- Page 2/H'he Battalion/Tuesday, June 5, 1984 Registration needs help Registration at Texas A&M has been a trying, tedious experience in the past. Lines are long and graduating seniors worry that they won’t get classes they must have in order to graduate. Some seniors who were in the T to Z line for summer school Monday ex pressed concern about classes they needed for graduation in August or De cember. Administrators took a step toward eliminating the lines and helping se niors get classes during pre-registration for Fall 1984. Students registered in or der of classification, further broken down alphabetically. That system seemed to work well, al though results won’t be in until students receive fall schedules. But the new sys tem did alleviate the long lines and may have aided seniors in their class sce- dules. An attempt was made to cut down on the lines at summer registration this year. Registration was divided into six time slots and more time was alloted for picking up card packets. Lines were long but not unduly so. A little patience was required but it wasn’t too unbearable. The biggest problems appeared to crop up if a student was blocked. And if yop are a senior with a name beginning with T through Z, you may not have gotten some classes you needed. That’s why the University should con sider using the classification system for summer registration: graduate students in the first time slot, then seniors, ju niors, sophomores and freshmen. If more divisions are needed, sophomores and freshmen could be divided alpha betically. It’s something to consider as seniors panic for lack of needed classes. — The Battalion Editorial Board Minority assistance program discriminatory to top students Editor: I recently read in The Bryan-College Station Eagle that Texas A&M plans on providing five minority students with $2,000 stipends, free dormitory accommodations and a one-on-one working relationship with a faculty member in the College of Geosciences for 10 weeks this summer. Sounds like one hell of a good deal to me. But why is this sort of opportunity restricted to mi nority students? I know of no one in my depart ment (geophysics) who has ever received such an opportunity. Why not reward those students who show great promise as future geoscientists this opportunity, regardless of race? Learning about this program also disturbs me because my department has no money to sup port the students it already has over the summer months. This money could be used to help those of us involved in research and course work to survive during this period. Why should this program be offered to five people based strictly on their race? The students in my department, as well as others, have worked long and hard — and sacrificed a great deal — to be excluded from such a program. I realize that Texas A&M is trying to right past wrongs, but why should this be done at the ex pense of those who aren’t members of a mi nority? I feel like we have been abandoned and gnored by the powerful here at Texas A&M. I’m all for eliminating all forms of discrimina tion, but this policy of offering special programs for members of minority groups is in blatant disregard for the rights and needs of the rest of us. Douglas V. Roberts Graduate student Geophysics The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Rel>eca Zirnmermann. Editor Bill Robinson. Editorial Page/Assistam City Editor Shelley Hockstra, City Editor Kathleen Hart. News Editor Dave Scott, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant News Editor : Dena Brown Staff Writers , Robin Black, * Kari Fluegel. Sarah Oates, Travis Tingle Copy Editor Tracie Holub Photographers Peter Rocha, Dean Saito « ” ■* > • i ♦ Editorial Policy Letters Policy The B.HLihnn is i mm-untlit. Letters to the Editor shnuki not exceed porting nes>spupern/tenitetlas a community : u)0 words in length. The etlitori.il stuff re- *er\ice to Texas AXrM und 11 ry:ut-College serves the right to edit letters for stvle und- Slut ion. length hut »«ill ntitke every elTort to maintain ^ the uutlror's intent. Each letter must be Opinions exprvssvtl in The ll.ilt.dion are signevl and must include the address and those nt the Edtton.d lltt.ml or the author. telephone nutnlter of the writer, and do not neicss.uii\ lepreseni the opin- The Battalion is publishetl Monday ions ol Texas AX-M aihninistiattns. Inculii through Friday tluring Texas AA-M regular or the Bttard ol Regents. semesters, except for ludidav and exatnitiu- The Battalion also senes as a lalMnalorv tion periotls. anti Tuestlav through Thurs- nessspafter for students in repotting, ethting dav during summer sessions. Mail subxcrif*- aml phiHogtaphx classes »«tihin the Depart- lions are Sib.75 per settiester. S55.