2
Wednesday, February 2, 2000
GPSF Fears Lack of Financial Aid
By Jamila Vernon
Staff Writer
The Graduate and Professional
Student Federation passed several reso
lutions Tuesday in response to UNC-sys
tem President Molly Broad’s tuition pro
posal.
The GPSF supported Broad’s pro
posal for state-funded financial aid while
opposing her call for a S2OO tuition
increase as well as student funding of
capital needs.
Broad proposes a $275 increase at all
16 system schools over three years. She
also recommends a one-year, S2OO
tuition increase at UNC-Chapel Hill
and N.C. State University to address fac
ulty salary needs. She also called for a
$36.8 million state-based financial aid
package.
GPSF President Lee Conner said his
Rogue's Mother Charged With Neglect
BY GINNY SCIABBARRASI
Assistant City Editor
After several weeks of investigation,
the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department has filed one charge against
the mother of Hailey Bogue.
Tara Christie has been charged with
one misdemeanor count of neglect,
which compels her to appear in Orange
County District Court. She will answer
questions in front of a judge, rather than
face a jury trial. Christie will not face
any jail time, nor was she arrested by the
sheriff s department, Maj. Don Truelove
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The Peer Tutoring Program will offer drop-in tutoring from 6-9 pm on
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Come to the 2nd floor of Dey Hall for help with the following subjects:
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Anthropology 10; Political Science 41
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worry was not the
S2OO increase in
tuition but
whether or not the
N.C. General
Assembly would
pass a financial aid
program to make
up for it. “I worry
that we may not
get a financial aid
program,” Conner
said. “The finan
cial aid program is
not directly set
aside.”
Conner also
GPSF President
Lee Conner
says any tuition
increase must be
coupled with
adequate aid.
said there was no mention of increasing
tuition remission for graduate students.
“I have no doubt that President Broad
would support the increase in tuition
remission, but it’s not specifically out-
said.
“We filed the charges we thought we
had probable cause to support,” he said.
Four-year-old Bogue suffered from
extreme hypothermia after she wan
dered off into the woods near the
Orange-Chatham County border on
Jan. 17.
She was rescued by a team of
searchers Jan. 18 at 10:45 a.m. and was
immediately transported to UNC
Hospitals.
When she was first admitted to the
hospital, Bogue was listed in critical con
dition, but quickly improved until her
lined,” he said.
Broad’s plan states that if the General
Assembly does not agree to pass the
financial aid program, the proposed
tuition increase of S2OO would increase
to S3OO, with a third of the boost set
aside for financial aid.
But GPSF memberjennifer Burgoon
said the plan would only increase the
burden on students. “They need a long
term plan that doesn’t include increasing
our tuition every couple of years,” said
Burgoon, a third-year graduate student.
The resolution in opposition to capi
tal needs funding concentrates on the
unprecedented use of student money to
fund academic buildings at state univer
sities. “Students have never paid any
sort of fee for buildings,” Conner said.
He said this could possibly set a neg
ative trend with the General Assembly.
“If you show (the General Assembly) we
release onjan. 21.
The warrant, which was served on
Jan. 31, states that Christie will be in
court on Feb. 21 in Hillsborough.
Orange-Chatham District Attorney
Carl Fox said Christie had been charged
with a criminal violation, but was not
required to face a magistrate for a bond
or trial date.
“The court date (for Christie) is
already on the warrant,” Fox said.
Oscar Bogue, Hailey’s father, had
expressed interest in gaining custody of
his child, but was unavailable to be
reached for comment.
Campus Calendar
Today
2 p.m. - Alex Vernon will speak
about his book “Islands of Hope:
Lessons from North America’s Great
Wildlife Sanctuaries” in the Bull’s
Head Bookshop.
*' 4 p.m. - An interest session will be
held for the a.p.p.l.e.s. Social
Entrepreneurship Program in Union
211.
'The public is invited.
HI Wanted:
Marketing Representative for Carolina Dining Service at
UNC-Chapel Hill
• 15-20 hours per week
✓ • Flexible schedule with evening and occasional
L < weekend hours.
1 1 _• J n /7 Responsibilities:
C • In charge of creating, organizing and implementing
campus promotions
* Welcome bag program
1 • Telemarketing Campaign
S • CTOPS Orientation Presentation and Sales Table
l IV 1 > . Advisory board and assist general manager with
Board of Directors
Contact Christine Ziemak at 962-0296
,*T+.
Newman Catholic Student Center Parish
I Campus Ministry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Discussion on Pope John Paul II by Fr. Phillip Leach
I 7pm Conner Dorm Lounge
* february Ist
Movie “Dead Man Walking" & death penalty discussion
I 6:30 pm Undergraduate Library Room 211
? February 2nd
Student Night “Catholic Trivia”
I 5.30 p m Hinton James Ist floor lounge, dinner included
pFTITTCTryHMBF PF february 3rd
I Feast of St. Blase Mass at Newman
7pm Duke game social to follow (Newman T-Shirt Day)
Newman Student Choir Singing
I 11:5 O-noon Steps of Wilson Library
E3SE9BBF february 6th
Instruction of Student Mass at Newman
I 7pm with reception afterwards
218 Pittsboro Street * Chapel Mill. \< 2~5H)-2“38 • (hi 1 )) <)2‘) s“iu
News
can pay half, they’re not going to want
to go back to paying 100 percent,”
Conner said.
