Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 04, 1982, Page 4, Image 4

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emerald
inter/national
From Associated Press reports
Students misled,
says Secretary Beil
WASHINGTON
Education Secretary T.H. Bell
contended Monday that college
students are being misled about
the impact of the Reagan admin
istration's cutbacks in federal aid
"We re not emasculating the
student aid program," Bell said at
a news conference He said his
department will spend $4.3 billion
to assist American youth to attend
colleges, universities and other
institutions next year
"These are not draconian
cuts," he said,
Bell charged that critics of the
proposed stricter eligibility rules
for so-called Pell grants,
guaranteed student loans and
other programs are "alarmed and
apprehensive and almost hys
terical about it and because of
that some students are making
decisions not to go on to school at
all. when, indeed, they could still
afford to do it if all of our proposals
were adopted."
He said, “I really think maybe
the press and the electronic
media have been just a little bit
slanted.” He faulted reporters
who note that the administration
wants to bar 600,000 to 700,000
graduate students from
guaranteed student loans, but fail
to mention that it would shift those
students to a new loan program at
higher interest rates.
Bell said that federal student aid
has become "too generous" in
recent years and needs to be
scaled back
"The more you rush in with
mega-federal'dollars, the more
you start pushing people aside
and depriving them of the
privilege of earning their own way,
which in and of itself is a
strengthening experience,” he
said
Bell s department today pub
lished its needs test for
guaranteed student loans for
students from families earning
more than $30,000
The new tables, published in
the Federal Register, indicate that
a student attending an average
private college costing $6,885
could still get a full $2,500
Guaranteed Student Loan if her
family’s income was nearly
$40,000
At the same time, students at
the average public, four-year
college will not be able to get a full
$2,500 loan if the family's income
exceeds $30,000 But those from
families making up to $36,000
could get a loan of at least $1,000
Those figures assume the
student is from a two-parent
family of four, with one child in
college
Colleges will consult the new
family contribution schedules to
determine which students are
eligible for the loans. Until last
Oct. 1, all students could get the
loans regardless of wealth Last
year, some 3.5 million students
borrowed $7.8 billion under the
Guaranteed Student Loan
Program
Union supporters
battle Polish police
WARSAW, Poland
Anti-government riots engulfed
Warsaw, Gdansk, and other
Polish cities Monday as
demonstrators supporting the
independent union Solidarity took
to the streets and police respond
ed with tear gas and fire hoses
State-run television said the
crowds attacked public buildings,
smashed windows and burned
vehicles Witnesses said the
protesters chanted, "Solidarity!
Solidarity!" and screamed
"Gestapo!” at police who moved
in to disperse them
Clashes occurred around the
Parliament building and
Communist Party headquarters
Witnesses said the riots in
Warsaw continued late into the
night They reported seeing a
crowd commandeer a bus, block
a roadway, and hurl pavement
pieces and debris at the police
Others tore down every red
Communist flag they could find
One group marched along carry
ing a red flag in flames as police
circled them in |eeps and hurled
tear gas
Another report said so many
people sought refuge from the
police in Warsaw's St John's
Cathedral that the priests began
admitting only the injured City
medical officials refused to say
how many were injured, but
ambulances careened through
Warsaw taking bleeding and
beaten people to hospitals
City medical officials refused to
estimate the number of injured
The television said several
dozen protestors had been
detained and would "account for
their transgressions under
summary procedure, in accord
ance with martial law "
It blamed the disturbances on
"anti-socialist elements" and
"imperialist propganda," and said
the military authorities "will not
swerve from the course of socia
list renewal
Reagan agrees to
summit conference
WASHINGTON
Pres Reagan has decided to
accept an informal invitation from
Soviet Pres Leonid Brezhnev for
a full-fledged summit meeting this
fall, administration officials said
Monday
But the president still hopes he
can meet with the ailing Soviet
leader at a United Nations
conference on disarmament in
New York next month, said White
House press secretary Larry
Speakes, and no specific
preparations are underway at this
time for a later summit
Administration officials, who
said Reagan was willing to accept
an invitation to a fall summit,
reported that Austria had been
mentioned as a possible site The
sources asked not to be identified
by name
While Speakes and State
Department spokesman Dean
Fischer took pains to stress there
are no specific plans for an au
tumn meeting, there was no flat
denial that Reagan had decided to
accept a Brezhnev invitation to
meet in a third country
In the last such summit,
Brezhnev and Jimmy Carter
conferred in Vienna in 1979 and
signed the Strategic Arms Limita
tion Treaty, which has not been
ratified by the Senate
Presumably, nuclear issues
and other topics, including overall
East-West relations and the
Middle East, could be on the
agenda
Speakes told reporters that no
formal invitation has been
extended to Brezhnev for a June
meeting It awaits Brezhnev s
acceptance of an invitation to take
part in the United Nations
conference Every indication has
been that Brezhnev will not take
part in the United Nations
conference
The prospects of a Reagan
Brezhnev meeting in mid-June
might defuse anticipated
demonstrations opposing
Reagan's nuclear policies when
he visits Paris. Rome, London,
Bonn and West Berlin next month
Abortion:
A woman's
choice
Abortion is safe and legal in a
clinic setting The Portland Women's Health Center
offers abortion services up to 18 weeks from the last
menstrual period The abortion procedure used up to 12
weeks <s vacuum aspiration with minimal dilation.
^^^fc^Dilation and Evacuation (an adaptation of the
j^^^^^^suction method) is used for abortions 13
fo 18 weeks Abortions are performed
• ■ with optional local anesthetic
M Medicaid, insurance and major credit
I M cards are accepted. Other referrals
•- vvvvwvvvvv
available. Call for further information.
PORTLAND
WOMEN'S
HEALTH
CENTER
6510 SE FOSTER ROAD
PORTLAND, OREGON 97206
503/777-7044