&ZZ T\/L U 1ST R 101, No. 170 (6 pages) Established in 1893 Tuesday • July 11, 1995 -micon- ts to lure a! -ing what is area’s “Sili- i I tain For- npeting for spot for ex- iactor Inc., ' chips, has ’ site to the 1 bragging expected to es between ■onstruction > to si.5 by- g could lay i ndustry’s said. South it Samsung boom area lumbia Riv jge townol re a has at jpport com investmem ople. Brushy Creek residents fight research complex he Animal Science 'reek residents fear Mike Friend, The Battalion Beef Center is located on FM 60 adjacent to the Brazos River. Brushy further development may cause water contamination and air pollution. Faculty Senate leas Group proposes adding credit hours to education certification □ Residents look to raise an additional $2,000 to file an injunction against the University. By Tara Wilkinson The Battalion Brushy Creek residents have planned fundraisers to pay for an injunction against the building of Texas A&M’s Animal Science Teaching, Research and Extension Complex. Residents will hold a garage sale July 29 and a barbecue August 26. Thirty-five members of Residents Opposed to Pigs and Livestock raised $3000 last month toward an injunction against the University’s plans to build the 1,600-animal teaching and research complex in Brushy Creek because they are con cerned about water contamination and air pollution. The cost of filing an injunction is $5,000. If a judge decides the in junction merits a hearing, resi dents estimate legal costs could reach $15,000. Dr. Ruth Schaffer, Texas A&M professor emeritus of sociology and resident of Brushy Creek, said all money raised from a garage sale and barbecue will be used in the fight against the building of the complex. Grover Hankins, professor at Texas Southern University’s Thur- good Marshall School of Law, is pro viding legal counsel to the Brushy Creek residents. “We would like to negotiate a rea sonable settlement between the Uni versity and Brushy Creek resi dents,” he said. Residents want University offi cials to prove it is safe to build the animal complex in Brushy Creek, Hankins said, or agree not to build. “If we seek an injunction, I’m sure a judge would consider it,” Hankins said. “The community has been encroached upon because of a permitting process that is ruthless.” Hankins said University activity in Brushy Creek, including an oper ating Beef Industry Center, already has left deep wells and sand mines that “look like the Grand Canyon.” Although Brushy Creek residents are concerned about the additional mess and heavy traffic the complex would bring to the area, they said a See Complex, Page 6 ne. The Batt» iversities iring theDi- ?rnoon. jcation prob 1 be better others about ’ Allen said. >llege □ Changes must be ap proved by Dr. Ray Bowen and the Commission on Teaching Standards By Katherine Arnold The Battalion The Faculty Senate recom mended changes in the secondary education teacher certification program yesterday, which would give students more experience for teaching in a changing society. The changes involve redesign ing the required courses for certifi cation, changing the prefixes and course descriptions on five 400-lev- el teacher education classes, and changing the course credit for stu dent teaching from 12 hours to pine-12 hours. Overall, three credit hours have been added to the current course requirements. Stan Carpenter, a faculty sen ator for the College of Education, said the changes will help the ed ucation system adapt to a chang ing society. “We have to develop our cur riculum in ways different from other colleges,” Carpenter said. “It’s a new ball game in education, and we need to train our teachers in different ways.” William Peters, professor of ed ucation, said the reforms in teacher certification came after three years of deliberation. “We have worked with each of the academic departments, faculty members and secondary education teachers to come up with this plan,” he said. “We have a good program now, but this program will be the only one of its nature in the state.” The program is outlined in four phases. In the first phase, students seek ing teacher cer tification be come familiar with working with adolescents by working with youth groups. In the second phase, students learn about teaching in today’s so ciety. The last two phases involve de veloping problem-solving and deci sion-making skills to devise meth ods to meet the educational de mands of society. The new course outline will in volve much more work in the field, Peters said. Students will begin working with adolescents as early as their freshman year. Diane Kaplan, deputy speaker of the Senate, said the reforms Bowen will create a better balance in the certification process. “We are trying to provide a bet ter balance between becoming an expert in the subject material and helping future teachers be able to communicate and interact with their students,” she said. The reforms now must be ap proved by Dr. Ray Bowen, Texas A&M president. The plan will also be considered Thursday by the Commission on Teaching Stan dards, the state agency that must approve the plan. The Faculty Senate approved the following other actions for Bowen’s approval. • Creating eight new graduate courses. • Creating one new undergrad uate course. • Changing the Genetics 320 course name from Human Genet ics to Biomedical Genetics, and changing the course description to focus on genetics as applied to bio medical science. • Changing the Vocational Edu cation Program within the Depart ment of Educational Psychology to Career Development Education. • Changing the name for the Department of Marine Engineer ing to Department of Marine Engi neering Technology. • Revising the criteria for tenure and promotion considera tion for faculty members. percent ercent -jm R Texas Legislature