Opinion Page 2fThe BattalionAThursday, September 27, 1984 Football ticket handout: a service to community At Saturday’s football game against Arkansas State, Kyle Field may see the biggest crowd of the young season. Tickets for the game are being distributed to children under 19 years old by Smith Dairy Queens in conjunction with the Texas A&M Ath letic Department. Attendance will be boosted; as many as 10,000 area young sters will get the chance to watch the Aggies play in Kyle Field. The Dairy Queen on Villa Maria Road in Bryan says it has al ready handed out over 1,000 of the special tickets. This pro gram is a welcome community service. It’s also great public rela tions lor both area Dairy Queens and the University. Nothing is more intimidating to an opponent than a full stadium. And nothing is better publicity than community service. — The Battalion Editorial Board Grading policy scrutinized by students and faculty Application for Whos Uh o NOTET: Due -to recent change^ a student carv now nominate him&elf. KJAMD MAJ-Qgs CLASSs QsTlZ&Z. MOF?E IRRELEVANT DATA: &L Photograph Reader’s Forum Reader’s Forum Reader’s Forum Reader’s The Faculty Sen ate Subcommittee on Grading Policy in conjunction with the Student Senate Committee on Aca demic Affairs are studying the pre sent grading policy on assignment of final grades. The purpose of this let ter is to extend in formation and so- —— licit facts and opinions on this is sue. Conversations with faculty members and the re sults of a limited student opinion survey indicate a significant dissatis faction with our current grading sys tem. For example, 70 percent of the student respondents (260 total) were either moderately or strongly dissat isfied with the present system, while only 25 percent were moderately or strongly satisfied with the system; five percent were indifferent. Based on comments of fellow fac ulty members and students, there exists the need to evaluate the pre sent grading system with regard to allowing finer gradations in final grades assigned in undergraduate and graduate courses, appearing on transcripts and used to calculate the GPR. Given the significance as signed to grades, the grading system used should be as fair and equitable as possible, in addition to providing an accurate measure of a student’s performance relative to a course-de pendent set of grading criteria. From this perspective, the present gradations of A, B, C, D, and F are inadequate. LETTERS: Gay issue shouldn’t lead to name-calling EDITOR: Now that the Board of Regents has asked for an appeal in the Gay Student Services case, this seems like an espe cially opportune time to take note of the conduct and behavior of the leadership involved in both sides of this case. Clearly the two sides disagree about what is or is not constitutional, but at no time has either side engaged in the low art of name calling. At no time has either side engaged in the nasty invective that has been dis played in the letters to the editor col umn in recent days. Nothing can be gained by calling each other faggots or bigots — but a great deal can be lost. Therefore, as one of the leaders in the gay community I offer you an olive branch on this issue and suggest a truce. The GSS suit is now entering its final stage. When the last verdict is in and the fi nal decison is implemented, both sides will have a great need for healing. We will have fought as only Aggies can, and we will be Aggies when it is over. I implore those of you who will feel compelled to write a letter to the editor to put your emotions in check and give This present system both under and over-evaluates student perfor mance in the upper and lower range of a grade interval, respectively; it promotes grade inflation and stu dent/instructor antagonism; and it implicitly suggests an inherent inac curacy in the assignment of grades by not providing for finer grada tions. A number of modifications ot the present system are possible. For ex ample, many schools use a =/- sys tem (e.g. C = , B- each having a cor responding GPR weighing factor), whereas a few use a numerical sys tem that permits even finer grada tion (e.g. University of Washington uses a 0.0 to 4.5 system with 0.1 increments). Whichever system one suggests, however, should be consis tent with the level of accuracy per mitted by the grade evaluation proc ess. The margin of error in some cases may not justify refinement of the system beyond a =/- division. We recognize one data base is in adequate; correspondingly, we are seeking the opinion of other stu dents and faculty both as to degree of satisfaction (or lack of) with the present system as well as to possible modifications. Student opinions