PAGE 6 — THE DECREE — OCTOBER 18,1996 Election year yields gains in student aid Student Aid to Colleges and Universities, 1995-96 (In Millions) Federal Loans ($28,707) Institutional and Other Grants ($9,962) Federal Grants and Work-Study ($8,657) State Grant Programs ($3,021) Source: The College Board Here is how the agreement af- • TRIO: Congress agreed to ter (R-Ill.), who chairs the House By CHARLES DERVARICS Just weeks before the election. President Clinton and the Repub lican-controlled Congress have approved far-reaching gains in student financial aid that exceeded even the most optimistic forecasts of education advocates. “The budget we agreed to... contains the biggest increase in Pell Grant scholarships in 20 years,” the president said Sept. 30 after the White House and con gressional leaders reached the end of marathon negotiating sessions. The agreement provides a maximum Pell Grant of $2,700, an increase of $230 above the cur rent level. The White House first proposed the $2,700 level six months ago in a budget most law makers called “dead on arrival” at its introduction. The figure also is significantly higher than recent Republican stu- dent-aid proposals. The House had proposed a $2,500 grant and the Senate Republicans countered with a $2,600 maximum. Lobbyists attributed the change to fear that the White House might provoke another government shutdown to embar rass congressional Republicans just before the election. But GOP leaders were intent on not allow ing the president to take credit for increases in Pell and other pro grams. “We’ve increased education spending off the board,” said Rep. Randy Cunningham (R-Calif.), one of a number of lawmakers who criticized Democrats for tak- A selection of recent drawings and paintings from Rocky Mount artist J. Chris Wilson is now on exhibit through Dec. 17 in the Mims Gallery at the Dunn Center for the Performing Arts. A free public reception to meet the artist will be held in the gal lery next Tuesday at 1 p.m. At the reception there will also be a dedication of the acquisition of Wilson’s recently finished por trait of Daisy Thorp, Wesleyan professor emeritus of art. Wilson is an accomplished and inventive contemporary realist painter who occasionally uses unusual sculptural surfaces in his portraiture. His 1966 portrait of Thorp, titled “The Garden House: ing unfair shots at the GOP on education. Overall, the final agreement contains an additional $3.5 bil lion for education above the bud get for fiscal 1996, which expired Sept. 30. “If s the best budget that we’ve had in a long time,” said David Merkowitz, director of public af fairs for the American Council on Education. “We certainly would hope that this would not be a one-year wonder.” Merkowitz, who characterized the education cuts proposed last year as “truly Draconian,” cred ited grassroot student campaigns for educating members of Con gress on student aid and making it an election-year “litmus test is sue ” "The overall pictuie on stu dent aid is overwhelmingly posi tive. We’ve come a long way since January 1995,” he said. Among other student-aid pro grams, work-study emerged as a clear winner with an increase of $213 million, or 34 percent. The bill provided $830 million for these programs, which goes a long way toward meeting a White House goal of $ 1 billion in fund ing by the end of the century. The agreement also dropped a House plan to terminate new capi tal contributions for Perkins Loans, a campus-based program. The final plan allotted $158 mil lion, the same as the president’s request. This amount also is $90 million more than the level floated in a Senate-proposed compromise last month. Daisy Thorp,” is painted on wo ven paper. His portrait of con temporary author and Rocky Mount native Allen Gurganus is painted on a dimensional wooden checkerboard panel seven feet high. Some of Wilson’s recent still life paintings with a colorful ki mono mural have been inspired by an extended working trip to Japan that Wilson made with his wife and daughter in 1994. Wilson is well known locally as an exhibiting artist and profes sor of art at Barton College. He also has had numerous important exhibitions in the United States and abroad. He had a solo exhibi tion at the Aichi Shukutoku Uni- fected other higher education pro grams: • State Student Incentive Grants: The pact earmarked $50 million, up significantly from cur rent funding and earlier GOP plans. The House originally wanted to terminate the program, while the Senate countered with $13 million. • Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants: The agree ment provided $583 million, the same as 1996 funding. versity in Nagoya, Japan, in 1994. His work is found ir many well-known public and private collections, such as R.J. Reynolds/ Nabisco in Winston-Salem and Poyner & Spruill at both the law firm’s Charlotte and Rocky Mount offices. Wilson, a longtime friend and associate of Wesleyan College, was the restoration director of the landmark Bellemonte House on campus. The Mims Gallery is free and open to the public weekdays from 2-4 p.m. Special viewings and addi tional information are available by contacting the curator at 985- 5268. $500 million, up $37 million from 1996 for a program that helps re cruit disadvantaged students for college. • Direct loans: Congress agreed to a 13 percent increase for administrative costs needed to run the program, in which the government provides loan capital directly to schools without help from banks. The White House originally sought a larger increase, but the new budget preserves the program after many Republicans sought to terminate it during the past two years. The budget fell far short of administration requests in at least one area, however. The final bud get did not fund a proposed $130 million Presidential Honors schol arship program, targeted to high achieving students. Nonetheless, lawmakers increased funding for other federal scholarship pro grams from $29 million to $39 million for 1997. Congress and the White House also agreed to continue the AmeriCorps national service pro grams. In a separate bill. Demo crats and Republicans voted to continue funding at $402 million, the same amount as 1996. Some GOP members sought termina tion of the program, in which stu dents earn loan forgiveness or fi nancial aid in exchange for serv ing their communities. Republican leaders praised the final 1997 budget for upholding some of its long-term goals. “Stu dent loans and grants are very high priority,” said Rep. John Por- subcommittee that deals with edu cation spending. Nonetheless, some hard feel ings remain, as evidenced by re marks from Rep. John Kasich (R- Ohio), chairman of the powerful House Budget Committee, who took aim at colleges’ and univer sities’ financial practices. The nation should “ask presi dents of colleges and universities why their costs are getting out of control,” Kasich said at a news conference to draw attention to GOP support for education. Kasich also urged parents to “march over to the [college] ad ministration office” to question officials about high budgets for non-teaching personnel and the growing number of faculty mem bers with limited English skills. Colleges and universities faced more muted criticism from Rep. William Goodling (R-Pa.), who chairs the House Economic and Educational Opportunities Com mittee. College costs are up nearly 300 percent during the past 10 years, he said, compared to an 80 percent increase in overall infla tion. Goodling and other lawmak ers plan to make college costs a key issue in next year’s sched uled reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, the federal law that authorizes most student-aid and higher-education programs. President Clinton signed the measure Sept. 30 to avoid any chance of a federal shutdown. The agreement covers the 1997 fiscal year, which began Oct. 1. New art exhibit, reception features Rocky Mount artist