Monday, Monday, March 30, 1992 The Battalion Page 5 Programs stress quality in education Continued from Page 2 annually from each University college. Recipients most likely will be non-tenured assistant professors and will receive a $5,000 teaching grant. They will be required to con duct research and share their results with the University. The CTE Visiting Scholars Program will bring nationally recognized teaching scholars to campus for conferences, workshops, semi nars and individual tutoring. The Classroom Communication Enhance ment Program, working through the CTE, is al ready in place. Students are able to file com plaints about a breakdown in classroom com munication, and all complaints must be inves tigated and resolved within seven days. "This was put in place to ensure we were having proper communication between stu dents and instructors," Gage said. "It gives us an opportunity early in the semester to correct the difficulty or make a faculty reassignment if necessary." The Reload Program began this spring to give students in general studies an extra semester to pull up their grades to enter a spe cific major. Gage said there are careful selec tion requirements and circumstances involved, but it pays off for the students. "Most students are challenged and commit ted to making the grade from that point on," he said. Other programs already in place include the Teaching Assistant Training and Evaluation Program, the University Honors Program, a network of University advisors and coun selors, the Office of Professional School Advis ing and international student exchange pro grams. The University influences high school stu dents through programs with the Center for Academic Enhancement and Outreach. The center helps academically troubled high school students to stay in school and continue their education at a higher level. "It's an integral and important part of re cruitment to diversify the student body," Gage said. "We're not just trying to recruit for A&M or for other colleges involved in this — we're trying to recruit for higher education." A&M works with other shcools, including the University of Texas, the University of North Texas and the University of Houston, to help students academically and financially. "Many kids don't have a home where there's literacy and tutoring," Gage said. The University also is trying to maintain quality through enrollment management. Gage said. The goal is to maintain a total enrollment of 41,000, 75 percent of that undergraduate stu dents, and 25 percent graduate and profession al students. , Presently, the University is at 80 percent un dergraduate students and 20 percent graduate and professional students. "Limited enrollment is essential to maintain quality in classroom and laboratory instruc tion, and have adequate faculty, facilities and support services that are so very important," Gage said. If University enrollment continues to grow as it has in the past, there would be 60,000 stu dents at A&M by the year 2000. Gage closed his program by saying "we haven't stopped" and that the University will continue to maintain a level of excellence in ed ucation. Scuba lessoNS 1/2 PRICE BUDDY SPECIAL H fSten up and set your Buddy in at 1 /2 price! * Heated Pool* ‘Textbook and Scuba Equip, included* Classes begin: April 2nd (call for schedules! Aprj| 20th May 4th Dive Trips: Cozumel* June 24th - June 29th Belize- August Dates TBA r* 1 is College Main. College Station fOn NortheateJ 409-846-9396 NASA adds 1 day to shuttle mission CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Atlantis' environmental mission was extended Sunday from eight to nine days so its crew can make extra measurements of earth's endangered ozone layer and other parts of the atmosphere. The shuttle's crew of six men and one woman have done every thing possible to save enough power for an additional day in space, including turning off the cabin lights and galley equipment when not in use. When told of the extension, commander Charles Bolden Jr. said “That's great news! The guys are really excited about it. . . . Ev erybody's smiling." “We're smiling down here, too," Mission Control replied. Atlantis was supposed to re turn Wednesday after eight days in orbit, but scientists involved in the mission asked for a ninth day. Landing is now scheduled for just after sunrise Thursday at the Kennedy Space Center. This is only the fourth time a shuttle flight has been prolonged for scientific purposes. The last oc casion was Discovery's biomedi cal research mission in January. Nine other shuttle flights nave been extended at least an orbit, but only because of technical problems of bad weather at land ing sites. Cambodia endangers peace pact with attack PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — The Vietnamese-installed government launched an offen sive against Khmer Rouge guerril las in northern Cambodia on Sun day, threatening the U.N.