should be sent to the Student Government Office, 219 Pavilion (845-3051), and faculty opinions should be sent to the Fac ulty Senate Office, Goodwin Hall (845-9528). Brann Johnson (Geophysics & Ge ology) John Evans (Environmental De sign) Sean Royal! (Economics) Tom Urban (Aerospace Engi neering) A classical display of music Kathy Wiesepape Before the last bars of the music crashed to a close, the audience was oh its feet. Gheering, shouting, clapping, waving arms in the air. The auditorium was packed; many had stood throughout the performance. I heard a thundering noise above me and looked up from my seat in the first tier. The boxes were vibrating to the rhythm of stamping feet as the fans clam ored for an encore. The cause of the uproar wasn’t a per formance by Alabama in G. Rollie White Coliseum. It wasn’t the last concert tour of Mick Jagger and the Stones. It wasn’t even Michael Jackson and his brothers live at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. It was the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, performing Symphony No. 7 by Dvorak in London’s Albert Hall. Such a enthusiastic display of appreciation is rare in this country — at least, at a performance of classical music. Here, when the music is good, people clap politely. When it’s very good, they clap harder. If it’s great, they stand and clap. And if it’s superlative, you may hear a timid “bravo” or two. What makes the difference? My guess is that it’s the social class that attends the concerts. Here, the high price of con certs limits the audience. The cheapest price I’ve paid is eight dollars, to hear! Houston Symphony in Houston. Last year I paid 15dollars hear the Pittsburg Symphony at Texas A&M. Tickets lot MSG OPAS-sponsored performance of the London $u phony next week range from TI to 22 dollars. An English student sitting beside me at Albert shocked when 1 told him the average price lor a concert)* In England, classical music is for everyone. Box seats usually go to the aristocracy and the upperot of English society, but the cheapest concert tickets costi than admission to a movie. These are the floor seats, meaning you either stand rectly in front of the stage, or, if you get tired, sit downi member the groundlings you heard alxmt in your speare class, who paid a penny to stand in front orchestra pit and watch the plays? These are the same peep At one concert, students in shorts and jeans werelyingflai their backs, absorbing the music through the floor. They’re the ones that began the cheering when the stopped. But their enthusiasm was catching. When I looked up from my seat in the first section the proletariat, it was the little old ladies wrapped in mi and the proper gentlemen in their evening dress whom stamping and shouting the house down. Kathy Wiesepape is a weekly Battalion columnist. I column appears on Thursdays. Smithsonian space museum a bit other-worldly By DICK WEST Columnist for United Press Internationa] WASHINGTON — If the National Air and Space Museum seems more other-worldly than usual these days, it may be because of Robert McCall. This part Buck Rogerish, part back ward-looking, branch of the Smithso nian Instutiton has just put on exhibit for the next 12 months 48 of McCall’s paintings and drawings, including sky pavilions and lunar bases. Part of the artwork is, by the artist’s own admission, pretty far-out — even for someone who has trained himself to think up to 1,000 years ahead of his time. The trick of being a leading science- fiction painter, McCall told me, is not only to reduce the future to canvas, but to make it believable. His sense of futuristic verisimilitude may be one of the reasons he was chosen to design U.S. postage stamps as well as a Disney World mural. But when I in terviewed him at a preview of the ex hibit, he looked exceptionally ordinary — just about how you might expect a 65-year-old man of average build* reddish hair that is both thinning: graying to look. Frankly, this part of the museii with its collection of rockets, press! suits, nose cones and other space)! paraphernalia has always seemed tor a bit out of touch with reality. Met however, was perfectly down-to-eartli “I try to anticipate what is coming, it 50 or 1,000 years from now,”hes: “Most people are too caught up int eryday happenings to peer into thet tant future. Yet, we have an infinit) j time before us.” your words some thought. Ask yourself, “Is this the sort of thing I want to say to a fellow Aggie?” If it isn’t then don’t say it. I invite Dr. Koldus to give us his views on this matter and join me in this effort to ease the rising tensions between the gay and non-gay community. Finally I have a request which I wish to