Slouch by Jim Earle “Okay, If you want to make an issue of it, where does it say that two wins in a row is not a winning streak?” Opinion Television tricks aren’t for kids Glued to the tube, many of us grew up with little first hand knowledge of life. Oh sure, we watched Beaver play with friends on TV, and Captain Kangaroo told us how healthy it was to run and read books. But few of us believed him — it was easier to watch the magic. Now a group of parents in an affluent Detroit suburb have realized the danger. They set out 18 months ago to wean their children from television — by coaxing rather than dragging them away from the tube. They say their efforts are working. The program encourages reading, sports, hobbies and other activities that children can enjoy alone or with their families. The program was prompted by national studies indicating the average child was watching 40 hours of TV a week. Those two full-time jobs leave few hours for anything else. The goal is cutting by half the time youngsters spent watching the tube. While not reaching the goal, informal surveys indicate an average 25 to 30 percent drop 4n TV viewing in some households. But it’s still a success. One organizer explained, “Our intention was really to inform parents that they do have a right to say no or yes to what their children watch and that there were many alter natives many people seem to have forgotten about.” We just wish our parents hadn’t forgotten about the al ternatives. the small society by Brickman ^FF-TH^-^UFF FfZ£>AA Of&G .. • amp HAVE A H&W Washington Star Syndicate. Inc. (5 Of /e-z The Battalion U S P S 045 360 LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words and are subject to beini' cut to that length or less if longer. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit such letters and does not guarantee to publish any letter. Each letter must be signed, show the address of the writer and list a telephone number for verification. 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Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editor or of the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration or the Board of MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Liz Newlin Managing Editor Andy Williams Asst. Managing Editor . Dillard Stone News Editors . .Karen Cornelison and Michelle Burrowes Sports Editor . .Sean Petty City Editor Roy Bragg Campus Editor Keith Taylor Focus Editors Beth Calhoun and Doug Graham Staff Writers Meril Edwards, Nancy Andersen, Louie Arthur, Richard Oliver, Mark Patterson, Carolyn Blosser, Kurt Allen Photo Editor . . . Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Photographers Lynn Blanco, Sam Stroder, Ken Herrerra Cartoonist Doug Graham Regents. The Battalion is a non-profit, self- supporting enterprise operated by students ’ as a university and community newspaper. Editorial policy is determined by the editor. Viewpoint The Battalion Texas A&M University Tuesday October 2, 1979 can Analysis Britain’s Open University employs varied curriculum, lofty standards By BRYAN SILCOCK International Writer’s Service LONDON — A good deal of skepticism originally greeted the new educational in stitution when it began. But now, as it narks its 10th year in operation, Britain’s 3pen University is considered a unique success, even by academic professionals. The concept, which is functioning as planned, has been to provide those who lever earned degrees with the chance to ret their college diplomas. More than 33,000 men and women have graduated since the project started, and some 70,000 are currently enrolled. The students, most of them adults with full-time jobs, must fulfill stiff require ments. Typically, they devote about eight hours a week over an eight-year period to completing the courses, studying mainly at home. But the Open University is more than a glorified correspondence school. Central to its operation is a close link with the national television and radio net works of the British Broadcasting Corpora tion. At the planning stage, in fact, its suggested title was the University of the Air. In the early morning and late at night, before or after their regular working hours, students can tune into lectures or televised laboraivets that supplement the written material they use. The BBC also broadcasts longer Open University pro grams on weekends. The Open University is primarily fi nanced by the government, with students paying only modest tuition fees. It actually has a campus, but it is primarily an admin istrative set-up in which its academic staff does its own research, packages new courses and updates old ones. Just as the Open University’s degrees are widely reeved, so its materials are con sidered to be exceptionally good. About 30 other countries around the world now im itate its approach, and many buy its taped and published courses. The high quality of th curriculum is due to the fact that, from the beginning, the Open University recruited a faculty of first-rate professors who have taken a keen interest in their mission. In their view, the curriculum had to be broad in scope, covering subjects ranging from literature and foreign languages to science and technology. Above all, they sought to impose lofty standards, so that the experiment would not be regarded as one of those diploma mills advertised on match-books. In addition to reading, writing, viewing and listening, students can purchase low- cost equipment for their courses. For example, an inexpensive microscope has been developed for their use at home. Open University specialists also furnished advice to a manufacturer to produce a tele scope at reasonable prices. Arrangements have been made as well with 260 univerisities and colleges around Britain, which cooperate by allowing Open University students with access to their libraries and computers. This not only represents an endorse ment of the project by the nation’s tra ditional institutions of high learning. In a practical sense, it also offers dispersed students an opportunity to mingle with each other in different areas. Some 5,200 part-time tutors around the country maintain more or less personal contact with the studnts, grading their exams, commenting on their progress and giving them advice. Each student is assigned a tutor who lives in his or her neighborhood, and they meet periodically. Tutorial sessions are conducted by telephone, too. And every year, during the summer, students must spend a week of residence in a designated study center. Applications for enrollment in the Open Univeristy are currently running about 80,000 per year, of which one-fburth are accepted on a first-come-first-serve basis. No prerequisites are demanded, since, as its name implies, it is truly open to all. The students must be strongly By RHC Bal A Texas At las found a p ting a rare those in a iseases. Dr. James motivated, since they pursue their com after long hours of regular