Page 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981 Local Classical quintet lulls audience By RUTH M. DALY Mozart, Bartok and Schumann in Battalion Reporter Rudder Theater while the Charlie An audience of more than 300 Daniels Band whooped and hol- hundred people politely tapped lered in G. Rollie White Coliseum their fingers to the sounds of Thursday night. The Lyric Art Quintet, five fa culty members from the Universi ty of Houston, hypnotized the crowd with three classical num bers in the two-hour long per- FOLLOW TH€ V€LLOUJ BRICK ROAD TO MSC RLL NIT€ FAIR Come dressed os a character F€B. 27 8 p.m.-3 a.m. IN TH€ MSC Review formance presented by the MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society. The group gave a flawless recit al for the well-behaved Aggie crowd. From the beginning of the prog ram, the musicians held the atten tion of the crowd, which came dressed in its Sunday-best. And, believe it or not, no one whooped at the end of the prog ram, although someone did say bravo a few times during the five- minute ovation. Perhaps the best thing the quin tet did for the crowd was make the composers’ music come alive in the minds of the audience. vT ' forms in 201 MSC beginning at 8 p.m. Admission is $3.50and includes admission to the All Nite Fair. Tickets available at Rudder Box Office. in Welch CEN- will begin at HIP: Will meet in the er ‘‘Saturday Night Live” stars Belushi and Dan Aykroyd stage a benefit concert to raise for a needy orphanage, highlighted by their unique blues le. 8 p.m. and midnight in Rudder Theatre. HOUR”: Will be presented at 8 p.m. in r orum. Tickets are available at Rudder Box Office or at ■ ASSOCIATION: The Catholic Graduate students host a Mardi Gras Parade and Dance(costumes option al) at 8 p.m. in the St. Mary’s Student Center. SATURDAY BAKE SALE: The Brazos Valley Food Co-operative will hold a bake sale from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at their store located at 4405 Old College Main, Bryan(across from Grins). Proceeds will help de fray operating expenses. WATER SKI CLUB: Will have an outing at Pecan Lake Park on Lake Somerville from 8 a.m. until dark. Non-members are wel come. Maps are available in the cubicle, 216 MSC. CATHOUC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Work Committee will have a project at St. Mary’s Student Center from 9 a.m. until noon. Lunch provided. Coffeehouse, with refreshments, games and free entertainment will be held from 8-11 p.m. in the student center. MSC ALL NITE FAIR: Will be held in the Memorial Student Center from 8 p.m. to3a.m. Dress as your favorite Oz character. MSC BASEMENT COMMITTEE: The Eric Johnson Band per- CLASS OF ’82 BALL DECORATIONS COMMITTEE: Meets from 10a.m. to 2 p.m. in I^ounge D between Dorms 6&8 towork on decorations. JUMP ROPE FOR HEART CONTEST: Will be held from 10a m to 1 p.m. at the Pemberthy Intramural Center fields to benefit the American Heart Association. RUGBY CLUB: Will play the Houston Heathens at 2 p.m. on the Main Drill Field. ( i PCKiKG CHJrtSSE RC&7AURAX7 4b % .XOOiV BUFFET £3.5© Monday thru Friday — All You Can Eat! SUNDAY & WEDNESDAY EVENING BUFFET #4.25 All You Can Eat! SPECIAL DINNER $3.75 Peking - Szechwan & Cantonese Dishes • Take Out Orders — > — OPEN DAILY: 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. 1313 S. College Ave. 822-7661 Training prepares TAs for classroom positions rein day Vick grat; )ert By SHARON D. RENFROW Battalion Reporter Teaching assistants often catch the ill will of students who feel that TAs don’t have the qualifications to plan, organize and teach an crn PIPES SNUFF spittons pipe racks ROLLING PAPER CIGARS - IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC LIGHTERS/FLUID IMPORTED CIGARETTES CUSTOM BLENDED TOBACCO ^CANDLES THAT KILL TOBACCO ODOht IS THERE LIFE AFTER THE RESIDENCE HALLS? SPECIAL YOU BET YOUR DORM ROOM THERE IS! FREE LARGE SOFT DRINK WITH PURCHASE OF WESTERN OR MEXICAN SPUD {with coupon) GOOD THRU 3-7-81 COME TO A PROGRAM DESIGNED FOR STUDENTS MOVING OFF CAMPUS (espe cially 5th yr. Seniors and Grad, students) UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 775-477S WE ALSO SERVE DELICIOUS SALADS AND 3 DIFFERENT SUPER SANDWICHES! 10 DIFFERENT SUPER POTATOES AND 4 KINDS OF NACHOSI NOTHING OVER 52.691 OPEN 1 I AM-9 PM MON.-SAT. CLOSED SUN. LOCATED AT 403 VILLA MARIA — I BL. WEST OF TEXAS AVE. WHEN: Tuesday March 3, 1981 WHERE: Harrington Tower, Rm. 225 TIME: 7:00 p.m. Sponsored By: RHA & THE OFF CAMPUS CENTER (DEPT. OF STUDENT AFFAIRS) I Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With jyj SC These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. V Cafeteria v fach Da **Y Special Only $2.13 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable' i Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas w chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS. FRIDAY EVENING SATURDAY SUNDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL NOON and EVENING NOON and EVENING BREADED FISH SPECIAL ROASTTURKEY DINNER FILET w/TARTAR Served with SAUCE Yankee Pot Roast Cranberry Sauce Cole Slaw (Texas Salad) Combread Dressing Hush Puppies Mashed Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Choice of one Potato w/ CotfeorTea vegetable gravy Giblet Gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Roll or Corn Bread & Butter And your choice of any Tea or Coffee Tea or Coffee One vegetable 2nd ANNUAL AGGIE SOFTBALL TOURNEY 32 TEAM OPEN March 6 and 7 Double Elimination $35.00 per Team AWARDS: TO 1. INDIVIDUAL TROPHIES FIRST & SECOND 2. TEAM TROPHIES TO FIRST THRU FOURTH 3. MOST VALUABLE PLAYER PLAQUE 4. ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM T- SHIRTS ENTER NOW Call 845-4662 or 845-4681 undergraduate course. But they generally have more than enough skills, say Texas A&M faculty members. “Most departments have a in troductory course to prepare their TAs,” said Dr. George Kunze, dean of the graduate college. Both the departments of chemistry and English have training programs and the Department of Educa tion, Curriculum and Instruction has an analysis course in college teaching, he said. A graduate student can work in any of three areas: research, lab preparation or teaching. Students working on research projects are called graduate assis tant researchers, GARs. They are paid by research grant. A graduate assistant non-teaching, GANT, does research with a professor in lab as well as preparing the labs and grading papers. The graduate student who teaches is a graduate assistant teacherj, GAT, also called TA. TA applicants are screened by department members for acade mic credentials and confidence. Applicants must have a combined graduate record exam score of 800 on the verbal and quantative sec tions and a grade point ratio of 3.0. Kunze gives the final approval on the departments’ choices. According to figures from the office of Institutional Planning and Analysis, TAs made up 28 percent of the teaching body at Texas A&M in Fall 1980. Training prog rams for the 776TAs is a necessity. A TA workshop on teaching strategy and setting objectives for classes is held every January, said Dr. Glenn Johnson, coordinator of the graduate program in the edu cation department. “The work shop is strictly volunteer. It gives the graduate student a chance to whet his appetite.” A workshop is also held for TAs in the English department. Before every semester, faculty and TAs meet and discuss teaching methods for composi tion, said Dr. Forrest Burt, direc tor of graduate English programs. 1RIRM AUTO TUNE “The Inflation Fighters” (Formerly Bill’s & Jay's Auto Tune) ’Quality Service.. Personal Attention" TUNE-UPS & OIL CHANGES... by Appointment Only 846-9086 3611 S. COLLEGE AV. — BRYAN 4 HAPPY HOURS! at ZACHARIAS PUB & GAME ROOM 1. Regular Happy Hour 4-6 p.m. and 2. Happy Hour at the Choice of the Bartender or 5. 2 Surprise Happy Half-hours or 4. Happy Rounds — waitresses make one trip to all tables for a happy round •Beer • mixed Drinks Rock 'n' Roll Every Friday Night “Once they are in our graduate program, we just don’t turn them lo loose, he said. “We feel that we have one of the most highly developed training program for teachers of writing, Burt said. Each semester theTAii assigned a full-time faculty mem ber who advises him, he said. Hie adviser goes over the the assign ments, visits the class, reviews graded themes and writes a sum mary on the TA at the end of the semester, he explained. Communication with theTAsis important in the English depart ment, said Dr. Claude Gibson, director of freshman English. “Ifa TA has a problem he can talktohis adviser, come to me or bring it up in English 697 — a course on teaching composition,’ he said, Most departments do not lei TAs teach without guidance. They are given a syllabus to follow ami are supervised by a professor. “We are given a syllabus to fol low in lab that corresponds with the lecture,” Tim Bundy, a plants and physiology TA, said. “And there is always a professor around in our labs.” Dr. Larry Peck, lab coordinator of the Department of Chemistry, makes sure that every lab TA has an advising faculty member assigned to him. “Some faculty work with the TA verbally and others by use of the syllabus," be said. All TAs must have at least some background, if not a degree, in the department in order to teach init In accounting, a TA is not allowed to teach unless he has had 15to20 hours of accounting, said Dr. Gan Shugart, department head. “We do not give a TA a class unless we are confident he can teach it, he said. “But if we get one bad stu dent evaluation on a TA, we take him out of the classroom.” Regardless of the amount of training and preparation a TA has. there will still be questions he can not answer. “Sometimes a TA doesn’t have all the answers, but neither does a professor,” Bundy said. out Woe not ir pane lie. disci i who li; am gran Tk w^TATE o F’T'ICAL Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN Mon.-Frl. Sat. 822-6105 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 8 a.m.-l p.m. Bob Hope says: “Red Cross can teach you firstaid. And first aid can be a life saver.” A PVdfcS«rv»c»cdThta Newspaper A Th* Adverting Corel $