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Juveniles occupy campu: By Mar* Jo Miller Women's Quad was Three juveniles were involved in in- campus. cidents this past week on campus. A juvenile was observed sniffing a Feb. white substance in a paper bag in a Pendleton Street Parking Garage A fire alarm was stairwell Feb. 1. incut 31 of Woe Two invf*nilf?c nirWfrt nr? f*n nnlnnu/n Th truancy charges on 500 Main Street and reactivated twic that day. A burglar alarm w Other incidents from the University president's office by police blotter: A non-student's b ing her to break the Feb. 5 Coliseum parking 1c An apartment wa: A car was vandalized by unknown removed from a w persons in a Bates West parking lot. persons on Marion : ^\ll cl Id l III WclM (llllVcUCU III lilt University Bookstore due to a malfunction. A 1973 Ford was damaged by A textbook was unknown persons in the Columbia locked room in W Hall parking lot. unknown persons. A non-student seen near the A motorcycle was Congress' session wil By College Press Service This session of Congress will be one of the most important student aid sessions in years, some college lobbyists say. Though Congress is not expected to pass many bills during this election-year session, it will do a lot of work toward shaping laws that will be enacted next year. And the laws, they say, are important. Lobbyists say it's essential to alter President Ronald Reagan's administration's emphasis on cutting college aid programs during this election year, when education seems to be a hot political topic. nv FVFN mr?r#* imnnrtanrp llipv tav will hp ihf tipv*.' Higher Education Reauthorization Act, which will set limits for aid programs for the next five years. "For the next six months, we'll be focusing on both the 1985 financial aid budget and the reauthorization act," said Kathy Ozer, legislative liaison for the United States Student Association (USSA) in Washington, D.C. The Higher Education Reauthorization Act is a congressional master plan, renewed every five years, which will set guidelines for future Congresses in forming aid budgets. For financial aid officials who last year finally were able to increase several aid programs ? following two years of cuts and level funding by the Reagan administration ? 1984 is the year to catch up and make long-awaited amendments to the nation's student aid system. "THIS IS the year in which, for a change, we won't be totally occupied just defending programs and will have the opportunity to get some funding increases," Ozer said. Reagan, however, has hinted broadly he intends to request more aid cuts this year. fs~undway Ren A-Recor~I (we also sell current albums as low as $6.49) [| I Top 200 Current Albums I Excellent Condition I n Thousands of Classics and Collectibles t j M 788-0747 _ ou _ , | | Dentsville Square Shp. Cnt. J $1.00 off on 3 2758 Decker Blvd. | | remalsjA^/cou pon ^ ^ ^ Col umb^SC^2920^ j j n&& F |s 772-5121 s Cl 1 ? COMPLETE CARRY OUT SERVICE ) r? 245 BUSH RIVER RD AT BOOZER SHOPPING CTR HI (NEXT TO DUTCH SQ) NEAR INTERSECTIONS OF 1-20 ft 126 AND 1-26 ft 176) EjfalSllSllGll51lS1l51lg|L51l5ll!nlg|l51l51l!nl51lSli! s police in past week warned to stay off unknown persons in a Coliseum parking 'ot. A citizens band radio and FM con4 verter valued at $75 were removed from a vehicle at the Senate Street activated in Tene- parking lot. drow dorm for An alarm activated by a student e system was reset cooking in Woodrow dorm alerted the e. Columbia fire department. 'as activated at the A child fell from the stage at r unknown causes. Drayton Hall. He was taken to rakes failed, caus- Richland Memorial Hospital. entrance arm to a The rear window was broken out of it. a car parked in the Senate Street parks entered and $300 ing lot. allet by unknown Street. Feb. 2 ^ A wallet was removed from an unlocked location in the Carolina removed from a Coliseum. oodrow dorm by A license plate was removed from a car on the ninth level of the Blossom ; tampered with by Street Garage. I affect student aid "Our top priority is better funding of existing programs," said Charles Saunders, legislative analyst with the American Council on Education (ACE). "We're expecting Congress will reject further cuts in the 1985 budget, as they did last year," he says. "But there are many programs which need more funding and issues which need to be addressed." in i?v ?i r,r*rro i !_l i.'.i r i r\o r i r -? * * * i /\nj r,Arr.ivi3 wisn nsi ior ivod ana lor me Migner Education Reauthorization Act includes increased funding of virtually all financial aid programs, along with implementing programs that address the mounting long-term debt many students are incurring. "The most centrally important issue we've got to face is to bring back into focus that there can be some reasonable combination between grant assistance and student loans," said Dallas Martin, executive director of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) in Washington, D.C. "Grant assistance in the last few years has not grown," Martin said. While grants made up more than 80 percent of all student aid funding in 1975-76, grants now comprise only 48 percent of all student aid funding. CONSEQUENTLY, MORE students are taking out larger loans to finance their educations. And for many, aid officials fear the burden of repaying those loans after they graduate will be too great. "Some kids are borrowing substantial amounts of money to get through school," said Janet Hansen, associate director of the College Board. CAROLINA WOMEN'S CLINIC Pregnancy Testing ? 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