106 YEARS AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY " - —^ Inesday • September 22, 1999 College Station, Texas Volume 106 • Issue 18 • 14 Pages ounseling center faces staff, fund shortage BY STUART HUTSON The Battalion kudents seeking psychological [stance at the Student Counseling /ice (SCS) may face a wait of up hree weeks because of a lack of ' and funding. tede Birch, director of SCS and [ychologist, said SCS employs 15 chologists, three counselors with [;ter’s degrees, and one full-time :hiatrist to help students with )lems ranging from stress and [iety to depression and suicidal tghts. lirch said SCS will require addi- jial space and staffing as the num- jof college students encountering ital health problems both at and around the country con- Les to rise. rThere have been increases in the fibers of college students around country who exhibit mental [hanoma, and A&M is no excep- Birch said. le said students who come to for help are assessed for their 1 of need for counseling. Stu- its who need emergency assis- |ce are helped immediately; how- }r, students not needing News in Brief irvices to be held >r engineering prof [Daniel B. Fambro, associate de- (irtment head for undergraduate jdies in the civil engineering and bociate profes- [>r at Texas A&M hd Class of '73 led Sunday at lie age of 48. Fambro’s teaching and re- \ search career spanned . more in 20 years, the majority [listime being spent at A&M. He also a research engineer at the is Transportation Institute. Since 1990, Fambro directed Summer Undergraduate Fel ls Program, designed to attract nation’s top engineering stu- jts to A&M. He had just led the jelopment of a new course to in- puce new students to the civil en- eering. Fambro also served as a gradu- j adviser in the department since 35. le was past president of the las Section of the Institute of isportation Engineers and a re lent of two major teaching awards \&M — the Zachry Award for Ex- [lence in Teaching and the Bird- I Endowed Teaching Award in Civ- [ngineering. Earlier this year, he ; named the Ruth&William Neely 'Chemical Fellow. [Fambro earned his bachelor of sci- pe and master of science degrees ;ivil engineering from A&M in 1973 1974, respectively. He earned jPh.D. in civil engineering from the jiversity of Tennessee in 1988. [Funeral services are today at a.m. at First Baptist Church in Van. emergency assistance will most like ly face a three-week wait. FAMBURO INSIDE aggielife Blowing glass J. Wayne Stark Galleries features delicate works of art in glass Page 3 sports Glenn, Aggies look strong olumnists discuss the state of ,ggie Football. Page 9 opinion •There’s more than one Miss America Possible new qualifications for ompetitors would eflect reality. Page 13 Batt radio Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for details on the Paul Christianson Awards. Steve Strawn, the only full-time psychiatrist working at SCS, said he had already seen three people that morning who, at some point, may have committed suicide had it not been for his intervention. Strawn said that while he cher ishes his job, it often presents diffi culties for him because of the inten sity of the situations he must face coupled with what is sometimes a problematic lack of resources. “I think that the SCS really does a good job with the resources that it has but there are times when the work demands become really too in tense,” Strawn said. Birch said while this staff is ade quate for SCS’s current needs, he would like to hire two additional counselors, as well as expand the SCS’s Website where students can obtain self-help literature. “The problem is simply funding,” Birch said. “But then again, I don’t know of any facility like this which has adequate funding. ” Birch said the problem of funding stems from a cap placed on student service fees by the Texas Legislature. He said all funding for SCS comes from these fees. The cap is currently $150 per stu dent. A&M charges $131, but Birch said the University must maintain the $19 gap in case the Legislature mandates faculty pay raises, which must come from student service fees. Ronald Lutz, a psychologist for SCS, said SCS will be instituting a new “case staffing” system this se mester in which each student who requests help will be assigned to a counselor who will then personally keep up with that student’s therapy. Soil toil BRADLEY ATCHISON/The Batvai.ion Cole Watson, of Colorado City, removes a soil sample from a drilling truck Tuesday on Joe Routt Boulevard. The sidewalk near Wellborn Road has been blocked over the last two weeks as the drilling crew took samples in the area. The information will be used by engineers to design a tunnel that will run under Wellborn Road. Board, chancellor meet GRAVES BY BRADY CREEL The Battalion The Texas A&M Chancellor’s Student Advisory Board (CSABJ will meet today for the first time with A&M’s Chancellor Gen. Howard Graves, to discuss restricting student financial aid and other current issues for the schools in the Texas A&M University System. CSAB is comprised of the stu dent body president and a student representative from each of the in stitutions in the system. The pur pose of meeting is to provide Gen. Graves, the top-ranking adminis trator for the System, with infor mation about each campus’s spe cific needs. CSAB, Gen. Graves and the Texas A&M Board of Regents will meet today at 11:30 a.m. for a lun cheon meeting at the John Con- nally Building. The purpose of CSAB is to gener ate scholarships and internships and to produce quality opportunities for students to achieve higher education. Student Body President Will Hurd, a senior computer science major, said this is an important time for concentration on student - related issues within the System. “This is an incredible time to capitalize on the collective wisdom of student leaders from various parts of the state to discuss the na ture of higher education in the state of Texas,” he said. The highlight of the agenda of the CSAB delegation for this year will be its trip to Washington, D.C., to lob by Congress concerning student-re lated issues. see Board on Page 2. A&M honors retiring counselor Dobrovolsky BY AMANDA SMITH The Battalion Texas A&M will bid farewell to Dr. Nick Dobrovolsky of the Student Counseling Service (SCS) at a retirement reception today from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in MSC 145 in his honor for his ser vice as a psychologist. Dobrovolsky began working at A&M in the Department of Educa tional Psychology in 1975 and con tinued as an intern until 1978, when he began his work for SCS. “When I came to Texas A&M, I was interested in career counsel ing,” Dobrovolsky said. “That’s what I did my dissertation on, and later I became more interested in hypnosis. I am a counseling psy chologist and have a different way of looking at mental health, looking