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Show 4 MONDAY. FEBRUARY IBARRA continued from page THE DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE 26. 2001 J Ibarra said Clinton's recent pardons and the "gift registry" in New York for Clinton's n;.'w home have shadowed his wonderful term in office. ' President Clinton left this nation in much better shape than he found it, and our current president has an uncanny way of feeding ammunition to tne enemy, tine press j, Ibarra came into office as a "fan" of Clinton and said there weren't many times he ever disagreed with the president Tci me, it becomes a question of loyalty he said. Clinton took approximately 170 actions his last day in office and Ibarra said he thinks the pardons will always be controversial HEADQUARTERS f ierj Dim I Starting at 10 S 0 continued from page 1 said. He said he feels his actions at the Olympics transcended sports. "I was the greatest sprinter for a long time, but when I did just one simple act, they forgot all about how I ran track." he said. He encouraged audience members to "grow to higher ground." "All you black kids in here, I want you to have a future," he said. "If you don't get up off your butts and educate yourself to the highest level, you are doing a great disservice to yourselves," he said. According to Carlos, the establishment that has denied some children an education on the basis of the color of their skin has shortchanged everyone. Maybe some of these minority children had the cure for heart disease or for AIDS, he said. But now we will never know. He said violence is not a solution to the ignorance entwined with racism. 'God gave everybody something good," Carlos said. He encouraged audience members to teach others. He invited Caucasian students to confront their friends. "If one of your friends uses the challenge him," he said, because, if left unchecked, that person's viciousness will be turned elsewhere. Growing up in Harlem, N.Y., Carlos watched welfare pull black families apart, just as slavery did. When a husband was unable to earn enough money to support his family, he would have to leave the household so his wife and children would qualify for welfare. "Now when a black man or an Asian man or any man has this situa" he tion, he begins to lose said. "You don't like the fact that you can't buy diapers for your kids, you can never take your wife anything nice." Carlos spoke as part of Black Awareness Month and also soki copies of his new biography Why? self-respe- ct $7 Pnc bawd on quad occupancy Mtn Iran Sa LaVa Cy tndudM accommodated i taralan A! packagat mat b told with I Court nudm torn ISC CARD REQUIRED) CmtMvMm land Onty r coniuncton wW Cound Kudtnt DcMt Tip depart on Sjndayt aaitrg on Fb 25, 2001 Th tea departum Apii1. 2001 Rales do not rcbdt dapanun) lax. peuangar tacHy charjMt tfvppng College Graduate Program 3.9-6.- 9 Financing Special Terms and Rates Any new ami Nate Wade Subaru BOi City, UT ated Students of the University of Utah. "A io percent cap is enormous. Students need more protections." Dalton hopes his successor will lead the charge to lower the second-tie- r cap next legislative session. As it stands, the cap will not change the plans of U President J. Bernard Machen. Machen is a proponent of the system because it gives him two-tier- ed more flexibility when crafting the U's budget. U administrators have discussed a second-tie- r increase of i to 3 percent, below the current cap. is far which "This doesn't affect us at all," U lobbyist Nancy Lyon said. But it will affect institutions like UVSC, which has discussed a tuition increase as high as 25 percent. "I don't really know why they wanted to add a cap. They are the ones that wanted to go higher," Lyon said. Vai Peterson, UVSC associate vice president for college relations, said, "We weren't pushing for the cap." He said UVSC officials requested the new legislative policy because it would allow all revenue to benefit the institution which raised it. 4?eterson said. He used academic counseling as an example. UVSC has one counselor for every 2,400 students; with Call Terry Colling wood at: Salt lake Jess Dalton, president of the Associ- two-tiere- Subaru 207 South 1 d "The main purpose behind tuition is to address some specific institutional needs that would Jiot be addressed in any other way," 2001 I TUITIOII continued from page Main 84 I I I -- 355-7571 the additional funding, they could allocate funds to improve the ratio. The Regents may revisit the statewide increase and raise it another percent or two, Lyon said. That would most likely happen in the March 14 to 15 meeting held at Dixie State College of Utah. The Regents will hear requests for second-tie- r hikes either at the March or April meeting. WWW.NATEWADE.COM --nH 'An old error is always more popular than a new truth. -- German T3 Research methods in Psychology Psychology 3010 CWQI 1 Independent Study instudy.utah.edu 581-880- saying B |