The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 28, 1997, Image 5

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    Page 5
Tuesday • January 28, 1997
lNKINGS
(ntinued from Page 1
pie latest school to jump on the bandwag-
ras the University of Texas at Austin. UT
; not ranked as one of the top-50 schools in
[country.
lust last week, UT’s student govern-
mt passed a resolution backing an ini-
live for UT President Robert Berdahl to
|te a letter to the magazine denouncing
rankings.
|eff Tsai, UT student body president
a senior government major, said the
(gazine attempts to coalesce vastly dif-
;nt schools, such as Texas A&M and
lliam & Mary, a small liberal arts col-
|e, and claims to create a comprehen-
list of rankings.
[They try to tell us in a series of rankings
pt is best for us and what is not best for us,"
|i said.
Tsai said the rankings are superficial and ir-
Jvant since they make readers look at colleges
1 different level, such as “A&M is better than
T and vice versa.
Cate Mueller, a media relations man-
;r for U.S. News and World Report,
Id the magazine’s college editorial staff
jets annually with an advisory com
mittee, which consists of several deans
of admissions, research experts and offi
cials from universities, to evaluate the
criteria they use and make improve
ments on the survey.
Mueller said 75 percent of the ranking
criteria is based on factual information
such as the number of graduates and the
number of applicants accepted compared
to the number which applied.
“We rank them in a large number of objective
attributes based on educational quality includ
ing academic reputation,” she said.
Mueller said the remaining 25 percent of the
ranking depends on the academic reputation
section where deans of uni versities are asked to
state their assessment of other schools. If deans
have no background on another school, they do
not have to fill out anything about that particu
lar school.
Mueller said the magazine’s traditional adage
is “News you can use" and the survey is done for
readers, not colleges.
“U.S. News believes that our rankings
provide a significant service to readers,”
Mueller said.
Thompson said one of the inaccuracies of the
rankings, besides the academic reputation sec
tion, is the value-added formula which is used to
compute graduation rates.
The formula takes the average SAT scores
of entering freshmen and predicts the rate
of graduation. Later, if the actual rate of
graduation is better than the predicted rate,
bonus points are given to the university. If
the actual rate is less than the predicted
rate, fewer points are tallied.
“What’s profoundly silly about that is, to
get a perfect score, the school would have
to accept mannequins and give them diplo
mas,” Thompson said. “The mannequins
would have a predicted graduation rate of
zero and an actual rate of 100.”
Mueller said the Art & Science Group Inc., a
higher education consulting group, conducted a
study and found that college rankings play a
modest role in an individual’s decision on where
to attend college.
“We basically never hear of a student who
strictly chooses a school just because of what the
ranking was,” Mueller said.
Tsai said since U.S. News and World
Report advertises statements such as “Ex
clusive Rankings” and “What’s Right For
You” on the cover of its annual rankings
issue, it appears that the magazine pro
motes itself to readers as the main source
of college information.
“The fact of the matter is that people do
rely on the rankings because U.S. News en
courages them to rely on these rankings,”
Tsai said.
SPRING BIBM '9?
Cancun from $349
Acapulco from $399
plus tax
Holiday Express
21st Year 800-235-TRIP
Attention:
FALL 1997
Student Teachers
except HLTH & KINE and AGED
WHAT: Pre-Student Teaching Informational Meeting
WHEN: Wednesday, February 5, 1997
TIME: 7:00 p.m.
WHERE: Rudder Tower, Room 601
This meeting is MANDATORY!!
ornado touches
lown near Houston
iakaveli shoulc
his pops to
. Maybe he sb
r’s footsteps to
ie Lord.
PASADENA (AP) — A torna-
damaged several buildings
nd overturned mobile homes
hen it struck Monday along a
ajor thoroughfare in Pasade-
novvs, not la, just southeast of Houston,
nyonewhoser [authorities said.
don killumimm Extensive damage was reported
1 see that hem pom the 3:40 p.m. touchdown but
dc. go serious injuries were reported,
lasadena police officer Gary
. boskocil said.
\l pk f f He said police received reports of
V Cl I U J Stores being damaged and mobile
ow’s openingn f$ o mes knocked over. Power was
outfits inabou:t| 1K)c ked out to about 5,500 homes.
I Other scattered damage oc-
lurred at a church, where pieces of
soul R&Barffi
ie winner’s;*)® I
laimingthefs
the roof were blown off and win
dows ripped out. One side of a two-
story office building was torn away
and part of a mini-storage ware
house reduced to rubble.
Zory Gonzalez had stopped to
talk to workers in a law firm in the
office building.
“We heard the glass shatter and
things flying everywhere,” she said.
“I heard the glass first and then it
completely ripped the side of the
entire offices.”
She crouched under a desk un
til the noises of wind and flying de
bris stopped. She suffered some
scratches on her feet when she lost
her shoes scrambling for cover.
Cain
beat Don:-*',
wpop-roati Continued from Page 1
he award#f «,. T , , ... . „ ^
3 We had no notification, Car
penter said. “It really just kind of
flight us by surprise. We pay to
ive the privilege to live here. We
sed to be able to use the comput-
s as well.”
Carpenter said Cain Hall resi-
nts pay around $2,100 a semester
live in the hall.
He said he is not bitter about the
liange, but he hopes they can work
Imething out.
I “We don’t mind if athletes get
fecial privileges,” he said.