work, ofteni ist who dis noisy children within earshot. Norii iat the find easy to awaken early or go tobedlak irmation for order to catch the television or radioi ich as Tay tures. But the drop-out rate is surprisi rome. small — much lower, in fact, than in: ventional British universities that have snerative a tremely competitive entry tests. With all this, though, the Open t mses malfu veristy has failed to live up to expectali in one respect. Despite the ideali iat part of nzymes is t< hopes of its founders, who would attract many unskilled workers, nd becorm no experience in higher education,! principally appealed to schoolteaei; technicians and other white-collan H ployees who consider an Open Univen degree a a way of advancing their c® Another sizeable category of its st«l( are housewives who may be seeking turn to the jobs after their childrent up or are merely seeking some tellectual stimulation. On the whole, however, the Openl versity has achieved its aim, andl j oar( j pioneering effort, after a decade, come a part of the educational estakli Monday n ig ment here. Silcock writes on science and tecU assengers, for the London Sunday Times, thehi nr special e weekly paper. CUSTOMER COMPLAI NTS ian’s Disea These dis have an digestive om Bj The A&h I appre lew school One of t en student: The oth lassengers Jther stude The requ awarded i cy for a i lisioner of ant Su )onald Ne; ill be subr if Control, then acquir rict under The nev rithin four One way irocess, Su hrson said the assemb Irive the b fhis would lalf, he sail The vote -as 6-0. T bsent fro 5-minute In other conduct co< DICK WE ST ‘May beets grow in your navel’ would work better than ‘denounce By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — One frequently hears the lament that name-calling isn’t what it used to be. Connoisseurs of castigation claim the art of billingsgate is dying — that our flair for vituperation has degenerated into a bland, cliche-ridden obloquy that barely qualifies as insulting. To some extent, these plaints may sim ply be wistful manifestations of the na tional nostalgia binge. Yet they cannot be dismissed out of hand. We have within the past month seen hard evidence of a deprecation breakdown in high places. I refer to the Senate Ethics Committee’s resolution of disapproval di rected at Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga. As the whole world knows, committee members groped desperately for the proper words with which to convey their criticism. They examined such terms as “censure’ and “condemn” in the manner of an old dog worrying a bone — sniffing at them, turning them over with their paws and walking stiff-legged around them. The verb they finally settled on was “denounce,” a compromise, pedestrian choice that some members felt was too highly pejorative but that Talmadge seemed to view as almost a compliment. At some point, probably later this month, the resolution will come before the full Senate for action. It will be subject to amendment on the floor. Which means the Senate will have an opportunity to ex press itself in a more eloquent way than the committee recommended. Before getting involved in these delib erations, senators might do well to borrow my copy of the latest edition of “Maledicta, the International Journal of Verbal Aggression.” Issued twice yearly by the Maledicta Society of Waukesha, Wis., this learned publication provides scholarly compila tions of invectives from all over the world, and explains all the nuances. As the publisher, Reinhold Aman, a former medieval languages and literature professor, put it: “Our main areas of interest are the meaning, origin, history, etymology, use, spread and influence of verbal aggression and verbal abuse of any kind — swear words, insults, terms of abuse, curses. UNIVERSIT IBM damnations, threats, nicknames, and cial, religious, ethnic and sexual slurs stereotypes. ” Surely, out of all that, senators canfii language that articulately sums up sentiments on the Talmadge case. Most of the more forceful phraseswosl be a mite too coarse for senatorial p poses. I did, however, come across» that is a good deal more imaginativetls “denounce.” Imagine how chastened Talmadf would feel if the Senate adopted a resolt tion that said: “May beets growing navel. ” Let the Senate go on record a timei two with that type of malediction and® can bet all lawgivers will start walking® narrow line. Tj Letters Every ticket book-holding student should be given a seat in Kyle Field Editor: During the last Student Senate meeting (Sept. 26), the seating problem for the U. of H. game was discussed. The problem is the anticipated seats, sold over a month ago, versus the actual number of seats ready for the game. Originally the stadium was to be com pleted by the U. of H. game. After the usual construction set-backs, it was finally determined that, for the Houston game, the seating will be as follows: 1. Former Students — the entire west side. 2. High School Career day —- the west side of and end zone in the horseshoe. 3. U. of H. — from the 50 yard line north to the middle of the horseshoe. 4. Aggies — 50 yard line south, bleachers, the second deck, and most of the third deck. Due to weather and construction prob lems, there are less seats than anticipated. The solution dictated to the Student Se nate is as follows: 1. Former Student — the entire west side. 2. High School Career day — standing room on the track with their seats being given to the faculty or Former Students. 3. U. of H. — unchanged. 4. Aggies — 50 yard line south, bleachers, the second deck, that part of the third deck finished, standing room on the track, and G. Rollie White. When I questioned this distribution of tickets I was quickly told that, this is how it is and there is nothing that can be done about it. It may well be too late for the Houston game, but I hope this letter will prevent A&M students (namely freshman) from getting the shaft later. I do not know if we can recall the as yet unsold tickets from U. of H. If we can buy back the tickets before they are sold, then we can give tickets to the pre-sold seats (i.e.ticket books)of Aggie freshman. In the event there are more un- forseen setbacks, and a ticket shortage, more consideration should be given to Aggie students. To do this several options are open: 1. Finish the stadium. 2. Do not send tickets to our opponents until it is known for certain how many seats are available. 3. Regretfully reimburse some Former Students for their seats. (Former Students had their four years, and while they bought a ticket, so did the freshman.) 4. Squeeze Army and fit everybody® Maybe nothing can be done; these solutions are unrealistic; there will not be a shortage. Whateverb case I think it is only fair that every st dent with a ticket book be given a SET IN KYLE FIELD! — Lee Maverick, ’S Editor’s note: This letter was aci panied by six other signatures. THOTZ by Doug Graham