The Battalion STATE & LOCAL 3 Thursday, January 26,1989 ARCO gives A&M $50 thousand Company’s grant helps support Minority Engineering Program r h By Melissa Naumann REPORTER Texas A&M’s Minority Engi neering Program has received a $50,000 grant from ARCO to help retain minority engineering stu dents. Jeanne Rierson, assistant to the dean of engineering and coordina tor of MEP, said the money will be used in a program called Phase One. “This is a bridge program for in coming freshmen during the second summer session,” she said. “We con centrate on their math, chemistry and English skills to prepare them for Math 151 and Chemistry 101 (in the fall semester).” Rierson said the program, which began in July 1988, was designed to keep minority engineering students at A&M. “The first year is the hardest for any student,” she said. “This gives students a chance to see what college is all about. The whole idea is to keep more minority engineering stu dents here. I think that when a stu dent comes to A&M and sees we have a program like this, they are likely to stay.” The 30 freshmen who attended Phase One last summer had a higher average grade-point ratio for the fall semester than those minority engi neering students who did not attend, Rierson said. In the past, A&M has been suc cessful in retaining minority engi neering students through gradua tion. In 1987, the College of Engineering had 79 Hispanic grad uates, more than any other univer sity. A&M also ranked third in the nation for the total number of mi nority engineering graduates with 98 receiving bachelor degrees. How ard University topped the list with 129 graduates while City College of New York had 116. Alleged rape victim testifies, hospitalized after becoming ill SAN DIEGO, Texas (AP) — An alleged gang-rape victim forced un der threat of jail to testify at trial was taken from the courthouse on a stretcher Wednesday, but hospital officials declined to say why she fell ill. Meanwhile, a prosecution witness who admitted he once told a psychia trist the alleged attack victim “loved testified Wednesday that she cried and tried to resist the men who sexually assaulted her on the hood ofa car March 26-27. An ambulance took the woman to Alice Physicians and Surgeons Hos pital at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, just as glit no* J ” ping trial of Felipe Chew, who also ople tnij f aces a separate sexual assault trial in have to legislati ie of tk ■d to o« loke the le have testimony in the aggravated kidnap- ihe case. The woman was reported in stable |, condition. Hospital emergency room iungati: p erson nel and nursi g supervisors press said the woman’s physician refused to release further information. After the woman was taken to the hospital, District Judge Gilberto Hi nojosa explained to the jury she had ‘fallen ill” and would testify later. Her testimony was cut short Tues day after she reported fainting dur ing an afternoon break and said her stomach and head ached. Witness Jose Carlos Briones, speaking Spanish as a court inter preter translated, testified Wednes day the woman “didn’t want to do it. She was complaining. She had tears.” Briones, 29, was indicted on a sex ual assault charge in case, but his trial date has not been set. All 10 men indicted have pleaded inno cent. Briones said he saw Chew sexually assault the woman with a beer bottle while other men held her down on the hood of a car that night at the ranch where an illegal cockfight was taking place. “Hejust laughed,” Briones said of Chew’s behavior, adding that the woman clearly did not appear to en joy it. He admitted Wednesday, how ever, to Chew’s court-appointed de fense attorney, Jaime Garza, that in the course of a court-ordered men tal-competency examination last June he told a Corpus Christi psychi atrist that the woman “loved it” that night and that she was a “run around.” Later, under further questioning by Assistant District Attorney Ro dolfo Gutierrez, he denied telling the psychiatrist the woman was a willing participant. Briones said he had consumed two cases of beer on March 26 and admitted being convicted for heroin possession 10 years ago. He also said he fondled the woman and tried to have sex with the her that night, but the alcohol rendered him impotent. He said the others tried to force him to perform oral sex on her, but he resisted. Briones said he then tried to stop the men from raping and sodomiz ing her, but they did not listen. Garza asked Briones if he knew anything about a reported arrange ment by the prosecution to recom mend probation for him if he testi fied against his co-defendants, but Briones said he was not aware of such a deal. “We have found that even with scholarships and other financial as sistance, many minority youngsters enrolled in science, engineering and business courses never complete their college education,” Lodwrick Cook, ARCO chairman and chief ex ecutive officer, said in a statement. “While no single funding source can solve the growing problem of mi nority under-representation in sci ence and engineering, we believe the spotlight