The Battalion Estate & local 3 Tuesday, July 25,1989 t was: Program stresses that skills in statistics be learned young >f'plar.!:' 'ast sided and/or ca on morer. estheiH elocane II. Webj ot wittiJ idem ie pro the mos S By Mia B. Moody STAFF WRITER ■ In an effort to improve the skills of students taking statistics courses, Texas A&M is serving as a host for one of the eight programs offered in the nation that will give teachers of grades kindergarten through 12 point ers on how to make the subject more interesting for stu dents. I The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Founda tion Summer Institute in Statistics is sponsoring the one-week workshop that began Monday. I Dr. James F. McNamara, coordinator of the program and a professor in the educational psychology depart- ment at A&M, said, “Because of a report released by the Mathematics and Statistics Educational Board we felt like students need to start learning the basics of statistics beginning as early as kindergarten. The workshop is one of the measures that is being used to give teachers the skills necessary to implement the teaching of statis tics into their curriculum.” I Gail Burrill, chairman of the joint committee of sta tistics and mathematics teachers for the Mathematics jand Statistics Educational Board, said the program, “E- perybody Counts,” was formed to bring students up to a llevel where they can compete with students in other ountries in statistics literacy. “We have found that students who have graduated from high schools in America in the past generally aren’t able to work with numbers at the level equivalent to students in Japan, for example,” Burrill said. “We hope that by introducing students to intuitive and the oretical courses at an earlier age we will increase their competency to a level that is competitive with other countries.” McNamara said statistics is an important part of the modern student’s life because its techniques are used in determining quality control in manufacturing and food preparation, and in sampling to estimate voter and con sumer behavior. Murray Siegal, site coordinator of the workshop, said he and three other teachers from across the country were chosen to direct the workshop. “We are a group of mathematics teachers from high- schools and junior high schools who were chosen by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation Summer Institute in Statistics, in order to instruct teach ers on how to bring the user-friendly statistics system into the classroom,” Siegal said. Siegal said the current method in which statistics is being taught is difficult for students to grasp. The method that the workshop utilizes is simple, but power ful, he said. PD will resume hiring officers fter three years of no recruiting ■ HOUSTON (AP) — As Houston ■olice prepare to resume hiring ofFi- .■ers after a three-year lapse, several nservnt« ;C r U iti n g experts say it is doubtful (jie department can Find enough ualified applicants for a scheduled Ctober cadet class. The Houston Police Department’s iecruiting division, dormant since 1986, will conduct a three-day job fair this week. Recruiters expect |bout 1,500 people to attend — lteniel1 Shout the number of applicants iw an:./®ceded to Find 70 who qualify for i non- admission to the Oct. 5 class, dits s Subsequent classes are scheduled ‘xasAiM or N° ve mh )er > December and Jan- ■ ary. )fT1 ustas i order hetiij tool irstdajl -more; idless- /ewtio leasitf iiistfc meani /earoef Police Chief Lee P. Brown vehe mently denied that the department will take any shortcuts and said the selection of cadets will not be com promised for any reason. “It’s incorrect to make the accusa tion that we’re compromising any as pect of our selection process,” Brown said. Among those skeptical of plans for the Oct. 5 class were several re cruiters for other police depart ments. “I don’t think that they can do it and have a quality police officer,” San Antonio recruiter C.E. King told the Houston Chronicle. “Sure, you can get bodies and out them in a Abandoned newborn boy found in Austin church AUSTIN (AP) — A baby named William, who is estimated to be about 2 weeks old, was found wrap ped in a blanket in a pastor’s study, the third baby abandoned in Austin in less than two weeks. The infant was found Sunday just before 11 a.m. at the Faith United Methodist Church, the Rev. Floyd Vick said. A burlap bundle containing dia pers was placed on the sofa next to the child, Vick said. “We’re grateful that they found the church, and glad he was brought here, instead of put in a Dumpster,” Vick said. A note made from words cut out Iof various publications and glued to a sheet of paper accompanied the in fant. It read: “Homeless and can’t take care of William. Flelp find a family.” No food was left with the baby, but a mother rushed out for for mula, Vick said. The baby was taken by police to the Children’s Hospital at Bracken- ridge, where he was admitted to re ceive additional nourishment, Larry BeSaw, a hospital spokesman said. “He appeared a little thin and a little dehydrated, but otherwise in good shape,” he said. Police Sgt. Sam Cox said, “It’s get ting to be a regular thing.” class, but how many nuts are you going to get? People are going to be scared to be stopped by police.” Others pointed to new, stricter ed ucational requirements for recruits as a potential problem in finding a pool of qualified applicants in time for the October class. The depart ment now requires applicants to have 60 hours of college credit with a C average. Racial tension