Monday, March 24, 1986/The Battalion Page 3 State and Local ' Vd available to pay stuOent loans Program to help new physicians By JEANNE ISENBERG Reporter The first few years after the com- etion of medical school can be ugh ones, especially for the physi- an who has student loans to repay. Not only is he challenged by the ressures of his new job, but he also ay have to deal with the debts in- irred by his education. Now, with the aid of the Physician udent Loan Repayment Program, gwly-licensed physicians can pay ■pebts while practicing medicine the same time. The Texas College and University fstein Coordinating Board is inau- Hting a new program designed to pay up to $3,000 in student loans ■every year spent working in exas rural and inner-city areas with health care shortages, or with pa tients of designated state agencies. Deborah Bay, director of public information for the Coordinating Board, says the program was set up by the Texas Legislature last spring to encourage physicians to practice in underserved areas or with state agencies in need of their services. The board hopes this program will deal with the problem of uneven distribution of physicians by provid ing good incentives to work in these areas and agencies. Bay says. Mack C. Adams, assistant commis sioner for student services for the Coordinating Board, says the yearly loan repayments are an option for up to five years, providing the stu dent with up to $ 15,000 in aid. The amount of money issued to the physician each year by the state. he says, depends on the amount of the individual debt and on how much of the debt normally would be due that year. Applicants must be licensed grad uates of accredited medical or os teopathic schools who finished their postgraduate work after May 1984, Bay says. They may apply for accep tance during their final year of train ing or when employment in the un derserved area begins. The rural and urban areas in Texas included by the program are designated by the state for those physicians who wish to go into pri vate practice. Bay says. The designated state agencies of the program include the Texas De partment of Health, the Texas De partment of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, the Texas De partment of Corrections and the Texas Youth Council. The loans to be repaid must have been used for graduate or profes sional education, and the payments are made by the Coordinating Board to approved lenders such as banks, credit unions, universities and medi cal schools. Bay says the Coordinating Board, which consists of about 37 universi ties, 49 community college districts, several public medical schools and a technical institute, saw final appro val of the program in January and now is waiting for applications to start coming in. To participate in the program or receive more information, Bay says, potential applicants can go to the fi nancial aid office at their school or write the Coordinating Board in Austin. In Advance Regents to consider raising fees for Fall 1986 semester s Il2 ■ The Texas A&M Board of Re- Knts will consider proposed in- Keases in parking permit fees, bus fees, student service fees and modular style dorm fees during two days of meetings which begin today. pantH A report from A&M President OoWBank E. Vandiver’s office says a vout 5percent increase in parking per- jll! mils will be necessary for the . ,1086 fall semester. This increase is recommended in order to meet shot! (the funding requirements for the that liiroulti-level parking garage, t' nr , scheduled for completion in late , 1988. .■Users of the off campus bus :r amB rv j ce can eX p ec ^ a 3 4 percent ) ne tolpcrease to $40 per shuttle pass if f tk the board accepts the proposal in It wasVandiver’s report. The report also proposes an in crease in the maximum student services fees from $54.50 per se mester to $61 per semester. New modular dorm fees also may be raised by 4.3 percent, according to the report. The dorms affected include Haas, Hobby, McFadden, Clements, Neeley and Underwood. The current fee for modular dorms, $791, would be raised to $825 if the increase is approved. Also being considered is the es tablishment of an international student fee of $21 per semester. If approved, all fee increases would be effective for the Fall 1986 semester. ie wi l Faculty Senate to debate change in A&M regulations > the rtf" 1 oldV The Faculty Senate will hold a salesml special meeting today at 3:15 i.m. in 601 Rudder Tower to xmdnue amending the core cur riculum proposal and to consider changes in the University rules and regulations. Also, the Senate will hear three Resolutions from the Personnel and Welfare Committee, one urging state legislators to main tain and, if needed, increase the state contribution to retirement programs in Texas in order to | achieve equality with comparable institutions. lands, p Man.' _ The second resolution asks that President Frank E. Vandiver ihefact i be ef® ctballK l see ^ act i° n by the Legislature to ret ofR se the Ip provide free tuition for A&M em ployees and their dependents at state universities in Texas. Another resolution asks that all campus classrooms have signs clearly displayed, stating a Uni versity regulation prohibiting the use of tobacco in classrooms and laboratories. In other business, the Senate will amend and vote on the re maining two requirements of the core curriculum proposal. The remaining sections are cultural heritage and social science. Fol lowing the amendment