The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 19, 1984 - Page 7 Auditors investigate student aid for trade schools WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal auditors say that lax admission stan- dards by some trade schools wind up costing the government millions of dollars in wasted student aid. The General Accounting Office, in a " report to Congress, said the Education Department needs to keep a closer Watch on the 1,725 trade schools, whose students got $278 million in Pell GrantE in 1980-81. AN EDUCATION Department of- ficial defended the "open enrollment" policies used by some of these schools and rejected a GAO recommendation that the government impose tighter admission standards. Among the abuses the auditors found was one school that ran a "Name a Hairstyle" contest with prizes of one full scholarship worth $2,025 and nine partial scholarships from $300 to $500. The school covered most of the costs of fthe top prize by pocketing the winner's $1,750 Pell Grant, the GAO said. The GAO audited records of 35 schools in 15 states from 1980-81 that had 761 students getting government grants. '" THE GAO said the schools were , elected at random to represent 1,165, et about two-thirds of all proprietary, ""t profit-making, trade schools, with 123,000 students. These schools teach such trades as acting, art, broad- casting, cosmetology, business, fashion design and secretarial skills. It said most of the schools admitted students who did not have a high school diploma or an equivalency degree. 'Education Department rules state that to get a grant, a student must have a -diploma or demonstrate ability to #benefit from training. The GAO estimated that 14,900 of the 123,000 students were admitted without 'a diploma or test results to indicate 6 'they could benefit from the training. "Almost three-quarters subsequently dropped out before finishing their cour- ses, but after drawing $13 million in federal aid. The agency also estimated that 83 percent of the schools failed to enforce a rule that students make satisfactory academic progress to keep getting aid. "Some schools used "questionable recruiting practices," including over- blown claims about placing graduates in jobs. The GAO suggested that the Education Department tighten the ad- mission requirements for students get- ting federal aid. Edward Elmendorf, the depar- t'ient's assistant secretary for post- secondary education, disagreed, saying, "We believe the Congress has 'made it quite clear that individuals "should have every opportunity to obtain training to prepare them for em- ployment, which is embodied in the open enrollment concept." Court says sleeping drivers 01 blameless LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - The ,Michigan Supreme Court yesterday 'ruled a motorist found sleeping in a motionless car cannot be convicted of drunken driving. The 4-3 ruling reversed James Pomeroy's conviction from Unionville and that of Jessie Fulcher in Vassar. Both were discovered slumped over their steering wheels, intoxicated. -Their cars were motionless but idling. THE COURT majority said a person who is sleeping cannot be operating or in control of his vehicle. "If the car had been in motion, the person in the driver's seat might have 4been found to be 'operating' it even though he asserted that he was asleep," the court said. 'If the person in the driver's seat had been awake, he might have been found to have been in such physical control of the car as to support a conclusion that he was operating it even if the car was 'motionless." - i i r .._