‘J5 per mem ofCtHunntnieations. st hool year ami SJ5 per full tear. A*l\end ing rates furnishetl on request. I’niteil Press Inicinatimial is eniitletl ex- Our address: The Battalion. 210 Reesl rhtsneh Itt the use for repnrtluctittn it! all McfhniaUI Building. Texas A AM L'nivcrxitv. neus tlisftuti'hes t tetlitetl, to it. Rights of re- College Station. T.V 77A-IX. protlm non of all other maun herein re- Strxoml class ftostage paid at Cadtege Sta- serxetL don. TX 77R-1X TRIBUNE Qnd the temple OF OEMS Prof defends calculator us u Lin M1LT« lid Mor ized ancr: It By PATRICIA McCORMACK Columnist tor United Press International Here’s whdt the critics sm about THE NATURAL tears tha_ trapped j at the bot. _u.s. Agree or disagree with the following? Isearched “A child should not be forced to do by handf for possi thing that can be done better and more easily® 001 - ? a pocket calculator.” •'•••aUShi ^ • If you agree, you're in step with Edwin E.lit® £jgj u retired Harvard University professor of icj Americar ematics and a contributor to the 1984 Yearl the National Council of Teachers of Mathemai Moise, who made the statement in a repon the Yearbook, defends use of calculators by san “It seems likely that children need to kno\t pinch how to do the algorithms by handjustn owner of a Rolls Royce needs to know howto but this is a practical question, not a questiotl principle. “It may be objected that the use of a pocket culator teaches the child nothing about thecoit: of number, or about the meanings of theofe tions performed on numbers, or about thereat mencair ennudex isa Cza x why the little machines give the right answe , ew flare ■•a ★Mip O'Neill ★★a* 1 ’ - Defense Contractors A SHOO-IN FOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR f ,N a- Salvador.- Resident Duarte unbeatable: Georpe Callup, Lou Harris A HIT!// DEEP INTO RIGHT FIELD P' * Vm Sculfy, Joe Gara^roia Urmi ABU r ales— I ranian b asl of B; tors bega j But, he concludes, “the algorithms (the arithi cal calculations) are also worthless in all three spects.” Calculators aside, Moise is pessimistic al mathematics education. “In the next decade, excellence will notpn in the teaching of school mathematics,” he the Yearbook. “For years to come, it may be impossible tom duce new mathematical material in demen' schools, since the teachers are barely trained deal with what they are teaching now. For this son, we had better go slowly, because when try to teach mathematics they do not undersl the consequences are terrible The trouble with underqualified teachers,as sees it: —They cannot tell the difference betwet: right and a wrong idea. —They can tell only the difference between familiar and the unfamiliar. “When unfamiliar insights are ignored ...or, tually rejected as wrong, the effect is to discoun 111 students or corrupt their mentality, or bod Moise said. The at :ial Iraqi lear an z assing t new Ira gainst I r. The re] Hilary c< nk an Sn< Jackson gearing for battle Delegate rules face challenge u It’s snz me to exas A& lialist Dr. “Chanc joisonoi when it I Texas A& life and at’s no e The fat, xtremely :entof the rom 2,01 orted nat “If you ralk away nakes are nan/snake yman. Ii on can ou By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — If, as some analysts are say ing, we have presidential candidates this year who do not exactly take a macho stand on all the issues, I remind you that the race is capable of generating a wimp backlash. Historians tell us something of the sort hap pened during the 1964 campaign. When opposi tion forces tried to make fun of the size of Lyndon Johnson’s home town (Johnson City, Tex., pop. 767), a small town backlash developed. likely will find a middle name that someone would just as soon not publically flaunt. Middle names, in fact, provide about the only option a birth certifi cate leaves us. We can always camouflage embar rassing monikers by using only the first letters in our signatures, and it all looks perfectly natural. By the same token, many of us voters either live in, or come from, small towns. So it is risky to sin gle out for ridicule the home town segment of a candidate’s biography. Then, four years later, rival politicians became fond of pointing out that the center H in Hubert H. Humphrey’s name stood for Horatio. HHH lost anyhow, but it was established that many of