The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 31, 1985, Image 15

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    Thursday, January 31, 1983/The Battalion/Page 15
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(continued from page 1)
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PohcyanJ
adra said on the tape. “He asked
at list, and I told him. He said
fd like to see it.
Basically, I got scared and didn’t
lly know what to do.”
Ibob Wiatt, director of security
veen whund University Police, and Will
^ ^ finijfbtt, a detective for University Po-
r g e d 26,®, also testified Wednesday. Both
’ a niodejineii also testified at Monday’s trial,
which ended in a mistrial,
tk by i(|(pWiatt and Scott said the original
cxpensivtext'icise roster had been considered
e foreipwital piece of evidence during the
c to l sinlestigation. Though a recons-
Buted roster was presented at the
1 level foBsing of the grand jury investiga-
' deficitolqn, it was of no value in the investi-
ice a S6.
> said ttii
in partoi
v analyt
nntryand
t.
ion, they said.
The six-woman jury reconvened
at 9 a.m. today. The job of the jury,
as Kuboviak stated Monday, is to de
termine whether or not Cuadra de
stroyed the exercise documents
knowing the investigation was un
derway.
If convicted on the tampering
with evidence charge, Cuadra could
f ace up to one year in jail and a fine
of up to $2,000.'
A pretrial hearing for D’Alessan-
dro, Miles and Fancher is scheduled
for Friday afternoon. The three face
charges of criminally negligent hom
icide, which also carries a penalty of
up to one year in jail and a fine of up
to $2,000. All four former cadets
face charges of hazing, which carries
a jail term of 10 days to three
months, and a fine of $25 to $200.
Companies
(continued from page 1)
Students also are interested in cer
tain fields, so interested that depart
ments are finding it difficult to meet
students’ needs.
“The people who are trying to get
in electrical engineering are over
whelming our capabilities, and as a
result, we’re going to require that the
students perform better,” Beasley
said.
Freshman enrollment in electrical
engineering remained the same
from last year to this year, but trans
fer student enrollment increased by
45 percent, he said.
Beasley said the Department of
Computer Science and the College
of Business are facing the same situ
ation and are considering the same
measures.
“Enrollment is higher than we
have staff to teach,” said Dr. Bart
Childs, computer science professor
in charge of that department’s co-op
program. “But the reason (computer
science) is the one to be in is that
there are jobs to have.”
Most computer science graduates
will find jobs through the placement
center, he said, usually as systems
analysts.
But Childs agrees with Schoen-
feldt that students have to put forth
an effort if they want a job.
1 here are a good number of
graduates who don’t want to do any
thing toward getting a job until they
cross the stage,” he said .
Campus
(continued from page 1)
opi
ulf
the least painful for students.
“The Delco plan calls for an in
crease of resident tuition over 10
years until it reaches $24 per semes
ter hour and an increase in nonresi
dent tuition until it reaches $192 per
hour’’ he says. “That sounds steep
but right now it probably is the best
bill.”
One good thing about the Delco
plan is that it will not affect students
already in school, Gavras says.
“It has a grandfather clause which
says students who are presently in
school and who do not transfer to
another university will not be af
fected by the tuition increase,” he
says.
A bill sponsored by Gary Thomp
son, D-Abilene, would raise resident
tuition to 15 percent of the yearly
cost it takes to educate a student. A
study by the Texas Research League
revealed that resident undergrad
uates currently pay for only 3 per
cent of their educational cost.
“Gary Thompson’s indexing bill is
out,” Gavras says. “It doesn’t allow
the student any type of future plan
ning for his school budget. The stu
dent doesn’t know how much his tu
ition will increase from one year to
the next.”
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