Page 2/The Battalion/Friday, May 9, 1986 Rain for the parade The results of educational reform the Texas Examination of Current Administrators (TECAT) are in. Only 6,579, or 3.3 percent, of Texas teachers who took the competency test failed. Gov' Mark White claims that’s an A in anyone’s book. Perhaps, but getting an A on TECAT results is like getting an A in Office Aide I — it doesn’t really mean anything. Dubbed a competency test, TECAT was proclaimed as the savior of quality education in the state. But TECAT is at best an assessment of basic knowelege. It measures such skills as fun damental writing skills, ability to use an index or table of con tents and recognition of sentence fragments and basic gramma tical and spelling errors. Anyone who lacked these basic necessities for teaching shouldn’t have been allowed in the classroom in the first place. But those who did fail will be given a second chance at passing. TECAT, far from being a beacon of excellence, is more like a $4.7 million broom used to sweep dead weight out of public schools. Aside from a good spring cleaning, TECAT has accom plished little. Has the quality of education increased? Does it mean the teachers and administrators who passed the test are outstanding? Hardly. The test doesn’t examine how effectively a teacher can relay information to students. It doesn’t account for an educator’s ability to inspire students with enthusiasm and a desire to learn. Classroom performance is nearly impossible to measure with a standardized test. TECAT is a step in the right direction, but it is far from a solution. The sentiments that spawned the test show a genuine concern for quality instruction — but it’s not enough. Education in Texas still is ailing. The cure isn’t an answer sheet and a No. 2 pencil. The Battalion Editorial Board Pluses into minuses I knew a woman once whose prob lem was her beau ty. She said women ; envied her, men lusted after her and employers never took her se riously. I believed her until I men tioned her plight at a dinner party. The men nodded in sympathy, but the women indicated they disagreed. They threw their napkins at me. It must have been in the same spirit that the Washington Dossier, a slick monthly of no consequence, asked mem- bers of Congress for some personal in formation. including their bad habits. What the magazine got in response was similar to the complaint of the lady who said that God had cursed her with beau- ty. Congressman after congressman con fessed to working too hard. Alphabetically speaking. Rep. Michael Barnes (D-Md.) was the first, to fess up. He admitted to “compulsive neatness and punctuality.” Rep. Tony Coelho (D- Calif.) said he spent “too much time on the road, working.” Rep. James Jones (D-Okla.) confessed that he spent “too much time at work” and Rep. Norman Mineta (D-Calif.) was forthright enough to say that he just couldn’t stay away from the desk. “Workaholism,” he called it. These confessions are of a type. T hey are like those in which people admit to being too good or too generous or too sensitive. Confessions of this sort usually are preceded by the words, “I just can’t help mvself but. . . .” Then comes the admission of some supposed shortcom ing that is not a shortcoming at all — and probably isn’t true, either. With the pos sible exception of someone complaining about how wealth has complicated his life, nothing quite so grates on the ear. Where is the congressman whose bad The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Cathie Anderson, Editor Kirsten Dietz, Managing Editor Loren StefTy. Opinion Page Editor Frank Smith, City Editor Sue Krenek. .Yens Editor Ken Sury. Sports Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is u non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&\( and Br\an-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the Editorial Board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of I exas A&rXI administrators, faculty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas \X:M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are SI6.75 per 'semester. $33.25 per school vear and $35 per full rear. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: 'The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald Building. Eexas A&M University, College Station. TX 77H43. " Second class postage paid at College Station. TX 77843. POS'l MASTER: Send address changes to The Battal ion. 216 Reed McDonald. Texas A&M University, College Station I X 77843. habit is goofing off? Where is the brave soul who is bored? Where is the man who chases women, the woman who chases men, the ones who daydream or whose worst habit is a craven fear of any interest group with a postage meter? Where’s the guy who just can’t turn down a contribu tion, the one who doesn’t know how to say no to a speech invitation, the one who admits to throwing principle out the w in- dow should the president call on the phone? No one like that in our Congress. No, indeed. We have the most conscientious and noncontroversial politicians the w'orld has ever seen. Take Rep. James Slattery (D-Kan.). According to Dossier, his political rating is 50 percent liberal, 50 percent conservative. His best friend is his wife. His heroes are Jesus Christ, Abraham Lincoln, Harry S. Truman, Dwight Eisenhower and Robert F. Ken nedy. A favorite movie is “Chariots of Fire” and his favorite book is the Bible. Slattery’s favorite clothing store is in Kansas. One of his favorite television shows is the “McNeil/Lehrer News Hour.” He prefers to vacation in his home state (he’s just corny about Kansas in August), and his w ife-cum-best f riend is a full-time mother “active in civic orga nizations and Bible studies.” His ultimate ambition is “To be a good husband and father and the best congressman I can be. . . .” But like his colleagues, he too has bad habits: They are “being late and trying to do too many things.” I suggest therapy. The survey goes on. Rep. Eligio (Kika) de la Garza (D-Tex..) says his favorite films are Eddie Albert movies. Rep. John Dingell _(D-Mich.) says his is “Robin Hood” and Rep. James Howard (D- N.J.), chest surely swollen in pride, said his greatest achievement was “passage of the 55-miles-per-hour national speed limit.” Many of the congressmen say their best friend is their wife, which in some cases is probably true, in some cases is nothing of the sort, and in any case has nothing to do with intimacy and every thing to do with efficiency. It means you only have to lie to one person. The most common ultimate ambition is to be just a darn good member of Con gress. There are some exceptions. Rep. Thomas Dow ney (D-N.Y.) says he wants to be president; Rep. Jack Kemp (R- N.Y.) says he wants to be chairman of the Federal Reserve System and Rep. Mel Levine (D-Calif.), at age 42, says he still wants to play first base for the L.A. Dod gers. Only Levine has a chance. All in all. Dossiers profiles of Con gress makes for depressing reading. Gone, for the most part, are the persona lities, the characters — the men or women who could admit to a few really bad habits. Now many congressmen take an attribute and try to make you think it’s a liability. They deserve w hat I got when I believed that beauty could be an afflic tion: Ladies, get your napkins. Copyright 1986, Washington Post Writers Group Richard Cohen Opinion CAPITOL DEADER THEATER INFLUENCE FOR SALE” BEDTIME FOR RONZD’ r» jei IN-RATE L NEED INFLUENCE? LETS RAP! j Dntn Gmaaiy Two Sleazeba^///’ Terrorists use atrocities not media, for attentio The State De partment on Lues- day accused NBC of encouraging terrorism because the network tele vised an interview w 11 h terrorist Mohammed Abul Abbas but refused to reveal where the terrorist was being interviewed. Cathie Anderson Abbas is under indictment by a federal grand jury in connection with the mur der of Leon Klinghoffer, a wheelchair- bound New Yorker traveling on the Achille Lauro when it w'as hijacked in the Mediterranean Sea in October. Robert Oakley, head of the depart ment’s counter-terrorism section, said that when a media organization makes a deal with a terrorist not to divulge his whereabouts, it is saying, in ef fect, “we’ve become his accomplices in order to give him publicity.” I can just hear the NBC executives now. Executive Number 1 says, “Ya’ know w'e should get that guy who’s ac cused of hijacking the Achille Lauro to appear on the ‘NBC Nightly News.’ We could put terror in the hearts and minds of every red-blooded American. We could give terrorism a new name. Why didn’t I think of this before?” Executive Number 2 picks up on his friend’s enthusiasm. “I’ll make sure we get just the right lighting and make-up to realh show him at hi.s best. We’ll make this gin a star. We’ll boost our ratings. If we pla\ <>ui cards right, we might convince him to let one of our correspondents go along on his next raid. We ll get in on the ground floor, if you know what I mean.” “Watch out ABC,” says Executive Number 1. “Whatever it takes we’ll get this Abbas guy, even if it means promis ing not to reveal where he’s hiding.” No debate. No extensive thought. NBC executives easily decided that the\ needed Abbas’ interview to boost their ratings and scheduled him for the show. By allowing Abbas to appeal on the “NBC Nightly News,” the network, like State Department spokesman Charles E. Redman says, gave this terrorist the- plat form he wanted to disseminate hi.s poli tical propaganda. Why would an Amer ican network allow a terrorist to sav Pres ident Reagan has become “enemy num ber 1” and that operations on American soil are envisioned? tv. macs list nlam ze to dis 111 |<*U heart i mg a terrora