The Houstonian

Page 1

Vol 115— Issue 13

Huntsville, Texas

Thursday, February 25, 2010

SPORTS

FEATURE PRESENTATION

INDEX

Sports....................page 5

Find out what individual became the 21st Bearkat to break 1000 points

Entertainment contributor James Ashworth observes “Death and Taxidermy” in the Gaddis Geeslin Art Gallery

Viewpoints................page 2

Nation & World...page 6 Entertainment........page 7 Snow Day..............page 8

SEE page 4

SEE page 5

Campus................page 3 Sports....................page 4

Joe Buvid | The Houstonian

Bearkats are now 12-1 in conference making them the number one seed in the Southland Conference Tournament.

See SPORTS for more on this game plus results from the Women’s Basketball and Softball.

Facing fiscal fees

SHSU SNOW DAY See page 8

University to charge credit card use in effort to save money following cuts.

“Cowbrrr and baby” Photo Courtesy of Amanda Bexley

SHSU regents approve renovation of Walker E du c ati onC enter By Julia May

SHSU Public Relations

Sam Houston State University was granted approval by the Texas State University System Board of Regents to begin the renovation of the Katy and E. Don Walker, Sr. Education Center during the group’s regular meeting in San Marcos Feb. 18-19. The facility is located on the grounds of the Sam

Houston Memorial Museum. University officials anticipate that the renovation will begin in June and be completed by the end of the summer. “The Walker Education Center is the portal to the Sam Houston Memorial Museum and is visited by thousands of citizens each year,” SHSU President Jim Gaertner told the regents.

— See CENTER, page 3

In other business the university was authorized to: * Offer the Master of Business Administration program and the Master of Education in Special Education program via distance learning. * Increase meal plan rates by zero to 6 percent, depending on individual meal plans, beginning in the Fall 2010 semester.

* Increase room rates by 3 percent beginning in the Fall 2010 semester. * Change the Distance Learning Fee from $303 per course to $101 per credit hour effective immediately.

Joe Buvid | The Houstonian

“Sam Houston State is currently the second lowest funded school in per student funding. Cur-

rently Sam Houston is receiving $4,476 per student enrolled. That number is considerably lower than the highest funded school – Texas A&M Galveston, which receives $16, 291 per student. Sam Houston is not far behind Lamar, who is the lowest and receives $4,173 a student.” By Lotis Butchko Senior Editor

Sam Houston State students can expect to dish out bigger bucks in the next two years as the university will introduce a “convenience fee” to help pay for the five percent general revenue reduction from the state of Texas. The five percent cut will cost Sam Houston State $2.55 million a year over a two-year period, taking a total of $5.1 million from the Sam Houston’s state funded budget. “When students pay with a credit card that costs the university money,” said Dana Gibson, vice president of finance and operations at Sam Houston State. “The convenience fee is going to be the students absorbing that cost.” That cost could save the university up to $850,000 a year, according to Gibson. When students, or parents use credit cards for tuition, meal plans, or any type of credit card used on campus, the con-

venience fee will be added so that they will be paying the additional cost that the credit card company tacks on. Online Checks, written checks and cash will be excluded from the convenience fee. The reduction has left many students asking why, but a quick glance at the state comptroller’s website shows that the sales tax from the first quarter was down, and the second quarter was flat. While that is becoming more steady, auto sales tax is down 20 percent. Saving Money In order to save money, Sam Houston State is bringing in Schneider Electric to do an Energy Audit. An energy audit assesses how much energy a building or home uses, and evaluates what measures can be taken to improve efficiency. Other forms of saving money will include reducing the number of graduate assistants jobs. “Unfortunately for next fall we typically fund four assistantships in our MBA Program, which we will not be doing in

the fall,” said Mitchell Muehsam, dean of the College of Business Affairs. “But we are not firing any student assistants. All but one is graduating and we are just not going to fill those positions.” Cutting those positions will save the department $36,000 a year, according to Muehsam. Other forms of saving money will come in the form of increasing the number of adjunct teachers. As of Fall 2010 the College of Business Affairs has 21 non-tenured/tenure-track faculty members. That number can be expected to grow as the school will look to adjuncts to help keep cost down without paying benefits or tenure expenses. “We are cancelling some searches,” said Gibson. “That will mean that we might have more part-time faculty, some searches won’t be completed and some staff positions might not be filled. “We are not trying to eliminate positions, but we won’t be filling them.” — See FEE, page 3


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