The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 10, 1984, Image 2

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    2—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 10, 1984
Grant scarcity makes many sign dotted line on loans
By ANITA J. KATZ
Collegian Staff Writer
A scarcity of higher education grants has
pressured more students to take out student
loans, University President Bryce Jordan
told members of Congress last week.
"Higher education costs are increasingly
.squeezing families who are attempting to
support their children's postsecondary edu
cation," Jordan said in a presentation be
fore the House Subcommittee on
Postsecondary Education. "Because of the
scarcity of grant dollars, our students wits .
documented financial need are turning to
loans to finance their education," he said in
his statement.
Jordan said more than one half of the
University's students participating in the
National Direct Student Loan program must
also borrow from the Guaranteed Student
Loan program to meet their education costs.
Testimony from Jordan and other univer
sity presidents came before the committee
during a hearing concerned with the reau
thorization of the Higher Education Act of
1965.
The act, which outlines government aid to
several higher education programs, is
scheduled to expire in September 1985. A bill
to replace the act was introduced by Rep.
Paul Simon, house committee chairman,
during March and hearings on the bill began
last week.
State
Map courtesy Centre County Planning Office, Voter Precinct Atlas
The World Agriculture Service . Society
. presents Dr. James Diamond speaking on
"Nan aphm[lbruall Ogibm Plioguiam"
112 Armsby 7:30 p.m.
Tonight
Everyone Welcome
R• 281
. PHI BETA LAMBDA
Topic: "Advertising & ,2,t>
Entrepreneurship" 41 'tt 111% 9 7
1. OAR
Speaker: Ms. Mimi Coppersmith e
of Morgan Signs, Inc. & 1 / 1'440
Barash, Inc., Publisher of
Town & Gown and Where
and When Magazine
TUESDAY 445 DAVEY LAB
APRIL 10 7:30 P.M.
ALL WELCOME
0307
Use fire carefully.
U.S. Rep. William F. Clinger, R-central
Pa., said the bill "looks like it contains some
fairly sweeping and some good
changes."
Clinger said he supports the bill but that it
will likely undergo many changes before it
is presented to Congress for a vote.
Several of the changes Simon has pro
posed are concerned with the student aid
programs under Title IV of the act.
Title IV funds include: Pell Grants, Guar
anteed Student Loans, National Direct Stu
dent Loans, College Work-Study and
Supplemental Education Opportunity
Grants.
Under Simon's proposal, the Pell Grant
program would be maintained and the max
imum award amount would be raised to $3,-
000 per year. A cost of living adjustment
would increase award amounts annually in
relation to the rises in the Consumer Price
Index. The grants, which now cover up to 50
percent of tuition costs, would also be ex
tended to cover up to 75 percent of tuition,
fees and required books.
Students would be eligible for grants for
five years as undergraduates and for their
first year of graduate or professional school.
Jordan said he is pleased with the com
mittee's "intiative to incorporate inflation
adjustments into the Pell Grant formula"
but that the proposed programs still does
not represent student costs accurately. Jor
dan said a University survey showed that
"Dance your pants off at the Saloon!"
Tonight featuring...
Larry Moore with oldies trivia
101 Heister Street • 234.0845
Coll
Vot
ege Borough
ing Precincts
11 / 2
k s t •
4kft e
6 .1 1
I
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Tuesday, April 10
ARHS meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 225 HUB.
Gamma Sigma Sigma meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 75 Willard.
Circle K Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 319 HUB.
Student Union Board meeting, 7 p.m., Room 307 HUB.
P.S. Students For Life meeting, 7 p.m., Room 318 HUB.
P.S. Science Fiction Society meeting, 7 p.m., Room 304 Boucke.
Phi Beta Lambda meeting, 7 p.m., Room 445 Davey Lab.
World'Agriculture Service Society meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 112 Armsby
Bldg.
College Democrats meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 308 Willard.
Student Foundation for the Performing Arts meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room
227 HUB.
students' costs ' for room and board are
greater than those given in Pell grant "at
tendance allowances".
A proposed change in the allotment for
mula for the College Work-Study program
would link the allotments institutions re
ceived for the program to the number of Pell
grants and Guaranteed Student Loans made
to students at the institutions the previous
year.
Changes in the GSL program include the
elimination of a fiVe percent origination fee
made to lenders, and a provision to make
interest rates on GSLs and unsubsidized
loans sensitive to rising and falling Trea
sury bill rates.
Maximum loan amounts would increase
so undergraduate students could borrow up
to $3,000 per year and graduate students
could borrow up to $7,000 per year. Parent
borrowers would be permitted to borrow
their parent contribution in unsubsidized
PLUS loans (Parent Loans for Undergrad
uate Students).
