The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 27, 1990, Image 2

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    The Battalion
OPINION
Monday, August 27,1990
Opinion Page Editor Ellen Hobbs 845^1
ie Bat
londa
Students’ protests
may be effective
Last spring, construction began on a
new wing of the Memorial Student
Center. Twenty-six trees were cut down
or moved to make space for this
addition.
There were a lot of students who
were pretty upset about this. A lot of
moaning and groaning was going on
around campus. But in the end only a
handful of people made strong appeals
on behalf of the trees.
Why didn’t the majority of the people
who wanted the trees to stay speak up?
Because most people believe that
speaking up just doesn’t do any good,
especially in a case like this, when you’re
a lowly peon talking to the rich and
powerful people. Even if there are other
lowly peons who feel the same way.
Well, let me tell you a little story:
This May, Warren Hellmen, trustee
chairman at Mills College in Oakland,
Calif., announced the small, 138-year-
old women’s college would begin
admitting male students in the fall to
increase enrollment and improve Mills’
financial situation.
The Mills College student body was
less than thrilled with this plan. Most of
the women of Mills are there because
they prefer to be taught in a university
created for women. If they had wanted
to be coeds, they would have gone to a
coeducational facility.
The women of Mills protested the
decision. They went on strike. They tied
yellow ribbons around trees. They made
banners and posters and T-shirts. They
even got together with faculty, staff and
alumni and worked up a new plan for
financial support and enrollment
increases to present to the trustees.
Two weeks after the strike and
protests began, Hellmen appeared
before the students wearing the yellow
garb that was a sign of support for the
students’ cause and said, “All of you had
a lot of banners for us. Here’s one for
you.” Then he unfurled a banner that
read, “MILLS. For Women. Again.”
Ellen
Hobbs
Opinion Page Editor
You see, it’s not always so futile.
We need to realize the importance
and the effectiveness of protest. Not
rioting, not imposing on the rights of
others, not censorship or violence or
beligerence, but peaceful, positive
protest.
Some people seem to think that
protest is bad, somethingjust liberal
commies or religious zealots use to get
their own way. But our right to protest
gives us a lever to help us protect our
other rights.
Think about it. If you were billed too
much by the electric company and
called them up to ask them about it, and
they said, “So?” you wouldn’t just let
them get away with it. You’d go to their
offices. You’d write a letter. You’d
throw a little fit right there on the
phone.
But many people seem to feel there
are a lot of things that people or
companies or groups do to us, and even
though we don’t like it, there’s nothing
we can do about it, just because we’re us
and they’re them.
And maybe we can’t always win. But
sometimes we can. And we just can’t
know until we try.
If you feel like something needs to be
said about an injustice, or construction,
or gun control, or fireworks laws, or
whatever, stand up and say something.
Write a letter to a newspaper. Speak at a
meeting. Make a banner. Pass out fliers.
Join an organization. Try to convince
people that you’re right. Help find a
better way to do it. Protest!
Mail Call
Grading policy below ‘average’
EDITOR:
What is the point of retaking a class at Texas A&M if
you don’t end up with the grade you deserve?
It is odd that other universities will give a student a
grade for a class that is based upon the student’s under
standing of the subject whether they have taken the class
for a second time or not. But here at A&M, if a student
takes a class more than once, their grades for the class are
averaged. So if a student fails algebra once and gets an A
the second time, their grade is a C.
This policy is ridiculous and unfair to the students. It
punishes students for having the drive to try to improve
their grade-point ratio and their understanding of the sub
ject because even the highest grade in the class will warrent
a mediocre GPR.
The grading policy should be changed. Rather than av
eraging the grades of retaken classes, the new grade should
replace the old one and credit should only be given fortJ
ing one class. 1
James Saxon, graduate student
Savannah Gorrell ’91
EDITOR’S NOTE: The 1989-90 Texas A&M Undergrad
uate Catalog says: “Credit for a course failed may 1* J
tained only by registering and repeating the course ij
class. The original grade will remain on the student’s pe r .
manent record, and both grades will be used in compm,
ing the GPR. An F or U previously made is not removed
once the course is passed.”
Have an opinion ? Express it!
Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff ri .
serves the right to edit letters for style and length, but will make every effort tom,,
tain the author’s intent. There is no guarantee that letters submitted a,jDjJ
printed. Each letter must be signed and must include the classification, addnssai:
telephone number of the writer.
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Clip ’n’ save this handy guide to the Opinion Page
This is an easy-to-
understand guide to The
Battalion Opinion Page. I hope
that it will answer some of the
questions you have about Page
2. If you have any other
questions, the Opinion Page
editor can be reached at 845-
3314.
Please participate in the
Opinion Page. Write us and get
yourself in print!
I want to submit a letter to the
editor. What do I do?
