The Battalion STATE & LOCAL 3 Friday, April 21,1989 The Battalion room lent? A&M lets professors consult at will University places no restrictions on outside consulting by faculty Becky Weisenfels Editor ive many relatives who iig for months to drive ;ould see me graduate, ing to show up even if :r Pig gave my com- ess. at Bush will be there, ly want to see me wall; aawwwwww, isn’t that they don’t see me wall; they probably nil aduated. other people who are -e in the same predica- relatives. If A&M was lission, we should have ig to be lots of disap- f they can’t come, and to help me get those tig me? ■ to consider the stu- laving the president your campus is a big f them would like to lately, there probably G. Rollie White Col- guess they can always relatives, eat Cheetos oned that A&M may to the graduationcer- parents paid for me four years, and now ) pay more money to ipe hot. n A&M might have to the graduation cere- not another building ugh to hold the grad- tony could be moved d or somewhere, but ic problem of unpre- imong other things, nk that would be the diat the solution is sr, if it came down to laving my family or * ceremony, I would iniily. s is a senior jourm- or of The Battalion, I team for ~ team showed the school well. >y the behavior II one does not ndance this would rather the previous nbarrass the ools. caryjust how lects them. - d consider how Breathed 1 Beeson REPORTER While many universities have poli cies restricting the amount of out side consultation by faculty mem bers, Texas A&M does not designate specific limitations, Provost Donald McDonald said. Unlike A&M, the University of Tennessee has a rule that limits out sideconsulting to one day a week. “Most of the A&M faculty mem bers don’t take anywhere near that much time consulting,” McDonald said. If faculty members want to do consulting, it must be approved by (lie administration. McDonald said I outside consulting must be beneficial to professors in their teaching and research at the University. “You can’t let outside consulting interfere with your obligations to the University such as teaching and meeting with students,” he said. If the consulting doesn’t have some kind of contribution to the University along these lines, McDon ald said, then faculty members shouldn’t be wasting their time doing it. A&M faculty members are en couraged to do outside consulting, he said. “The primary advantage is that it brings faculty members in contact with real world problems, which in creases ability in the classroom, brings real world problems to stu dents and helps increase faculty members’ skills,” he said. Dr. J. Benton Storey, professor of horticultural sciences at A&M, agrees that outside consulting en hances knowledge. “Every time I do consulting, I come back knowing a lot more about my field,” he said. “Then I’m able to make applications in the classroom. It brings the material alive.” Another positive aspect of consul ting for faculty members is the salary it brings, although McDonald said consulting really doesn’t account for a high percentage of faculty mem bers’ income. Dr. Don Tomlinson, assistant pro fessor of journalism at A&M, does ducation dean says politicians enege on promises for funding By Melissa Naumann REPORTER Contrary to promises made during political cam paigns, funds for education have continued to decline and cannot meet student needs, Dean Corrigan, dean of the College of Education, said. Corrigan said that although President George Bush has claimed to be the “education president,” his “mea- " attempts at educational reform have been less than satisfactory thus far. The rhetoric does not equal the action,” he said. ‘With all the talk about ‘a nation at risk,’ education still appears to be more important in our political cam paigns than in our appropriations.” Corrigan’s view is supported by a National Education Association report that affirmed the declining number of students being served by four major education pro grams: Chapter 1, Pell grants, the Bilingual Education Act and the Education for All Handicapped Children Act. The decrease in funding for Chapter 1, which is aimed at poor children in early grades, is the most omi nous symbol for the future of education, Corrigan said. According to the NEA report, during the 1980-81 school year, seven million students received aid from the Chapter 1 program. In the 1988-89 school year, however, only 5.6 million children are involved in the i. The report also said the number of children living in poverty, which is who Chapter 1 was designed to help, is more than 12 million. For 1989, Chapter 1 received $4.6 billion in federal funds, but $6.9 billion was necessary to serve all eligible students. Corrigan said a goal of politicians in recent years has been to concentrate attention and money on younger children to save money on later remediation, but the ac tual funds given to education haven’t backed this up. “The farther up the education ladder you go, the less effective remediation is,” he said. Secretary of Education Lauro Cavazos, former presi dent of Texas Tech University, has spoken about the drop-out problem, but Corrigan said the decreasing funds for Chapter 1 contradict Cavazos’ promises to lower the drop-out rate. “Children are at risk (of dropping out of school) in the first grade unless we provide opportunities for them,” Corrigan said. At the other end of the educational spectrum, the amount of money allotted to Pell grants (assistance to college students) also is not adequate for the needs of all eligible students. To serve all students, $6.1 billion was needed, but only $4.5 billion was allotted. Bilingual education is also suffering, the NEA report said. To serve all eligible students, $1.4 billion was needed. Instead, $200 million was given to the pro gram. Archie Challenges The World Again And Again! r i With This Coupon FREE Bigger Burgers with Each Drink Purchased \ Sunday, Monday and Tuesday - April 23, 24 & 25 I Good at Both Archie's Restaurants — —. 