The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1984 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE 2
FRIO - NUECES PUBLICATIONS, LTD
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY23,1984
THE COTULLA RECORD, COTULLA. TEXAS
TONY SAN MIGUEL is assessed by Mrs. G.S. Nash.
The assessment will serve as an aid in planning an
Individual Education Plan. The IEP ia just one part of
the program taking place daily at the Special
Education Classes at Welhausen School in Cotulla. Go
by and see the children and volunteer your services tn
help.
Junior High Perfect Attendance
FIRST SEMESTER
PERFECT ATTENDANCE
8th GRADE
Paul Alvarado, Dale Avant.
Robin Casillas. Veronica Col-
chado. Benny Flores. Rachel R.
Flores. Mary Jane Ganna.
Mireja Garcia, Leticia Garza.
Refugio Garza. Javier Gonzales.
Edward Hinojoaa. Myra Vela.
Nora Villarreal, Laura Weather-
ford. Genoro Reyes, Tina
Garza. Mancela Martinez.
Sharon Me Lennen, Lorena
Mejia, Gilbert Niaves, Sally
Lynn Nickell, Marcelo Perez,
Michelle Perez. Jo Ann Ramirez.
Melissa H. Reyes. Enedina
Rios. Roddy Salazar. Hilda
Soto
7th GRADE
Micheal Adams, Virgilio
Alaniz. Dickie Alvarado, Jesus
Alvarado. George Ayala. Mel-
issa Coichado, Jim Tobe Craw-
ford. Reynaldo De Leon. Arturo
De Los Santos, Joee Rogelio
Del Toro, Nathan Ehlert, Hea-
ther Ellisor, Marganto Flores,
Jr., Brian Garcia, Juan M
Gonzalez, Robert Hearn, Roxie
Lee Hillje, Paula Lann. Ismael
Martinez. Carlos Nichols.
Indira Ortiz, Christy Patterson,
Annabelle Quiroz, Jesus Rod-
nguez, Raquel Salazar, Donna
Schek, Michelle Sosa, Inez
Zarate. Silver Zertuche. Paulino
Bernal. Sandra Garza, Jesus
Adams
NEWMAN JR HIGH
SEMESTER GR
Heather Elliaor, Marganto
Flores, Jill Northcut, Johnny
Perez, Donna Schek, Wilbur
Tenery.
3rd 6 WEEKS
Marganto Flores, Effie
Maldonado, Jill Northcut,
Johnny Perez.
SEMESTER GR
A&B
Michael Adams, Virgilio
Alaniz, Susy Alvarado, Sammi
Benson, Sandia Castor, Melissa
Coichado, Jim Crawford,
Reynaldo De Leon, Nathan
Ehlert, Chriatan Franklin,
Brian Garda, Priadlla Garcia,
Jesus Gauna, Juan Gonzalez,
Roel Gonzalez, Roxie Hilfje,
Reese Kerr, Paula Lann, Effie
Maldonado. Frank Montague.
Indira Ortiz, Christy Patterson,
Dana Rose. Victor Sotelo. Mat-
ilda Zertuche.
3rd 6 WEEKS
A&B
Michael Adams, Virgilio
Alaniz, Sandra Castor, Jim
Crawford, Reynaldo De Leon,
Nathan Ehlert, Heather EUi-
sor, Christen Franklin. Brian
Garcia, Jesus Gauna. Roel
Gonzalez. Roxie Hillje, Paula
Lann, Dana Roes, Donna Schek,
Victor Sotelo, Wilbur Tenery
Sth GRADE
SEMESTER GR.
A
Jerri Calloway, Janice Ehlert.
Brenda Hill, Lynn Nickell,
Herminia Rios, Nora Villarreal.
3rd 6 WEEKS
A
John A. Harvey, Brenda Hill,
Lynn Nickell, Hernuma Rios,
Nora Villarreal
SEMESTER GR
A&B
IMle Avant, Tammy Brown,
Jerri Calloway, Enedilia Casi-
llas. Robin L. Casillas, Arturo
Castillo, Veronica Coichado,
Eliza Diaz, Tony Garcia, Leticia
Garza, Javier Gonzalez, John A.
