L VAUL Hount it Earls How to charm jaded potential voters in 12 easy months Th scramle make voting see cl BY BONNIE DATT ASSOCIATE EDITOR PHOTO BY: BENJAMIN GLOTZER, SYRACUSE U. CAPITOL PHOTO BY: CLAIRE DUGGAN, GEORGE WASHINGTON U. OULD '96 BE THE FIRST ELECTION that hinges on who has the best Web site? In '92, Bill Clinton went for sax appeal on Arsenio. Now the hip thing is to go online. Worlds of information about each candidate - QuickTime movies of speeches we didn't listen to the first time around, pictures of monuments, flags and seals, copies of Senate bills - are available at the click of a mouse. No doubt we'll soon be able to down- r load adorable pictures o f P hil G ram m as a toddler. That's progress? The 18- to 24- -,, year-old vote steadily declined from 1972 - when the voting age was lowered to 18 and 49.6 percent of that age group voted - until an upswing in 1992, when 42.8 percent voted. But '94 saw new lows, with only 20 percent of 18-to- 24-year-olds voting. Now the scramble is again on to make voting seem cool. I want a new plug "College students can literally be the deciding factor in this election," says Kevin Geary, College Democrats national president. "Coming up on the 25th anniversary of the change to an 18 voting age, we're in the position to issue a challenge to our gen- eration: Your future is at stake." Go to the polls because our age group has only had the vote for 25 years? Whatever - everyone needs a gimmick. Of course, the biggest gimmicks come at those every-four-year blowouts. What else but a presidential election would induce Madonna to swathe herself in an American flag and nothing else? OK, bad example. "A major presidential election will attract a lot of voters," says Joe Galli, College Republicans national chair. "But generally, students are pretty apathetic. The majority are there to get an education, better themselves and get a part of the American Dream." Tom Edwards, a grad student who runs College Park Libertarians at the U. of Maryland, notices this attitude at his school. "I don't think a lot of them take political groups seriously," he says. "We don't have a job to give them right now." Mike Juel, Arizona state chair of the College Republicans, agrees that political interest falls off once a major election passes. "Only a few of us are "Although I hate the term GenX, we are GenX because we don't have anything tangible to rally around," Geary says. "Are students doing something besides going to classes and parrying on the weekends? Yes, they are, whether it's getting involved in Green Peace, Amnesty International or other smaller organiza- tions, or volunteering - it's just not rallying around one issue." What's at issue here? So how will organizations get students fired up about one issue - that small matter of who's going to run our country for the next four years? , Rock the Vote, which targets 18-to-24-year- olds in its drive to encourage voting, had remark- able success with the '92 election. But '96 is going to be a different challenge, says Pam Batra, media director. "We're not really sure we have the same level of excitement," Batra says. "Young people tend to need immediate gratification. There was a lot of excitement in the '92 election and with Clinton as a young president, but there was not a lot of media attention about what he did once he got into office. "There was a serious drop in the '94 election, and we got a new Congress that is not inter- ested in youth issues." And Washington won't care about youth issues if youths themselves don't, Batra says. "It's important that we mobilize campuses to bring attention to youth issues. If students talk about them, the issues will be addressed. If they're not addressed, they're going to be overlooked." Making students aware of the iues is the College Democrats' main goal, says Betsy Arnold, com- munications director for College Democrats and a senior at the U. of St. Thomas in Minnesota. "We want to educate them, get them to vote, and then we hope that when they vote, they'll vote Democrat." Juel also thinks education is the best tactic, but he says it goes beyond just getting students interest- ed in the election. He's wary of sounds-good poli- tics that, upon examination, are full of holes. "In '92, students got fairly involved with the presidential election because of the great work-for- school programs proposed by Clinton, but they weren't really involved enough to really check out the details," he says. Galli thinks colleges are teeming with conserva- tives, and College Republicans hope to tap into it. "They might not seem active, but if you talk to them, you'll find that this generation is generally conservative," he says. "Our ideas are ideas that they can grasp. If we MICHAEL VANCE HAD known for months he was in trouble, but lit- erally becoming a "starving stu- dent" was a bit more than he bar- gained for. Although the U. of Texas, Arlington, junior worked three jobs, nothing seemed to shrink the monthly stack of credit card bills, totaling more than $5,000. One day, he hit bottom - his financial pinch was so tight he skipped meals for three weeks. Vance could only blame him- self - and the plastic domino effect triggered by his credit card - for his temporary fast. "I started opening one charge account after another," he says. "When I first got the [credit card], I said, 'This