GREAT AMERICAN GRILL DELICIOUS SAVORY GREAT AMERICAN Come try our new menu at: 1704 Kyle Avenue, South (At the corner of Harvey Road and Texas Avenue, behind Safeway) Page 16/The Battalion/Thursday, November 14,1985 Waldo AVAST Y£ SWABS/ PR 61 PA RE. FOR ^O^OlNG / byKevin Thomas *i«r/ Renovation of Capitol gets started (continued from page 1) Pink church Building a memorial to community strength Associated Press VATTMAN — As you take the S- shaped curve on Farm to Market Road 628, Our Lady of Consolation Church can be seen at the far end of a mile of grain and cotton fields. Its pink bricks stand out against the horizon, the tallest thing for miles around. The pink paint helps hide the true color of interior bricks of beach sand from Baffin Bay, three miles down the road. Things are quiet in the little com munity, just the way the Rev. Wil liam P. Disney likes it. Disney took over the parish 12 years ago. He also takes care of the church in nearby Riviera. The two small communities are all that remain of entrepreneur and land developer Theodore F. Koch’s plan for a “Texas Riviera.” In the early 1900s, Koch bought 18,881 acres from the King Ranch and planned three communities: Riviera, Riviera Beach and a third town. To help populate his third com munity, Koch approached the Rev. Edward J. Vattmann, secretary of the Catholic Colonization Society of America. Koch wanted Vattmann to encourage Catholic families to settle in the new town to be called Vatman- nville. A new church was planned and families began moving into the area! In 1914, the wood frame church was opened with a new bell and a new priest, the Rev. J.J. Hoellmann. That same year a 40-acre townsite was laid out. To celebrate their new town, the residents held a Thanks giving Day picnic and dance. But on August 18, 1916, all the ambitious planning was swept away in hurri cane winds that struck the town at 4:34 that Friday afternoon. Hilda Yaklin remembers the hur ricane. She and her family huddled in a cellar while the winds blew their house halfway off its foundation. The rest of the town was not as lucky. The church blew down and the general store Collapsed. Many homes were swept into the country side. The town of Riviera Beach was completely destroyed. Little was left of Vattmannville but a determin ation to rebuild. Hoellmann had built schools and school’s 50 students. In 1930 the church received a Crucifixion scene carved by Aloys Lang of Germany. Lang, famous for his portrayal of Christ in the Passion Piav at Oberammergau, is believed to nave carved only two crucifixion scenes. the Goddess will be re-assembled and displayed on the Capitol grounds for several days, according to Graham. Also Wednesday, Graham an nounced a plan to replace the dis eased and dying elms along the Ca pitol’s main south walk. For years, the elms provided a natural archway leading to the Capi tol. The planting project, scheduled to begin in February, will be super vised by the State Preservation Board in conjunction with Project Greenscape, an Austin Chamber of Commerce project ‘‘They had some hard years after that (hurri cane). ...” — The Rev. William P. Disney of Our Lady of Consolation Church. Monsignor Frank J. Pater took over the parish in 1937. Through his efforts, 10 stained glass windows from Germany were contributed by parishioners. The interior of the church was redone. Faculty Senate may examine curriculum plan (continued from page 1) churches before, and felt well- equipped to help the community start over. To make sure the new church wouldn’t be destroyed by another hurricane, Hoellman decided to build it out of brick. Each parishioner was assigned to make a share of the bricks. The 18 families made them from the hand iest material they had: beach sand. Yaklin’s father, Henry Forsthoff, was abrickmason. “We had this little brick-making machine,” she said. “It would make three bricks at a time. Everybody kept coming by the house to make bricks. We soon had bricks drying all over the yard.” The church was designed by Igna tius Loyola Underbrink in the colo nial romantic style. It is 100 feet long, 40 feet wide and has a 25-foot arched ceiling. Bricks made by the parishioners were used on the inner walls, with the outer walls constructed of com mercially produced brick. The church was finished in 1920 and the bell from the first church installed in its steeple. Hoellmann had more plans. A rectory, parochial school and convent soon followed. Nuns from the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament taught the “They had to put up plaster,” Dis ney saicl. “The sand they made the bricks from was full of salt. When ever it rained, they leaked water.” Disney said the town never really recovered from the hurricane. “They had some hard years after that and people started selling out and moving back up north,” he said. The school and convent closed 20 years ago. The town’s name was soon shortened to just Vattmann. Between the two signs that mark the town there are only three homes to day. One of them belongs to Corne lius and Hilda Yaklin. Every morning at 7:15 she joins 20 other parishioners at the church for Mass. Most of them have lived in the area for more than 60 years. “I guess 25 percent of my parish are in their late 70s to early 80s,” Disney said. Although most of the young peo ple have moved away, they return once a year for the Thanksgiving picnic. More than 1,500 people show up for the picnic every year and de vour more than 50 turkeys. The picnic is open to the public and food is served family style. All of the parishioners help out. You can find Mrs. Yaklin deboning turkeys. “I’ve only missed one of these since they