The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 06, 1986, Image 4

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    BOB BROWN
UNIVERSAL TRAVEL [
COMPLETE, DEPENDABLE DOMESTIC
AND WORLDWIDE TRAVEL
Airline Reservations • Hotel/Motel Accomodations
Travel Counsel • Rental Car Reservations • Tours
Charter Flights • FREE Ticket Delivery
846-8718
• Agency is fully computerized •
410 S. Texas/Lobby of the Ramada Inn/College Station
Long, Short, & Tea Length
from $59
new arrivals daily
900 Harvey Rd. • Post Oak Village JJ
Dresses • Accessories • Tuxedos
Open 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.. Sat.
by Dr. Kevin G. Schacterle
Chiropractor
MIGRAINE HEADACHES
More (hau liticcn million Americans sulTei from chronic headaches many olWhich can
be calc'jori/cd as mierainc. This lype of headache usually starts on one side and may
spread (o the entire head Other symptoms may include irritability, nausea and sensitiv ity
to bticht licht. Victims of mieraine headaches may also experience ' sij’nals'' of an im
pendin'.: attack, such as a lluttcry stomach and a sensation that lichts and colors seem
brnjhter than normal. A headache max hist lot several hours or several days. Since sci
ence has lone been aware that mieraine headaches result from a stretching of the arteries
and nerves ol the head, chiropractic has developed special tests to determine the precise
point ol the bloekaee in these areas.
I’lease do not fa no re the early warning sians: headache, stiffness in neck. back, painful
toints. lea arm pain, numbness, back neck pain, shoulder pain, numbness in hands, feet,
fat Iv treatment of these sians will minimi/e v our need for additional follow-up v isits.
( omplimentarv consultation and spinal evaluation will be aiven thru the end of the
month I’rev ions patients of chiropractic w ho feel the necessity for "only'' a spinal adjust
ment are weleome.
Should vou feel a need lor an appointment please call 6d6-2 100.
\1iarame headaches mav also be caused bv a misalianment of the neck bones resultina in
a pinehma traction that stretches the blood vessels and nerves leadina to the head.
Hours:
Mon.. W ed.. Fri. 12-7 p.m.
l ues.. T'hurs., Sat. N-l p.m.
909 Southwest Pkw v
Doctor & Professional Bld^.
Yours for better health.
Kevin G. Sehaehterle. D.C.
Kaepa - r^ccbok
SHOE SALE
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ONLY
Rcaboh
$29. 95
Regular Price $37. 95
SALE
PRICE
Ladies
Princess
$29.
95
In 1983 Brown’s initiated a new, low mark-up concept for selling athletic shoes. Our ex
penses are lower and we pass the savings directly on to you. Don’t pay inflated mall prices
-- shop Brown’s Shoe Fit...Bryan-College Station’s largest shoe store.
Kaepa
SHOE FIT CO.
On Texas Avenue
Near Academy
Hours: 9:30-6:00
693-8269
Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, March 6, 1986
Legislators will instruct classes
Smith to test teaching ability [for
By ALISSA LEHMANN
Reporter
State Sen. Kent Caperton and
State Rep. Richard Smith will test
their teaching abilities this week in
support of a statewide program to
E remote communication between
:gislators, students and teachers.
Smith and Caperton will partici
pate in Texas Public Schools Week
by teaching classes in local public
schools. The governor, lieutenant
governor, and speaker of the house
also will be participating in the back-
to-school event.
Each of them will spend all or part
of a day teaching and observing in a
Texas classroom.
Dr. Terry Heller, senior educa
tion aide for the Senate Education
Committee, said the event was orga
nized by Senate Education Commit
tee Chairman Carl Parker.
She said Parker challenged the
rest of the legislature to spend a day
teaching during Texans Public
Schools Week.
Parker says he hopes the legis
lators will gain insight into education
issues that may be addressed in the
next legislative session.
“We can never know enough
about something as complex as the
education enterprise,” Parker said.
Heller said recent school reforms
have been tough on public schools.