at the strengths of an individual. ” Dobrovolsky plans to continue to operate his small practice, which specializes in habit control, eating behavior and biofeedback — a measurement of body responses like hand temperature, muscle ac tivity and brain activity. During his years with SCS, Do brovolsky was awarded the Presi dent’s Meritorious Service Award in 1994, served as president of the Bra zos Valley Psychological Association in 1983 and 1996 and served as vice president for the Central Texas Soci ety of Clinical Hypnosis in 1992. As a psychologist, Dobrovol sky’s interests include career coun seling, hypnotherapy, counseling and psychotherapy, stress manage ment education, relationship coun seling education and consultation and outreach. Dr. Wade Birch, the director of SCS, said Dobrovolsky’s expertise in the areas of hypnosis and biofeedback have aided the Univer sity community. “He has really contributed in several areas [like] relaxation and biofeedback services,” Birch said. “Not every campus has services and equipment for that. Knowing how to relax is important to stu dents, no matter what problems the student may have. ” see Counselor on Page 2. “This may not eliminate a wait ing list,” Lutz said. “This will offer more of a chance that a student will be personally contacted each week instead of being shuffled around from counselor to counselor with weeks between sessions.” Birch said SCS has been autho rized to hire another psychiatrist to help alleviate Strawn’s workload. “A psychiatrist is a medical doc tor who can prescribe medicine and tends to see the cases who require more in-depth therapy,” Birch said. “They tend to get burnt out a little more quickly because of this con stant exposure to extreme cases. ” Strawn said though his case load may be extreme, he enjoys his job and values each person he has the opportunity to help. Volunteer Fair to help students help others BY ROLANDO GARCIA The Battalion When Bowie Hogg helps paint houses for the needy, the junior business management major believes he is providing more than just a fresh coat of paint. “It may sound kind of corny, but I think it’s like a fresh coat of paint on life,” Hogg said. “It’s rejuvenat ing to see that there are people out there willing to work like this to help them.” Students will have a chance to learn about com munity service opportunities at the Volunteer Oppor tunities Fair today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Bonfire site. Lori Salter, adviser for student activities, said the fair, which is sponsored by the Volunteer Services Cen ter, will feature more than 20 organizations from the Bryan-College Station area students can join, includ ing such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Habitat for Humanity and Planned Parenthood. Hogg, a coordinator for the Big Event, an annual Texas A&M one-day volunteer service project, and also a mentor with Helping One Student To Succeed (HOSTS), said volunteering is a constructive way for students to spend their free time. “There’s no better satisfaction in life than helping those in need,” Hogg said. He said HOSTS allows college students to help children struggling in school by tutoring and be coming a mentor and friend to an elementary school student. “As someone who has done well in school, I think torfayand tomorrow -from 10am to 2pm at the polo fields -more than 20 volunteer organizations will attend ROBERT HYNECEK/Tiii; Battalion a college student can be someone these kids look up to as a positive role model,” Hogg said. Jeff Rogers, projects coordinator for the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity and a senior speech com munication major, said his work with the Special Olympics was memorable. “These kids have to overcome so much just to be there,” Rogers said. “I was a hugger at the finish line, and to see those kids so excited, no matter how they finish, it’s the best experience I’ve ever had.” Salter said in addition to the volunteer fair, students can access the Volunteer Services Center’s Website to find an organization that suits them. see Volunteer on Page 2. Ball State University honors Battalion, Aggieland works BY AMANDA SMITH The Battalion Six Texas A&M students and their work published in Texas A&M’s newspaper. The Battalion, and its yearbook. The Aggieland, re ceived awards for their graphic art works in the 1999 College Graphics Reporting and News Art Competi tion sponsored by the Philadelphia Inquirer and Ball State University. Michael Price, the competi tion chair and the graphic jour nalism coordinator at Ball State University, said the Department of Journalism at Ball State Uni versity and the Philadelphia In quirer joined three years ago to provide a competition to recog nize visual arts in media pro duction and education. “Part of the reason we under took this with the Philadelphia In quirer is to recognize excellence in graphics reporting and news and to promote the fundamentals of visu al journalism in student media,” Price said. Price said he hopes the compe tition will lend more attention to graphic art and photo illustration in news delivery. “My hope is that they would be given equal thought in considering the telling of a story,” he said. “North by Northgate" won third place and was designed by Guy Rogers, Robert Hynecek and Mike Puentes. “Sometimes the best way to tell a story is to show it.” Entries totaled 278 for the 1999 competition, compared to 174 en tries in the 1998 competition. Of the entries, 87 received awards. Nine awards were claimed by A&M students. The graphic arts awards recip ients from A&M represent rela tively young talent. Robert Hynecek, a graphic arts awards recipient and a senior biomedical science major, started working with the graphics at The Battalion in Fall 1998. Hynecek said the results of the competition are more exciting, in light of the competing schools. “Texas A&M doesn’t even have a fine arts department, and we placed against Ball State University with a competitive graphics department,” Hynecek said. “I think it is a big re ward to have people just point out [graphics] from the paper.” Guy Rogers, an awards recipient and a sophomore agricultural jour nalism major, started working with the photography desk at The Bat talion in Spring 1999. “I got involved with photography because I wanted to create more vi sually pleasing art,” Rogers said. Mark McPherson, an awards re cipient and a senior environmental design major, started with The Bat talion in Spring 1999. In reviewing the entries. Price said the judges initially determine whether the entry meets the com petition’s criteria for the individual entry, the content of the graphic or the illustration, the degree to which a graphic or illustration advances its story, the visual appeal of the graphic, the accuracy and the writ ten components accompanying the graphic.