started,” she said. “These are good people around here,” Disney said. “I don’t tell them that — but they’re good people.” Stress of raising family can depress workers (continued from page 1) what they do at work. It manifests it self in conflict.” The Boston University study also found that: • Forty-three percent of the em ployees interviewed, both male and female, said the strain of managing family responsibilities was the main reason they got depressed at work. Googins said one-third of the re spondents said they worried a signif icant amount about their kids during the day, “which has got to be a large oft 25 percent of the parents with chil dren aged 6 to 12 said their kids cared for themselves at home. part of this stress-strain depression.” • Eighty-eight percent of the em ployees rated their job performance tly “ ~ as “very high,” while only 56 percent rated their performance as a parent in the same way. • few employees used formal af ter-school day care for their chil dren. In fact, according to the study, The study recommended that companies should provide day care or a center where employees can learn about day care in their neigh borhoods. It also said employers should consider offering flexible schedules and benefits to help work ers pay for day care. here’s one college credit you’ll use long after graduation Really, it's simple economics. When you apply for and receive a Foley's charge card, you'll gain a credit rating; and your prompt payment and good judgment keep it A-1. Plus, you don't have to wait for graduation to get it- let us know whether you're a junior, senior or graduate student. If we cannot verify your class status in the Student Directory, please attach verification of class status; for example, a paid fee slip. Fill out the attached form and return it to us. Send this application to: Foley's Credit Promotion Dept. P.O. Box 1971, Houston, Texas 77251 Name Local address. City .Stdte. Permdnent address City .Stdte. Age Spouse's name Major subject _ .Unmarried () Mdrried () Separated () Class Status: Jr. () University/college Bank at Sr. () Grad. () "BRING ON THE NIGHT’/STING Mon.-Fri. 7:40/9:40 “ Checking () Sovings () Loan () Parent, guardian or nearest relative. Phone number Address City ATTIC HEARTOF TEXAS m Have you or your spouse ever had d Foley's occount? If yes, account number or name Date Signature SAN AN' tery could b viate a finar Comptrollei predicts siu Texas bv 19 Bullock, : Club meetii said he wool tuel wagerin enues and h i> r i uuiem rregiiaiicy: we listen, we care, we Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors ^ Brazos Valley o Crisis Pregnancy Service} We re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE . Copy quality so good you can’t tell it’s a copy Clean, clear, crisp copies from out new Kodak copier-duplicilot. Plenty of free parking, fast service. Try us 'oday! | KWIKKOPYWIW, 3W2 5. Teui Annut Bfyan | r rr«**TTTTTlH| Friday rHov for the A&M curriculum, the com mittee also recommends that the en tering student complete at least one computer science course in high school or demonstrate proficiency through an exam. Otherwise, the student will be required to complete a computer science course at A&M. The report also recommends that the entering student complete two years of a foreign language in high school or demonstrate proficiency through an exam. The student not fulfilling that requirement would take two semesters of a foreign lan- guaee. Black said the committee began working on the core curriculum in February 1984 after Vandiver re quested that the Faculty Senate make recommendations on the gen eral educational requirements of the University. Vandiver told the Senate that A&M is one of the few major univer sities in the nation that fails to re quire a broad background in the arts and sciences, which he said was “the hear t of a university education." Black said one problem facing the core curriculum is the number of hours students will be required to take if the proposal passes without amendment. For example, electrical engi neering students will be required to add as many as five more hours to their current 139-hour degree plan because the electrical engineering degree plan includes 13 elective hours that may be used for speech and writing, cultural heritage or so cial science courses. Black said such highly-specialized departments may need to drop some of their required engineering courses to avoid building a five-year degree program. “If approved, this report chal lenges the engineers to look at whether there may be some unnec- cessary duplication of courses,” he said. To compile the report, the 20- member core curriculum committee studied several journals on core cur- riculums, the degree programs of different universities across the na tion and the recommendations of university accrediting boards. Put your message in n the night sky above the ; Arkansas game; on Nite Flite's electronic billboard. 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M-u-m VM+M ThaTafttiif HmIiIa j STOP MAKING KM PUTT THEATRES >50 First Show Only Sit S Sun A&M Nits Tuesday Senior Citizens Anytlnu The tern tend until program o parties hun ports, a Hr Medicare r and hospit; culating b railroad w also were e: ____ 0% 315CollegeN. 845-6711 VsinCmcl O MldnlgMShows ndMEfi 1 ST€V6N SPiaaeAG Presents .... * awafc* JSFUTunF ' tMon-Frl 7.45/9.55 l— ■ 1 i...- ■■■■■■■ iL Death Wish Bronson Mon-Frl 7:20/9:2! In Septembe istration asked the debt limit to $2,078 trillic legislation has congressional plans passed b ate to force a b end of the deca Post Oak 3 in the Mall 7SM1K Bull* to h creasing t services. But Built lottery, sayi “lots of me