House Bill 72, she said, caused sig
nificant changes that have had quite
an impact on teachers.
She said changes include teacher
and administrator tests, a career lad
der based on experience and new
performance standards.
Legislators’ direct participation in
the classroom, Heller said, will serve
to show support for teachers while
also boosting their morale.
By SCOTT
Assists
schools to see first-hand the impact
of the recent education reforms.
“I anticipate some valuable insight
into future legislation that may be
needed to fine-tune some of the re
cent reforms.”
Caperton will teach at Oakwood
Caperton said, “During the last
legislative session, many teachers
called to suggest that I visit the
• T
Middle School and Southwood Val
ley Elementary in College Station to
day. He will spend the morning at
Oakwood teaching two sixth-grade
social studies classes about his role in
government.
Pam Wyatt, Oakwood Middle
School teacher, said Caperton will
participate in bus duty and will be
with her during her planning pe-*
Caperton then will join
Maryvonne Cooper’s fourth-grade
class at Southwood Valley Elemen
tary for a brown-bag lunch. Cooper
said during Texas Public Schoo
Week, each grade level is assigned a
day to bring a brown-bag lunch and
parents are invited to have lunch
with the children.
Gov. Mark
exas A&M
nd A&M Sy:
jficials Wedne
try to avoid
research func
pudget crunc!
I White rec
Ariefmg on
■Texas agricul
The Texas Ag
Service, the 1
iSnd the Agri
Station.
White sai(
Itplifting and
lace of Tallin
Ihreatening t
fcudget shortl
I “We aren’t
Economy, w<
bne” he said
■he prospects
■ve're buildir
lo find new i
Is going on hi
I A&M agri
|he Universi
ole in deve
gy for Te>
onducted o'
icultural res
A&M agri
fWhite that h
ng can inen
l)f the agricu
Smith then took his tursB Nevill
Wyatt’s sixth-grade social stuiBl 16
class and spent the rest of theiB' 011 ’ sa *^ ^
observing
Lia Stokes, district office adn
trator, said Smith divided
into House and Senate groups.!
Caperton will spend the remain
der of the day teaching Cooper’s
class. She said he will cover the es
sential elements of her lesson plan
but has also developed his own
plans.
aid he then took the studt
through the theoretical process
passing a hill
He wanted to teach them ata
the postive aspects and the slut
comings of the legislative systfl
Stokes said
I' P 1
Lo
Pierre Auguste Renoir, the
French Impressionist painter, was
born Feb. 25, 1841,. and this year
marks the 145th anniversary of his
birth.
Fpw people realize that Renoir
painted some of his most important
works with hands that were badly
crippled with arthritis. In his later
works, Renoir seemed to focus on
dexterity and the use of the hands.
“Jean Renoir, the Artist's Son,”
painted in 1900, shows a young boy
doing needlework. The year before
his death in 1919, Renoir painted
“Woman Tying Her Shoe.”
Today the Arthritis Foundai
says modern medication and
ment methods can prevent or deli
much of the pain and deformity
nabling far
heir crops -
jproduce at t
rease their i
He said '
Sits value-adc
tablishing
plants rathe
roducts tc
ousiana tl
larsoutofT
In additic
programs tl
bility of |
products cai
the farmer’s
added-value
ucts falls wi
average.
C MSC OPAS Stark Series
M
ByJ<
presents
JJL
Tr
TAMU
SYMPHONIC
The Texas
cation will b
one produce
and science t
national rep<
education.
A survey
tional Cente
published ne
the institutio
don majors it
publication i
port on the c
! “They dor
says the dear
cation. “The
but it’s a big <
Dr. Dean <
College of
enrollment i
teaching ma
; ilv over the f
success is it
tional averag
During tl
[colleges acre
perienced a
The number
jors and a
BAND
^ J Dean ’ Direct
lx.Bandmaster of fu^
March 6th s : nn *.
rcn o** 8:00 p.m.
judder Theatre
tickets $1
Available at dooir*