tandards raised Honor grads to need higher GPRs at A&M THE BATTALION Page 7 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1978 / honors standards for jaduating seniors have been estab- jlied at Texas A&M University to Jeet a student government request Iraise the requirements. ■The higher standards will affect l)re than 12,000 freshmen and Insfer students this fall and could It the number of honor graduates I half. Approximately one-third of |e Texas A&M seniors graduated th honors this past year. The idea of making it tougher to aduate with honors came from the adent senate, explained Dr. J. M. 1 rescott, vice president for academic affairs. “The student lead ers felt that so many students were graduating with the title that it was starting to lose its meaning.” “The new requirements will affect any student wbo entered the uni versity after June, he continued. The old requirements made it possible for any student to graduate with honors by having a grade point average of 3.25 or better on Texas A&M s 4.0 grading scale. Dr. Pre scott noted. The new requirements raised the mininum grade point average for a cum laude graduate to 3.5. Magna cum laude distinction went from 3.5 to 3.7 under the stricter standards. To obtain the highest academic distinction of all, summa cum laude, Texas A&M students must now have an average of at least 3.9. The old average was 3.75. “These new requirements could cut the number of honor graduates in half, ” said Robert Baine, assistant registrar. “Some 30 percent of the students who graduated with bachelor s degrees this spring were honor graduates. “That means roughly one out of every three received honor status,” he added. “How many will graduate with honors under the new re quirements is anyone’s guess.” University officials said, however, that high grades don’t necessarily point to “grade inflation,” a situation that occurs when professors give high grades when not academically merited. A study conducted within Texas A&M’s College of Engineering, which accounts for some 25 percent of all students at the university, showed that since 1970 students’ grades dropped one-tenth of one percent. Some students welcome the stric ter academic requirements. “I’m all for it,” said Tom Pater son, executive vice president of the Texas A&M Student Senate. “If you’re going to have an honor, it should actually by one.” “This will say to students that Texas A&M demands excellence,” said Patterson, a senior agricultural economics major. “If people want the distinction of graduating with honors, then they’re going to have to work for it.” 1 Texans might could ^ CotlYltvy of 'p&V&doXCS like talking thataway nd Cam- United Press International AlSTIN — Twenty years ago bases such as “might could” and night ought to were used only by wt Texas farmers and other rural ■ But according to Marianna Di laola, a University of Texas linguis- Bcs instructor, more and more piddle-class people are using night could and "might ought to - called double modal auxiliaries - in their conversations. Ms. Di Paola said Texans — espe- ially under 35 — are resorting to ialectial speech to declare them- dves different from newcomers to Lone Star State. And the linguistics instructor has vidence that dialectial speech is ecoming common in the every day wiversaton of many Texans. Over the past two years, students Ms. Di Paola s classes have asked ieir parents and friends to fill in blanks of dialogues such as the mowing: if someone says to you, “I’m loing to the store, can you use some Ms. Di Paola said most of the par ticipants answered with might could" or “might ought to” — and they were anything but backwoods farmers. Most of the participants were urban residents, well educated and native Texans. Ms. Di Paola explained said the use of double modal auxiliaries among educated urbanites is a phenomenon that has been ob served only recently. Prior to the dialect projects of her classes, most When you say, you might could do that,' you're also saying you're a Texan and proud of it. Texam are resorting to dialec- 8 P eec ^ 1 declare themselves afferent from newcomers to the [one Star State. ” you answer: “I might fuse some. —il you think someone has a job |to do but you’re not sure, you might suggest.“You might do this.” liguists considered use of double modal auxiliaries to be a colloquial, rural phenomenon. It means that colloquial speech has become a "prestige ruralism, ” Ms. Di Paola said. “It’s a sign that Texans are more aware than ever before of their heritage and proud of it. She said the Texas dialect survey compares with one conducted Martha’s Vineyard, an old Mas sachusetts sailing community that has become a resort area. Ms. Di Paola said that younger native resi dents of the community were using words and sounds that were com mon among the ofd-time sailors of the island. “When you say, ‘I might could do that,’ you’re also saying you’re a Texan and proud of it.” finds racial accord Greyhound R x - The cure for college blahs. It's a feeling that slowly descends upon you. The exams, the pop tests, the required reading, the hours at the library, the thesis— they won’t go away. But you can. This weekend, take off, say hello to your friends, see the sights, have a great time. You’ll arrive with money in your pocket because your Greyhound trip doesn’t take that much out of it. If you’re feeling tired, depressed and exhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It’s a sure cure for the blahs. Greyhound Service To One- Way Round- Trip You Can Leave You Arrive Blanktown 0.00 00.00 0:00 P.M. 0:00 PM Blanktown 0.00 00.00 0:00 P.M. 0:00 PM Blanktown 0.00 00.00 0:00 P.M. 0:00 P.M Blanktown 0.00 00.00 0:00 PM. 0:00 PM Blanktown 0.00 00.00 0:00 P.M. 0:00 P.M Ask your agent about additional departures and return trips. (Prices subject to change.) Greyhound Agent Address Phone GO GREYHOUND United Press International MANZINI, Swaziland — It is a land of sharp contrasts between white and black, rich