NE^Iir ■' Tuesday, June 15, 2004 tThe Battalion jlume 110 • ] 52 • 6 pages \ Ie\as A&M Tradition Since 1893 OPINION: King-size mistake. Page 5 vrwv^theban...c-onn PACE DESIGN BY: LAUREN ROUSE Book Buyback Conditions Several factors affect the price you will receive. ^ Whether or not the book has been readopted for the upcoming semester ^ New editions by the publisher t^The condition of the book fe* The national demand for the book The current inventory on hand ANDREW BURLESON • THE BATTALION SOURCE : TRADITIONS BOOKSTORE Buyback changes proposed By Natalie Younts THE BATTALION Texas A&M Student Government Association mem bers are trying to help students get more money back for their used books by encouraging pro fessors to turn in their book orders before final exams. Students can receive up to 50 percent of the new price of a book during textbook buyback if the professor has specified that the book will be used again for the following semester. If a professor has not informed bookstores whether or not the book will be used again, students can only receive up to 10 percent back for the book. Student senator Scott Smith, a senior chemical engineering major, informed deans, depart ment heads and professors of the problem and asked for their help during dead week in May. “When tuition is raised 21 percent in a single semester, you’ve got to look to these things to find new ways to save students 4 money,” said Smith, the student services chair for the Student Senate. Joanna Koliba, assistant manager of the MSC Bookstore, said professors should turn in their orders before buyback goes into full swing so that students can get up to 50 percent back. “The sooner they turn in an adoption, the sooner we can begin to pay 50 percent for the book,” Koliba said. Professors’ textbook adop tion records, or a list of books that will be used the following semester, are first sent to the MSC bookstore. Representatives from off-cam pus bookstores can then get a copy from the MSC. Shri Parchure, Loupot's Bookstores general manager, said professors not turning their book orders in on time are not the only reason that students would not get 50 percent back for their used books. Buyback amounts also depend on how many books the store needs and the timing of the buyback. Some students don’t sell their books back until after the last day of finals, and by that time, no more books are needed, Parchure said. Parchure said 70 to 75 per cent of professors turn their book requests in before finals. “There are some professors who are lazy,” Parchure said. “But for a lot of classes, they have not decided who is going to teach the class.” In the future, Student Government Association mem bers will encourage deans and department heads to assign classes to instructors earlier, Smith said. He said assigning classes earlier would reduce the amount of book orders that are turned in late because it is unknown who is teaching the class. Student Government Association members would also like for deans to encourage fac ulty members to turn in adop tion records before full-swing See Buyback on page 2 iates honors ewly admitted GATES By Shawn Millender THE BATTALION A&M President Robert M. Gates attended a banquet Monday in Brownsville to honor south Texas high school seniors who will attend A&M in the fall. The banquet, hosted by the Brownsville A&M Club, was a send-off for students from five area counties who have been admitted to A&M.' B Rachel Hernandez, an administrator for the Brownsville Independent School District, was glad to uwe Gates in town for the banquet. B “The banquet was wonderful,” Hernandez said. “We tai about 150 people there — every table was full.” Gates attencied a reception hosted by Brownsville iSD Assistant Superintendent Johnny Pineda before he banquet hosted by the Brownsville A&M Club. 1 “We’re delighted to have him,” Pineda said. “The Iblic should thank him down here. The Brownsville 1SD has enjoyed a great relationship with A&M with tes at the helm.” I Pineda said student interest in attending A&M has ;p ked recently due to intensified recruitment of Rio jiande Valley students. I B “In the last couple of years, A&M has done a really jreat job down here because of its president and alum- ■ ti foundation. We are really fortunate to have them lown here,” Pineda said. B “We're real excited here. Any time Dr. Gates and his :rcw comes down it’s a reason to celebrate, but this year ve have so many kids to recognize,” Hernandez said. B Hernandez said that Brownsville ISD sent 78 appli- :a ions to A&M for the fall and will be sending at least 10 students in August. B“When we first started this we had 25 people show tp. but this year it has grown to over 150,” Hernandez said. ■ The Brownsville ISD will send the valedictorians ft m two of its five high schools to A&M as well as one ;a utatorian. “I like to think we send our best and brightest to Hernandez said. Frank Ashley, assistant provost for enrollment, will tcfcompany Gates on the trip along with seven other le egates. Ashley said last year’s event was cancelled due to