December 2 The Battalion ume 103 • Issue 65 • 10 Pages Tuesday, December 3, 1996 The Batt Online: http://bat-web.tamu.edu urvey measures reactions to GUF proposal urvey Results you satisfied with the quality f education at Texas A&M? Yes: 86%, No: 14% you feel our faculty and staff deserve a pay raise? Yes: 71.1%, No: 28.9% mould you be in favor of the mproposed increase in the General Use Fee? Yes: 41.6%, No: 58.4% By JoAnne Whittemore The Battalion Texas Aggies Making Changes (TAMC), a Student Government subcommittee, conducted a non- scientific survey to determine students’ feelings about the pro posed General Use Fee increase. Laurent Therivel, vice presi dent of finance for Student Gov ernment and a senior manage ment and marketing major, said the purpose of the survey was to measure students’ reaction to the increase. “We want a gauge of students’ opinions of the General Use Fee,” he said. “First, if they know about it; and second, what they think about it.” The survey was distributed to students in the MSG and various classrooms. A brief synopsis at the top of the survey informed students of the current GUF rate, how a GUF increase would affect them, and why the issue is important. Therivel said students com plain about the last line of the synopsis stating, “A failure to in crease fees would result in a de crease in the quality of education and the value of the Texas A&M diploma.” Therivel said students felt the statement was biased in favor of the GUF. Matt Mayfield, executive vice president of administration for Student Government and a se nior animal science major, said the survey was as unbiased as possible. “If you want to tell people the facts, you can’t go about it in a completely unbiased way,” he said. “You can’t be completely un biased on something like this.” The survey asked students whether they are satisfied with the quality of education at A&M, whether they feel the faculty de serves a pay raise, and whether they would support an increase in the GUF. There was also a sec tion for students to add their comments. Therivel said students’ an swers varied in the comments section. He said students felt they were constantly “slammed” with fees since the GUF was re cently increased and the pro posed GUF increase would come all at once, rather than in mone tary increments. Therivel said students felt fi nancial aid and scholarships needed to be increased to offset the GUF increase. He said stu dents suggested getting revenue from other sources, such as the state government. Therivel said the GUF re ceived a closely divided re sponse because students are not as informed on the issue as they could be. Student Government is at tempting to better inform stu dents by distributing information to major campus organizations and speaking to organizations that show an interest in learning more about the GUF. But Therivel said it is mostly up to students to get informed. See Survey, Page 6 awsuit presses ‘ child support 35 interest payment gkriwan, TmBt jli >es for the sho: nst lllinois-f Ve do unde and we comii ter.” (1-12), itwa in a season But this on licrous than 1, returning! ilder that co! ed a calf mu 1 vas scratchec SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A dgt' entered a class-action or- jr Monday providing for par- to collect interest on past- ■ child support, a sum iaii tiffs’ attorneys say could (t# billions of dollars. “ I his is based on the funda- lental proposition that child ■We will not allow private attorneys to profit from the tlhildren” Dan Morales I' ;: Texas Attorney General ipport is not a request. It is a Hirt order. These are just and did debts owed to the children ithe state of Texas,” plaintiffs’ wyer Steven Sinkin said. ■tate District Judge John D. ffiriel Jr. ruled custodial par- its who have been owed back Id support would be certi- las a class in the case. Ilaria del Carmen Rios and Idre Wilson, two San Antonio omen who have been owed l-due child support, are the litiffs representing the class. ■It feels good to be able to Bp out others,” Rios, the loitier of a 15-year-old, said. I’ past-due child support in- feased from $4,575 to $22,199 Ice interest was figured in, lin said. ■exas Attorney General Dan bales intervened last week fcehalf of the plaintiffs and ffiged to pursue unpaid inter- >tin the child support cases Boffice handles. ■We do in fact want to collect iterest on the past due child upport,” said Ron Dusek, a Bkesman for Morales. ■he state began collecting iterest on pending cases of pt-due child support in July, Dusek said. Cases in which the past-due amount has been paid will be re-examined for interest assessment, he said. There is was no figure avail able on how many cases that would apply to or how much money is involved, Dusek