must stay focused on the retention issue.” Hays challenges student senators to look around By Kelly S. Brown STAFF WRITER In the Student Senate’s first meet ing this semester, Student Body President Jay Hays challenged the Student Senate to make the most of their positions and to take a good look around campus. “The changes we do or do not make today will have an effect on what the University will be like many years from now,” Hays said. One of the changes discussed in the fall semester by two Senate mem bers concerned abolishing the ‘grode’ stories told by yell leaders at midnight yell practice. The bill was sent to committee but later was re scinded by its authors. Although that bill never passed, Ty Clevenger, a sophomore genetics major and senator from the agricul ture college, said the possibility of Texas A&M having collegiate license plates is almost a reality. The idea for the specialized plates originated in the Senate last semester. “The bill is going through the Texas Legislature now, it looks good and hopefully we won’t have any problems with it,” Clevenger said. Co-op experience gives opportunity to practice job skills By Fiona Soltes STAFF WRITER How do you get a job without experience? And how do you get experience without a job? Students involved in Texas A&M’s Cooperative Education program may have discovered the answer to this riddle. Dr. Steve Yates, director of the office of cooperative education, said the program is an ideal way for companies to train and de velop students for prospective employment upon graduation. It’s also an ideal way for the stu dent to get the experience he needs for the job he wants, while getting college credit. The co-op program began at the University of Cincinnati in 1906, Yates said. Soon afterward, it moved to Georgia Tech, MIT, and other large schools, but it didn’t come to A&M until 1958, he said. Yates said the first A&M co-ops were from the college of engi neering. In 1978, the program expanded to other colleges, but engineering students still make up 70 percent of the co-ops, he said. John Vandegrift, a senior aero space engineering major, will hold his fourth co-op position with NASA this summer. Vande grift said his first position with NASA was in Shuttle Require ments Management. “It was basically just learning what NASA did,” he said. During his second and third terms, Vandegrift was involved in the extra-vehicular activity train ing of astronauts. “EVA means space-walking,” he said. “Every crew must be taught the emergency contin gency tasks, which is what they do when something fails in order to ensure a safe return. An example of this is contingency payload bay door closure. The astronauts need to know how to put on their suits, step out into space, discon nect drive motors, hook up winches and then crank the doors shut.” Vandegrift’s group also trained some crews for special missions such as capturing satel lites to replace instruments on them. “Becoming certified to teach courses is a long process,” Vande grift said. “Only after three or four years can you be qualified to teach all the courses that my group taught.” But through the program, Vandegrift was able to sit in on these classes and assist in the tea ching any way he could. “I was eager to teach, but I was not given the opportunity to be thrown into it,” he said. “NASA was not exclusionary with me be cause I was a co-op. But it’s like being in any company; you must pay your dues.” Being a co-op with NASA taught Vandegrift more than just aerospace engineering skills. “Co-oping gives you a break from school and a chance to see what the real world is like,” Van degrift said. “It’s not all technical learning, because you learn about income tax, budgeting and things like that, that you wouldn’t learn if you hadn’t worked through school. Of course, you also get the chance to find an area that inter ests you, doing career hunting while you’re there.” Co-oping also has made the prospect of graduating seem less threatening for Vandegrift. “Co-oping helps eliminate ‘se nior nerves,’ ” he said. “I don’t have to be thinking, ‘Oh, no, I’ve got to interview, make a resume and take finals while trying to fig ure out where to work.’ ” Vandegrift said that as a co-op with NASA, he should receive a job offer from them after gradua tion. See Co-ops/Page 7 JESUS] Noel Addy I Accounting [S TH1 E REASON FOR THE SEASON L. Roy Cornwell Mechanical Engineering L. Wayne Greene Animal Science James W. Kolari Finance Gerald Morrison Mechanical Engineering Roger Schultz Speech Comm, and Theatre Arts Richard M. Alexander Mechanical Engineering Harry Coyle Civil Engineering Michael Greenwald Speech Comm, and Theatre Arts M. M. Kothmann Range Science Philip Noe Electrical Engineering David Segrest Family and Community Medicine Richard M. Anderson 1 Economics James W. Craig Jr. Construction Science James Griffin Economics Rose Kuehler Health and Phys. Education Dennis O’Neal Mechanical Engineering Peter Sharpe Industrial Engineering I Jan Baldwin I Health and Phys. Education Stephen Crouse Health and Phys. Education Richard