ne Abbas on: i says. "Ob his kindii fact encoii ■ 11* all seel •s not llu pub licit’ t n lives onamq ns particularm is aided by tbj t mass murden he worldbfltetf pie are drawn» liter thantheoi i t slot) becaustf jort theit atrool ■to perpetratetll emain ignouh If NBC and other news media would give less time and space to terrorists and more to government officials, Amer icans could get more of the light infor mation to make the right decisions. After all. the government knows whether ■ plane crashes! e .i svinptoinob ilia have theoH >lic informed, i e neither tern ekit ions staff. I tblic’s right to orjou rnalism mif ion. Mail Call Advice from the opposition EDITOR: The words which punctuate the editor’s note to Mike Foarde’s letter of April 18, . . such expression requires ef fort on the part of the individual,” are still etched on my conscience. For too long I’ve heard the groan of Texas A&M students, myself included, concerning the “liberal-bias” of The Battalion. More than once I’ve vowed to post a response to a slanted editorial or fallacious letter from a reader, only to have my fervor foregone by more pacifying pursuits such as “The Cosby Show,” or a large bag of nacho-flavored Doritos. It is ironic that the target of my criticism has offered the advice which has awakened me from my apathy and medioc rity. Bravo Foarde and Mark Schulz for standing up for what is right as revealed bv God through his word. However unpopular this stance may be in these United States of the 1980s in which self-proclaimed gods state that “. . . morality is the individual’s idea of right and wrong.” I choose to stand also for the standard of right and wrong outlined in the Bible, and challenge other on this campus who maintain this position to stand too and vocalize their beliefs on the pages of this publication as well as vocally in classes and on campus — before these rights are taken away in the name of separation of church and state. Unfortunately, my daught man’s name. But as a (om en thank this young man for hr young lady in need. ei die vounggcnil| 1 want to publik siderate serviceioi Herb Bailey Devoted readers Markel Lee Simmons ’87 Thanks from a concerned dad EDITOR: A word of thanks to an unidentified Aggie gentleman who assisted my daughter in distress. On April 20 my daughter, a Baylor f reshman, was return ing to Waco from a visit with friends in Fort Worth when she had a tire blow out north of Hillsboro. The gentleman, driving a maroon (what other color for an Aggie?) Biarritz, and his young lady friend stopped, changed my daughter’s tire, accompanied her into Hill sboro, where she bought a new tire and then followed heron to Waco to assure a safe trip. EDITOR: What misanthropic niiise inspires Cynthia Gay asq composes her masterworks of editorial satire. Surely J Texas A&M journalism department must be filled pride as they peruse her latest column, a commentaryonj recent / exas Month!} comparison of the 'University Texas and 1 exas A&M. Certainly genius alone guided^ pen as she wove the subtle threads of ibogie and banality^ only proved the point she so brilliantly feigned to coi# The grand irony of that column did, however, illustra< the one point on whic h the' Texas Afont/j/y article was taken. A&M does have an intellectual underground, invisibility testifies to t he amhem icity of our critical disp® 1 lion. We would never allow ourselves to be paraded at decorative symbol o( stat us < >n t he bosom of the object of® discontent. Obviously Gay is well aquainted with this side of TeO A&M. In my five years as an undergraduate at this instil 11 tional learning facility, never has a Battalion column 1 served as such a shining symbol to its ideologically dis franchised. It is Gay’s (not Karl Pallmeyer’s) column tin feeds the fires ol our discontent. It is her column that* pass around with laughter, shocked disbelief and the vag 1 * impression that something greater than ourselves,t* necessarily benevolent, is going on. So in case she ever feels her inspiration fading, we want 1 assure her of a devoted readership that appreciates talents, those of us truly “in touch with the ’80s.” Jerry Rosrek Letters to the Editor should not exceed .‘UIO words in lent'th. editorial staff reserves the right to edit letteis foistyle and length bill wake every effort to maintain the authot ’s intent. Each letter wit signed and must include the addi css and telephone number ofthev HOI populai state co lation during Texasi Thai trouble Jared I the Te: He si $ 18 a b; but he main si “If y ize at . disastei erate g barrel] the To a coup prices I very sif ton sai outlool league. For past, ‘ t how su ing hu Alor state is interes of thee factors ling oil “Th be as I the bi strong the oil Haz the do export con fid streng He was gr durin actual! pende Grc state w durinj of 191 and h; than d 1