ravel difficulties brought on by inclement weather. See Gates on page 2 Furry friends BRIAN WILLS • THE BATTALION Christine Veade, a senior biomedical science major, gives Jessica, a calico cat, and The Center, which currently houses eight cats and 12 dogs, is in the process of adding Chip, a terrier mix, attention at the Stevenson Companion Animal Life-Care Center. a new wing that will make room for more animals and two student residents. Supreme Court keeps ‘under God’ in pledge By Anne Gearan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday allowed millions of schoolchildren to keep affirming loyalty to one nation “under God” but dodged the underlying question of whether the Pledge of Allegiance is an uncon stitutional blending of church and state. The ruling overturned a lower court deci sion that the religious reference made the pledge unconstitutional in public schools. But the decision did so on technical grounds, rul ing the man who brought the case on behalf of his 10-year-old daughter could not legally represent her. It was an anticlimactic end to an emotion al high court showdown over God in the pub lic schools and in public life. It also neutral izes what might have been a potent election- year political issue in which the Bush admin istration argued strongly that the reference to God should remain part of the pledge. The outcome does not prevent a future court challenge over the same issue, howev er, and both defenders and opponents of the current wording predicted that fight will come quickly. For now, five justices said the court could not rule on the case because California atheist Michael Newdow does not have full custody of his daughter. “When hard questions of domestic rela tions are sure to affect the outcome, the pru dent course is for the federal court to stay its hand rather than reach out to resolve a weighty question of federal constitutional law,” Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority. Newdow, who has fought a protracted cus tody battle with the girl’s mother, was angered by the decision and the basis for it. “She spends 10 days a month with me,” he said. “The suggestion that I don’t have suffi cient custody is just incredible.” Three other justices went along with the outcome, but seemed to accuse the majority of using Newdow’s legal standing as a fig leaf to avoid the harder constitutional issue. The three, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and See Court on page 6 Survey finds U.S. gas prices drop for first time this year By Paul Chavez THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES — A boost in gasoline trbduction and a dip in oil prices has led to year’s first nationwide drop in gas >r|:es, an industry analyst said. The weighted national average price for three grades of gasoline fell 6 1 /2 cents to 04 per gallon Friday after rising more han 59 cents since mid-December, analyst ;5 Trilby Lundberg, who publishes the semi- nonthly Lundberg Survey, said Sunday. The ■urvey regularly polls nearly 8,000 gas sta- ions across the United States. The average price for all grades on the last survey May 21 was slightly above $2.10 per gallon. Crude oil prices, which have been hover ing above $40 a barrel in recent weeks, closed last week at $38.45 a barrel, Lundberg said. The lower oil prices can be attributed to oil production above the official quota set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and OPEC’s recent announce ment that it would increase production this summer to stabilize prices, Lundberg said. See Gas on page 2 Texas A&M student killed in car crash By Natalie Younts THE BATTALION Kathryn Marie McLellan, a senior nutrition major at Texas A&M, was killed in a car crash after her Jeep Grand Cherokee collided with a pickup truck. McLellan was killed on U.S. 77 near Victoria while driving to her hometown. Corpus Christi, for a doctor’s appointment Wednesday afternoon. Twenty-two-year-old McLellan was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. She was also involved with Young Life, a non-profit organization whose mis sion is to introduce adolescents to Jesus Christ and help them grow in their faith. Kelli Morris, a senior early childhood education major and president of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, said that Katie was a person who had strong Christian val ues and would be missed very much. “It’s shocking when someone this close to you and someone this young passes,” Morris said. “We’re missing a friend.” Morris said she hopes that the Aggie family will pray for Katie’s family during this time of grief. McLellan graduated from Carroll High School in Corpus Christi, where she participated in sports and was in the National Honor Society. McLellan is survived by her parents, Mike and Donna McLellan, her brother Keith McLellan, and grandparents Don and Joyce DeKock and John and Marie McLellan. The family is accepting donations to the Katie McLellan Young Life Camp Fund. Donations can be sent to Frost Bank, attention Alan Wilson, P.O. Box 749, Corpus Christi, Texas, 78403-0749.