Students would also be given the option of
consolidating their student loans, prior to
entering repayment, with a lender holding
any one of the outstanding loans or with the
Student Loan Marketing Association. Re
payment periods may be extended from 10
to 15 years.
Eligiblity for loans would not extend to
students with family incomes more than
$65,000 a year.
Borough boundary
--- Street continuation
Precinct boundary
SLIMMER JOBS
• Do you know how to find one?
• Can you write a job resume?
• Need help with interviewing skills?
for answers come to
CAREER DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
Tonight, April 10 sponsored by
7:00 pm CDPC
413 Boucke
4
•
THE
MIDODD
Below is a list of polling places for the
April 10 primary election. Voters can
use the map to determine their voting
precinct. Polling places will be open
from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Listings by map number, precinct name and
polling place.
1 North Church of Christ, Social Room,
Martin Terrace
2 Northeast College Heights School,
Conference Room, N. Atherton
3 West Central 1 Hamilton Lounge,
Hamilton Hall
4 West Central 2 State College Munici-
pal Building, council chambers
5 Northwest YMCA, 412 W. College
Ave. •
East 1 Findlay Union Building, East
Halls
7 East 4 Pollock Dining Hall, Room 129
8 East Central 1 = Glenland Building, 137
S. Pugh St.
9 East Central 2 Zeta Pal Fraternity; 225
E. Foster Ave.
10 Eagt Central 3 Phi Sigma Kappa, 501
S. Allen St.
11 East 2 Stephens Hall, South Halle
12 East 3 = Grace Lutheran .Church,
Social Room, S. Garner St. and Beaver Ave.
13 South Central 2 Ctutatian Church,
Rec Room, Easterly - Parkway and William
Street
14 South Central 1 State College Area
Senior High School, Main Entrance, Wester-,
ly Parkway
15 West 1 Elementary Schoof, Room
25, 235 Cori St.
le West 2 Our Lady of Victory School,
Room 101, 800 Westerly Parkway
17 South 1 , State College Area Interme
diate High SchOol, Malh Entrance
18 South 2 State College Area Interme
diate High School, Auditorium Entrance
19 Southeast Elementary. School, Front
Entrance, Easterly Parkway
Hastings, Stone, Stuart and Snyder are In
College Township and residents of those
halls must rote at the College Township
Municipal Building, 1431 E. College Ave.
John Brugel, director of the University
Office of Student Aid, said he disagrees with
the proposed eligibility ceiling for GSLs.
"If a family has an income of $65,000, has
10 kids and four of them are in college, they
are still a needy family," he said.
The bill proposes an institutional block
grant that would merge three student assis
tance programs: National Direct Student
Loans, Supplemental Education Opportuni
ty Grants and State Student Incentive
Grants. Institutions would have the discre
tion to make grants, extend or expand
awards under the work-study program, or
establish an institutionally based loan pro
gram. . .
Brugel said he is also not in favor of the
block grant proposal
The block grant, an approach fostered by
President Reagan, "becomes a consolidated
target for budget cuts," Brugel said. Having
several aid programs reduces the likelihood
of funding reductions, he said.
"We would be in favor of (the block grant)
if there was some assurance of funding,"
Brugel said.
The bill proposes that allocations to insti
tutions for the grant be based on the same
allotment formula as proposed for the work
study program: Institutions would be guar
anteed to receive a grant equal to what they
received for the three programs in fiscal
year 1985.
Jordan said that during the 1983-84 aca-
Because of a reporter's error the nature and details of this week's Peer
Contraceptive Education Program information sessions were incorrectly
reported in yesterday's Daily Collegian. The sessions are intended for students
considering becoming volunteer educators for PCEP and wanting more
information about the program.• Attendance to a session is not required for
volunteers, but they must train Fall Semester by taking a two-credit course and
attending eight workshops.
Bangkok 'traffic children'
a growing problem in city
By PETER.ENG
Associated Press Writer
BANGKOK, Thailand Eleven
hours a day six days a week, 9-year
old Srimon Maliwan and five of her
brothers and sisters dart through
several lanes of heavy traffic at a
shopping district intersection selling
newspapers to motorists.
They are among the hundreds of
"traffic children" who peddle papers,
flowers, mats and other items in the
streets of Bangkok and pose a grow
ing social problem for city authori
ties.
Officials fear that if no solution is
found soon, hundreds more such chil
dren many of them exploited by
their parents and others will take
to the streets in search of a living.
"What these children are doing is
illegal," said Akom Sorasuchart, a
member of a special legislative com
mittee on traffic children.
