The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 06, 1982, Image 2

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    opinion
Slouch By Jim Earle
“I can see it in your eyes that you*re ready for football
season again.”
Letters: Sign-up
demolition derby
Editor:
Have you experienced the latest sport
ing event which I call the “Human De
molition Derby” or HDD for short? This
sport is very similar to the football game
called “Kill the Man with the Ball.” Next
semester, I am going to start my own
business and sell football pads and equip
ment to participants. This should be a
good investment due to HDDs increasing
popularity. It occurs every weeknight at 6
p.m. and if you haven’t guessed by now,
the sport is better known as Job Interview
Sign-up.
Today’s sign-up method is done by
randomly placing companies in different
lines. At 6 p.m., these companies and line
numbers are called out and sign-up is on
a first-come-first-served basis. This is
very similar to “Kill the Man with the
. Ball.”
I always believed that the whole pur
pose of the interview process was to give
everyone a fair and equal sign-up oppor
tunity but this is not occuring due to line
cutting. There may be only 20 people in
front of you during a pre-line set-up but
after the line number is called out there
will probably be more than 40 people in
front of you. (Pre-line set-up is the
method of gambling and forming a line
prior to knowing what companies are
going to be in that particular line. This
gambling has become extremely popular
as more aand more people try to get in
terviews.)
The other main problem is the sign-up
location. This is on the second floor of
Rudder Tower. This room is about the
size of a small backyard. Now imagine
having a family reunion with about 300
people. I think the problem is quite evi
dent.
My solution to these problems is that
all interview sign-ups should be done by
lottery. Dorm sign-up has changed over
to this method and it is working quite
well. Students would enter their ID num
ber for each company they wished to in
terview with and some sort of drawing
would be held.
I sincerely hope something will be
done very soon or next year we may be
paying to watch students play HDD.
Randy S. Reed ’83
Bike stolen
Editor:
I’d like to thank all the good Ags who
saw my bicycle being picked up and car
ried away Thursday from the MSC. The
wheels were locked together, so it must
have been rather obvious to someone
that something was going on.
The bike wouldn’t be worth much to
anyone else. It only has three speeds and
has been rebuilt several times in the past
20 years. You see, the bike belonged to
my father — he bought it shortly after I
was born. When I was old enough to ride
it by myself, he rebuilt and gave it to me.
Thursday, it was lent to a friend who has
no car, no bus pass and no bike, and later
it disappeared.
If you’ve got it, I hope you can realize
that it means more to me than transpor
tation and return it to where you got it. If
you saw it being taken or have seen it
since (it’s red, with a black seat and white
handle bars, with a Wichita Kansas bike
plate on the back) please let me know. It
would mean a lot to me and my father.
Tracey Taylor
696-3062
The Battalion
USES 045 360
Member of
Texas Press Association
Southwest Journalism Conference
Editor Diana Sultenfuss
Managing Editor Phyllis Henderson
Associate Editor Denise Richter
City Editor Bernie Fette
Assistant City Editor Gary Barker
Sports Editor Frank L. Christlieb
Entertainment Editor Nancy Floeck
Assistant Entertainment Editor Colette
Hutchings
News Editors Rachel Bostwick, Cathy
Capps, Daniel Puckett, Jan Werner,
Todd Woodard
Staff Writers Jennifer Carr, Susan
Dittman, Beverly Hamilton,
John Lopez, Robert McGlohon
Hope E. Paasch, Bill Robinson,
Dana Smelser, Joe Tindel, John
Wagner, Rebeca Zimmermann
Cartoonists John Groce, Scott McCullar
Graphic Artist Pam Starasinic
Photographers . .. David Fisher, Octavio Garcia,
Jane Hollingsworth, Janet Joyce,
Peter Rocha, John Ryan, Colin
Valentine
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—
—
Battalion/Page I
September 6,19$|
I
Painful loss was inevitable —
It had to happen.
It was painful, but maybe it was inevit
able.
The Aggie football team and Jackie
Sherrill lost.
After all the hullaballoo about Sherill’s
salary, Aggies everywhere had great ex
pectations for the season.
The 38 to 16 loss to Boston College
Saturday successfully — maybe only tem
porarily — brought Aggies back down to
earth from the regions of outer space
which we had been inhabiting.
Already, someone has placed hand
lettered signs around campus which say:
“Bum, next year buy Jack Bicknell” (the
Boston College coach), and “Bum, it’s not
whether you win or lose, it’s how much
you pay the coach.”
But, one game doesn’t show a coach’s
worth. The players on Sherrill’s team,
except for the freshmen, were recruited
by Wilson. The seniors have played
under three coaches now: Bellard, Wil
son and Sherrill. It isn’t always easy to
adapt to new systems.
