January 23, 1996 ic Professional En- genera] meeting 7:30 p.m. in 202 ysics. For more act the SHPE of- Association: Or- i internacional, ro y entrega de e held at 7 p.m, Contact Adolfo at ana at 764-8795 i Business Associ- meeting will be in 118 Wehner. ome. Call Claris- r details. Battalion service t student and fac- rctivities. Items led no later than /ance of the de- application dead- re not events and i What's Up. If stions, please call 45-3313. ARTISTIC DISTINCTIONS African-American and youth art illustrate diverse viewpoints. Aggielife, Page 3 STUDENTS SET TO GO FISHIN' Stidvent: Fish Camp counselors generally fit into three categories. Opinion, Page 11 ALMOST HEAVEN Lady Aggie Angel Spinks dominates opponents inside. Sports, Page 7 H. 102, No. 78 (12 pages) The Battalion Serving Texas AcrM University Since 1893 Wednesday • January 24, 1996 Clinton challenges GOP to balance budget JSen. Dole called the President the main ob stacle to a balanced budget. WASHINGTON (AP) — De- Evering his State of the Union address to a skeptical Republi- Congress, President Clin ton traced the themes of his re- election campaign Tuesday See related EDITORIAL, Page 11 night and confronted the GOP the budget, demanding they “never — ever” shut the gov ernment again. Democrats rose with loud cheers but Republicans sat in stony silence at Clinton’s chal lenge. GOP lawmakers — par ticularly the rebellious House freshmen — had been coached by party elders to be on good behavior and not boo Clinton, as some did last year. The speech was brief by Clin ton standards, 61 minutes, less than last year’s record 81- minute marathon. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole — front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination — made the Republican re sponse, outlining differences with Clinton and assailing the president as “the chief obstacle to a balanced budget.” He called the president “the rear guard of the welfare state.” Dole said Clinton was “ca reening dangerously off course” in welfare, education, Medicare and taxes. “We will challenge President Clinton again and again to walk the talk he talks so well,” Dole vowed. Clinton proposed several new initiatives, among them 81,000 college scholarships for the top 5 percent of graduates from every high school, and turning the FBI loose on youth gangs. With Republicans controlling the legislative agenda, Clin ton’s propos als are un likely to see the light of day, especial ly in an elec tion year. The House chamber over flowed with Senate and House mem bers, Clin ton’s Cabinet, the Supreme Court justices in their black robes and ambassadors from Clinton around the world. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, Clin ton’s yearlong nemesis, sat im mediately behind the president, applauding politely on some oc casions, and sitting in stern si lence when the president criti cized Congress. And criticize he did. “I challenge all of you in this chamber,” Clinton said, “never — ever” shut the government again. He said it was time to “finish the job” and pass a balanced budget plan that he could sign. First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, listening along her GOP Whitewater critics, was applauded as she entered with her 15-year-old daughter, Chelsea, who was making her first State of the Union appear ance. The president introduced the beleaguered Mrs. Clinton as a “wonderful wife, a magnifi cent mother and a great first lady,” and Chelsea led a stand ing ovation of Democrats and Republicans alike. “The era of big government is over,” Clinton said, twice, as if to capture a campaign slogan. Re publicans liked that, and an swered with applause. Democrats hailed Clinton’s next sentence: “But we cannot go back to the time when our citizens were left to fend for themselves.” V fa/mtine - 7 p.m. $ 69 95 ac yl c Ignition cars we’ll )oed, set timing, test key ignition parts. MSC Council elects president J Williams will take office in April. By Courtney Walker The Battalion The newly elected leader of one of Texas A&M’s largest or ganizations arrived on campus four years ago as a shy student who spent the first month of | classes in his room. I But life, at \ l&M brought 1 Chris Williams, a senior political science and speech communi cation major, out of his shell. Last night, Williams was elected MSC Council presi dent. “When I first came to A&M, 1 didn’t know anyone,” he said. ‘My parents had just moved to Oklahoma, so I was pretty much alone.” Williams was attracted to the MSC as a' freshman when he at tended a Political Forum meet ing. He decided to get involved. There, he said, he found his niche. His MSC leadership experi ence includes serving as Political Forum chair and MSC Council vice president for program ad ministration. “I have a clear understanding of what the MSC is about and where it needs to go,” he said. “And I have a clear vision of how to make a difference.” Williams, who takes office in April, said his three main chal lenges this year will be reclaim ing the MSC’s role on campus, internally structuring the MSC "I have a clear under standing of what the MSC is about and where it needs to go." — Chris Williams new MSC Council president to produce quality programs, and building an MSC team. As MSC Council President, he will oversee approximately 40 council members from 27 MSC committees. Jonathan Neerman, an MSC Council executive vice president and a senior political science major, has worked with See MSC, Page 6 Evan Zimmerman, The Battalion HEAVY METAL This machine, the Molecular Beam Epitaxy System (MBE) at the NanoFAB Center is located in the basement of the Engineering/Physics Build- ihg. The MBE uses a molecular beam to layer silicon on semiconductors that can be used to make computer chips. $69 95 St ,) most cars WHEEL IGNMENT $ 34 95 B-CS residents want to open maternity house Cl The Heritage House is in search of a building to renovate or prop erty to build a facility. By Kendra S. Rasmussen The Battalion A 16-year-old girl who