grants A&M s College of Medicine $ 1 million □ Funds will be used to increase the college's yearly enrollment, al lowing more students to train for family medicine. By Javier Hinojosa The Batt alion A $1 million grant from the Texas Legislature will allow the Texas A&M College of Medicine to increase the college’s yearly student enrollment and expand the Texas A&M Health Science Center in Temple. The current size of each class is 48 students. Over the next four years, the college will admit freshmen classes of 64 students. Enrollment in the College of Medicine will be 256 in the Fall of 1999. Janice Mauren, director of public affairs for the College of Medicine, said the college’s administra tors felt an enrollment increase was important for the college’s future. The College of Medicine’s facilities originally were made to accommodate class sizes of 100. Because of the increase in class size, microscopes arid other laboratory equipment will be purchased, and the gross anatomy lab will be upgraded. Dr. Kelly Hester, associate dean for the College of Medicine’s academic affairs, said the increase will allow the college to train more physicians for family medicine, which is a primary need of the state and nation. "We have a history of producing a large number of students that go into primary care specialties,” Hester said. “By increasing the class size, you increase the number of students that choose those areas just by the nature of our curriculum.” More than 55 percent of A&M medical students chose to specialize in primary care in 1995, and 25 percent went into family medicine. The College of Medicine provides students with the opportunity to interact with general practi tioners, internal specialists and pediatricians. Hester said faculty members specializing in clinical medicine will be hired so the college can maintain its small student-to-faculty ratio. Medical students study at the Temple campus after their second year and complete their clinical studies at Darnell Army Community Hospital, Scott & White Memorial Hospital and Clinic and Olin E. Teague Veterans’ Center. During this time they integrate what is learned in the classroom and what is learned working in hospital wards. Despite the growth in enrollment, Hester said the College of Medicine will not change its mission. “We’re just going to have the opportunity to bet ter what we’re doing now,” he said. “When the school was first started, the initial thought was that there was going to be 96 to 100 students when we reached our maximum. There is no specific plan. However, I think that a lot of what is going to happen in the future is go ing to depend on our continued success and what we do now.” Nick Rodnicki, The Battalion Look familiar? PTTS officer and animal science student Jon Peters kept busy Monday issuing tickets to parking violators. This vehicle was illegally parked on Spence Street in front of the Agriculture Building. International Student Services ensures quality of academic life □ The program helps internation al students adjust to student life in the United States and at Texas A&M. By Javier Hinojosa The Battalion International students have help available to them with any problems they encounter. That friend is International Student Services. Suzanne Drolesky, director of International Student Services, said the program is responsible for making sure the quality of life for internation al students at A&M meets or beats the students’ expectations. As non-immi grant visa hold ers, international students must comply with a broad range of government regu lations. Those regula tions become diffi cult to deal with because the rules are complicated, change frequently and are interpret ed differently by separate agencies. “It’s like swim ming in a pool full of things you’re not sure are out there,” Drolesky said. “There may be sharks in the water, or places so deep you can drown. There are people out here, sitting in a boat who can say, ‘Hop in the boat and let us explain to you how to get through this uncertain territory.’” International students have many docu ments such as visas and passports they must keep up-to-date. “It is not a difficult thing to forget,” she said. “It’s easy for someone to wake up a couple of months after one of the expiration dates and say ‘Oh no!”’ There are many mechanisms out there that are designed to keep international students’ visas in status. “We are about to change over to a system where we can actually send international stu dents notices when, according to our records, their passports are about to expire or their sta tus has been breached,” she said. Victoria Saha, immigration specialist, said a computer database is being developed that will handle all the notifications. The database could be ready to use as early as this fall. “We are currently working on [the database] with Computing Information Services, but we’re not exactly sure how long it will be before we can use it,” Saha said. Drolesky said international stu dents work hard to understand the regulations. “It can be very complicated,” Drolesky said. “An international stu dent is faced with having to under stand all the Uni versity regulations that apply to everyone and the many immigration regulations that have an impact on their lives. Some times those two things are almost working against each other.” International students must be full-time stu dents and have special immigration permission to coenroll. They can jeopardize their immigra tion status by dropping below 12 hours at any point during the semester. International students who fall out of status are not eligible for a broad number of benefits offered by the immigration program. This in cludes practical training experiences, in which the students work for six months before retum- See Programs, Page 6