Griffin Mechanical Engineering Alvin Larke Jr. Agricultural Education John H. Painter Electrical Engineering D. Dwayne Simpson Psychology : Danny Ballard 1 Health and Phys. Education Walter Daugherity Computer Science Tim Gronberg Economics Patricia Larke Educational Curriculum A. D. Patton Electrical Engineering Loren Skow Veterinary Anatomy George W. Bates I Biochemistry Joyce S. Davis Robert Gustafson Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Mathematics Terry Larsen Environmental Design Robert H. Pender Health and Phys. Education Darrell Smith Education Psychology i Michael R. Baye Economics Michael Davis Medical Physiology Paul Harms Animal Science Ray Laster Mechanical Engineering Don Phillips • Industrial Engineering Jerome H. Smith Medical Pathology I Sue Beall Health and Phys. Education R. R. Davison - Chemical Engineering Patricia Harris English Language Institute Alan Letton Mechanical Engineering Kenneth Pierce Veterinary Medicine L. Murphy Smith Accounting James R. Boone 1 Mathematics Maurice Dennis Safety Education Roy Hartman Engineering Technology Jackson Leung Electrical Engineering Leonard Ponder Health and Phys. Education Terry Spencer Geophysics 1 Chris Borman Education Kenneth R. Dirks Medical Pathology Warren Heffington Mechanical Engineering Dallas N. Little Civil Engineering Alvin A. Price Veterinary Medicine Michael Sunnafrank Speech Comm, and Theatre Arts Jon Botsford Engineering Technology LinusJ. Dowell Health and Phys. Education Don R. Herring Agricultural Education Mac Lively Computer Science Robin Redfield Mechanical Engineering Donald A. Sweeney Urban and Regional Planning Walter L. Bradley I Mechanical Engineering John English Industrial Engineering Richard T. Hise Marketing Lee Lowery Civil Engineering Debra Reed Finance Wei Kang Tsai Electrical Engineering Maynard Bratlien Educational Administration John A. Epling Construction Science Louis Hodges Recreation and Parks Jack Lunsford Chemistry W. Robert Reed Economics Dan Turner Mechanical Engineering ■ I James Brooks Oceanography David A. Erlandson Educational Administration Harry Hogan Mechanical Engineering Theodore S. Maffitt Architecture Edward Reid Industrial Distribution Dick Volz Computer Science Scott Brown Veterinary Physiology Louis Everett Mechanical Engineering Ken Hogue Industrial D. T. Magnuson Biochemistry David Rhode Mechanical Engineering Karan Watson Electrical Engineering 1 Camille Bunting Health and Phys. Education Roger Fay Oceanography Joyce Holley Accounting Vicki Markowsky Health and Phys. Education ' Don Rice Industrial Distribution Carson E. Watt Recreation and Parks I Jon Burke Economics Richard Feldman Industrial Engineering C.L. Hough Mechanical Engineering J. D. McCrady Veterinary Physiology Larry Roderick Industrial Technology Casper Wiggins Accounting fe Jack Campbell \ Educational Curriculum and Instruction Dana Forgione Accounting John W. Huff Veterinary Microbiology Stephen McDaniel Marking Hayes E. Ross Jr. Civil Engineering Steven Wiggins Economics Oral Capps Agricultural Economics Carl Gabbard Health and Phys. Education T. Rick Irvin Veterinary Anatomy Thomas U. McElmurry Aerospace Engineering Fred Ruppel Agricultural Economics Henry Wigley Civil Engineering Andrew K. Chan Electrical Engineering E. Dean Gage Veterinary Medicine Mike E. James Jr. Civil Engineering John A. McIntyre Physics Don Russell Electical Engineering James R. Wild Biochemistry and Genetics Mark Christensen I Biology Emma Gibbons Health and Phys. Education Robert K. James Educational Curriculum Dennis McNaughten Health and Phys. Educadon Wayne Sampson Human Anatomy Melony Williams Accounting Larry D. Claborn 1 Veterinary Physiology Bob Gillette Economics David G. J ansson Mechanical Engineering Martin Medhurst Speech Comm. & Theater Arts Donald Saylak Civil Engineering James E. Womack Veterinary Pathology James C. Clingermayer Political Science Lynn Gillette Economics Jim Jensen Veterinary Physiology Glenn A. Miller Health and Phys. Education Mark Schaefer Mathematics Will Worley Electrical Engineering 8 Dan Colunga Computer Science Ramon Goforth Mechanical Engineering Walter F.Juliff Veterinary Cont. Education Jeff Miller Accounting Richard Shapery Civil Engineering Ralph Wurbs Civil Engineering Jerome Congleton Industrial Engineering H. L. Goodwin Agricultural Economics Jimmy T. Keeton Animal Science Gayle Schmidt Health and Phys. Education Wayne E. Wylie Health and Phys. Education We are a group of faculty who are united by a common experience that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students amd faculty who might like to discuss such questions with us. We are FACULTY FRIENDS. Any faculty member interested in joining FACULTY FRIENDS please contact: Bob Gillette 5-7384, or Glenn Miller 5-3130, or Lee Lowery 5-4395. as that other Wade ck to a ie 16-yet ey The sti beliefs: nmine correct y are fl( lowing® erning® new cttf iat toob mservati* ; A&Ml ry is_g< and , housing mservati' intain tl ig stu(k [ Lved McDowt- to d hous®! , in dtf ests. A^' : /e wi lich M >s isai^ ;hose" :3 ' idnessii worepj istforW