First, write a letter. A letter
to the editor can be up to 300
words in length, or a little more
than one page, typewritten and
single spaced (you don’t have
to type it —just make sure we
can read it). If you want to
write something longer than
that, you may submit a
Reader’s Opinion, which I’ll
explain in a minute.
You can either mail your
letter to The Batt, or you can
bring it by. Our newsroom is in
216 Reed McDonald (the
building on the corner with the
Bus Stop Snack Bar, on the
j^north side of campus). Our
The Battalion
(USPS 045 360)
Member of
Texas Press Association
American Collegiate Press
The Battalion Editorial Board
Cindy McMillian,
Editor
Timm Doolen, Managing Editor
Ellen Hobbs, Opinion Page Editor
Holly Becka, City Editor
Kristin North,
Meg Reagan,
News Editors
Nadja Sabawala,
Sports Editor
Eric Roalson, Art Director
Lisa Ann Robertson,
Lifestyles Editor
mailing address is Mail Call,
230 Reed McDonald, Texas
A&M University, College
Station, Texas 77843-1111. If
you want to use campus mail,
we’re at Mail Stop 1111.
If you’re a student
submitting a letter, make sure
to include your class year —the
number, not the words (instead
of senior, say Class of ’91.
WHOOP!) — your student I.D.
and phone number, and your
major. If you work on campus
and are not a student, tell us
where you work.
If you bring your letter to
The Batt, make sure to bring
your A&M I.D. or, if that’s not
possible, your driver’s license.
If you mail your letter, expect a
call from us to verify that you
are who you say you are.
Our policy says that all
letters must be signed by one
or more individuals. No group
can take responsibility for one
letter. If a lom^list of
Editorial Policy
The Battalion is a non-profit, self-sup
porting newspaper operated as a commu
nity service to Texas A&M and Bryan-
College Station.
Opinions expressed in The Battalion
are those of the editorial board or the au
thor, and do not necessarily represent the
opinions of Texas A&M administrators,
faculty or the Board of Regents.
The Battalion is published Monday
through Friday during Texas A&M regu
lar semesters, except for holiday and ex
amination periods. Newsroom: 845-3313.
Mail subscriptions are $20 per semes
ter, $40 per school year and $50 per full
year: 845-2611. Advertising rates fur
nished on request: 845-2696.
Our address: The Battalion, 230 Reed
McDonald, Texas A&M University, Col
lege Station, TX 77843-1111.
Second class postage paid at College
Station, TX 77843.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald,
Texas A&M University, College Station
TX 77843-4111.
signatures is given, we will
print the first signature and
indicate how many other
signatures were on the letter.
No anonymous letters will be
printed. There must be a name
printed with each letter.
We edit for grammar,
spelling, length and style. We
will not, however, change the
essence of your letter.
Please don’t expect your
letter to be printed the same
day you turn it in. It may take
us a few days, or even longer,
to get your letter typed into
our computer system, verify it
and find room for it on the
page. We deal with a great
volume of letters, and
sometimes it takes us a while to
get them all printed.
There is no guarantee that
your letter will oe printed. We
try to print all the letters, but
sometimes, for a variety of
reasons, we just can’t. Don’t let
that discourage you —most of
the time we print everything
we get.
What’s this about Reader’s
Opinions?
Anything that is submitted
that is too long for Mail Call
can end up being a Reader’s
Opinion column.
Your Reader’s Opinion will
be edited just like a letter. The
shorter and more concise your
column, the less the chance
that it will be cut.
If you submit a Reader’s
Opinion, include the same
information you would include
with a letter to the editor.
No more than three
Reader’s Opinions will be
printed per person per
semester.
I like to write stuff on word
processors. What if I want to
bring in a letter or a column
on a disk? Can The Batt load it
directly into their computers?
We can load submissions
from many Macintosh or XT
systems very quickly. If you
want to submit items on disks,
submit both the disk and a
hard copy. Chances are it won’t
take as long to be printed as it
would if we had to get it typed
in by hand. I’ll make sure you
get your disks back.
What’s the difference
between editorials and
Adventures In Cartooning
columns?
Editorials are the opinion of I
The Battalion as a whole. The]j
are written and selected by a
majority of t he members of
The Battalion Editorial Board,
which is made up of The
Battalion editors that are
named in the box at the bottom]
of this page.
Editorials appear in the
upper left-hand corner of Page]
2, are boxed and shaded, and
have the words “The Battalion!
Editorial Board” printed at the j
bottom.
Opinions found in columns
are tne opinions of the
individual columnists, not the
whole newspaper as a whole,
just as the opinions in MailCalll|
letters and Reader’s Opinions
are only the opinions of the
individual writers.
The Battalion does not
regulate the topic choices or
viewpoints of our columnists.
Well, that’s it —Page 2 in a
nutshell. Keep forming f
opinions, and happy reading
Ellen Hobbs is a senior
journalism major. 0t ,
by Don Atkinson Jr
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