995 E A y\ ]VE U N V R esidence Recycling i^M's summer cycling pilot program .as a strong success. Page 2 O Traveling Texas Commuters can reduce travel time by studying maps on the Internet. Page 12 Walking Wounded The A&M football team tries to get healthy for '95 season. Sports, Page 15 Battalion r ol. 101, No. 186 (18 pages) Established in 1893 Friday • August 25, 1995 &M settles lawsuit ith former employees Former A&M student to stand trial for murder The lawsuit filed against (le A&M System by a farm vorker while employed a he Texas Agricultural Ex- >eriment Station was settled larlier this month. !y Wes Swift he Battalion rThe Texas A&M University System rill pay an estimated $86,000 in un- mployment benefits and back pay- aents to more than 400 Texas farm workers as part of a class action law- uit settlement. ■ The Aug. 15 settlement concludes wo years of negotiating between the System and Texas Rural Legal Aid, n organization that gives legal help o farm workers. ' The lawsuit, filed by Berene Muril- o of Plainview, contended that work- srs were illegally classified as “inde- >endent contractors” instead of “em- loyees” and were paid below mini- aiim wage while working for the i'exas Agricultural Experiment Sta- ion (TABS). e A&M System operates 18 ex- V\ periment stations across the state. The stations use farm workers to re search growing and planting methods for agricultural and horticultural crops. According to the suit, the misclassi- fication also meant workers could not receive unemployment benefits, since contractors do not qualify for benefits under Texas law. Since the contractor status cost the farm workers Social Security credit for the work they did, the System will also correct the workers’ Social Secu rity records to ensure that they receive all benefits enti tled to them. Kay Drought, a lawyer with Texas Rural Legal Aid, said she was happy with the suit’s outcome. “I am pleased with the set tlement and with the way Texas A&M handled the law suit,” she said. The settlement must still be ap proved by U.S. District Judge George P. Kazen. During the Aug. 15 press confer ence to announce the settlement. Bob Merrifield, TABS deputy director, said the System did not make a con scious effort to cheat the workers. “We acknowledge that mistakes were made, but there was never any overt attempt to defraud these work ers,” Merrifield said. “We have moved to correct these mistakes and imple mented controls to ensure that they do not recur.” As part of the settlement, the Sys tem has agreed to classify all future farm workers as employees. Murillo, 55, told the Associated Press that she was upset because the actions of the TABS would dramati cally affect her. “What really angered me was that "I am pleased with the settlement and with the way Texas A&M han dled the lawsuit." — Kay Drought lawyer with Texas Rural Legal Aid my bosses never paid into my Social Security, because when I reach my old age and won’t be able to work, I won’t have anything to support me,” she said. Drought said the misclassification is a problem that is widespread in Texas and estimated that 90 percent of all farm workers are affected at some time. □ Ron Shamburger, who is charged with the Fall 1994 murder of an A&M student, will stand trial in September. By Javier Hinojosa The Battalion The trial of a 22-year-old former Texas A&M student, charged with capi tal murder and aggravated kidnapping, will begin Sept. 5 in the 361st District Court at the Brazos County Courthouse. FVetrial motions were made Aug. 11. Ron Scott Shamburger turned him self in to the police on Sept. 30, 1994 and confessed to the murder of Lori Ann Baker, a junior accounting major from Kingwood, who was killed earlier that morning. The University Police Department re ported that Baker was shot in the head after she awakened to find Shamburger burglarizing her home on Bayou Woods Drive. Shamburger also confessed to three other burglaries in the area. Victoria Kohler, Baker’s roommate, was abducted by Shamburger and put in the trunk of her car, UPD reported. Shamburger then drove Kohler to a nearby street before returning to set Baker’s room on fire. During the Aug. ll pretrial, Judge Carolyn Ruffino of the 361st District Court considered several motions filed by both the prosecution and the defense. Defense attorney Kyle Hawthorne of Houston filed a motion requesting that pictures of Baker be turned away from the sight of the jury when they were not being used. “These pictures are very graphic and can draw a juror’s attention away from the trial,” he said. Vanessa Muldrow, representing the district attorney’s office, said the court should follow the examples of other cases and leave the pictures up throughout the trial. “It would be too much of an inconve nience to have the clerk get up and turn the picture around be fore and after every time the pictures were needed,” she said. The judge denied the motion and anoth er motion by the de fense requesting the use of a video camera to record the trial. Hawthorne said a video tape of the trial should be sent to appellate judges in case of an appeal. However, Muldrow said allowing a camera in the courtroom would create a disturbance. “The camera would