EBRUARY 1989 Student Body U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 23 1oney no barrier between 'have' and 'havenot' roommates By Jonathon Danek The Daily Illini U. of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana Patrice Mitchell, sophomore in en- gineering at the U. of Illinois, Cham- paign-Urbana, was born when her pa- rents were still in college. Although she was eight years old before they held full- e jobs, her parents' current occupa- ns have led to an extremely secure financial status. Her father is a dentist and her mother is a high school mathematics teacher. Mitchell drives a Renault Alliance, and she owns most of the electronic equipment in her dormitory room. Mitchell's roommate, Julie Stropes, sophomore in commerce, works during the summer and applies for as much ancial aid as she can. Her contribu- tion to the room is a fan. "We don't fight Tuition Continued From Page 1 putting himself through college was dif- ficult, but he's known students who went to outrageous lengths to come up th their college funds. "I've known people who cut corners so closely they wouldn't turn the heat on until there was an inch or two of snow on the ground," Parker said. Had the minimum wage risen with inflation since 1981, according to the Consumer Price Index, it would now be $4.51. For students like Parker, this gap has led them to spend more time orking and less time studying. Parker said he paid for his schooling with part-time jobs, and no financial help from his parents. Not only has the minimum wage remained low, he said, but Athens, Ga., wages tend to be low anyway because employers have little incentive to offer more money. "In Athens, it's a captive work force because they know they have a lot of people wanting jobs, so they can keep he salaries low," Parker said. Despite the difficulty he incurred in funding his education, Parker said some of his problems could have been alleviated by applying more strenuous- ly for student aid. Reagan's cuts have made aid harder to come by, but far from unobtainable, he said. "I thought I couldn't get a scho- larship, so I didn't even try. Now I wish I had, because there's a lot that go un- sed," Parker said. Gary Tacker, a senior Italian/market- ing major, is another student feeling the pinch of higher tuitions. He's had sever- al part-time and temporary jobs be- cause he receives almost no money from his parents or from grants, he said. In- creasingly tight government regula- tions concerning student financial aid haven't helped matters, Thacker said. "The money my parents have is *nough that I can't get financial assist- ance," he said. "My sister graduated in 1985, and it was easier for her to get financial aid. To me, there's a trend in cutbacks in money. My freshman year, I could have gotten a loan if I'd wanted, but now, it's harder." Having to work and go to school at the same time has given his social and studying time a beating, he said. "I think the biggest thing is that hav- Ong these jobs will be helpful in getting me a job when I get out, besides just paying for school," he said. "I've talked to companies that said this experience is definitely an advantage." over what each other brings to the room; she brings it all," Stropes said. The financial disparities of college students today are becoming in- creasingly more apparent. In a year when a $300 tuition increase may mean the end of an academic career for some, other students blink an eye. Last summer, Stropes had two jobs. During the day, she worked full time for the Rock Island (Ill.) Arsenal. At night, she worked as an usher at a local minor league baseball park. "I have everything," Stropes said of her financial aid package, which in- cludes a full loan and a Pell Grant. "I usually feel bad that I can't say 'Here, my parents will pay for you (Stropes) too,'" Mitchell said. In the past, Mitchell said she has offered to lend Stropes money. Poorer students who earn their way through school have a greater apprecia- tion for the money they have, Stropes said. "I think that's the difference be- tween rich people and poor people. You're more conscious of (money) if you earned it." Having to worry about how much money she has at a given time has made her life a little different from other stu- dents, Stropes said. Money decisions re- quire a lot more thought. "You just can't pick a school," said Stropes, "you have to see how much it costs." But hard work and time spent in long financial-aid lines have not led to re- sentment of the affluent. "Someday I'll be rich," Stropes said. AQA ou. t Y U Q J m Z Q W cx: W H W 2 O W Y_ m START YOUR CLIMB TO CAREER SUCCESS THIS SUMMER. Apply now for six weeks of Army ROTC leader- ship training. 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