-spon sored peace accord that is meant to end more than a dozen years of war. The Khmer Rouge, who are hated for the hundreds of thou sands of deaths they caused dur ing the three-year reign that was ended by a Vietnamese invasion in 1978, called for an immediate truce. The government and the Khmer Rouge have accused each other of starting the recent fight ing by trying to seize more territo ry before full deployment of U.N. peacekeeping forces under the pact. The government and three ri val rebel groups signed the peace agreement in Paris in October. But the four-month interval before U.N. officials arrived to begin overseeing the truce left a power vacuum marked by frequent cease-fire violations, political as sassinations and civil unrest. Yasushi Akashi, head of the U.N. peacekeeping operation, said fighting was spreading, and con demned it as a threat to peace. YOU KNOW WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE An engagement ring from David Gardner's. It will take some time. It will take some money. But it will take her breath away. ckvid oarcJneks Jewelers ♦ Gemolocists Chimney Hill Retail Plaza 701 University East, Suite 403 College Station, TX 77840 (409) 846-4151 HICKEN 846-0193 FREE DELIVERY Mimlmum Doll vary Required 317 Patricia, Northgate Baskets (SSrvdTwrtfrFrinch Frl•• & lex** Toa«t) Chicken Fried Steak, gravy *3.79 Chicken Strips, all white meat, gravy 4.39 Chicken Nuggets, 9 pc. with Sauce 3.19 Chicken Fried Steak Fingers, gravy 3.55 2 pa Fried Chicken Basket 2.59 3 pa Fried Chicken Basket 3.55 5 pa Fried Chicken Basket 5.10 1/2 lb Falitas...$5.99 1 lb Faiitas...S9.99 10 pc., mixed 10 pc.,mixed w/Cole Slaw & Fries Sandwiches Grilled Chicken Breast w/ Fries 1/4 lb Hamburger Hot Wings 10 pc. 20 pc. HourrM-F 11-2,5-11 Sat 11-11 Sun 12-11 *3.79 p" Buy 1 lb Chicken Fajitas and 6.55 I I Get a Second at 1/2 Prica 4-tS4? In Observance of National Library Week HRsrCnYTfexns _ First City, Texas - Bryan/College Station and the Sterling C. Evans Library cordially invite our friends and customers to view published books by distingushed authors of Texas A&M University Monday, March 30, and Tuesday, March 31, 1992 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. First City, Texas 3000 Briarcrest Drive ; ourtl DALLA avericks, : rom rookii Jcisive 13- napped a i ;ame losing nctory Sui fnver Nug Denver, enter D Iseemed on fritrol by 1 Iwith 7:10 tc n's 18-foot But a tt Nuggets' Sc ling a charg row by Mi aaining. 1 |Dallas run Blackman's i ead with 1:5 Hodge s< _ oints durin Idunk off an r\' m Mm* Bryan, Texas Ted Anderson Victor Arizpe Stephen Atkins John August William Banks Leonard Berry S.P. Bhattachaxyya Terry Blanchard A1 Boggess Walter Buenger James Burk Robert Calvert Garland Cannon Kai Chang Carolyn Clark William B. Clark Robert Cochran Charles Conrad Authors of Texas A&M University 1990-1901 Yavuz Corapcioglu Ronald Hatchett Larry Crumbley Harold Hawkins Kathleen Davis John Herbich Roy Dejoie Henry Dethloff Joe Dixon Patrick Domenico David Dubofsky Don Dyal James Earle George Edwards George Fowler Stephen Fulling Carl Gabbard Barbara Gastel Alberto Gonzalez Walter Haisler Hal Hall John Hoyle Robert Ivie Marcko Jaric Larry Johnson Katherine Kelly William Klemm Wulf Koepke Clinton Machann James McNeal Martin Medhurst Stjepan Mestrovic Glenn Miller Jelena Milojkovic-Djuric Timothy Mitchell Steve Murdock Francis Narcowich Gerald North David Olson A. Parasuraman Robert Pender William Perry Tarla Rai Peterson Raymond Petrillo Udo Pooch John Powers William Pride Malcolm Quantrill Don Rice Kurt Ritter jon Rodiek peter Rose Wayne Sampson Donald Sawyer James Schumacher Richard Shafer John Slattery L. Murphy Smith Jerry Stuth Philip Taetz Louis Tassinaiy Frank Thomas Paul Thompson I.R. Tizard Carlton Van Doren Paul Van Riper Dickson Varner S.B. Vinson Peter Wetherill Clifford Whetten Stephen Worchel Richard Wysk Larry Yarak HrstCity,Texas 3000 Briarcrest Drive 776-5402 Member FDIC