Thursday, February 26, 1987/The Battalion/Page 5 ommittee lobbies for A&M interests ^Students research and identify pertinent education issues : duct« : pape Stitt)® ^ Tko ted it, By John Marr Reporter Although the Legislative Study Group sounds like a group of stu dents that meets on Thursday nights oil the fourth floor of the library, it ' 1 is an established committee of Texas 4&M Student Government that lob- “Fi'tHesin Austin for A&M and its stu- fcnts. “We (LSG) are student lobbyists,” IG director Alan Moore says. “This ans we lobby idealistically and not ancially. Our funds are used to ther and disseminate research to islators and media personnel.” The 20-member, non-partisan |oup is funded by Student Govern- nt and outside donations. The Kitside donations are used for travel ■penses, Moore says. Generally, two to four members vel to Austin each week to rep ent students on issues relevant to M. The two main objectives of the G are to identify and research her education issues that affect AkM students and to present these liues to legislators and media rep- lesentatives in Austin, he says. ■ As a procedural check, the Stu- dtnt Senate legitimizes all positions lie LSG takes on issues to ensure it is Jpresenting A&M students. ■ “Networking is the name of the ts : to itureoll ts He® ion id tnicttd Iso ki! isenill '5 tutlsjl Ave.ni is. Scon tion w I the id e of 1! ispecti«| iolaiioi game in determining relevant is sues,” Moore says. Networking involves talking to numerous sources and reading many journals and reports to find needed information. Moore says that once the informa tion is found, the LSG develops it one step further. The group com piles all the information and re search it has collected into a reliable report on which legislators can base higher-education decisions. Currently, the LSG is compiling a study on each state’s tuition and fee policy. LSG member Mark Browning, a junior accounting major, says the study will help establish the group’s credibility to legislators in Austin by showing that the group has initia tive. “We do not want to be classified as a stereotyped, whining student group,” Moore says. To further its credibility, the LSG is working on two statewide newslet ters targeted at legislators, the press corps and A&M administrators. One will be a monthly four-page letter with articles written by LSG mem bers, and the other will be a two- page position brief that “draws the battle lines,” Moore says. A battle line already has been drawn on cuts in higher education. Cutting higher education defeats the purpose of educating students who nave ability and not just money, Moore says. “When the federal level starts closing the door on education and the state level starts closing the door on education, you have to be very thin to get through that door,” he says. Moore is talking about the door to the Permanent University Fund. The LSG is prepared to defend the PUF against any attempt to give the Legislature authority over its alloca tion. The LSG is concerned that PUF money could be substituted for gen eral research funds A&M receives from other sources. The use of the PUF as a substitute is a disguised cut in higher education, he says. “Higher education is the engine that drives the state,” Moore says. “If you cut off the fuel to the engine, it doesn’t take a mechanical engineer to tell you the engine will stop.” Browning says the consensus in Austin is that any raid on the PUF is unlikely because the University of Texas and Texas A&M delegations have too much power. However, the LSG will compose a formal report to present to the delegation, he says. Moore says the LSG also is form ing positions on several house bills in the Legislature, such as House Bill 24, presented by Sen. Gonzalo Bar rientos, D-Austin, titled “Hazing Rit uals.” The bill, if passed, would establish the fact that consent is not a defense in a hazing incident. Also, it would establish that a university is not re sponsible for a hazing incident if it publicly states its opposition to hazing. The LSG also is looking at House Bill 284 concerning grade point av erages. The bill would change the method for calculating a student’s grade-point ratio when a repeated class is involved. The bill proposes that a grade of C, D or F received by a student in a class be excluded from the student’s GPR if the student re peated the class for an equal or bet ter grade. This would not apply if the student repeats the class more than once. But the LSG is not confined to higher-education issues. Research also is being conducted on matters closer to home. Moore says that A&M students’ concern about changes in the tax law which made scholarships taxable led LSG to research the changes. The LSG reports that only scholarships awarded after Aug. 16, 1986, are taxable and that only money used for non-educational expenses is tax able. Expenses such as room and board must be itemized much like mileage is itemized for employers. imoking cold’ irons used for painless brands iranii a* PARIS, Texas (AP) — All branding irons l smoke, but Jimmy Harden’s irons are smoking rowB The animals probably appreciate that. “It’s totally painless,” Harden says as he ttellresses a smoking iron to his blue-jeaned leg. Irani ki|| krta-BThe process, developed at Texas A&M, is pilled freeze branding, and it’s done with liquid kJdlrBtrogen that chills the branding irons to 320 de- juraillaBees below zero. The cold kills the hair follicles njtkfffid when the dead follicles fall off, the new hair grows back white, making the brand appear as if it grew there. “It’s a fairly new process,” says Harden, the Northeast Texas livestock inspector supervisor for the Texas Animal Health Division. “They were fooling around with it at Texas A&M in 1980-1981, and it has really caught on the past few years.” Harden has been freeze branding for about five years and said he thinks the expense pre vents people from getting involved. “The brass irons cost from $30 to $80 each. and I’ve bought over 100 irons,” he says. “I’ve helped set up two other people in the state.” With freeze branding there’s no scar and no chance of infection. Harden says. Harden has branded some cattle, goats and dogs, but most people want their horses freeze branded. “A description of the color and markings of one horse could fit a dozen others,” he says, “but a brand gives you positive identification, and there’s no way to blot out a freeze brand. It’s per manent identification.” FREE MINI-COURSES The Department of English invites stu- dents, staff and faculty to attend any of the following sessions on improving writing skills. Each session lasts about 1 1 / 2 hours, and no registration is required. All sessions are held at 6:30 pm in 105 Blocker Thursday, Feb. 26 Monday, March 2 Tuesday, March 3 Wednesday, March 4 Thursday, March 5 Wednesday, March 25 Thursday, March 26 Cohehence Effective Persuaion Editing Appealing to an Audience Writing Good Paragraphs Comma Usage Punctuation Rules Call 845-3452 for more information. FREE Delivery THE NEW FREE Delivery v9 NO MINIMUM ORDER Food Delivery 764-9449 NO MINIMUM ORDER LUNCH SPECIAL (campus only) No. 1 salad V4 lb burger or 1 lb potato 16 oz. soft drink dessert $3.90 No. 2 salad y 2 lb burger or sub-sandwich 16 oz. soft drink dessert $4.45 ndj 3X1 keep it# roll tilt If: per pi ^ ,ys and :i| :he las* 3 Lew* then* ext weti I, A WORD FROM “prraorpiscopoEXWRSsnH ABOUT MILLER LITE THERE’S ONLY ONE LITE BEER * TRANSLATION: A SUPERBLY BREWED. FINE TASTING PILSNER BEER.