Broad’s plan calls for an escalating
increase, starting at S2OO and then top
ping off at $275 a year until the year 2020.
“Is it better than the Board of
Trustee’s proposal? One thousand five
hundred is a lot better than S2OO as long
as you assume S2OO is the end of it,”
Conner said.
The BOT passed a plan in October
calling for a $1,500 increase for all UNC
students over five years.
The money will be allocated to
finance a $750 million construction plan
on the 16 UNC campuses. “Twenty per
cent of that would come to the Chapel
Hill campus,” Conner said.
The University Editor can be reached
at udesk@unc.edu.
An unidentified woman who spoke
for Oscar said she could not release any
information about the case or about
Christie.
Hailey was taken into custody of the
Chatham Count)' Department of Social
Welfare while charges were pending, but
social service officials would not confirm
whether she was still there.
After repeated attempts by Daily Tar
Heel reporters, Christie could not be
reached for comment.
The City Editor can be reached
at citydesk@unc.edu.
5 p.m. - Members of the Youth
Angst Society will read from their own
poetry and prose.
The public is invited.
6 p.m. - Carolina Campus Civitan,
a service club, will hold a meeting for
new members in Union 226.
Everyone is welcome and refresh
ments will be served after the meeting.
8 p.m. - An interest meeting will be
held for the a.p.p.l.e.s. Social
Entrepreneurship Program in Union
208.
McCain, Gore Triumph
In Key N.H. Primaries
Associated Press
MANCHESTER, N.H. - Arizona
Sen. John McCain scored a landslide
victory over George W. Bush on
Tuesday in New Hampshire’s leadoff
primary, puncturing the Texas gover
nor’s aura as the inevitable Republican
nominee.
Vice President A1 Gore survived a
toe-to-toe challenge from Bill Bradley in
the Democratic duel.
The former New Jersey senator con
gratulated Gore
and told The
Associated Press,
“We’re going to
keep moving for
ward.”
With more than
half the precincts
counted, Gore
had 54 percent of
the vote, Bradley
46.
ELECTIONS
m
NATION
It was a typical New Hampshire pri
mary, with voters delivering a lecture to
the front-runners and recasting the GOP
race as the candidates looked to larger
states ahead.
McCain rolled up 49 percent of the
GOP vote, Bush 31.
Before heading back to the campaign
trail, McCain was savoring his triumph
and celebrating his surprising victory
margin. He watched returns with his
wife, Cindy, who put a trembling hand
to her mouth and said, “It really hap
pened.”
“We have sent a powerful message to
Washington that change is coming,"
The public is invited.
Thursday
2 p.m. to 3 p.m. There will be an
information session for a.p.p.l.e.s.
Summer Internship Program in
Union 226.
3:30 p.m. - Kyriakos S. Markides,
Ph.D., from the University of Texas
Medical Branch, will speak about
“America’s Growing Hispanic
Population: Trends in Health Status
and Policy Implications.”
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McCain told cheering supporters, cred
iting his agenda of political and cam
paign finance reform for his victory.
“The Republican Party recovered its
heritage of reform. And it’s the begin
ning of the end of the truth-twisting pol
itics of Bill Clinton and A1 Gore.”
The vice president cast his victory as
a bad omen for Bradley, who lost the
lowa caucuses to Gore last week by a
much wider margin. “If he cannot win
here, then that’s a devastating blow to
him,” Gore told reporters. Bradley,
however, has enough money to com
pete with Gore in a coast-to-coast series
of primaries March 7.
In returns from 56 percent of New
Hampshire’s 300 Republican precincts,
McCain had 49 percent of the vote
compared to 30 for Bush. Millionaire
publisher Steve Forbes was a distant
third at 13 percent and former
Ambassador Alan Keyes was at 6.
Social conservative Gary Bauer bare
ly registered and was struggling to sur
vive. “I’m a fighter, but I’m not delu
sional,” Bauer said. Aides said campaign
stops were still on this week’s schedule.
Forbes had to be disappointed, too,
finishing little better than he did in the
1996 primary, after investing four years
and millions of dollars for a second
GOP bid.
Nearly four out of every 10 New
Hampshire voters do not declare a part)'
affiliation, and they were a potent attrac
tion to insurgent candidates McCain
and Bradley in a state that has a history
of knocking front-runners offstride.
Bradley was rocked by last week’s land
slide loss to Gore in lowa’s caucuses.
The lecture is part of the Institute on
Aging Distinguished Lecture Series.
Markides’ lecture will be held in the
School of Social Work Auditorium.
The public is invited.
For the Record
Tuesday’s graphic, “Carolina Vote
2000: Senior Class President and Vice
President Candidates,” should have list
ed Scott Washington as a junior from
Bladenboro.
The Daily Tar Heel regrets the error.