Harvey, K'Raeaa Hillje, Angie
Kerr, Deai Martinez. Maraahe
McBryde. Sandy Ortiz. Marcelo
Perez, Michelle Perez, Enedina
Rioe, Laura Weatherford.
3rd 6 WEEKS
A&B
Jesumta Cantu, Robin L. Cas-
illas. Arturo Castillo, Veronica
Coichado, Janice Ehlert. Tony
Garcia, Leticia Garza, Refugio
Garza, Humberto Gonzalez,
Javier Gonzalez, K'Reeea
Hillje. Angie Kerr. Lorena
Mejia. Marsalie McBryde,
Marcelo Perez, Michelle Perez,
Mario Ramirez. Enedina Rios.
Laura Weatherford, Hedy
Woodul.
Special Ed Is Really Special
The Cotulla
Record
PUBLISHEDEVERY THURSDAY
A Frio-Nueces
Publication Ltd.
interested. If in the publication of the news wa
FARM A RANCH DIVISION
Weather
IRA, Keogh
Pension Plans
salt
•Not insured by FSLIC
EffiC
$12-271-7111
1100 442 *72*
TEXAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
at any time. But at least once
a year a meeting, usually
referred to as an ARD, must
be scheduled to review the
Linda Flowers
Managing Editor
'984
■MEN
education
Welhausen
clear the
:RQpnnf
fuel
Mrs. Sandra Reddell
Advertising Manager
William E . Dozier, Jr.
General Partner
BARNES LBR. 02457L
302 N. FRONT ST.
P. 0. BOX 739
Guaranteed by GN A
Call any Gill Savings branch for
more information
Issued by GNA Life Insurance
Company
Regional Corporate Offices
Austin, Texas
FSLIC
INSURED tsS
Lewis A. Reddell II
Editor and
General Manager
Following a drastic change
in the weather, rain was
reported throughout most of
South Texas Monday. Rain
was falling in the following
cities Monday: Austin, San
Antonio, Victoria, Corpus
Christi, Alice, Brownsville
and Harlingen. . Light rain
fell overnight in Cotulla.
Snow reported in Brown
and Coleman counties. Hail
and sleet was reported in
northern areas of Bexar
County.
propane
torch
osterous. Aside from the ob-
jection which arises from its
unprotected situation; the dis-
tance, it is from the settled part
of the country and the diffi-
culty of access, and the almost
total want of communication with
the rest of the world, stamp
the measure as an act of folly,
to say the least. The very reverse
of each of these objections holds
true with regard to Houston.
This city, beyond a question,
is the best point in the Republic
for extensive and rapid commun-
ication by water and by land,
with the whole country - it is
the most populous and central
town, and we may add, has even
shown the greatest readiness
in time of threatened danger,
to meet the tide and roll it back.
When His Excellency, by
such efforts of childish passion
strive to repress the rising en-
ergies and advancing pros-
perity of this city, we should
only smile at his impotence did
we not reflect that in thus att-
empting to stab us, he strikes
through the bosom of the
country!
HOUSTON MORNING STAR
MARCH 6. 1840
CONSTRUCTION DIVISION
frv-tagkmnt Dehe
Fo< FREE .idd.bonji ,formation on Homestead Hints and on THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS magazine send your
name and address and as*> tor Reprint No 1244 Mother s Oo«n Home Country Lore Wr.te to Doing MORE
With LESS1 105 Stoney Mountain Road Hendersonville. N C 28791 or in care nt this paper
Copyright '984 THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS Inc
4. Individualized
Educational Programs -
Individualized educational
programs, often referred to
as lEP's are written
documents that summarize a
handicapped child's learning
program.
5. IEP Periodic Review -
Any parent may request a
review or revision of the IEP
programs cannot
the specific needs of
child, then services
be delivered through
agencies at public
dendale Cafe as well as the
water tower.