direct towards the religious leaders in our area. I know that you have strong views on the subject of homosexuality, but surely people of good conscience can disagree with one another without also condemning each other to hell. For my part I will ask the members of the gay community and those non-gays who agree with our cause to tone down their rhetoric and refrain from attacking your beliefs. My request is thay you talk to your flocks and do the same. Let us display the best in Christian behavior, not the worst. Lenny DePalma President of Alternative Noisy garbage trucks bother dorm resident EDITOR: Td like to describe a little situation to you. A Bright and early this morning, a cam pus garbage truck came cruising into Parking Annex 18, right in front for Hart Hall. Tm not talking about a pickup and a couple of guys collecting a few plastic bags. I mean a big diesel job that picks up a big metal container, revs up its engine to hydraulically lift the container over head, and then drops the container back onto the concrete. Then it backs up, complete with blar ing backup beeper, and repeats the process about fifteen feet from my win dow. (Don’t tell me to close my window; Hart Hall isn’t air conditioned, remem ber?) I’ll bet that truck wakes up half the people in this dorm. A 6:30 wake-up call may not sound so bad to those of you in the Gorps, or to those of you with eight o’clock classes, but it isn’t doing me any good. This is not a single, random event, by the way. This has been going on since the beginning of semester. What is the point of setting quiet hours since even the university doesn’t respect them? Isn’t it nice to know that this “world class” university cares more about its garbage than its students? What do you have to say about that one, Frank? ( I’ll bet the garbage truck doesn’t wake him up.) P.S. Tm betting you wimpy editorial types won’t have the nerve to print this Marc D. McSwain Class of’85 Ugly Bell Tower a nice, musical gift EDITOR: I would like to take this opportunity to single myself out as (seemingly) the only existing Ag that does not resent the Albritton Bell Tower. As a matter of fact, I very much enjoy hearing the “Spirit of Aggieland” tolling across the campus. I realize not everyone agrees with the form of Mr. Albritton’s donation, and I’ll have to agree that there are more worthy causes than the construction of a bell tower. But I don’t believe that is the point. The point is that the bell tower was a gift, and it takes a pretty ungrateful per son to complain about a gift. Personally, I enjoy the music,and I say thank you Mr. Albritton, even if it is an ugly bell tower. Stoney Smith Class of ’86 The Battalion USPS 045 360 Member of Texas Press Association Southwest |ournalisni Conference In memoriam Bill Robinson, 1962-1984, Editor The Battalion Editorial Board Stephanie Ross, Acliii(j Editor Patrice Koranek, Managing Editor Shelley Hoekstra, City Editor Brigid Brockman, News Editor Donn triedman. Editorial Page Editor Bonnie Langford, News Editor Ed Cassavoy, Sports Editor The Battalion Staff Assistant City Editors Melissa Adair, Michelle Pok Assistant News Editors Kellie Dworaczyk, Rhonda Snider, LauriRtS Assistant Sports Editor Travis Tinji Entertainment Editor - Bill HukIw Assistant Entertainment Editor Angel Stole Editorial (lartoonist Mike La* Make-up Editor John Hafc Copy Writer Karen Bind Copy Editors Kathv Breard, Kaye Pah™* Cyndy Davis, Patricia Flin Editorial Policy I he Butmlutn is a non-proth, self-supporting nnvfi (iperuted as a communin' service lo I'exus nryun-Colleffe Smiion. Opinions expressed in The Buttulhn are ihoxolik Editorial Board or the author, and do not neiwsmW resent the opinions o/ Texas A&M adminisinton.iitt* 1 or the Board of Regents. I he Battalion also serves as a laboratory nes'tjstpnu students in reporting, editing and photftgraphf m within the Department ofConnnunicatioin. Letters Policy Letters lo the editor should not exceed 31)0 i™™ 1 ' length. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit him for style and length bin n ill make every effort to !!! '' ‘ : the author's intent, each letter must 6e s/jfiied and mm include the address anti telephone number of the tuia The Battalion is published Monday thmiyh frar during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for IMt and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are Sit )>er semester, ST’ -b per school year and [Xt fa year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion. 2W Reed McDotut Building. Texas A&M University. College Statin ■ 77H-Tt Editorial staff plume number: (dl)S)ll45-26iO..\l venising: (409) H-iJi-So 11. Second class postage paid at College Station, TXltHl