leads to death of prisoner MIDWAY (AP) — A Texas prison inmate died after suffering stab wounds during a racially-motivated fight among about 120 prisoners, prison officials said. The disturbance Sunday af ternoon in a dayroom at the Texas Department of Corrections Fergu son Unit erupted as a result of a dis pute between black and Hispanic in mates, prison spokesman David Nunnelee said. Donovan Fitzgerald Ingram, 24, received two stab wounds in the inci dent and later died at Huntsville Me morial Hospital, Nunnelee said. In gram was serving a 10-year term for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon from Montgomery County. During the disturbance, inmates broke furniture and broke out win dows, using the glass as a weapon, Nunnelee said. Writer tells A&M audience what a real author’s life is like By Mia B. Moody STAFF WRITER All writers aren’t rich grad uates from Ivy League schools who wear tweed jackets and smoke pipes, Joe R. Lansdale, vice president of the Horror Writers of America, said in a Fri day presentation in the Sterling C. Evans Library. Lansdale said he hopes that by telling of his struggle to become a successful writer he can clear up the stereotypes that many people have of writers. Lansdale has written books and short stories that have been cat egorized as horror, folk-tale and mystery stories. Two titles of Lan- sdale’s books, “A ‘B’ Movie with Blood and Popcorn” and “Tight Little Stitches in a Dead Man’s Back,” give people a sense of his style. “Television is probably respon sible for the image that most peo ple have of authors,” Lansdale said. “In movies, authors are usually graduates from schools in New York or California who drive fancy cars and live glamo rous, easy lives. In reality, there are probably only four or five writers in the whole world who live like that.” Lansdale said television shows portray writing as an easy task. He said Angela Lansbury in the television show, “Murder, She Wrote” will often say, “Well I have a free weekend so I had bet ter try to get a story written.” He said this is unrealistic. “When I write a story I usually write only two or three pages a day and then I sometimes tear those pages up and start over,” he said. The other image people have of writers is the college professor who publishes one story every five years, he said. “I don’t want to step on any body’s toes, but you all know the type of professors who I’m talk ing about, the kind who have sto ries published in college literary magazines about dogs, a bad sex life or a weird childhood,” he said. “They consider everbody else hacks and themselves literary geniuses.” Photo by Kathy Haveman Joe R. Lansdale, author of horror, folktale and mystery books, speaks at the A&M library about “real life” as an author. Lansdale doesn’t fit into either stereotype. He is from East Texas and is an archaeology graduate from the University of Texas. Lansdale said people who want to live a glamorous lifestyle should probably choose a profes sion other than writing. “The average income of writ ers is $4,000,” Lansdale said. “I made less than that for several years and around that for a cou ple of years and now I make way above that.” Lansdale said that to supple ment his salary as a writer, he has been a garbage collector and a waiter.i i “For several years I didn’t make any money from my wri ting,” Lansdale said. “In fact, the IRS said that if I didn’t start mak ing money soon, then I could de clare writing as my hobby and not a profession. My publisher even had to go with me to the bank in order for me to get them to fi nance my house. Eventually I did make enough money to make a career out of writing.” The best experience a writer can get is not at school, Lansdale said, but at the typewriter. “I took a writer’s course at the University of Texas, where I got my degree in archeology, and that was one the worst mistakes of my life,” he said. “Professors can teach you the basics, but they can’t give you ideas; and the im portant thing in writing is good, original ideas.” UH English professor, fiction writer dies at 58 after battle against cancer HOUSTON (AP) — A private memorial service was pending Monday for Donald Barthelme, an award-win ning modern Fiction writer and Cullen Professor of En glish at the University of Houston, who died of cancer. Barthelme was best-known for his wry humor and in novative techniques in writing short stories, many of which were published in The New Yorker, Atlantic and the Paris Review. Barthelme had undergone successful surgery for throat cancer 17 months ago. But he became ill with a form of blood cancer while living in Rome this summer and was admitted to M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston three weeks ago. He died Sunday at the age of 58. “He was a reigning presence in the (UH English) program,” Edward Hirsch, poet and professor of En glish at UH said. “Donald was the kindest man I’ve known. He had a deep-bred Southern courtesy and a kind attitude toward life, personally and professionally. “I’ve looked to him often as a mentor, teacher and friend.” A former newspaper man, Barthelme wrote 15 books, including several novels and collections of short stories. His awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1967, National Institutes of Arts and Letters Award in 1972, National Book Award in 1972 and the Rea Award for the Short Story in 1988. U! Not all MBAs are created equal. Graduating from one of the better business schools can give you a competitive edge. 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