said. Interest has not been as sessed uniformly in private or state cases for back child sup port, according to the Attorney General’s Office. A state law was passed in 1991 allowing interest to be paid. It was amended in 1993 to provide for a 12 percent interest rate. Sinkin and Richard Orsinger, another plaintiffs’ attorney in the class-action lawsuit, said the judge’s order means anyone who received child support "since Sept. 1, 1985, can seek re calculation of the amount of any past-due child support to include interest. The attorneys estimate some 2 million Texas children may be affected, with the interest total ing billions of dollars. “This is a situation that has existed in Texas for a long time,” Orsinger said. “I think it just takes a little push ... and then it’ll start rolling.” The attorney general’s office handles 800,000 child support cases. The interest calculation won’t place an unmanageable burden on the office because a new computer program will handle much of the work, Dusek said. Court hearings are to be held to determine who will notify the members of the class and how the private attorneys in the case will be paid. Morales said last week all the past-due interest should go di rectly to children or to refund the state for welfare payments that supported the children when child support wasn’t paid. “We will not allow private at torneys to profit from the chil dren,” Morales said. Famous Pearls Pat James, The Battalion Former First Lady Barbara Bush gets her first glance at the new George Bush Presidential Library during a site visit on Monday afternoon. Computerized GRE benefits students By Erica Roy The Battalion Texas A&M now offers stu dents the opportunity to take a computerized version of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) instead of the pencil-and- paper version previously used. Dr. Kathy Hannula-Bral, a testing services administrator with Measurement and Research Services, said the computer- based test can benefit students in various ways. “It’s valuable for students in a number of ways,” Hannula-Bral said. “They have the flexibility in when they can take the test, a quick score reporting to the in stitution, and immediate feed back (on the test score).” The first computerized test at A&M will be administered Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. in Room 005 of the Agriculture Building. Four students may take the ex amination at a time, and two of the spots are filled. The next computerized test will be administered Saturday at 2 p.m. Various other test dates in December are available. Computer testing for the spring semester will begin Jan. 6, 1997. Tests will be given every Monday, Tuesday and Friday (except for Jan. 20 which is Mar tin Luther King Jr. Day) from 8 a.m to 5 p.m. and on Wednesday nights from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. More test dates will be offered if the demand arises, Hannula- Bral said. The pencil-and-paper version of the test is still available, but the Educational Testing Service and the GRE Program are gradu ally de-emphasizing it. Only three pencil-and-paper tests are scheduled this school year, and two for the next year. Eventually, the GRE will only be adminis tered via computer. The computer version of the test is not simply the pencil- and-paper version copied onto the computer. The test is com puter adaptive, which means the answer a student gives to a question determines the next question the student receives, and responses to questions can not be changed once they have been answered. After the administration of the test is over, the student has the option of canceling the score or viewing it immediately. If a stu dent chooses to view the score, it can no longer be canceled. Students do not have to be computer literate to take the exam on the computer, because tutorials will be held before the administering of the test. Students may call 1-800-GRE- CALL (National Registration Cen ter), 862-7375 or 845-0532 (Mea surement and Research Services) to register for the computer-based GRE. To register by phone, a stu dent must have a credit card or Educational Testing Service Au thorization voucher. Students may also register in Room 005 in the Agriculture Building and pay with check or money order. |hi Battalion TODAY Jonnick’s Way filters: Musician Irry Connick Jr. is ftified in moving Pm jazz to funk. Aggielife, Page 3 ist Hurrah Jnior Page White has ?h hopes on the eve her final NCAA post- ison appearance. Sports, Page 7 ark Alliance hitefall: Quanell X eaks about former esident Bushs al- ged conspiracy. Opinion, Page 9 Sheriffs challenge Brady law WASHINGTON (AP) — Two coun ty sheriffs from Montana and Arizona are challenging the Brady gun-con trol law before the Supreme Court, arguing the