I Carpenter said a good solution to
le problem would be to allow ath-
Ites exclusive privileges to the
ist by ABC-Tv
li
PPLICANTS
ontinued from Page 1
"We have roughly 1,600 monthly
ntacts,” she said, “and our law
ool files have increased 50 percent.”
The Office of Professional School
Ivising provides students with ser-
:es to help them with the applica-
m and interview process. The office
ceives applications, holds work-
ops, answers specific questions,
ites personalized letters and sends
computers most of the day, but to
have a “common time” when every
one could use them.
Dr. Karl Mooney, associate ath
letic director for academic affairs,
said the Athletic Department is try
ing to solve the problem.
“We’re trying to come up with a
system to provide [non-athletes] an
opportunity to use the lab when it’s
not packed,” Mooney said. “It was
never included in the contract that
[the computer lab) vyould be avail
able to non-athletes. ’
Mooney said it is important
all student athletes have access
to any supplementary learning
tools because of pressure from
the Big 12.
“[Athletes] can’t have a light
weight schedule,” he said.
letters of recommendation.
“We are trying to set up mock in
terview workshops, and we have
hired a part-time health career ad
viser to enhance that division of our
office,” Blum said.
Rachel Smith, a senior microbiol
ogy major entering medical school
this fall, explained how visiting the
Office of Professional School Advis
ing, sending off all applications, and
getting an acceptance letter meant
her single goal had been met.
“Yes, I’m in!” she said.
SPRING ‘MAKEUPS’
It s not too late to get in the '97 Aggieland
Don't miss out on this
final opportunity to
be in Texas A&M's Ag-
gieland yearbook.
Class pictures will be
taken 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Monday - Friday until
February 21.
Pictures being taken
ON CAMPUS
in MSC basement
Bookstore
Hullabaloo
Vocal
Music
Univ.
PLUS
across from University PLUS
^|||^c.raTBarber
Yearbook class portraits byAR Photography
Call 693-8183 for more details
WHAT INSPIRED THE MOUNTAIN MEN?
George Washington:
“Whereas it is the duty of all nations to
acknowledge the providence of
almighty God, to obey His will, to be
grateful for His benefits, and humbly to
implore His protection and favor.”
Abraham Lincoln:
“Intelligence, Patriotism, Christianity,
and a firm reliance on Him who has
never yet forsaken this favored land
are still competent to adjust in the best
way all our present difficulty. ...As was
said three thousand years ago, so still
it must be said, ‘the judgments of the
Lord are true and righteous altogeth
er’”
Thomas Jefferson:
“God who gave us life gave us liberty. Can
the liberties of a nation be secure when we
have removed a conviction that these lib
erties are the gift of God? Indeed I tremble
for my country when I reflect that God is
just, that His justice cannot sleep forever.”
Teddy Roosevelt:
“There are those who believe that a new
modernity demands a new morality. What
they fail to consider is the harsh reality that
there is no such thing as a new morality.
There is only one morality. All else is im
morality. There is only true Christian ethics
over against which stands the whole of pa
ganism. If we are to fulfill our great destiny
as people, then we must return to the old
morality, the sole morality.”
FACULTY FRIENDS
We are inspired by Jesus Christ who said: “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall
not perish but have eternal life.” We are a grou^of professors, instructors, lecturers, and administrators united by their common experience
that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students, fac
ulty, and staff who might like to discuss such questions with us. If you would like to be a part of the FACULTY FRIENDS ad, please contact
Murphy Smith 5-3108, Steve Crouse 5-3997, or Lee Lowery 5-4395.
Natalie L. Allen
Accounting
Bill Cready
Accounting
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Civil Engineering
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Civil Engineering
Walter F. Juliff
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Eli Jones
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Carson E. Watt
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Austin Daily
Accounting
Hayes E. Ross Jr.
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Russell K. Biles
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Michael Greenwald
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L. Murphy Smith
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Richard M. Alexander
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Speech Comm. -
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Health and Kinesiology
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G. Brian Colwell
Health and Kinesiology
Warren Heffington
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Alvin A. Price
Veterinary Medicine
Oral Capps, Jr.
Agricultural Economics
James M. Griffin
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Stephen Crouse
Health and Kinesiology
Harry Hogan
Mechanical Engineering
Loren Skow
Veterinary Medicine
H. L. Goodwin
Agricultural Economics
Tim Gronberg
Economics
Michael D. Delp
Health and Kinesiology
C. L. Hough
Mechanical Engineering
Michael Willard
Veterinary Medicine
Fred Ruppel
Agricultural Economics
Steven Wiggins
Economics
Carl Gabbard
Health and Kinesiology
Ken D. Kihm
Mechanical Engineering
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Veterinary Microbiology
Don R. Herring
Agricultural Education
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Educational Administration
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Health and Kinesiology
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Mechanical Engineering
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Health and Kinesiology
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Veterinary Pathology
L. Wayne Greene
Animal Science
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Educational Curriculum (Retired)
Vicki Markowsky
Health and Kinesiology
Ozden Ochoa
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Leonard Ponder
Health and Kinesiology
David Rhode
Mechanical Engineering
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Veterinary Physiology
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Educational Curriculum
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Health and Kinesiology
Dan Turner
Mechanical Engineering
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Veterinary Physiology
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Animal Science
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Medical Anatomy
Jim Jensen
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j
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NOTE: This ad presents the personal convictions of the individuals listed herein; the ad does not represent or support any view or position of Texas A&M University or any aca
demic department. The ad does represent and acknowledge the diversity of academic contributions to Texas A&M University by men and women of various race, ethnic group,
and cultural background who share the Christian faith.