New coaches need time to build prog
rams, and players need time to adapt to
new systems. Eventually, Sherrill may
guide an A&M team to some sort of cha-
pionship, but in the meantime we have
restrain ourselves from expecting mira
cles.
rebeca
zimmermann
Even experienced sports writers ex
pect great things from Sherrill and the
Aggies this season. Sports Illustrated
picked the Aggies 15th in the nation in
preseason top 20 picks. Skip Bayless,
sports editor for the Dallas Times-
Herald, picked Texas A&M to finish the
year as national champions.
After years of losing seasons or just
barely missing a conference champion
ship, it’s difficult to remain rational in the
face of stellar hopes for a talented new
coach to turn the team around.
But, for our sakes and the football
team’s sake, we have to try to remain ra
tional.
Sherrill seemed calmer after the game
than most fans. And although the team
lost, Sherrill scored a major victory with
the student body — he kept the football
team on the field for the traditel^
game yell practice Aggies holM
loss. ■
I’ve been going to Aggitb
games since 1969, and thiswiHq'ow,
game that I can remember ger be
staying on the field for yellpnlattract
Student body reaction totlalclrnmi
vious approval and delight. V. in per
louder at the post-game yell Draa» a ^ an
during the game. .
OK, Sherrill lost his firstgiMr m
the fans, were disappointed-Jj|L s j c
dously so. Everyone except By p resen
lege was disappointed. lent at
But, we, as Aggies, can for|j4 since t
everything at the sight of ti ence ir
team and the head coach “sawl is eum
ty’s horns off” with the restof
end of the game.
It made you feel proud tos
team and a coach who had ei %S8nmn
to stay for yell practice, despitel||| t hou
gust and jeers. It was quite irnpii you’d t
So, we’ve come down f romoa enterta
and landed with a thud. Nowi telltha
stop screaming for national ( this tin
ships. Sherrill needs a chanceMj ( , )u ,
w itti his team, strengthen thegoJr** 0 ’,
and work on the bad points.
The familiar cry of “NextyniB. eseil
here” isn’t valid yet, but somedt songs r
We’re Aggies; we always hoji dttern
Saturd
bands.
“Wt
at this
time,”
Owen
Se
lion
rain.
THERE V0U HAVEIf, PAN,..TESTIMONY FROM A MAN lf|
CLAIMS TD HAVE FLOWN BEFORE M WRI6HT BROTHI
Reaganomics: Is it working?
by Donald A. Davis
United Press International
Democrats who are hoping to make Reaga
nomics the major issue in the November elec
tion might want to start thinking up an alter
nate strategy.
For when President Reagan comes down
from his California mountaintop next week,
he will have in his pocket some strong num
bers to back up his argument about how the
economy should be run.
Interest rates are falling fast and inflation
is down, giving Republicans solid statistics to
cite. While Democrats will continue to hit
hard at the tremendous unemployment rate
and other unattractive parts of the president’s
program, the man in the street will react posi
tively to the recent economic developments.
It is at this moment that Reagan plans to
start his attack on the campaign trail, to keep
reminding voters that their wallets are getting
fatter.
However, even while administration
sources are claiming “a moderate recovery is
under way,” the president is playing a cau
tious hand.
Continued good economic news could
work wonders at the polls two months from
now, but he knows well that the numbers that
have shifted so quickly in his direction could
just as easily boomerang before election day.
He will make no statements that might come
back to haunt him.
Economists disagree — as they usually do
on most things — on the reasons for the sud
den improvement in important indicators.
Few, however, assign the success to the presi
dent’s financial austerity program.
That alone will not prevent Reagan from
telling voters that he must be doing something
right in Washington because his policies are
bearing fruit.
The administration has carefully laid the
groundwork for defending the high rate of
jobless America by calling that particular sta
tistic “a lagging indicator.” In other words,
most of the rest of the economy must be bub
bling healthily along before the administra
tion can be brought to task for the nation’s
unemployment woes.
In the meantime, Reagan will continue to
express sympathy for those out of work in
order to defuse the problem on the campaign
trail.
In all, Reagan is resuming his rolea
)ubli(
of the Republican Party at a particu/arf
time. While no seasoned political
would dare claim the Republicans will
big sweep of House seats in Novembal
borderline candidates are sleepingf
knowing that Reagan’s economic polii
out of the doghouse as long as thei
rates remain lower than they have fern
Berry s World
Hi
B
*
Hi
WFA
/
) 1982 by NEA, Inc.
“He’s just returned from a wonderful camp that
emphasized self-expression. ’’