Study: As college costs rise, grants for students erode By Robin Estrin The Associated Press BOSTON — The cost of college continues to rise as available fed eral grant money erodes, putting higher education out of reach for many low-income American fami lies, a study released Tuesday showed. Student grants are covering a significantly diminishing propor tion of college pricetags. Pell grants — the major federal fund ing source for low-income stu dents — provide about half of what they did 20 years ago, ac cording to the study. In the 1976-77 school year, the average Pell grant covered 19 per cent of the cost of attending a pri vate, four-year institution, and 39 percent of the price of a public four-year school. In 1996-97 — the most recent year available for the study — the average grant covered 9 percent for private schools, and 22 percent for public. Even more striking, the maxi mum Pell grant — given to the neediest students — fell from cov Cigarette smoking on the rise at colleges By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Cigarette smoking is on the rise among col lege students, jumping 28 percent in four years and causing health advocates to warn the nation may face more tobacco-caused disease. “The rise in this group is really an alarming sign,” said Henry Wechsler of Harvard University, whose study appears in Wednes day’s Journal of the American Medical Association. Wechsler’s findings aren’t a surprise — smoking already had risen among teenagers by 32 per cent in the 1990s. So once those teens hit college, the rates among college students were sure to rise, too. But the findings show that health officials must target college students to try to get them to quit, said Dr. Donald Sharp of the Cen ters for Disease Control and Pre vention. Until now, college students largely have been ignored by anti tobacco programs. Historically, they were far less likely to smoke than less educated Americans, plus most smokers begin before they reach age 18. So health work ers had focused more on persuad ing children never to try cigarettes and helping older smokers quit, Sharp said. “Because of the highly addic tive nature of nicotine, very few of those kids who became regular smokers in middle school and high school quit” by college, he said. "They will suffer a much higher rate of smoking-related ill ness and death as a result unless effective cessation can be provid ed to that group.” Cigarette smoking is the leading preventable cause of disease and death. The government says it kills more than 400,000 Ameri cans a year. Smoking causes a host of health problems, from lung cancer and heart disease to impotence. Some 3,000 teen-agers begin smoking every day. The question is what was happening to people a little older — the 18- to 24-year olds now in college. Wechsler compared surveys of over 14,000 students at 116 col leges in 1993 and again in 1997. Some 28.5 percent of college stu dents smoked last year, up from 22.3 percent in 1993, he reported. The vast majority started smok ing in high school — only 11 per cent of college students had their first cigarette after age 18. But 28 percent moved from occasionally trying cigarettes in high school to becoming regular smokers in col lege, a finding the CDC called worrisome. Half of college smokers report ed they had tried to quit in the previous year, and 18 percent had made five or more attempts at kicking the addiction. The findings stress the need for colleges to offer more smoke-free dormitories, because students might go without that cigarette if they can’t smoke it conveniently, Wechsler said. He is about to study how smoke-free U.S. col leges are. Churches that endorse gay marriage excluded By Lori Johnston The Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ga. — Saying they didn’t want same-sex mar riages performed in their church es, Southern Baptists in Georgia voted Tuesday to exclude congre gations that “endorse” homosex uality. The Rev. J. Gerald Harris, new president of the denomination’s state convention, said Southern Baptists welcome gay individuals but can’t allow churches to advo cate their behavior. “The unanimous verdict of scripture is that practicing homo sexuality is a sin,” said Harris, from Eastside Baptist Church in Marietta. “Love ... must not com promise the church’s allegiance to scripture.” Delegates voted to warn churches they should not know ingly take any action to affirm, ap prove or endorse homosexual be havior if they want to remain in the convention, the denomina tion’s second largest in the nation behind Texas. The Rev. J. Robert White, the Georgia convention’s executive director, will oversee investiga tion of churches. If there is a com plaint, White will meet with the pastor and the convention will ask the church to come into com pliance or leave the denomina tion. Several of more than 2,400 church representatives in Colum bus this week for the meeting spoke against the measure. “To speak on this very issue is perilous,” said Bill Self of John’s Creek Baptist Church in Alpharet ta. “I want to ask one simple ques tion. This year, the homosexuals. Who's next, churches that receive African-Americans? Churches that allow women in the ministry?” Also Tuesday, the group reject ed a provision to exclude church es that engage in "divisive” and “disruptive” charismatic wor ship, such as speaking in tongues. ering 35 percent of private college costs in 1976-77 to 13 percent in 1996-97; for public schools, it dropped from covering 72 percent of the price to 34 percent, the study said. If low-income students don’t at tend community college, they can't afford to go to college at all, said Thomas Parker, senior vice presi dent of The Education Resources Institute, a Boston-based nonprofit guarantor of privately issued stu dent loans, and one of the two groups that released the report. “What we like to think is we have a system where people have both access and choice, but what we’re rapidly developing is a sys tem where people have access but not choice,” he said. The average Pell grant award declined by 23 percent — adjust ing for inflation — over two decades, but college prices rose by 49 percent, and family incomes crept up by just 10 percent over the same period. In 1996-97, the maximum Pell grant available was $2,470 for qualifying students. In 1997-98, it went up to $2,700 and is at $3,000 for the current year. “Even with those increases, the bottom line is the net price still in creases for most families, particu larly for the lowest-income stu dents,” said Jamie Merisotis, president of The Institute for High er Education Policy in Washing ton, D.C., and co-author of the re port. About 3.6 million of the na tion’s 14 million college students receive Pell grants. I Love Lab Time Sign up for U of O Alpine Skiing and Snowboarding. PEOL 271 Alpine Skiing I - Course Registration #24535 PEOL 272 Alpine Skiing II - Course Registration #24536 PEOL 273 Alpine Skiing III - Course Registration #24537 PEOL 280 Snowboarding I - Course Registration #24538 PEOL 281 Snowboarding II - Course Registration #24539 PEOL 282 Snowboarding III - Course Registration #24540 PEOL 399 Sp St Telemark Skiing - Course Registration #25841 Luxury busses take you to Hoodoo Ski Area for 8 consecutive Thursdays starting in January. 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