Wednesday, December 10,1986/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local visers: Good outweighs bad for phone registration system By Bob Grube Staff Writer f e four weeks of endless busy signals and phone receivers, the preregistration pe- * Hriod > s almost over. 1 he seniors at e relieved after ■getting the courses they need. The freshman are ■upset because all of their c lasses were (losed. Hut His the new phone registration system really all it's up to be? Claude Gibson, chairman of the under- jduate advisers in the Department of English, is the system has advantages for both students and faculty advisers. |The new system allows registration to extend past the normal operating hours, and that is a |defini(e advantage for the students,” Gibson says. “The system also allows the students to take more ^ responsibility for what they are signing up for. It es them read their degree plans a little more carefully than when an adviser was doing it for them. “Advisers benefit from the system, too. We no C jger have to spend time performing the me- Jnical aspects of registration, like verifying ** t Schedules and class rosters on the computer. I That took a lot of time to do. Now, we can spend \ that time more efficiently, answering specific fregistration-type questions. —Vi think the new system is more efficient and business-like.” While Gibson thinks the system has many ad vantages, he says it also has a few disadvantages that students need to be aware of. “When students came to see the adviser, many mistakes were caught by the adviser,” Gibson says. “Now it’s up to the student to catch those mistakes. It’s more of a coincidence if the adviser catches a mistake now. “Another disadvantage of the new system is the decrease of one-to-one communication be tween the student and the adviser. Many depart ments offer special topics courses — 489 courses — that are many times announced by a flyer on the departement bulletin board. Without the ad viser-student contact, students are on their own to find out about the course.” Gibson says the advising load at the Depart ment of English has lightened a little, but he doesn’t know yet whether the system is a success. “I think the system is saving everybody time, but I’m reserving judgment on it until January when it shuts down,” Gibson says. “I have this great fear that 300 students are'going to be lined up outside my door during the first week of school because they tried to register on their own and something went wrong.” Willard P. Worley, associate professor and fac ulty adviser in the Department of Electrical Engi neering, isn’t waiting to pass judgment on the new system. He’s been at Texas A&M since 1939, either as a student or a professor, and has seen many forms of undergraduate registration. He thinks this form is by far the best. “When I was a student, we had to go to each department to register,” Worley says. “This new system is just a dream. It’s great. After the first couple of days when all the students tried to reg ister and found out only graduate students and seniors were allowed to, it has been great.” Worley also thinks the system has its advan tages and disadvantages, but he says there are many more advantages for both faculty and stu dents. “Today, students can register at the speed of light from almost anywhere they can get to a phone,” Worley says. “I just talked to a student in Dallas who asked me when he could come down to register. I told him, ‘As soon as we hang up the phone.’ “The main disadvantage I see is that once stu dents register for the first time, they never have to talk to another human being again regarding registration. AH they have to do is talk to a me chanical voice on the other end of the phone.” Worley says the system has different advan tages and disadvantages for each college and de partment. Brazos symphony to salute Beethoven By Karl Pallmeyer Staff Writer The Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra will present “Bask in Our Beethoven,” a concert fea turing the music of Ludwig van Beethoven, at 8 p.m. Thursday in Rudder Auditorium. Violinist Zina Schiff will be performing with the BVSO un der the direction of conductor Franz Anton Krager. Schiff has studied violin at the Curtis Institute of Music under Ivan Galamian and at Jascha Hei fetz’s Masterclass. She has per formed at Carnegie Hall and the Metropolitan Museum in New York. In addition, she has been named “Outstanding Young Art ist” by Musical America and has received several other awards. Krager said Tuesday that Schiff will be playing a violin commissioned and assembled by Dr. Joseph Nagy vary, a professor of biophysics and biochemistry at Texas A&M. Krager said that Na- gyvary has come close to produc ing a violin that matches the sound quality of the violins pro duced in the 18th century by An- agyv lins have been used by several great violinists including Itzhak Perlman. Schiff will be using one of Na- gyvary’s violins for Beethoven’s only concerto for violin, the Vio lin Concerto in D Major. Krager said Beethoven’s 45-minute long concerto was one of the most in fluential.. pieces of its type. The Seventh Symphony, which Krager describes as Beethoven’s second most popular symphony, will make up the second half of the program. Krager said that the second movement of the sym phony was so popular that con ductors would substitute it for the second movements of other sym phonies their orchestras were performing. Tickets for “Bask in Our Bee thoven” are $12 for adults, $10 for students and senior citizens, and $8 for children under 13. The tickets are available at the Rudder box office and at any Ticketron outlet. For more information call the Rudder box office at 845-1234 or the BVSO office at 846-7659. % Officials: Houston not out of battle for '1988 GOP site nent. Tb it’s usuallul ation. Ho» my monct, spent on: liii orove to e :( iy SlOnwrtSj to coniiiwj igh an attei HOUSTON (AP) — Officials with the GOP site-selection com- liittee say Houston is not out of the running to host the 1988 Re publican National Convention ;ven though the city is a leading ndidate to host the Democratic ionvention. But Republican officials say they won’t go to the same city as the Democrats. GOP officials said last week that several of the 10 bidding cit ies would be allowed to update their bids for the convention in oral presentations before the nine-member committee meeting in Washington Thursday. Stores hiring holiday help despite economy DALLAS (AP) — Despite the downturn in the Texas economy and generally sluggish sales this year, many of the state’s retailers are using traditionally large holiday work forces designed to handle an over flow of Christmas shoppers. Many stores around the state ap pear to have added nearly the same number of temporary workers as in better economic times, even though industry executives are uncertain whether they’ll ring up as many sales. “In a good month like December, extra help will usually make you money,” said Tom Hoskins, vice president of the Fort Worth-based Dunlap Co., which again this year boosted the payroll at each of its 34 stores by an average of 25 percent. Maury Aresty, president of the Retail Merchants Association in Houston, said a big holiday sales payoff would help many stores re cover from a slow year. “If you’re going to take a real gamble, you’re going to take it in De cember,” Aresty said. “Retailers are making sure they have enough help on hand to realize any improvement there might be (in sales),” he said. A recent survey conducted for the Texas Retailers Association esti mated sales in the first 10 months of this year were 3.76 percent below the same period of 1985. Spokesman Dan Hagan said Houston-based Foley’s added about 1,000 temporary workers for the holiday season, a figure that is com parable to pa;st Christmases. Hagan doesn’t believe the heavy hiring in an economic downturn is a gamble for Foley’s. Stores have to be ready when cus tomers are in a buying mood, Hagan said. ating a I thought if to I and interested®! iswer, l ire realist^ 1. )nie truly fj id, tno sl FI themself ing the f'j hat hasbj rhildhooM ite, or ;t SOU nebotM ether" r a loti d f f| contrWj peers. O' are looW ak the/H^ ever it ■ ; for the ^ why the^ n’t bo*' about* 1 ion, and breaks, atching yean :C epti liorj 0 ^ .forW SMILE FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE $ 29 00 CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS ‘Call For Appointment Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome Evening Appointments Available • Nitrous Oxide Available • Complete Family Dental Care 1 On Shuttle Bus Route (Anderson Bus) _ ^(Anderson Bus) CarePlus^ft* MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER Dan Lawson, D.D.S. 696-9578 1712 S.W. 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