Circulation • 1,425,000 SENIORS FLUNK FACTS — PAGE 2 February 1990 • Volume 3 BEER-DRINKING GAMES THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER [ Crime Statistics The FI3I releases its annual cam pus crime figures, but some say the numbers don t provide the full pic ture. Page 2 OPINIONS Ouch! Toilet paper and tuition hikes rub a Marshall U. student the same way — raw — Page 7 SPECIAL REPORT Career Moves U. explores students' job search concerns, including opportunities for liberal arts majors — Pages 16 & 17 LIFE AND ART Road Trip Many students find the solution to a dull weekend is a road trip, and some Auburn U students have taken trips of epic proportions — Page H DOLLARS AND SENSE Making millions A stocks game gives students a chance to learn the market and win $25,000 and a trip to the Bahamas — Page 19 STUDENT BODY Seasons change College baseball coaches debate postponing the season until warmer months. — Page 22 Critics say SAT bias costs women jobs, scholarships By Wendy Warren ■ The Breeze James Madison U. Biased questions on the Scholastic Aptitude Test may limit every thing from scholarships to job opportunities for women, a spokesperson for a national test critic group claims. “Girls do better in high school and col lege, yet score lower (than men) on the SAT,” said Sarah Stockwell of FairTest, a Cambridge, Mass , watchdog group that monitors standardized tests The claim comes on the heels of sev eral other complaints about possible gender bias in the SAT. a test which is administered to most college applicants nationwide. However, representatives from Educational Testing Service, the organization which sponsors the SAT, denied the claims and said other studies have shown an absence of bias The bias shows up m the number of National Merit Scholarships given to high school seniors each spring, Stockwell said. Semifinalists for the scholarships are chosen solely on the scores of their Preliminary SATs, a shorter, slightly easier version of the SAT. Of the 15,467 National Merit semifi nalists announced this fall, FairTest reported 58 percent were male and 36 percent were female The remaining students’ genders could not lie deter mined from their names See SAT, Page 2 On the stick i JACK COYHR UAIY IOWAN U Of OWA U. of Iowa Graduate student Bruce Wisenbum tosses a burning stick under his leg while giving a juggling exhibition. Wisenbum is a member of the Hawkeye Jugglers In college... with children By Stacy Smith ■ University Daily Kansan U. of Kansas When U of Kansas senior David Harger thinks back to the fall finals period of his sophomore year, he can laugh about the C on his transcript which broke his perfect -1 0 grade point average. The C doesn’t bother Harger much when he looks at his 22-month-old daughter, Dene, and remembers the day she was born the morning before his statistics final. "It's kind of fun explaining why the C is there," he said “When I interview for internships and mention it. people are m shock when I tell them. It's kind of an icebreaker" (larger is one of 2,221 U of Kansas students with children. 992 of whom are undergraduate students, according to fall '88 records from the office of institu tional research and planning For the past year, Harger, 21, has been a single parent with joint custody of his daughter. Dene spends two weeks with turn and then the next two weeks with her mother. Although balancing the roles of stu dent and parent are not easy, 1 larger has done both while maintaining a Cll’A above 8.5 in accounting and economics He plans to attend law school after lie graduates in the spring. "It's really hard, because you’ve got a babv that stays up until 9 or 10 at night and vou can’t do homework," he said. See CHILDREN. Page 27 Ruling could sound buzzer for game prayer By Crystal Bernstein ■ The Daily Tar Heel U. ot North Carolina A federal court ruling may have sounded the final bell for the tradi tional pre-game prayer over the pub lic address system. ACLU Executive Director Hilary Chiz said although the ruling only directly governs Alabama. Florida and Georgia, its effects will be felt across the country. “The ruling ought to send a signal 1). of Georgia President Charles Knapp opposed the decision. to all schools nationwide that broad cast prayer is absolutely unconstitu tional,” Chi/ said “No school can he in thebusiness of advancing any par ticular religion." See PRAYER Page 27