RESERVE YOUR COMPUTER TERMINAL
NOW FOR END•OF•TERM, SUMMER, OR
FALL SEMESTER 1984
No need to wait in line again.
You will have your own rental terminal
at your desk.
Call 234-1262 or send this reservation request to
SOUTH HILLS BUSINESS SCHOOLCOMPUTERS
1315 SOUTH ALLEN STREET
STATE COLLEGE, PA 16801
Hi-way Sicilian Style Cut Pie
Walk-in fast service at the Cut Pie Shop on Garner Street
112 South Garner Street • 234-0349
demic year, total documented financial
need for undergraduates at the University
was $99.8 million.
However, after all existing aid sources
had been taken into account, unmet need for
students totaled $22.8 million, forcing stu
dents to "take on frequently alarming loan
burdens," he said.
Jordan also said increasing numbers of
graduate students are turning to loans to
finance their education. In the last three
years, the number of graduates using loans
has increased 34 percent, he said.
Jordan said graduate student access to
Title IV funds should be increased to encour
age graduate students to continue their
education and not be pulled towards indus
try.
Correction
Get 2 slices of Sicillian Style Cut Pie and a
Soda for ONLY $1.55
`Higher education costs
are increasingly
squeezing families who
are attempting to support
their children's
postsecondary
education.'
—University President Bryce
Jordan
A survey taken by the Social Wel
fare Department in February 1983
found there were 421 children 5 to 18
years old working• the city streets, a
third of them 12 or under.
Random surveys by the depart
ment also found that almost 11 per
cent of the children have never
attended school.
Officials say that because child
labor is deeply, ingrained into the
economy of Thailand, the traffic chil
dren problem cannot be tackled sim
ply by enforcing the•laws, which bar
the employment of children under 12
and prohibit selling on the streets.
In a recent meeting, the traffic
children committee decided to even
tually approach all the unemployed
parents and offer them work so their
children can attend school.
The committee also proposed that
children already in school be allowed
to continue selling if they agree to be
trained in other work.
HOW MUCH ESSEX MEWS HAS TO OFFER.
IT'S A VERY HUMAN REACTION.
ENE
=ILE
it is human nature to assume that one must pay for
life's niceties.
This is, after all, thel9Bo's.
So it's with pleasure that we present a contradiction
to that assumption...ESSEX MEWS.
ESSEX MEWS is State College's only condominium
village designed especially for students.
Each unit consists of 1112 square feet of thoughtfully
laid out spa - ce. The townhouse deBign features 2
bedrooms, 2 1 / 2 baths, a separate dining area, and
covered patios.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED NEXT TO
444 EAST COLLEGE AVENUE
STATE COLLEGE, PA 16801
CALL 817-237-5675 COLLECT TODAY.
PEOPLE ARE STUNNED BY
ESSEX
McDONALD'S AT:
IrW";
''il .4 i:~: ii ~~ ~~....r.
SUITE 250
Ideally located on •
Southgate Drive near cam
pus, recreational areas,
and shopping centers,
ESSEX MEWS overlooks
beautiful Mt. Nittany.
Free shuttle service is
provided to and from cam
pus...campus and city bus
stops are also located on site:
Our interiors are what dreams are made of. Lux
uriously appointed with all appliances and ac
cessories. There's nothing else to buy.
FEATURES
Built-in microwave oven
30-inch electric range
Frost-free refrigerator with ice maker
Sofa sleeper
Chair sleepers
Cocktail table/end tables
Bookcase or entertainment center
Bed sheets and pillow cases
Towels and wash cloths
Cookware and cutlery
Dinner service for four
Individually controlled central
heating and air conditioning
Plush wall-to-wall carpeting
Sound-insulated walls
Energy efficient structure
Private van shuttle service in
addition to campus and city bus
stops located on site
APPLIANCES
FURNITURE
ACCESSORIES
Shower curtain
Table lamps
GE automatic drip coffee maker
Stainless steel flatware
OTHER AMENITIES
Private patios
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
ACCEPTING
RESERVATIONS NOW
FOR FALL OCCUPANCY.
ALTERNATIVE FINANCING
PACKAGES AVAILABLE...
SOME SPECIALLY DESIGNED
FOR PARENTS!
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 10, 19
Automatic dishwasher
Garbage disposal
Stack washer and dryer
Dining table and chairs
Bunk beds and mattresses
Chests and nightstands
Desks -
Glasses
Off-street parking
Outstanding tax benefits
Quality construction
Conveniently located near campus
Priced in the 60's
Several financing packages
available, some specifically
designed for parents of students