federal government can not require local police to help en force the measure. Sheriffs’ departments may not “be conscripted for a federal crusade,” say lawyers for Jay Printz, sheriff of Ravalli County, Mont. Also seeking to overturn the law is Sheriff Richard Mack of Graham County, Ariz. But government lawyers say the 1993 Brady law is a legal effort to curb a “national epidemic of gun vio lence,” and “there is no constitution al rule preventing Congress from de vising a national solution and then requiring limited local assistance.” “I believe it’s constitutional,” Pres ident Clinton told reporters Monday. “Tens of thousands of people with criminal backgrounds and other seri ous problems couldn’t get handguns because of the Brady law. ... People are alive today because of it.” After hearing arguments in the case Tuesday, the justices are expect ed to issue a ruling by next July. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap peals upheld the Brady law in 1995, saying the requirement was a minor burden similar to “the federally im posed duties of state officers to report missing children or traffic fatalities.” However, previous decisions by the high court suggest some justices may be sympathetic to a states’ rights argument. In 1995, the justices struck down a federal law that banned gun pos session within 1,000 feet of schools, saying the states — not Congress — had the authority to enact such criminal laws. Last April, the court signaled a further shift in the balance of power between states and the federal gov ernment when it said Congress can not force states into federal court to settle disputes over gambling on In dian reservations. The Brady law was enacted by Congress over bitter opposition from gun-control opponents, including the National Rifle Association. The measure is named after James Brady, who was seriously wounded in the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan. Brady, who pushed for the law, has urged the high court not to “mess with success.” Seniors prepare to graduate By Marika Cook The Battalion In the aftermath of Elephant Walk, the Class of ’97 is dead, but life after the Twelfth Man awaits them. As graduation approaches, seniors are faced with major life decisions. Many are left won dering where they will go and what they will do to bridge the gap between their college years and their future. Melanie Benson, a senior international studies major, is looking at all her options be fore deciding where she will go after graduation. “I am a member of PRSSA (Public Relations Student Soci ety of America) which is provid ing me with tips on the job mar ket,” Benson said. “We do office visits and practice interviewing. I’m also using a job bank in Houston and going to the PRSSA Career Fair in the spring. I want to get an internship after graduation and then continue with that company.” Many seniors are already working, hoping to gain valu able work experience that will benefit them after graduation. Michelle Lyons, a senior journalism major, is Class of ’98 but will graduate one year early. “Unfortunately, I went for quantity, not quality, and I don’t feel like I learned enough,” Lyons said. “I work at The Eagle now and I think ex perience is more important than grades. I feel like I work all the time anyway, so I might as well be finished with school and working full-time.” But looking for a job is not the first item on every graduat ing senior’s agenda. Other grad uates choose to put their pro fessional lives on hold while they pursue personal interests. Ashley Jensen, a senior Span ish major, said she wants to enter the job market but is in no hurry. “After graduation, I plan to go to Argentina and enjoy some free time while I can, before I have to pay off my loans,” Jensen said. Another option for seniors is to continue their education in professional school. Anthony Semien, a senior agricultural development major, said he plans to attend business graduate school at A&M. Semien is a “non-traditidnal” student be cause he has been married more than two years and has an 18- month old daughter. Semien began school at A&M in 1989. He withdrew one and a half years later to complete a two-year mission for his church in South America. He started school again in the fall of 1993 and has been attending ever since. Along with taking 13 hours of school, Semien works 45 to 50 hours a week at two dif ferent jobs and is a newly ap pointed off-campus senator. “My wife thinks I’m burning the candle at both ends, but I wanted this (Student) Senate seat in order to represent stu dents that get lost in the shuffle — especially married students,” Semien said. “I’ve learned that it’s important to find your niche, what you really want to do with your life.” See Seniors, Page 6