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Aside from the financial value of outside consulting, he said, the ad- ; vantages to him are pretty much the | same as to the University. “It allows me to ‘keep my hand in,’ | in a professional sense, and to stay on top of current issues that have to do with my field,” Tomlinson said, j “It also allows me to pass that infor mation on to my students.” He said there’s a danger of stag- j nation in teaching, where one’s pro fessional development becomes ar rested. “Research and consulting can pre vent stagnation from occurring,” Tomlinson said. As for the one-day-a-week policy at the University of Tennessee, he said that should be adequate for fac ulty members. “The time I spend consulting va ries,” Tomlinson said, “but I don’t do it anywhere near a day a week.” He said he doesn’t think outside consulting takes faculty away from teaching or responsibility to the Uni versity. “A faculty member has to per form 100 percent of the responsibil ity he has to the University,” Tom linson said. “The consulting has to be done over and above that.” He said many people don’t realize the extent to which faculty members work on research and consulting at night and on the weekends. “In my opinion, consulting is not only an activity that should be per mitted, but it’s an activity that should be encouraged,” Tomlinson said. University of Tennessee Vice Pro vost C.W. Minkel said he encourages as many faculty members as possible to experience the real world and have practical training. He doesn’t object to them earning additional funds. “Outside consulting can both con tribute toward and take away from the faculty’s teaching and responsi bility to the university, depending on how much is done and the nature of it,” he said. He said his one-day-a-week policy is pretty much the national norm. “For the most part, I think outside consulting is a desirable thing to do,” Minkel said. Rock ’n’ roll music has power to reflect society, prof says By Melissa Naumann REPORTER The times they are a-changin’ — and music is changing right along with them. Dr. Terry Anderson, a Texas A&M associate professor of his tory, has given his students a mu sical walk through history for nine years to illustrate music’s power of reflecting society. Thursday night, Anderson be gan his list of 60 significant songs with “Rock Around the Clock,” the beginning of rock ‘n‘ roll that also served as a rejection of 1940s music. “Rock signaled a change be cause it was a rejection of this pablum,” Anderson said. “In other words, it was music that demonstrated the restlessness.” After the Korean War, songs like “My Boyfriend’s Back” re flected a desire for a return for normalcy, he said. “Courtship and romance — that’s what’s normal,” he said. Soon, the songs of the 1950s began to sound the same, but re lief was on the way in the 1960s, Anderson said. “If the Beatles hadn’t begun to experiment with music, we would have called the exterminator,” he said. As the ’60s wore on, black and, eventually, integrated bands be came more popular. Conse quently, songs such as Sly and the Family Stone’s “Stand” began ad dressing the issue of civil rights, he said. “Another genre that started to ask questions in the 1960s was folk music,” Anderson said, play ing “Tom Dooley” by the Kings ton Trio. “This song by itself wasn’t important. What was im portant was that folk singers sat up and said, ‘Hey, we can make some money!”’ The silence of the students in the ’50s, called the Silent Genera tion, was attacked by Simon and Garfunkel in “The Sound of Si lence,” but this silence ended with the ’60s, Anderson said. In fact, with the beginning of the Vietnam War, songs began to reflect more than one facet of American society. Songs like “Draft Dodgers” were countered with Barry Sadler’s patriotic “The Ballad of the Green Berets,” which sold 7 million copies. “Eve of Destruction,” written by a 19-year-old, showed that support for the war, especially among younger Americans, was declining. “War was a large factor in alienating many people your age from the nation,” Anderson said. The war, however, wasn’t the only thing musicians wrote songs to protest, he said. “If you didn’t revolt against the establishment, you’d revolt just for the hell of it,” he said, playing “Born To Be Wild” by Steppen- wolf. The other half of American so ciety responded with songs such as “Dawn of Correction,” defend ing the American way, Anderson said. The ’70s brought artists such as Jimi Hendrix and the Moody Blues experimenting with music, while others such as Helen Reddy with “I Am Woman” continued to address social issues. Although the experimentation continues with artists such as U2 and Prince, the present trend is back to normalcy, tied in with bits of social commentary and cyn icism, he said. Anderson said one song in par ticular served as the theme of the Reagan administration, making the most recent comment on American society: “Don’t Worry — Be Happy.” Attention! Former Members of 24 hr. Gyms of Texas! You have 3 days left! crouJsctYM. i® a limited transfer mein'’ ershi P to al1 eli 9 ible members. But hurry', ° ffer ends A pril 24th! croups cnrM A LICENSEE OF GOLD'S GYM £NT- INC. 1308 Harvey ^ oac * College Station 764-8000