Newspapers / University of North Carolina … / Nov. 17, 2005, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of University of North Carolina Wilmington Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Quitting cold tumey alone can be difncult With free, confidential support from Quitline NC, you don’t have to go it alone. Call 1-800-QUIT-NOW (1-800- 784-8669) any time between 8 a.m. and midnight to talk to a professionally trained Quit Coach. They'll help you warm up to cold turkey and stay tobacco-free for good. QuitllneNC.com Wellness 1-600-QUIT-NOW ilestooes Learning Center High Quality Child Care Center For More Information e-mail: milestoneslc® ec.rr.com Located at: 4915 Oriole Drive Wilmington. NC 28403 (off of Racine Drive) Opening JANUARY 2006!!! Enroll your Child today • Will be applying for 5 Star license •Providing early childhood education for children ages birth to 5 years of age • Serves breakfast, lunch & snack • Part-time care available • Subsidized children accepted Employees Needed: • Early Childhood Education Degree or Related Fields desired or working towards a degree in Early Childhood Education or Related Fields. the Seahawk | NEWS | November 17, 2005 2 Cost of student loans could increase Hollan Peterson Assistant News Editor Students who rely on federal student loans may face increased economic hardships as the Republican-dominated House continues to try desperately to get $54 million in budget cuts passed. Of particular interest to the 80 percent of university students who rely on some form of federal aid to attend college is the House Education and Workforce Committee’s pro posal to increase cuts to the federal student aid program to $14.5 billion over the next five years. The average debt of a recent college graduate is $17,500. But according to House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, students could be facing increased charges in their student loans. “Included in these cuts are nearly $8 billion in new charges to students and families that will raise the cost of their college loans. These new changes could cost the average student borrower up to $5800 in additional interest payments.” Although Federal Student Loan programs constitute less than 1 percent of the federal government’s expenditures, they are set to comprise 30 percent of the cuts in the budget reconciliation bill. Progress for the budget-cutting bill, which also purports to cut $10 billion from Medicaid, $4.9 billion from Child Support, and $844 million from food stamp programs has come to a standstill. Although a controversial portion of the bill that would have opened up Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for oil drill ing was removed on Nov. 9 in hopes to widen support for the bill, it was pulled fi-om the House floor on Nov. 10. Due to the fact the Budget Reconciliation Bill has been promoted as one of the most important legislative acts in years, it is highly unlikely that the battle is over. “I think that it is ridiculous, essentially what the government is saying with this bill is that education is not a priority... that food, health care, and our children are all of ancil lary import to the neo-imperialistic agenda of the Bush administration. If we can’t afford to take care of our own needs, as this bill illustrates, what business do we have telling other countries what to do?” UNCW Senior Angela Taylor said. NC STATE UNIVERSITY ROCKET FUEL t » ONLY NCSU COULD ENGINEER AN MBA THIS STRONG. Here's the Technology MSA that can launch !he career you've always wanted. It's the fast-track to where technology meets business meets management, with a curriculum geared for tomorrow's workplace. Witti a choice of concentrations, the NC State Technotogy MBA lets you focus on the future you have in mind. So sign up today for an Information Session. And be sire to tie your shoelaces extra tight. The Technology MBA Ready for your career to take off? Rogittor for an InfonruHon Session at www.mba.ncsij.edu MBA Management Concentrations: S/ofechnology-PharmaceuJ/cal Financial Mdnagement: Information Technology: Marketing Product Innovation : Supply Cham recfinoiogy Entrepreneurship $1.00 OC'f (■$5,00 or wore fare) Call HUke 233.SS98 forajJaCerMe maii ■ca»)ip«sf_can‘jage%aiQQx:QW
University of North Carolina Wilmington Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 17, 2005, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75