process, which may be completed at this meeting, the Senate will vote on the core curriculum document as a whole. Congressmen say Texas city may get more Navy ships Associated Press CORPUS CHRISTI — This Gulf Coast city’s Homeport, to be located on Ingleside Point, could benefit from political debate over the Navy’s plan to establish new battlegroups on the nation’s three coastlines, two congressmen say. Rep. Mac Sweeney, R-Wharton, and Rep. Solomon Ortiz, D-Corpus Christi, said Corpus Christi stands to gain more ships in addition to the battleship USS Wisconsin and its four support vessels scheduled to ar rive by 1990. Congressional critics have crit icized Homeport proposals at Ever ett, Wash., and Staten Island, N.Y., as politically motivated, unstrategic and costly. Sweeney said it is only a question of when more ships will arrive at the expense of ports elsewhere. “I see only the beginning of a buildup along the Gulf Coast,” Sweeney told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. “Without a doubt, Corpus Christi walked away with the big prize and, right now, the only prize that is secure.” Ortiz confirmed press reports quoting unnamed congressional sources that the House Armed Serv ices Committee in a secret, 20-14 vote on Thursday, authorized spending $412 million to renovate the Wisconsin. Ortiz said Sen. Barry M. Goldwa- ter, R-Ariz., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and others could defeat funding for other ports in crucial test votes at va rious intervals over the summer. , Goldwater wrote Defense Secre tary Caspar Weinberger March 7, saying the homeport proposals were motivated by “unadulterated poli tics” and that he would not “take any positive action on it in my commit tee.” A General Accounting Office re port said earlier the homeport dis persal plan is costlier than stationing ships in existing ports. But Sen. Phil Gramm, a leading Senate homeport advocate as Re publican senator from Texas, said last week that Goldwater supports the Corpus Christi Homeport as the most economical. As a result, spending for various ships and harbor facilities in the USS Iowa battleship group at Staten Is land and at Navy facilities elsewhere, including Norfolk, Va., may be in trouble, said Ortiz, a member of the House Armed Services Committee. “If that doesn’t pass, this doesn’t mean that we’re going to get it for Corpus Christi, but it becomes a situ ation where it becomes doubtful whether they will have a homeport,” Ortiz said in a telephone interview from Brownsville. He said the Navy may have to con sider stationing ships elsewhere at a time when the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico are the least pro tected yet the most threatened be cause of a Soviet presence at Cuba and Nicaragua. Corpus Christi would be a likely place for those ships, Ortiz said. Sweeney, also of the House Armed Services Committee, said po litical considerations were apparent in the decision to put homeports at Everett and Staten Island. Major bases at San Diego, Calif., and Nor folk already protect those coasts, he said. He said fleets anchored at San Diego, Calif., and Norfolk are vic tims of the “Pearl Harbor syn drome,” while the Gulf Coast propo sal is well-dispersed and less vulnerable to attack or a single knockout blow. Hearing on needs of state transportation to be held 118 ie to itt University News Service COLLEGE STATION — A hear- g on state transportation needs will onducted by the Texas House of Jresentatives Committee on insportation March 25-26 at :as A&M in conjunction with the ual meeting of the Texas Trans- ortation Institute’s Advisory Com- ittee. Testimony during the two days will come from advisory committee members who are leaders in the state’s transportation community. Speakers representing aviation, highway facilities, railroad, water, safety, and urban transportation agencies are expected to outline cur rent status and the needs of their in dustries. The hearing convenes at 2:45 p.m. March 25 in 301 Rudder. Leg islators expected to attend include Texas Sen. John Traeger, Sen. Kent Caperton and Rep. Richard Smith of Bryan. TTI, judged by its peers to be the nation’s top transportation research organization, is a University-based research organization that was cre ated to serve all forms of transporta tion in the state. Dr. Charley Wootan, director of TTI, said, “The institute is charged to serve as a focal point for transpor tation research for various agencies of state government so that each agency does not have to develop and maintain its own research staff. “We’re looking forward to meet ing with the House Transportation Committee once again to exchange ideas and information about issues that are so vital to our state.” Country &'Western Dance Beginning VM April 2-30 6:00-7:15pm $15 Advanced 'W, April 2-30 7:30-&45pm $15 Hurry in, registration has already begun! WANTED Major anthology now seeks poems: love, nature, haiku, song lyrics, reflective, free verse, religious — all typesl Beginners are welcome! Our editors will reply within 7 days. Send ONE POEM ONLY, 21 lines or less, to: WORLD OF POETRY PRESS Dept. AP • 2431 Stockton Blvd. • Sacramento, Calif. 95817 Announcing... New Drink Specials! Monday: Tuesday: Wednesday: Thursday: $1.25 Daiquiris $1.25 Margaritas $1.75 Long Island Iced Tea $1.00 Well Drinks for Ladies COLLEGE STATION HILTON M ft. an ^ Conference Center 801 University Drive East • 693-7500 ... See it now, before it vanishes from sight!