Since the museum opened on
December the third seventy
some odd people have signed
the guest register which I find
encouraging.
I receive a publication entitled
the ‘Texas National Dispatch''
which is the newspaper of the
Texas 1986 Sesquicentennial
Commission. In the news from
the Republic we find the follow-
ingarticle.
"We understand that orders
have been received from the
President, to remove all the arms
of Government from this dty,
and cause this place to cease
to be a military depot. We would
much rather sustain the meas-
ures of any administration
in this country, then decry them:
but when a step like this is taken,
having so clearly for its motive,
a petty pique and malice against
the citizens of one portion of
the country, rather than a desire
to promote the good of the
whole; when we see the head of
the Government so far forget
the dignity of his station, as to
make his public acts subserve
to gratify his private malice,
we cannot and will not be silent.
The idea of making Austin
the only place to depoeite for
the arms of the country is prep-
2nd Class pontage paid at Cotnlla, Texan
78014. Entered In the Pont Office at Cotnlla,
Texas Febrnary 19, 1898 an Second One* MaM
Matter under Act of March 3, 1879.
It ia the intention of the RECORD to pubtiah
all the newa which the public in entitled to
There is much curiosity
and misconcepts that
surround the term Special
Education. The term special
education has been defined
in many ways by many
people. Generally speaking
special education is a free
public school education for a
child with special learning
needs These needs may
range from the child who is
severely retarded to that of
the child who is diagnosed as
a genius. Both children have
special learning needs which
cannot be met in the regular
classroom environment.
210 N IH 36. P O Box 523,
Cotulla Texaa 78014. 512 3712316
business or group we will correct sdeh error
ss soon ss possible after it is brought to out
st tent ion by whoever may properly claim to
have been offended or mierepreeented.
Poetmaster: 'Send fora P 83679 to
P.O. Drawer C, Cotulla, Tx. 79014
appropriateness of the childs
IEP.
The children at Welhausen
School may receive
3. Least Restrictive En-
vironment - It is recognized
that it is important for the
child with special learning
needs to have experiences
with all kinds of children.
Schools are required to
educate handicapped
children to as great an extent
as possible in regular school
settings. Placement in
separate buildings should
take place only when the
services are so specialized
that they could not possibly
be provided in the regular
school building.
specialized instructions for a
full day, a half day or 2 one-
half hours, depending upon
the child needs. Related
services are also provided
for Speech Therapy, Oc-
cupation Therapy, Physical
Therapy and Diagnostic
Assessments.
The special
teachers here at
work very to
misconcepts and stigmas
that are associated with
special education. The goal
of the special educator is the
same as that of the regular
educator and that is:
Providing instructions from
which children learn and
enjoy at the same time. After
all there are many great
Americans that were or are
labeled as handicapped. A
few of these are: Sammy
DAVIS Jr. - singer and ac-
tor; Guadalupe Quintanilla •
Assistant Provost at the
University of Houston and
Franklin D. Roosevelt - U.S.
President and the list could
gw on and on.
SAVINGS
Positive about our future. And yours.
1975, the
Han-
Act
94-142
On Nov. 29,
Education for All
dicapped Children
became Public Law
(PL 94-142). This
authorized grants of money
to the states to assist them in
initiating, expanding and
improving programs for the
education of children with
special needs. The purpose
of the law was to insure all
children of their rights.
Doing MORE...With LESS!
Ay the staff of
CHOOSE
YOUR
ROAD TO
"/OPPORTUNITY.
These rights include the
following:
1. Free Appropriate
Education - A child with
special learning needs is
entitled to free educational
services to meet these needs.
If school
meet
the
must
other
expense.
2. Parental Placement
Consent - Every decision
affecting a handicapped
child must have parental
consent.
11.515%
Current Annualized Yield*
• IK Months
• Interest compounded
continuously
Insured
Investment
Money Market
Account
10%
Investment: $2,500 and up
$2,500 minimum investment
to open this account
Regulations allow a total of
6 transactions a month, 3 by
check. 3 by pre-authorized
or telephone transfers ($300
minimum per transaction)
Rates subject to change the
1st of each month.
(THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS
MOTHER E APT h NEWS is .4 (pqistpred trademark o’ The MOTHER EARThnEWS i
THE ART OF REMOVING SPOTS
There's a whole branch of home chem-
istry for removing stains that's developed
over the years. Unfortunately, however,
some of the spot-lifting formulations that
worked just fine in 1899 or 1938 won t
help much in 1984
Why? Because back when Aunt Nell
found that she could remove ink stains
from colored cottons with a paste of dried
mustard and wa'er, for example, the ink
she banished was chemically different
from the liquid your ballpoint pen just
leaked into your shirt pocket And to
complicate matters further, that new gar-
ment probably isn t cotton either. In fact,
it s likely to be made of some fiber com-
bination that Aunt Nell never even sus-
pected might someday exist.
Still, while we re discovering a new body of stain-removing lore, there's not much to
lose by trying the old ways. You can. for instance, treat a paint spot in fabric with
equal parts of turpentine and ammonia If the paint is the traditional oil-based for-
mula and not some newfangled plastic composition, the spot will often come out
Luckily, some substances don t change: human sweat, for example You can still re-
move a perspiration mark by dampening the spot, sprinkling it heavily with borax,
lightly rolling up the article, and leaving it for 15 minutes Rinse the area with cold
water and the stain should be gone
Many lessons about removing stains are learned in the school of trial and error. A
lot of readers of THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS have been to that institution them-
selves. and they've written to tell us about the tips they've learned Here are a few
you'll probably find helpful
If you need to remove a grease or oil spot from wool, sponge it with water and sprin
kle the stain with baking soda Let the powder dry and then gently brush it off
If the insides of your aluminum pots and pans have become stained by cooking, you
can brighten them easily by boiling apple parings in them for a short time
Discolored wooden cutting boards can be whitened by rubbing them with lemon
rinds turned inside out and then sponging off the wood with warm water
Scorched milk has a terrible odor that seems to linger A little salt sprinkled on any
milk that boils onto the stove will both stop the burning and. to a large degree, neutra-
lize the unpleasant smell
In fact, used like scouring powder, salt cleanses all sorts of things: discolored coffee
pots and cups, wood table tops, or oilcloth Dissolved in hot water, the same chemical
cleans bamboo furniture, drains, and the inside of bottles. Made into a paste with
flour and vinegar, it does wonders for tarnished brass or copper Leave this home-
made polish on the metal for an hour or so. rub it off with a soft cloth, and wash the
item Mixed with turpentine, salt also whitens bathtubs and washbowls
Road tar and asphalt that splatters up and sticks to an automobile is almost impos-
sible to remove unless you saturate the spots with linseed oil Allow the oil to soften
the tar for a few minutes, and you'll find that the grime rubs right off with a piece of
coarse cloth
also available.
Call nearest GUI Savinas
Branch for current rates.
• Initial Investment: $50.00
• Minimum Additions: $25 00
• No Fees or Service Charges
‘Based on a rate of 10.75%
History
(Continued from page 1)
SUBSCRIPTION RATES PER YEAR:
r. *
La Salle and adjoining eonntleo,,,. (7 gg
Elsewhere............................
High Yield
Tax Deferred
Gill Annuity*
11%
Current Annualized Yield
$5,000 Minimum Deposit
F ebruary
13
79
F ebruary
14
50
F ebruary
14
86
F ebruary
15
64
F ebruary
15
81
F ebruary
16
49
F ebruary
16
81
February
17
64
F ebruary
17
83
F ebruary
18
67
F ebruary
18
81
February
19
53
February
19
53
February
20
47
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Reddell, Lewis A., II & Flowers, Linda. The Cotulla Record (Cotulla, Tex.), Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1984, newspaper, February 23, 1984; Cotulla, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1175409/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Alexander Memorial Library.