and poor, but Swaziland in 10 years of indepen dence has struck a racial accommo dation that is rare in Africa. Britain granted independence to the tiny, 10,000-square-miles king dom on Sept. 6, 1968, and the capi tal city of Manzini this month was bedecked with brilliantly colored banners marking the decade of self- rule. King Sobhuza II, the Ngwanyama (Lion) of Swaziland, has managed since independence to maintain a sense of unity and stability despite the startling — and sometimes bizarre — contrasts that charac terize his nation. White South Africans flock to elegant hotels and casinos in Mbabane, where they can see back-to-back pornographic movies and Las Vegas style nightclub acts prohibited in their own country. But only miles away, young Swazi girls walk bare-breasted carrying tall veeds to celebrate tbe “{estival of virgins marking their entrance into puberty. There is also a stark contrast bet ween tbe vast sugar cane plantations that exist side by side with subsis tence agriculture. It is a land of grinding poverty and shining elegance, ancient ways of life mixed with the 20th century. It is sandwiched between apartheid South Africa and socialist Mozam bique — and maintains friendly re lations with both. Ionian oestit* iitw Study shows pss visibility h compacts I Drivers of compact cars and many ptermediate and full- size autos Wd take extra care on hills and ^rves, a Texas A&M U ersity nows. Their choice of automobile has igcAficantiy lowered tbe level at ™ich they view traffic. They there- nresee less, increasing the chances f accident. Highway grade and no-passing one disign assumes driver eye might of 3.75 feet, an average ob tained from 1960 studies. A 1978 investigation by Texas M researchers Wiley Cunagin ind Tony Abrahamson found it is Ifpow critically lower. For many drivers, eye height is marly less than 3.5 feet,” com mented Cunagin, a research as- °ciate with the Texas Transporta tion Institute. Some drivers therefore have less ’ight distance on vertical curves to a lesser degree, on horizon- al curves, the researchers’ report mdicates. Their study indicates considera- ion should be given to modification ^striping for no passing zones and tesign of curves. Current standards do not allow sufficient time for lower cars to re- ro to their lane,” Cunagin com mented. “The sight distance is just insufficient. ” Abrahamson and Cunagin ev aluated driver eye height mea surements from 161 side view Photographs of different passenger $rs and pickup trucks. Their sam ple included 62 small and subcom- Pact cars, 86 intermediate and full- size models and 13 pickup trucks. the VARSITY SHOP HAIR CARE FOR GUYS & GALS 301 PATRICIA NORTHGATE 846-7401 REDKEN manSE e!A5T mall Texas at Villa Maria M-F 10-8:30 Sat. 10-6 SmanSnnMHi THE INSTITUTE OF CHRISTIAN ACADEMICS The ICA includes: • Ten thought-jogging hours of instruction and discussion. • A help-filled notebook of essays, outlines and resource materials. In schools and universities alike, issues and entire fields of study are often presented in conflict with biblical Christianity. Most Christians are neither equipped nor well enough in formed to resolve these areas of tension. Today there is a growing need for Christians to build a foundation upon which to stand and speak. The Institute of Christian Academics is designed for: STUDENTS*. . . who encounter these tensions almost daily, who are often ridiculed in their attempts to defend their faith, and who generally suffer in silence. How To Relate Your Faith To Your World Registration Date: September 22-23 Cost: $15.00 per couple $10.00 per single (includes large notebook of essays) Location: Grace Bible Church Schedule Registration: Friday 6:00 PM Fr jg a v ’ 7:00 PM-9:30 PM Saturday: 8:45 AM-4:30 PM 7:00 PM-9:00 PM Despite the abounding contrasts, a visitor discovers that white and black have struck an understanding which makes Swaziland refreshingly free of the racism practiced elsewhere in Africa. “We are all brothers here,” a black hotel matron in Manzini tells a white visitor. “We eat together from the same plate.” One key to Swaziland’s success is that the 10,000 or so whites have been allowed to retain their economic dominance while political power is lodged in the hands of the 79-year-old Sobhuza. There are roughly half a million Swazis. Whites hold the top positions in the hotels and casinos, in the shops and department stores and on the sugar cane plantations that provide Swaziland with its largest export. “Swaziland is governed by blacks, but it is run by whites,” said one white Swazi. To be sure, Sobhuza is pressing his localization program, which calls for the gradual replacement of Rother’s Bookstore Full Line of Custom T-Shirts & Caps 340 Jersey — At the Southgate whites by blacks. He issued a veiled warning to whites in his speech on Sept. 6 commemorating the 10 years of independence from Britain. Two can ride cheaper than one. ^UcvKfihgie-^n (mein BUSINESS COLLEGE Inquire About Our Term Startingl September 26 Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368 French's Care-A-Lot OPEN FOR A&M FOOTBALL LOCATED BEHIND BEEF & BREW OFF HWY. 30 CALL 846-1037 FOR RESERVATIONS! jTIHEAIE CILAjfJf Backs the Aggies! Lunch time in the patio of our La Rojefui distdlei'y. When our workers sit down to lunch they sit down to a tradition. When they make Cuervo Gold it’s the same. Every day at just about eleven the wives from Tequila arrive at the Cuervo distillery bearing their husbands 1 lunches. Lunches that have been lovingly prepared in the same proud manner since men first began working here in 1795. It is this same pride in a job well-done that makes Cuervo Gold truly special. Any way you drink it, Cuervo Gold will bring you back to a time when quality ruled the world. liMN cmfifil Cuervo.The Gold standard since1795. CUERVO ESPECIAL® TEQUILA. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1977 HEUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD, CONN.