turn the case into a circus,” she said, “jurors could be in timidated, embarrassed or self-conscious in front of a camera.” Shamburger pall scuba classes canceled, expected to resume next year 3The scheduled scuba classes lave been replaced with sections aquatics. ty Katherine Arnold Fhe Battalion (- Texas A&M’s Department of Health and Ki lesiology will not offer scuba living classes until Fall 1996 leiicause of problems uncov- >red this spring. I Texas A&M System’s Inter- lal Audit Department investi- ated the program and issued a 'eport recommending that the rinesiology department take neasures to alleviate the ap- gkrance of a conflict of interest >etween the personal interests iflthe scuba instructors and the Uterests of A&M. ■Dr. Robert Armstrong, lead of the Department of dealth and Kinesiology, said that as a ‘esult of an investigation, the kinesiology lepartment canceled all scuba classes for the fenmer and fall and dismissed the two facul ty members who taught scuba, Tom Meinecke Bid James Woosley. 1 Emma Gibbons, an associate professor in the rinesiology department, said the students who A&M SCUBA CLASS registered to take scuba classes this summer were offered classes in aquatics instead. The department set up 12 sections of scuba classes for the fall, but did not allow students to enroll in them, pending the results of the investigation. The kinesiology department will replace the sections of scuba classes with other aquatics classes, Gibbons said. Mark Poehl, assistant director of the Texas A&M University System Internal Audit Department, said the in vestigation of the scuba pro gram was prompted by a letter submitted by an attorney repre senting Wayne Cotter, owner of Paradise Scuba. The letter suggested that the instructors refused to sign refer rals to complete certification at another location, used A&M equipment off campus and sold course materials directly to stu dents without allowing outside competition. Armstrong said the depart ment is currently investigating other universities to see how different college scuba programs are run. If a scuba program can be developed that will not create a conflict of interest, the department may offer scuba classes in Fall 1996, he said. See Scuba, Page 13 Stew Milne, The Battalion Moving madness Parking officer Doc Fletcher directs incoming students and parents to appropriate areas to park and un load. Residence halls opened on Sunday. Bowen approves withdrawal, Faculty Senate supports Attendance policy changes pay raises for lecturers □ Beginning this fall, if stu dents visit the health center, |iey must show proof of treatment to receive an ex cused absence. By Katherine Arnold ■he Battalion S Changes recommended by the Fac ulty Senate to the withdrawal policy, attendance policy and student griev ance procedures were finalized earlier ttris month by Dr. Ray Bowen, Texas IA&M president. | According to the new withdrawal policy, effective in January, the last day to withdraw from the University will be the same as the Q-drop date. Dr. Pierce Cantrell, Senate speaker, said the revised regulation contains a provision for students who need to with draw after the Q-drop date for extenuat ing circumstances. The withdraw date was changed be cause administrators were often flooded with withdrawal recommendations from students at the end of the semester. Dr. Brent Paterson, chairman of the Senate’s rules and regulations commit tee, said he hopes the change will elimi nate problems. “Students should know by midterm if they are failing a class,” Paterson said. “If they are going to withdraw for academic reasons, they shouldn’t hold out for a miracle.” Also to take effect in January is the elimination of the withdraw pass ing/withdraw failing classifications. Currently, when a student withdraws from the University, a grade of WP or WF is given. WPs do not effect the grade-point ratio, but a WF is calcu lated as a failed course. Beginning in the spring, a student who withdraws will receive a W for all courses. The grades will not be calcu lated in the GPR. Paterson said the decision to elimi nate the WP/WF designations resulted because some faculty members were See Bowen, Page 14 □ A survey of A&M's lecturers led to the recommendation of an established merit-based pay raise procedure. By Tara Wilkinson The Battalion Texas A&M’s Faculty Senate recom mended the development of a consistent and fair way to provide lecturers with merit-based pay raises at the Aug. 14 Senate meeting. The resolution must be approved by Dr. Ray Bowen, A&M president, before it is implemented. Members of a Senate ad hoc commit tee, who drafted the resolution, sur veyed in March 1994 lecturers’ and se nior lecturers’ working conditions. Out of 255 surveys sent to lecturers, 133 (52 percent) were returned. Many lecturers indicated in the sur vey that they had not received merit raises or promotion-related raises, and they were not aware of official stan dards regarding the raises. Diane S. Kaplan, co-chair of the Sen ate ad hoc committee on the definition, role and status of lecturers, said prob lems indicated by the survey include “low pay for lecturers across the board, lack of merit pay for lecturers, and See Senate, Page 14