Monday, January 17, 1989 The Battalion Page 7 S Warped ,..AV? IT WAS LATER IMPORTED THAT... n whol,, 11 school )' 'ndiviii 1 and co, a v ‘oleii( ■ and coo, m Brv ) meets P-m. C 0! e inform, llT1 s conn ^ssessnia WHO IS DIRECTING THIS MESS.W m by Scott McCullar Waldo g and 4 we statio said. “Tf| aise pubi, one knot ivel dui'in , accidem >ut they >lidays di and esii [WHY DOESN'T BILL CLEMENTS RESIGN FOR WHAT HE DID TO SMU? AND PEOPLE WRITE NASTY LETTERS WHEN THE PRESS ASKS THE SAME QUESTIONS... I estate. I petroled will beg iik borro notes. Cii ompanyl provide ii k financii Citibank x iniitnieiit udge educates defendants on academic side of living mbert 1 saying ii to $1.31 NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Stu dents who cut class at Miriam Waltz er’s school could end up behind bars. “The choice is dear — learn or go to jail," said Waltzer, a criminal court I judge who got tired of seeing young ■defendants who couldn't read the le gal paperwork in front ot them. Her solution turn her courtroom into a classroom. “What 1 noticed was that the de fendants got younger and younger and less and less educated,” the judge said. "1 realized that 1 had the power to put them on probation and 1 make education part ol the terms ot I that probation." Since most had been expelled from school, she couldn’t send them back there. I So Waltzer started what she calls Hflll the Probation Education Program with classes in her courtroom run by volunteer tutors. The program, which she supervises, started in May suction m j nd Waref meeting and now has an enrollment ot two dozen students ages 17 to 27. Before the students tackle their first assignment, each is tested to de termine how much he or she knows “Most ot these people chopped out of school in about the ninth grade, but what we’ve found is that most of them are on a second or third grade level academicalh . Waltzei said Once class starts, die rules arc- simple: Study and don't cut class One unexcused absence means a weekend in jail, two and the student is off probation and in prison. l or those who stay out of trouble, the five years’ probation ends as soon as the student earns a high school di ploma. “It’s tough, that lady doesn't let you slip up,” said Charles Carter, 26, who has been a student in the pro gram from the beginning. “Some times you’ve been working and you're tired and you don’t want to I MATE ro rg-LU YOU Thus, aur ir’5 BREAK 'POINT. come, but you have to I like it. though. I like the reading, anyvvav 1 don't like the division and English, but I'm learning it too. Carter, convic ted of drug posses sion, said he hopes to get his di ploma this spring and enter barber school. Roosevelt Thomas, 21; convicted of carrying a concealed weapon said he would like to go to college and perhaps become a lawyer “That’s what my mama wanted me to he,” he said. “1 got a lot ot court experience already.' Cat returns from walk 8 years later BANCROFT, Wis. (AP) — Alter eight yeat's of unknown adventures, Clem the cat returned to its original owners. “I heard some meowing out on the front porch last Friday,” Kurt Helminiak said. “When I opened the door, there stood a big, long-haired, gray male cat. “He walked into the house, checked it out for a few minutes, then he purred and jumped up onto his favorite chair like he had never been gone.” Helminiak said his family were in credulous at first, but he and his wife, Julie, compared the cat to pic tures they had taken eight years ear lier and confirmed Clem had come home. “I let him out one cold night, when it was about 20 below zero, and snowing and blowing, and he never came back,” he said. The family searched for Clem throughout the neighborhood and listed him as a missing cat with the Humane Society. They also put up posters in stores, but the cat was never found. Clem is healthy, though a bit mangier. Another difference is that Clem is now f declawed, an indication that someone had taken care of it at least part of the time, Helminiak said. “He’s so glad to be home that he won't even go outside now,” he said. ¥ ^ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ FREE CHIPS ARE BACK! lectutf j tnuary n( Cente'j 7:00 W to folio* tiibit Ha 11 !45-85iJi; temporaiy^l i grant to* l| ral Endo#* t "| *1 *9 ¥Z + 1 *5 {i i i :i ;l 2 for 1 Enchilada Dinner with this coupon expires Jan. 31 ;j990 Margaritas all day j ‘•Happy Hour 11 a.m.-7 p.m.| Jpree Munchies 4p.m.-7p.m.| ‘L If™ COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 764-JUAN 907 Harvey Rd. 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CALL TOLL FREE TODAY 1-800-321-5911 'Depending on break dates and length ot stay by Kevin Thomas SemesterSpecial Aerobics Only r> a Gym & Aerobics Gym Only $69 ~ NO DUES OR I.D FEES ON ANY MEMBERSHIP 8,000 + lbs.Free Weights Muilt-Cam Machines Men's & Womens locker rooms/ showers • Sauna • Clean Spacious Workout Area • Complete Instruction Available • Whirlpool Semester Tanning Specials Power Walking Weighted Aerobic classes (All levels) • High/Low Impact • Interval Training • I D.E.A. Certified Instructors For More Information 846-6272 WELLBORN ROAD TEXAS A&M Q\ Jay’s Gym * SOUTH COLLEGE National Agri-Marketing Association Presents the sixth annual CARL STEVENS Professional Development and Selling Seminar January 27-January 28,1989 Texas A&M University The Seminar The Carl Stevens Professional Development and Selling Seminar is a 16-hour lecture seminar comprised of a series of intensive sessions.emphasizing personal development and involvement. It is an opportunity for stu dents to build and enhance communication and selling skill§—skills that are essential to entering and progressing in todays’s business world. The ability to sell yourself and express your ideas is seldom learned in the college class room. Texas A&M students now have the op portunity to participate in the Stevens semi nar, which will be conducted January 27 and January 28, 1989 SCHEDULE Friday, January 27 2-7 p.m. MSTC RM. 100 Saturday, January 28 8 a.m.-8 p.m. KLCT RM. 113 COST $5 preregistration fee (Remaining $35 at door) or $45 at the door Securing your college investment by strengthening interpersonal skills essential to entering and progressing