Speaking For Ourselves The Voice Volume 38 No. 2 Fayetteville, N.C. April 26, 1984 Stand Up For Your Rights By Eric D. Majette On February 2, 1984, a group of approximately 30 students rallied across Fayetteville State University protesting for co-ed visitation, better maintenance in dormitories, competence of instructors, the infirmary, and telephone operators, nourishing meals in the dining hall, and many other ignored complaints. The march began from Bryant Hall, to Vance Hall, and ended at Rudolph Jones Student Center, where they met with Nero B. Coleman, President of the Student Government Association. The students raised questions and voiced their complaints. Coleman informed the students that they should know their rights as citizens and as students. He also stated that “instead of making verbal complaints, students should document their complaints and send them through the correct channels. If their complaints are not answered, they should continue to press the issue until their complaints receive a recognition.” The students also complained about Chancellor Lyons not being available. A&T Astronaut Replaces Bluford Coleman commented on the Chancellor's “Open Door Policy” and confirmed that Chancellor Lyons is willing to see anyone with questions or complaints just as long as an appointment is made. While Coleman was explaining the policy, Chancellor Lyons unexpectedly appeared. Destinated to an appointment, Chancellor Lyons spoke briefly to the students about his “open door policy.” Lyons commented that he realized how difficult it is to see him, but he informed the students that they should not give up. According to the students, the rally Astronaut Ronald E. McNair, the first graduate of an historically Black university to fly into space, replaced Colonel Guion S. Bluford as Founders Day Speaker at Fayetteville State University on April 15. Roscoe Monroe, a NASA official on temporary duty at Fayetteville State, was informed that Colonel Bluford has been recently assigned to a West German Space Lab Mission and will be involved in training overseas at the time of the FSU program. Dr. McNair was a mission specialist on Space Shuttle Mission II which was launched from Kennedy Space Center on February 3, 1984. He has logged a total of 191 hours in space. A native of Lake City, South Carolina, Dr. McNair earned a B.S. Degree in Physics from A&T State University and a Ph. D in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While at MIT, he performed some of the earliest experiments in chemical and high pressure C02 lasers. Dr. McNair was selected as astronaut candidate by NASAin January 1978. In August 1979, he completed a one-year training and evaluation period, making him eligible for assignments as a mission specialist astronaut on space shuttle flight crews. was organized because of a student body meeting which only 25 students attended. The students who attended the meeting felt that “a rally would be a good way to unify the students, to get the students interested in the things that are happening on campus, and to let the students' voice be heard.” The students felt that the rally was a success because it showed Chancellor Lyons that students cared. The students are now looking forward to an organized formal meeting with Chancellor Lyons to express their thoughts. Registering New Voters IT# Stand Up For Your Rights!! Photo by: James Bullard Campus Digest News Service Rather than rallying behind a popular presidential candidate, students groups are concentrating on registering young voters for the '84 elections. Topics close to campus - like federal aid cuts, high unemployment rates for the young, the threat of nuclear war and unfavorable new legislation - have brought incrased realization of the need for student activity in the political scene. Before a person can vote, however, they must be registered. In early February, the Public Interest Research Groups announced a multi-million- dollar campaign to register one to three million students. College newspaper editors and student government presidents nationwide worked with the NIRC, urging student attendance at a conference held February 10-12 at Harvard University. There, participants learned more about campaign issues and voter-registration techniques. A $200,000 project to register voters in 16 states this summer is being planned by the United States Student Association and the National Student Educational Fund, who are now seeking grants. Organizers will concentrate on minority groups and beneficiaries of federal health and welfare programs. The nuclear arms issue has drawn the Student Coalition for Truth, a bipartisan coalition opposed to a nucleararms freeze, into the registration drive. Leading the coalition is the College Republican National Committee. College students in Alabama, California, Illinois, New Mexico and North Carolina - key presidential states - will be the target of the College Young Democrats of America in registration efforts. In 1982, only 18.3 percent of 18 and 19-year-olds (compared to 27.2 percent of the 20 to 24-year-old group and a whopping 64.8 percent of 65 to 74-year- olds) voted in Congressional elections. It's not surprising, then, that presidential candidates like former Vice President Walter Mondale and Sen. John Glenn Jr. have not yet made youth concerns a large part of their platforms. Sen. Alan Cranston of California, Sen. Gary Hart and the Rev. Jesse Jackson have potential to stir substantial student interest, according to some analysts. Admissions Practices Scrutinized Campits Digest News Service Pressures on colleges because of dropping enrollments affect more than tuition costs. An increasing number of questionable admissions procedures was the topic of discussion for more than 800 representatives of colleges, universities and secondary schools, who met for the annual College Board meeting in late October. An influential group, the College Board provides large amounts of assistance to financial aid offices through the College Scholarship Service. At the meeting, attendees particularly criticized the misuse of merit scholarships, some even calling on the College Board to police scholarship abuse to protect scholarship funds. Meeting participants expressed concern that additional money being awarded to top-ranking (often well-off) scholars decreased the amount of funds left for truly needy students. Although pressure for enrollments is great, more careful internal control over scholarship winners would help balance the situation, they said. At the entering college student level, more students are becoming aware of and applying for these merit scholarships. In addition, ever-earlier admissions programs and other recruiting activities present high school teachers with year-long senioritis. Meeting participants also suggested that financial aid officers should be more careful about approving loans for students who are unlikely to pay them back, such as poorer students and graduates of areas with low job- placement rates. Other disputed practices discussed included nonrefundable deposists, pressure on students to choose early admission at one college, the belittling of competing college programs, independent admissions companies working on a bounty hunter basis, and misrepresentations of actual college costs by some financial aid officers. Inside The Voice Editorials 2 National News 7 Political Satire 8 Variety Page 8 ELECTIONS...