FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2000 Student funding caught up in Congressional deadlock by Caryn Rousseau TMS Campus Washington ( orrcspoiulont November 02, 2000 WASHING TON - Just da\s be lore the presidential election. Washington politics is hitting college campuses where it hurts - the pocket book. Education spending has created a deadlock in budget negotiations leav ing both parties packing home Tor the election without an agreed upon La bor, Health and Human Services spending bill, which funds higher education. Funding will be frozen at 2(100 lev - els until both parties come to an agreement. Earlier this week Repub licans killed sections of the bill's con ference report, or House and Senate compromise, because of non-higher education issues including school construction funding. That move threatens the solvency of the entire bill, which included a $5OO increase in Pell Grant funding. Current Pell Grants are issued up to $3,300 with total spending at $7.6 million, accord ing to a U S. Department of Educa tion report issued this week The House and Senate agreement would li df Illinois students urge university to cancel Eminem concert by Billy O'Keefe TMS Campus November 01,2000 1 Eminem's coming to town. And like a devoted groupie, controversy fiS following him everywhere. A group of students from the Uni- Tversity of Illinois is asking the uni , versity to cancel a concert featur , iog the controversial rapper, who Ipfeome under constant fire for lyrics depicting acts of violence against women and gays. Sfj yMore important to the group, however, is that the university is sue a public apology for hosting the .. concert, to be held Thursday night fat Assembly Hall. Should the con , cert go on, the group has also re quested that proceeds from the con- fe t£ ' are not doing this to [tick] off people who are going le concert, and we are not doing this to censor any we're asking the university to do the rf° M “ ■ organizations commit- much in tune" wi% ■-< and gay rights. happenings and hais s claim that the students a chance to ‘of the concert opinion Thursda' i doing this,to [tick] sue, and it's 10 are going to the con- says, are not doing this to But Sakurai sa >ne,” says sophomore much like his pk one of the group's istration, would fal ;e asking the univer- and that he would right thing.” appearance at thr utcellor for Student of physical rets Barton, says that the Instead, the '1 advisory board, an online pet ith students and; /www.dayc /ith“great ! j,js also e ie adminis- ggaiitst t* promoter ; their own: : \ :? : at®** .'v v * '. Sa. limply telling’ he say >‘ thanks” s '; ' ence.tc \ -A will, set it, especially tioh,ho vsßartoh,^jgtottp% ite'the^'(td«te, 4 the withohi 4ors^;ity,”he .^s&vunniyep A V hold it t ;hat the uni- up the maximum grant to $3,800 and raise total funding to $9 million. "It's to the students' advantage to get this done now,” said Corye Harbour, legislative director of the United States Students Association. “They are talking about a lame duck session after the election and that would be had for education funding.” Barbour believes that leaving edu cation funding in the hands of a lame duck congress, which will occur when the Senate meets November 14, will hurt student interests. “People who have influence and pow er in Congress in ways other than voles can wait,” she said. “That only student pull is to withhold votes.” After the election student interests won't he as influential for congress men, Harbour said. Other threatened higher education spending initiatives include GEAR UP funding, which will be frozen at $200.()()() when it was agreed upon at $325,000. GEAR UP program ming provides financial assistance and mentoring opportunities for low income middle and high school stu dents to help them get to college. versity is simply dragging its feet until the concert ends, and that profiting from the concert, whether administrators admit it or not, is the school's only priority. “Gene Barton signed the con tract,” he says. “ He can also break the contract. [The administrators! have so much political clout, but they won't stand behind anything.; It's always ‘we'll schedule, more, meetings, we'il have more talks,’” “The profit issue is probably the most important issue, but the uni- ; versity is trying to divert from that and turn it into a freedom of speech issue,’’ he continues, “But free dom of speech occurs when the ' government is not profiting from it.” >re Nick Sakural, one of the fftowp at the University to voice their Barton says that he is “very NATIONAL CAMP US NE VVS Penn State by Andrew Bagnato Chicago Tribune November 02, 2000 CHICAGO - Penn State's faculty recently took time out from the consuming business of instruc tion and research to tackle a truly important issue: fan decorum at Beaver Stadium. Seems the Blue and White faithful have been jeer ing the Nittany Lions as they have stumbled to a 4-5 mark this au- In response, the faculty has passed a resolution against “nega tive cheering” in the stadium. For those unfamiliar with profspeak, that means booing. The move has generated snickers among stu dents and made the school a tar get of barbs from the national media. “I think as soon as they make that announcement there's going to be a chorus of boos,” senior Matt Brinker told the Associated Perhaps not surprisingly, Penn State coach Joe Paterno supports the resolution. cover your butt, better yet, help cover your ■' >.Y Y v ARMY ROTC Unlike any other college course you can take* gStdp by our website: www.pserie.psu.edu/admission/rotc or call Marty at 898-7279 V: J *. •• College can mean maneuvering through a lot of different things, but tuition payments shouldn’t be one of them. That’s where Army ROTC comes m. Here, you 1 )} develop skills that'll last a lifetime. Meet friends you can count on. And have a shot at getting a 2- or 3-year scholarship. Talk to an Army ROTC advisor today, and find out more about our scholarship program. We've got you covered resolves to have Boobirds take flight “I'm glad to see that they would come out tor that, hut it may he a little hit of overreaction in the sense that I don't know' that there has been that much (booing),” Paterno said. “Once in a while, you're going to get some booing ok your own team. We've had a little of that. but not v ery much even with the lousy start we had". "I think it's admirable as a resolu tion. I think we all ought to be aware of the fact that this is a college game and that respect for everybody who's trying out there should be part of the whole game experience." Still, the resolution seems an el fort to evoke a time when college sports were an innocent diversion in volving real students - a time that probably never existed, at least not on Penn State's level. The truth is that Nittany Lion fol lowers are exactly like most big-time college football fans. They're pas sionate. They're obnoxious. They jeered quarterback Kerry Collins when he was a junior, then cheered him when he won the Tribune's Sil ver Football as a senior. Win or lose, they converge on tiny State College in their multitudes every Saturday. It's heartless to heckle college athletes, especially given the fact that they aren't seeing a nickel of the profits generated by their ef forts. But the notion that big-time college sports fans should behave differently than a crowd at an NFL game is at best quaint. Perhaps that's why it lingers in (aptly named) Happy Valley. Sidelines: Paterno and his wife, Sue, telephoned Washington's Rick Neuheisel to offer support for Husky senior safety Curtis Will iams, who remains in intensive care at Stanford Medical Center after sustaining a spinal cord in jury Saturday. The Paternos and Penn State w ent through a similar experience with Adam Taliaferro this season. Taliaferro is in a Phila delphia-area rehabilitation facility. Purdue won't reap the recruiting benefits of its superb season until February's National Letter of In tent signing day. But head coach Joe Tiller said he already can see a difference. "We re in the hunt for a lot of really good football players right [tu now,” Tiller said. “We need to find a way to win another football game, because it seems like each week that you win. that player continues to answer the phone and continues to have good things to say about your program." Wisconsin's 13-7 rout of lowa last weekend may save the Badgers the ignominy of becoming the First Big Ten school in 40 years to go from first to w'orst. The last Big Ten school to go from first to worst was Wisconsin, which finished first in 1959 and last in 1960. Badgers coach Barry Alvarez said the two-time defending cham pions never recovered from the mass suspensions handed down by the NCAA a few hours before the season opener Aug. 31. “The fact that we have rarely started the same group two weeks in a row has been a problem,” Alvarez said. “That never leaves you. That’s al ways a distraction, just the fact that I'm talking about it now and we're in the 10th week of the season.” itionl.