The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 20, 2000, Image 7

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    dnesduy, September;
Wednesday, September 20. 2000
STATE
THE BATTALION
Page 7 A
X Tech
usiness
eared
•ps, it wasn’t an
onsider the resoliij
es to be brought
iclude the dish
Government a
iter Spirit of Ag» ;
Vtain Society. Tl!;
s to pass a student-,
rease the Student
x Fee by Si
d by Southerlan,
tirs Committee if-
igistration driven LUBBOCK(AP) —Texas
:rease voter turnblP 20 ! 1 ^ business school has not
lections. IBiisused state funds provided
ent Senate mee ! teaching assistants this se-
idents are encouiv # iester ’ according to a univer-
® ty-sponsored audit, despite
lingering questions about
■whether money was misused
1 Bn the graduate assistants.
Provost John Burns began
inued from personnel audit just after the
Btart of the fall semester when
ve been workhs * ;the school’s newspaper re-
gligent in not doesBorted that some class discus-
elected to thisoLyfton sessions listed in the uni
working on it sin,;r>«ersity’s schedule were not
inally getting an>jBiking place.
I In conducting his audit,
icw exposition ceip urns interviewed every
tion at the maxinHeaching assistant and a num-
br bid by summer Kt of faculty members and
EBdininistrators in the College
n publicized, Jot!e'M ) * Business Administration,
e community.Hell “■ could find no incidence
. rest of the winch a teaching assistant
^Bid not have (a) specific, ac
ceptable assignment,” Burns
»TOte in his final report. “I
iound no example in which a
leaching assistant was being
Tised as a research assistant or
|o assist faculty with consult-
ng contracts.”
His findings were submit
ted to Tech president David
chmidly on Monday.
lake it look like v:. Graduate students are typi-
hing wrong. Thefi -nlly paid to work as teaching
ted our travel in tlri assistants at universities
‘sident Reagan, aK hroughout the state. But after
v in each time.Wk he student newspaper article,
e, analysis showed questions arose at Tech as to
>aid $2,900." whether the teaching assistants
Iso responded tof were actually assisting in the
mg current preside! classroom or spending their
»orge W Bush Sum time conducting research.
;s Bush will not win Schmidly said the univer-
his programs are s/ig| slt y is expected to use the tax
i A1 Gore's programs, dollars it receives for graduate
ing to win this eW [assistants for teaching — not
eating thatkisahj lesearch.
the Chamber [oii
os County w
munity. including’
id] will pass on N
s a place where w
c for doing
aid. “You get in
icthing right maw-
said. “Com
UT releases enrollment
AUSTIN (AP) — Enrollment at
the University of Texas-Austin is
50,010 this fall, a preliminary
number the university says should
allow the campus to retain its rank
ing as the nation's largest.
Enrollment is broken down by
three categories: 38,184 under
graduates, 10,420 graduates and
1,406 law students, the university
announced Monday. The total is 2
percent more than last fall’s
49,009.
The increase is primarily the re
sult of a larger-than-expected fall
freshman enrollment of 6,664 and
a near doubling of summer provi
sional students, UT said.
The number of minority fresh
man attending UT also increased
this fall.
There were 296 black students,
up 10 from 286 in 1999; 1,324
Asian students, up 103 from 1,221
“It's clear the
university at
tracts the best
and the brightest
students in in
creasing numbers
and we are work
ing hard to retain
these students at
increasing rates”
— Larry Faulkner
University of Texas president
in 1999; and 1,011 Hispanic stu
dents, up 35 from 976 in 1999.
According to the university,
62.7 percent of UT’s total student
body is white, 0.5 percent is Amer
ican Indian, 3.2 percent is African
American, 12.5 percent is Asian
and 11.8 percent is Hispanic.
“It is clear the university at
tracts the best and the brightest
students in increasing numbers
and we are working hard to retain
these students at increasing rates,”
said university president Larry
Faulkner.
Faulkner said the university
needs to manage enrollment num
bers while enhancing faculty and
resources.
The university’s Office of Insti
tutional Studies calculates enroll
ment figures every 12th class day
of the month, but there is usually
little variation from the prelimi
nary figures.
Committee on education
investigates rising tuition
AUSTIN (AP) — Tu
ition and fees at Texas pub
lic universities have nearly
doubled since 1992, and
the state’s higher education
commissioner says that
works against a goal of in
creasing the number of
poor and minority students.
Don Brown told the
House Higher Education
Committee on Tuesday
that the rising costs and
the greater burden on stu
dents and their families is
“a danger to our ability to
close gaps” in low-in-
come and minority enroll
ment by 2015.
Annual tuition and fees
have increased from
$1,621 in 1992 to $2,935
in 1998, Brown testified.
Twenty-two percent of
that cost is being paid by
students and their fami
lies, compared with 16
percent in 1992.
The total estimated
cost — tuition, fees,
transportation, room and
board and books — to at
tend a four-year public
university in Texas this
year is $11,894. That is
compared with a national
average of $10,909.
Brown emphasized
that higher education re
mains a good investment
for students and the state,
but expressed concern
about the rising price.
“We all like to think of
Texas as a low-tuition-and-
fees state and for a long
time we were,” Brown
said. “In recent years,
though, Texas has moved
higher in the rankings.”
According to one list
distributed by the Higher
Education Coordinating
Board, Texas had the 29th-
highest tuition and fees in
the nation. Brown said the
state had traditionally
been ranked in the 40s.
Also on Tuesday, the
committee heard testimo
ny from the chancellors
of state universities, col
leges and technical
schools on a proposal to
designate more institu
tions as “flagships,” giv
ing them more money
from the $7.5 billion Per
manent University Fund
and a greater variety of
doctorate, graduate and
undergraduate programs.
Supporters of the 30-
year plan suggest naming
UT-Dallas, UT-San Anto
nio and the University of
Houston as flagships. Pro
ponents said the changes
are necessary because of
lagging enrollment, a
growing economy and to
keep up with public uni
versities in other states
such as California.
Texas’ higher educa
tion system will earn its
“rightful place” among
the nation’s premier uni
versities if legislators
adopt the plan, said Arthur
Smith, chancellor at the
University of Houston.
Strike!
KEVIN BURNS/Tim Battalion
Jay Fenlaw, a senior accounting major, bowls a few frames at
the Memorial Student Center bowling alley on Tuesday.
Fenlaw and his friends have weekly bowling competitions.
I you t!ip-flop of ;
> suffer the penalr~
ot the rewards.”
escribed his days
ite House underB.
irding.
.dividual who has
life, I can say one
ig and reward!
eriods of my lit;
s sitting in the 1 '
g daily abuse fe j
don Post and Ns
anu said.
leedy students t
FREE ADVANCE SCREENING
iis speech, the?
sed the complaint
vorkers who are-
; increases, inclt
minimum of
any of whom reef
ne for a three
also want reiof
iprehensive.paiC'
e and unchanged
:niu ms.
ly very first day® 1
evoted a large pe-
resources to ailt|
ds of the UT ^
id.
HEADACH
Wednesday,
September 27
alio-
b
salonselectives*
see it. (jo it.
8:00pm @ Rudder Theater
gineers
ndwiches
/ 9‘> j _ 2
Free passes available at the
Rudder Theater Box Office or lobby.
Passes required. Seating is limited
and not guaranteed. Please arrive early.
NETWORK
EVENT
THEATER*
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