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Use the Battalion Classifieds. Call 845-2611 Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, November 12, 1987 Texas moderates hope to influence Southern Baptists FORT WORTH (AP) — Fresh from victories at the state-level con vention, Texas moderate Baptists said Wednesday they hope to carry their campaign to the fundamental ist controlled national Southern Baptist Convention. “Local Baptists are beginning to wake up to the fact that they’ve been hoodwinked, and the tide has turned,” the Rev. John Leland Berg of West Oaks Baptist Church in Houston said. T uesday the convention elected moderate-backed Rev. Dick Maples of Bryan as first vice president. The convention elected independent Rev. Joel Gregory of Fort Worth as president and moderate Leobardo Estrada of El Paso as second vice president. Fundamentalists had put up a candidate for first vice president, but after Maples won easily, the sec ond candidate was unopposed. Wednesday the Baptist General Convention of Texas passed by voice vote a motion affirming support of the Baptist Joint Committee, a Washington D C.-based coalition for First Amendment issues that has drawn fire from fundamentalists. The fundamentalist-controlled Public Affairs Committee has re quested that the SBC cut off funding for the Joint Committee. Wednesday’s motion addresses that possibility, giving Texas Baptist officials permission to continue sup port for the Joint Committee. “We know the value of religious liberty in Texas, and we don’t want to see the ‘jointness’ of our work in Washington be lost to a group that is more interested in endorsing indi viduals and carrying out a secular political agenda than they are in de fending the traditions of our Baptist faith and belief,” Berg said. “They were solidly beaten yester day,” Berg said of the fundamental ists. However, fundamentalists said the win might be short-lived. The Rev. James Draper of Euless, a for mer SBC president who is aligned with the fundamentalists, said he does not believe any serious inroads were made for control of the na tional denomination. Another key resolution recom mends that Baptist bodies refrain from endorsing or opposing candi dates for public office. If approved, that resolution will be sent on to the executive committee of the SBC. Many Baptists were angered ear lier this year when the national Pub lic Affairs Committee decided to en dorse former Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork. Some local associations objected, passing resolu tions supporting the separation of church and state. Moderate Neal Rodgers said the Bork endorsement spurred some Texas laymen to act at this conven tion. “For many here in Texas ... it was the last straw,” he said, noting that Texas Baptists have a particularly close relationship with the Joint Committee, which represents several different Baptist groups. Rodgers, executive director of the moderate group Laity for the Bap tist Faith and Message, pointed to other moderate victories in state conventions in Louisiana, Georgia and North Carolina as examples of a grass-roots turnaround. Fundamentalists have been bat tling for control of the SBC since 1979 and now control the top posi tions. “What has happened this week is that laymen, Baptist laymen, have risen up and said, ‘Enough is enough,’ ” Rodgers said. Weather Watc ilOUSTC apist who t is charged Ault on C< ■ exas pr ■L becaus >r, officia onald Ft o City, w r, but th from lal assaul isday. Key: - Lightning E “ Fog • • • « Rain ** - Snow - Ice Pellets • ^ - Rain Shower ri\j Sunset Today: 5:29 p.m. Sunrise Friday: 6:49 a m. Map Discussion: High pressure will be the primary influence overmuch of the nation while a frontal system from the western Great Lakes to Oregon will generate some scattered rain. A deep low pressure system off the New England coast will continue to produce some snow over northern Maine and the maritime provinces of Canada. Forecast: Today. Fair and mild with a high temperature of 68 degrees and southeasterly winds of 5 to 10 mph. Tonight. Clear and cold with a low temperature Friday morning of 42 degrees and winds of less than 7 mph through the night. Friday. Fair to partly cloudy with a warming trend as the southerly flowo* wind at 8 to 13 mph pumps in warmer air from the Gulf. Expect a high temperature of 76 degrees. j)avid Sin; nt distri< ing thro i that sta jased afte ('ear sent fti sentenc Button al Brges in c ■apes in w 4 13. Be was rt jartment Singer s e served; prison b< parole. It’s a pr< y because o throug Weather Fact Alberta low — a low pressure system centered on the eastern slope of the Canadian Rockies in the province of Alberta, Canada. Lows moving inland from the Pacific are the actual parent systems. Alberta lows appear as these systems enhance, or are enhanced by, the dynamic trough that is a typical, almost semi permanent feature, during winter months. The media has dubbed these lows as “Alberta clippers." Prepared by: Charlie Brentcr Staff Meteorologist A&M Department of Meteorologj fter Dull ated rap nt to comn ;e Distric ntenced h ■'ear ser W a weap |e a third Ire being But prisor |l his sen lectly an< I sentenct secutiveb Nunneld Researchers at A&M design program to help track students’performance By Janie Bird Reporter A computer program being devel oped and tested by the Texas Engi neering Experiment Station at Texas A&M will enable teachers to make detailed lesson plans and track student performance. Three Central Texas school dis tricts of different sizes are helping the experiment station with the de velopment of the “HeadMaster” program, which began at the sta- tion’s Education and Technology di vision in 1984. “Teachers and principals worked with us to design the system,” says Dr. Michael L. Burger, director of the Learning Technology Center in the College of Education. Six teachers in the Judson, Nava- sota and Milano school districts are using the instructional management system, which has the capability to retain students’ names and past per formances and keeps a record of the state curriculum guide. HeadMaster also keeps record of what courses are taught and what teaching resources are available. The activities of each teacher now using the program are monitored by experiment station researchers, Bur ger says. Experiment station research assis tant Brian McDermott says teachers’ responses to the program have been good. “One teacher, who has been tea ching 14 years, says this is the first time she’s used the state curriculum guide in making her daily lesson plans,” McDermott says. Another advantage of the system is its capability to collect information that otherwise would be missed in a classroom environment, he says. From the administrative stand point, McDermott says, educators can use HeadMaster to keep a re cord of attendance and discipline in the schools. Administrators also can monitor how teachers use educational re sources and information to develop )b< By thei training programs, he says. McDermott and his colleagui hope to market HeadMaster nadoi Sex ally by the spring, after further ttiteimer will ing. Be at Tex The group already has made pit Rudder / sentations to a few national organ Westhein zations and has received favoraH ;ture calli response, he says. 1 will j The computer program is dt tted ques signed to cater to the needs of elf a progr mentary and secondary schools,!* ‘eatIssue; McDermott says researchers exp« [ the system to be used on college university levels in the future. “The door’s definitely not do; yet,” he says. “Right now, we looking to improve public edui don.” lichelle I major at said t tstheimer se she is -er in the i jWestheirr w host POST GAME FREE PIZZA Buy any size origanal Round pizza at | Regular price, get identical pizza HIGHLIGHTS FREE! Valid with coupon Exp. 12-17-87 Price varies depending on size and number ofj toppings B-Th-ll-12 V Little CaesaixPbsa 2 Large Pizzas with cheese & 2 toppings OPEN LATE AFTER YELL PRACTICE $11. 25 plus tax Extra items & cheese available at additional cost. Valid with coupon. One per customer. 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