coor- lator. i5it5 ion ROOMMATES NEEDED! Nice 4 bdrm house; all utilities id; $155/month; no lease; ed 2-4 males or 2-4 females; not mixed! Call Bec ky 696-6057. 15112 ckgp jge' iith C’ ATTENTION GRADUATES Dimer student needs roommate, iorth Houston area, 3-bedroom iuse, $300/mo. + utilities. Call 713) 442-3502. 14715 ed two female roommates to are master bedroom in three droom house. Rent $119 plus I bills. Close to campus. Space pin! L Ei available after finals. Call 696- !S ^5f76. 148t4 [Student Services roommate locator See. New number 846-2106. 147t5 Public helps flower lady Widow to get care United Press International FORT LAUDERDALE — Fannie Viccica, prevented by police from selling flowers on Mother’s Day to raise money to pay for cancer radiation treat ments, will get the medical care she needs after all — free of charge. The 63-year-old widow was selling flowers at a cemetery when police ordered her to pack up and go home because she had no occupational license. Viccica was peddling the flowers to make enough money to pay for postmastectomy medical care. She lives on $295 a month from Social Security and said her $500 in Medicaid be nefits ran out earlier this year after 25 radiation treatments. When word of her plight spread Monday, more than 100 residents in Dade and Broward counties phoned police and newspaper offices offering to donate money to help defray her medical costs. Even police officers offered donations for her care. “It’s very nice,” Viccica said. “It makes me feel that at least somebody really cares.” Viccica also was notified Mon day by the Broward branch of the American Cancer Society that she can receive free medical care at Broward General Hos pital. Broward General offers free or income-adjusted care to resi dents who don’t have insurance or can prove they can’t afford treatment, Adele Stones, a cli nical social worker at the hospit al said. Researcher says ringing ears forecast quakes United Press International LOS ALTOS, Calif. — Last Monday’s big Coalinga quake did not come as a surprise to a about two dozen Californians who seem to be able to predict them. The day before the tremblor, Mark Waterman called the Time Research Institute to re- E ort hearing a “low moaning” in is right ear and skull. It was the first of several calls researcher Marsha Adams got that Sunday evening warning her that an earthquake might soon strike somewhere in Cali fornia. Waterman, 26, a housepain- ter from Pleasanton, is one of 24 LULAC to fight migrant school bill ROOMMATE WANTED umate needed call 693-7850 or 846- ISltl Inmate needed graduated and living in las, call Brian, 696-3238. 151tl United Press International WASHINGTON — A Hispa nic group fighting a cutback in educational funding to migrant children says the reason a study showed little disruption in their lifestyles may be that many chil dren are left with other relatives in order to complete the school year. A report released Monday by the General Accounting Office said 40 percent of the children it studied did not actually miss any school because of their parents’ migration to follow farm or fishing industry jobs. ( “These students migrated ex- j clusively during the summer months, over holidays or before , initial school enrollment,” the GAO said. “Another 3.6 percent of GAO’s sample missed fewer than 10 days of school due to migration in any of the years re viewed.” The study also indicated 60 percent of the students in the random survey of six school dis tricts in Texas, California and Florida — the states receiving 55 percent of the migrant educa tion funding — were enrolled in only one school district during the study period, which aver aged 4.3 years per student. Congress is currently consid ering action to try to block Sec retary of Education Terrel Bell from severely narrowing eligi bility for the $266 million prog ram currently serving more than a half-million children of migrant workers. Bell wants to define migrant children as only those whose education was disrupted be cause of a move from one school district to another within the past 12 months. The League of United Latin American Citizens, the nation’s oldest and largest Hispanic organization, is fighting Bell’s plan. “Our feeling on this is there are parents who are trying, by leaving their children with rela tives and friends, to leave their children there until the end of the school year so the education will not be disrupted,” said LULAC spokeswoman Jill Kin caid. “This kind of proposal almost encourages a parent to take a kid out of one school district and put him in another to get the aid,” she said. “It’s bad for education and the continuity of curri culum.” Kincaid said although educa tion officials testified the 234,000 students who would be eliminated under the re classification would be served under other educational prog rams for disadvantaged chil- jdren, LULAC fears severe cut- | backs there would mean mig rant children would not be iserved. Congress enacted the prog ram 18 years ago to provide funding for such programs as language development or hand icapped education. It also pro vides special help for five years after a student is no longer cons idered migrant. The study included a random sample of 811 migrant educa tion students in the Pharr-San Juan-Alamo, Robstown and Au stin independent school districts in Texas; Palm Beach County School District in Florida; and the Fresno and Pajaro Valley unified school districts in Cali fornia. The latest figures show that for fiscal year 1982, Texas re ceived $67 million, California had $61.3 million and Florida received $19.2 million in mig rant education funding. people Adams has found who get headaches or hear a ringing- moaning noise in their ears as early as three days before earth quakes. She believes the sensations are caused by atmospheric changes and are one of several signals that could be used to warn authorities that a quake is imminent. Waterman is the most accu rate of the group, she said, with quakes following eight out of 10 of his reports. “I had ringing in my ears for two or three years but never con nected it with earthquakes until I heard about a Portland, Ore., woman who got headaches be fore each Mount St. Helens eruption,” he said. finals driving you CRAZY? Any time’s a wild time when you add the great taste of Two Fingers... and this wild Two Fingers T-shirt! To get yours, send your name, address, style preference and size (men’s style S,M,L or women’s French cut S, M, L) along with $6.95, to: Two Fingers T-shirt Offer, 19168 Albion Rd., Strongsville, Ohio 44136. Please allow 6 weeks for delivery Two Fingers’ is all it takes. ©1982 Two Fingers Tequila — 80 Proof. Imported & Bottled by Hiram Walker Inc., Burlingame. Calif. take a break... come pick up your 1983 AGGIE LAUD 216 Reed McDonald 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 845-2611