is only for emergencies.' After awhile, a new pair of shoes became an emergency." Vance's situation sounds all too familiar to Akash Sharma, a former Arizona State U. grad student. He owed $7,500 in tuition, plane tick- ets and other travel expenditures to two major credit card companies. But his dilemma was not so much plastic mania as the desire to be financially independent. "In my situation, credit cards are a compulsion to not ask my parents for money," he says. "It's a pride issue for me. I've been a lit- tle unrealistic about it, though, which is why my debt has grown so high." Jason Abell, author of the per- sonal and financial advice book Start Now, doesn't find these situa- tions at all surprising. "Credit cards are exactly like fire," says the Loyola U., Md., '93 grad. "They are a great resource when you need them because they're a convenient alternative to cash. If you don't treat them with respect, though, they can also harm you." "If you don't have the money in the bank, you shouldn't be buying." says Abell. Jen Robinson, a Michigan State U. senior, has a bank card and "sev- eral" clothing store credit cards. She says she was irresponsible at first but has learned to avoid the pitfalls of plastic. "You really have to manage your money," she says. "You have to tell yourself not to spend, spend, spend the second you're out of debt. It's not easy, but it's possible." Bill Smith, a counselor with Getting stuck with the high cost of getting into med school $1,400 600 400 200 Prep Course .................. .. $850 MCATFee ............................$155 Secondary Application Fees ................ $150 AMCAS Application Fees ......................... $310 These guresarebasedonaveages. Total: $1,465 The Price light Pick a card, any card. New York-based Credit Counseling Centers of America, says the credit card issue should be addressed more thoroughly on campus. "Since colleges require physical education credits, they should require one hour in budgeting and money management," he sug- gests. "If they can teach about sex, they can certainly teach about credit cards." We can just see it now: Max-Out 101: Paper vs. Plastic. Keliie Gormly, U. of Texas, Arlington/ Photo by Jeff Geissler, West Virginia U. MEDICAL SCHOOL. SOME consider it the pinnacle of prestige in this soci- ety hellbent on fame and fortune. What you may not know is that those future physicians will lay out thousands of dollars just to get their foot in the E.R. door. It all starts with the American Medical College Application Service application - a packet made up of the student's transcripts, biographi- cal information and a personal essay students use to get noticed. The cost to send AMCAS applica- tions to medical schools: $50 for the first school,$180 for up to five schools, then $20 for everyadditional school. "On average, I would say that most students apply to 10 or 11 schools, so that runs about $300," says Robert Kucheravy, an AMCAS applications assistant. Ty Brown, a senior at UCLA, consIders the getting-in game a scam. "I think the whole selection process is weighted toward those who can afford the initial process," he says. "In other words, rich white people." Don't jump on your soapbox too quickly, though. AMCAS does offer fee waivers based on financial need and special circumstances. But wait, there's more. Add in another $155 for the MCAT, a postgraduate test that determines a student's aptitude for the sciences. (Go ahead and budget at least $310 so you can take it again.) "The majority of students take the MCAT at least twice," says Collin Morely, associate vice presi- dent for the medical division of Princeton Review. And if you're thinking of signing up for one of those MCAT prep courses, you can tack on about $850 to the tab. In addition to paying the AMCAS fees, med school hopefuls have to lay out between $10 and $95- the aver- age being $30 - for each university's individual application. Some students claim medical schools send out appli- cations to unqualified students just to bank the fees. But remember: If AMCAS waives your fees, most schools will drop them, too. "I don't know of any medical school that wouldn't allow a fee waiver for a good reason," says Mil- lie Peterson, admissions director at the U. of Utah. Don't put your gold card away yet. Med school hopefuls often have to travel to schools for interviews. "The only way to get into a school is to get a good interview," Morely says. "Person- to-person interviews are much more common than over the phone." Once accepted by a school, you can avail yourself of all the financial aid you can muster. But if you can't come up with a lot of clams, the appli- cation process itself may shut the door. Sickening, isn't it? Amy Zukeran, Florida A&M U. Illustration by MattEricson, U. of Iowa sadistic enough to keep involved. But I don't think the apathy on campus is any greater than in the nation as a whole." And just because students aren't decking them- selves in red, white and blue doesn't mean they don't care. Campuses and communities have thou- sands of groups - social, humanitarian, environ- mental, religious, political - that divide students' time and attention. Geary, a senior at St. Joseph's College in Penn- sylvania, worries about low voter turnout, too, but he also thinks activism is alive and well on campus. 16 November 1995 November 1995 13