FEBRUARY 1988 U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 9 FEBRUARNYTYL 1988UR UNEY CAHER AINLCLEEONEWISAE r Buddies Scraping by Finance jobs alluring Teeing off in business A American U.'s Big Students budget to Finance management jobs Golf is an advantage in Buddies offer more than prevent skimpy meals at attract students from all the business game. just 'help with homework.' month's end. walks of life. Page 12 Page 11 Page 10 Page 10 .PEOPLtE W? ME UT AN EVUCAt0N WOU? IAPAKE ME OPE A WEAt-NG. 6U6R40 '5 00a, WT Tough ne Students face hard times By Michelle Allen The Daily Kent Stater Kent State U., OH Experts from the U.S. Department of Education project a 15 percent reduc- tion in the number of GSLs awarded to undergraduates and 25 percent for graduate students, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education. In 1986, Edward Irish, former Kent State associate director of Student Financial Aid, conducted a study on the impact the 1986 Higher Education Amendment would have on the GSL. program at Kent State. Last year 6,571 students received GSLs. The study projects that of that same number, 3,749 students will re- ceive reduced GSLs. Of these 3,749 stu- dents, 806 will not be eligible for any GSL. Last year Kent State certified a total of $13,000,160 in GSLs. This year, according to the study and the associate director of Student Financial Aid Theo- dore Hallenbeck, KSU is projected to certify $3,087,823 less. Kent State administrators were anti- cipating reductions in loans since Con- gress made changes last year, but few students were prepared for the cuts. Shelly Wilson, 19, a junior interior design major, lost $2,300 of her GSL this year. Wilson has received the max- imum amount available, $2,500, for the past two years. This year she is eligible for only $200. "My family is struggling to keep me in school," she said. "Two hundred dollars won't even buy my books." Speculating about why her GSL was so dramatically reduced, Wilson said, "I guess it is due to the new laws consider- ing parents' assets when calculating how much families can pay for college. "We're not rich. We bought a new house which is highly valued and this took my GSL away. Being an out-of- state student, I need the financial aid even more." According to an article in the Con- gressional Quarterly, congressional aides say lawmakers cut the number of students eligible for loans when revis- ing the Higher Education law in an effort to curb the loan program's grow- ing cost. See GSLs, Page 12 50 t flIET AIR1Y 0 AND' OEFOR6 1WNWi I, i 'iJP5 1PAiNG W t OANb TO PAY fO M4Y l-lCK. Me)T AND I CANT LI DC J6 w law cuts GSLs ureg wauey Nates normal Iobs, so ne uegan his own refrigerator rental service. By Sarah Stettler Daily Nexus U. of California, Santa Barbara "I like to go out with my friends. I like to get wild. But-I don't know. Some- times my brain just won't stop thinking about it-ways to try to make money. Everything I see-it's like psychotic," U. of California, Santa Barbara sopho- more Greg Wadley said. Wadley surfs, he parties, he's into sports-but there is something diffe- rent about him. He has a certain entre - preneurial air. Wadley's motivation comes from a fierce sense of independence combined with a marked distaste for the ordinary. "I hate working for hourly wages. Whenever I get a job, I end up hating it within three weeks." He also has an eye for opportunity. "You see something that works in another town, something that you might need, then other people need it too," he said. When asked about his apparent preoccupation with devising new ways of making money, Wadley said, "It doesn't really bother me that much. It just gets out of hand some- times when it's (money) the only thing I can think about. It usually goes away. A few beers and it goes away." At Francisco Torres dorm, where Wadley lived last year as a freshman, there was a large demand for dorm re- frigerators but a small supply. The re- frigerators F.T. offered for rent were also "really expensive" and the students had to transport them to and from their rooms on their own, Wadley said. So he bought 10 dorm fridges from a refrigera- tor distributor. He posted signs and waited, but not for long. At $65 per year, plus a $15 returnable deposit, his hunch was right on the money-the service was appealing, especially to cost- conscious freshmen who didn't want to deal with F.T.'s system. His refrigerators were newer, cheap- er and he offered drop-off and pick-up service. He arranged a maintenance agreement with a private company, rented a truck to transport the re- frigerators, and delivered them to wait- ing customers within a few days of their order. After the students were done with his refrigerators in June, he retrieved them with few problems. The only difficulty arose during finals, when Wadley found himself sharing his tiny dorm room See Fridge, Page 12