solicited help from Brazos County Crisis Pregnancy Services about a year ago probably has no idea what she set in motion. Sue Sorensen, crisis pregnancy center staff Member, said that when the girl came to her, she a one-year-old child and was three weeks away from delivering her second. "We want to help the girls that want to be helped." .s — Margaret O’Quinn Heritag, House board member are en The girl had no place to stay. She refused to live "ith her mother in a crack house where she had been raped twice. Sorensen said she spent 100 hours on the tele- m. - 7 p.m- Phone trying to find someone who would take the ?iti in. “It was the most frustrating thing I had ever dealt with,” she said. Her frustration came from the fact that Bryan- . - 7 p.m. College Station has no facility to house homeless, lite D 77840 , next to Pregnant women. So she began checking into a program she had heard about that housed women in crisis situations. A woman had laid the groui iwork for a mater- ^ y % home to serve the Bryan-t. ullege Station area, and then abandoned the project a year ago to move to Canada. She called it Heritage House. “It’s been sitting there ever since, waiting for someone else to pick it up,” she said. So that’s what Sorensen did. At an organizational meeting Tuesday night at the College Station Conference Center, Sorensen ex plained that Heritage House is ready to go, with one. exception. “We have everything but the place,” she said. Heritage House coordinators are looking for a home to renovate or property on which to build a pregnancy home. But for now, they are searching for couples to vol unteer their homes as “shepherding homes,” in which homeless, pregnant women would be placed as soon as March. When a facility is found, Sorensen said she hopes to start by housing up to eight girls, all of whom will have been screened extensively. “We’d like to house single, pregnant teens to start, with,” she said. “But my vision would be to house up to, say, 30 or 40 girls.” Margaret O’Quinn, a Heritage House board mem ber, said the home will not be a revolving-door orga nization, but one that expects something from the ladies they help. “My purpose is not to take in a rebellious teenag er who doesn’t want to listen to anyone,” she said. “We want to help the girls that want to be helped.” Dana Jones, an A&M junior journalism major, said she feels called to give time, guidance and love to this project. “God placed an intense burden on my heart for women in pregnancy crises.” she said. “I long to give my heart to it.” Heritage House coordinators are looking for vol unteers to provide support of any kind. Money for school still available □ University and federal officials predict different futures for college financial aid. By Heather Pace The Battalion Financial aid remains avail able to Texas A&M students de spite federal government bud- get-balancing attempts that threaten to cut it, an A&M fi nancial aid officer said. Jack Falks, Student Financial Aid assistant director, said fi nancial aid is safe from budget cuts in the long run, although fi nancial aid processing will prob ably be slowed down by the gov ernment shutdowns. “There were a lot of threats about cuts and interest subsidies for the students,” Falks said, “But it looks like that has been tabled, and we’re not as worried as we were three or four months ago.” Financial aid stability some what eases the burden on stu dents who graduate with sky- high debts, he said. And more students than ever before are in debt. “The average debt is increas ing somewhat on this campus, as the typical undergraduate leaves with about SlO.OOO in student loans,” Falks said. Jane Glickman of the United States Department of Education views the financial aid situation differently. She said aid is not yet safe from budget balancers. “It is one of the issues being considered with the budget-rec onciliation talks between the President and the leaders of the Senate,” Glickman said. Some Congress members are attempting to limit the number of schools that offer repayment and direct-lending plans. Under direct lending, federal money goes straight to universi ties’ financial aid offices, bypass ing banks and other middlemen that make loans more complicated for students. Currently, students na tionwide can take advan tage of a loan- repayment plan offered under the William D. Ford Fed eral Direct Loan Program. The program allows students to make monthly pa-ments after graduation based on their in comes, with annual adjustments as their income levels change. Falks said he supports this di rect-loan program, though A&M’s financial aid office does not offer it. But under the Stafford Loan Program available at A&M, stu dents benefit from a similar in come-contingent repayment plan. “Repayment plans allow stu dents to choose majors that may not pay as high of starting salaries, but they don’t have to deal with ballooning payments,” Falks said. Regardless of future financial aid trials and tribulation, many A&M students are dissatisfied even with the existing system. Many students feel cheated because their parents’ annual in comes exceed the minimum qualifications for financial aid. Rick Fournier, a sophomore mechanical engineering major, said financial aid should be re vamped to allow more students financial assistance. “My parents make just a little bit too much money to get finan cial aid, but they still can’t af ford to send me to college,” Fournier said. “I think financial aid needs some serious overhaul ing if it is going to work and be fair to everyone.” But struggling students should take note, Falks said, because nu merous financial aid opportuni ties go unclaimed each year. A recent National Academic Funding Administration (NAFA) report stated that more than S6 billion of national funding See Money, Page 6 "It [financial aid] is one of the issues being considered with the budget-rec onciliation talks between the President and the leaders of the Senate." —Jane Glickman United States Department of Education