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WHAT’S INSIDE? Faculty, staff discuss IDEA forms Advice: Hit-and-run penalties increase Player of the Year grows with experience

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SHSU prepares to beat TSU Alex Broussard|Houstonian

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Volume 124/ Issue 5

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Thursday, September 12, 2013

Supreme confusion CAMPUS

SGA officials say budget fight will go to high court JAY R. JORDAN Senior Reporter The Sam Houston State University Student Government’s budget war continued during Tuesday night’s meeting after the Senate unanimously passed their own budget after refusing to pass the president’s. THE NUMBERS Student Body President Ramiro Jaime Jr. presented a revised budget to the Senate after reportedly refusing to appoint a committee to do so, as mandated by the Senate on Sept. 3. No Senator made a motion to approve the budget, which according to tradition, means the budget did not pass. It’s unclear as to how SGA by-laws stand on the issue, however. “The intent of the budget is to efficiently run student government,” Jaime said. “All the budget is, is to say what we should do, or my suggestion of what we should do. This is what we plan to spend; an idea of what we should

do.” He said during his speech that the Senate uses an approximate number that the budget states for “whatever it deemed necessary.” “My point is… that we have a budget, and this is what we should use,” Jaime said. “But we don’t always go by that budget, and that’s perfectly fine. And that’s what the Senate’s job is to do: to appropriate that money that is deemed to the Senate.” Jaime said that while the budget is important, whatever it states is not set in stone. He said that the Senate is in charge of spending the entire budget however it deems necessary except for officer stipends and administrative wages. Jaime’s revised budget differed slightly from his original proposal. Compared to Sept. 3 proposal, he lowered the Executive Student Assistant Wages by $415 (4 percent), raised the Bearkat All Paws In budget by $1,000 (20 percent), and lowered the Senate Discretionary fund by $585 (4 percent). Senator Steve Perry (CHSS)

Brynn Castro | The Houstonian

ROUND TWO. Student body president Ramiro Jamie Jr. presents his revised budger to the SGA senate in Tuesday’s meeting. The budget never even made it to a vote. The Senate unanimously voted to approve a competing allocation of funds that they say would act as the budget for this fiscal year.

presented Senate Bill F13-02 after Jaime’s presentation that highlighted an allocation of funds by the Senate and varied slightly from his budget presented on Sept. 3. The bill kept the Officer Stipends the same as they were last year, while Jaime’s offered

pay raises to the president, vice president and chief of staff and pay decreases to the treasurer and secretary. Compared to FY 2013, it raised ESA Wages by $3,000 (67 percent), raised BAPI by $1,500 (30 percent), raised University Affairs by $250 (33 percent), and decreased the Senate

Discretionary fund by $1,450 (11 percent). “F13-02 was written by a broad coalition of Senate members who wanted to ensure that the Senate fulfilled its obligation to be good stewards of the financial —

SGA, page 2

CAMPUS

LSC indefinitely postponed until funds are found MOLLY WADDELL Associate Editor

Kaleigh Treiber| The Houstonian

BEARKAT MANIA. Cameron Walker, junior mass communication major, plays football at the Alpha Tau Omega booth, during Bearkat Mania. Bearkat Mania is an event where campus clubs and community businesses get together to welcome the Bearkat community back.

Internet companies refuse to grant government access to client info CHRISTIAN VAZQUEZ Staff Reporter Recently there has been a popular conception that major technology companies, such as Apple, Facebook and Google, are apathetic towards their clients being spied on by the National Security Agency, according to Patrick Gray from Wired.com. According to Facebook, this isn’t the case. Their engineering team published a blog post stating that all access to their site via apps and web browsers was now SSL

(Secure Socket Layer) encrypted on the same day the media released detailed documents on NSA’s “X-Keyscore” collection program. Wired.com’s sources in Facebook say it is merely a coincidence that the documents came out on the same day, and the company had been in the process of enabling the encryption across the board for years. Andy Bennett, Director of the Center for Excellence in Digital Forensics at SHSU, cautioned that while Facebook is SSL

encrypted, it doesn’t mean that it is impregnable. He used Facebook as an example. “Encrypting the traffic is a meaningless step,” Bennett said. “When Facebook says it’s encrypted, they’ve only eliminated one of the myriad of attacks. The NSA is able to cooperate with vendors. Just because they don’t have the explicit cooperation with Facebook, doesn’t mean that they didn’t have the cooperation with the developers of the app.” —

TECH, page 2

The Lowman Student Center expantion can’t go forward as quickly as hoped because some student’s fees are waived, according to Dan McDaniel, director of the LSC. In the fall of 2012, the students passed a referendum agreeing to increase their LSC fee from $60 to $100 to pay for a new LSC. After the increase went into place, McDaniel believed the LSC was on track to start building soon. McDaniel said the staff then realized that several students’ LSC fees are waived. McDaniel said that students who are solely distance learners don’t have to pay student center fees, as well as, state mandated waivers and university policy waivers. He said in the past fiscal year, which ended Aug. 31, $709,000 in fees were waived. “Financing is a challenge right now,” McDaniel said. “We’re working through to try and figure out how to make those financing payments and looking at different alternatives.” McDaniel wants to ensure the students that their fee increase is still going towards LSC construction. “In the meantime what we

have done is open a construction account for the university,” McDaniel said. Any excess that the students have been paying, or the $40 increase, is being put into a construction account. According to McDaniel the LSC is tackling some of the small things that the students and staff have requested be changed, while raising funds to begin building. Some people on campus had complained about the dim lighting in the LSC Lobby. McDaniel said that they have had a company come in and look at the lighting and change out the existing lights. They are currently working on a plan. McDaniel also said that they have bought more narrow tables to maximize the occupancy in the rooms. “We have so many organizations and we only have three rooms that will hold really over 50 people,” McDaniel’s said. With the narrow tables occupancy went up from 100 to 120. There is no projected date for the actual construction of the new LSC. The LSC needs to raise enough money to make a bond payment equal to the cost. McDaniel’s said this will be around $800,000 to break ground. It is unclear how much money has been set aside so far


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9-12-13 by The Houstonian - Issuu