the votes he did get were the result of a middle name backlash. Scratch deeply enough under any initial and you Because the sympathy vote can be so strong, presidential candidates at this stage of the cam paign might do well to curb any impulse to scoff at a shortage of virile warnings in the other camps. As one pundit in an analysis of the Persian Gulf crisis recently wrote, “Macho talk is cheap until American lives ... are at stake.” In a close race, a wimp backlash could be deci sive. So why run the risk of alienating a large, and potentially active, bloc of voters just because s«! candidate doesn’t come on like a caveman w spect to the Middle East or Central America? That the wimp vote is worth going after mai seen in the large number of males who eat quid If Ronald Reagan, or whoever is the Democn nominee, could get solid backing from quiche-eaters, that probably would be voi enough for victory in November. At the moment, however, the wimp vote appi ently is somewhat divided. One reason perhaps: tendency to slice quiche into several pieces. Whatever the wimp factor is, it is dangerous try to exploit it politically. What a candidate mas stirring up instead is an identifying element d will turn the wimp vote against him. Inside all of us, there is a little wimp struggl to get out. The task of politicians is to discovert! triggering mechanism — the wimp threshold,as were. < •C Presidential candidates fighting the wimp factor Slouch by Jim Earle By ARNOLD SAWISLAK Columnist for United Press International WASHINGTON — When Gov. James Hunt of North Carolina finished work on the Democratic National Convention delegate rules last year, party officials proudly declared that the selection process had been perfected at last. As 1984 delegate selection ends today, it looks like the declarations were premature and that the Democrats, like political Ancient Mariners, are doomed to sail forever on a sea of ever-changing rules. The obvious first order of business for the next Democratic rules revision commission will be the so-called “thresholds” that determine the level of support a candidate for the presidential nomi nation must have to win delegates in primaries and at caucuses. This issue involves basic questions of fairness and political pragmatism, and the party simply has been unable since the early 1970s to reconcile the two. The Democrats decided long ago to outlaw what were called “winner take all” contests — the candi date that gets the most votes gets all the delegates — in the nomination process. (They succeeded in banning this practice in statewide contests, but it still exists on a congressional district level, as in to day’s California primary.) Carrying the idea of “proportional representa tion” further, the Democrats tried to write rules that gave candidates the same percentage of dele gates as they got votes in the primaries or caucuses. But it became clear that a pure form of propor tional representation was impractical. First, a large field of candidates competing for a small number of delegates might produce a result that required chopping delegates, or at least their votes, into fractions. The Democrats don’t like doing that. Second, the rules writers thought there should be some minimum support a candidate needed to show so that major contenders could be separated from what are politely called “fringe” or “splinter” candidates. So a series of percentages were worked out to act as thresholds. Those whose vote fell below the cut off got no delegates in that contest. Over the years, the cutoffs have ranged from 10 percent to 20 per cent, which was the threshold this year. Jesse Jackson started complaining about the 20 percent early and has kept up his running objec tion to it. At first, little attention was paid to his complaints, but now he has won enough delegates and enough political respect to make an issue of the threshold question at the San Francisco con vention next month. It is a good bet that the convention will take some action to instruct those who write the 1988 rules to lower the threshold for the next election. Even Democrats who back the 20 percent cutoff hope that giving Jackson a victory on this issue will help keep him in the party and behind the presi dential candidate. It also is a good bet that nothing will be done about the 1984 threshold to give Jackson more del egates in the states where he got less than 20 per cent of the vote. “Regardless of what your schedule says, this can’t be your classroom. But on the other hand, you could...”