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In just 10 minutes, our profile can identify the top 3 things that will limit your performance in the real world. Think of it as a syllabus for a successful carreer. Visit us on the web www.flippengroup.com/batt Society of Women Engineers General Meeting When: Wed., April 16 th Time: 6:45 p.m. Where: RICH 101 Speaker: HP Free digital camera raffle-off! “What’s next? Let me tell you... My first year in the dorms was awesome: tons of friends and no worries. But sophomore year, they were full, and I thought I’d end up in some random apartment. That’s when I discovered Melrose. One bill, no hassles... just like the dorms. Everything is right here! My social life and my study life revolve around this place. I never had it so good.” Make it Melrose. Wednesday, April 16, 2003 '‘•<.iu j THE BATTAU Hoping for higher educatio Illegal immigrants denied admission to colleo By Maria Panaritis & Gaiutra Bahadur KRT CAMPUS PHILADELPHIA - Carlos de los Santos loves being an auto mechanic. Fussing with a carburetor, changing a clutch, installing brakes-it all feels good, he says with a smile. In the same breath, however, emerges a reminder that all is neither so simple nor sweet for the 21-year-old Norristown, Pa., man. He drops his head, stares at scrubbed- white hands and fingernails traced in grease, and longs for something out of reach: college. “Sometimes” he said, “what 1 do gets a little frustrating.” De los Santos is the son of illegal immigrants. In Pennsylvania and New Jersey, that means that he and many others like him aren’t able to go to college-even though the U.S. Supreme Court gives them the right to a high school cap and gown. Illegal immigrant populations spiked in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and other states during the 1990s economic boom, making this educational divide-and whether states should tackle it-a volatile issue. “College is almost universal now,” said Richard Fry, a former immigration spe cialist with the U.S. Labor Department who is senior research associate at the Pew Hispanic Center, a research organiza tion based in Washington. “In a major-league way, we’re denying opportunity to these youth. Their econom ic fortunes, their social fortunes, will be severely diminished.” To others, the answer is not further accommodation. Why, they ask, should colleges even admit illegal immigrants, let alone pro vide tuition discounts? “The solution is to enforce immigra tion laws-not to reward lawbreaking,” said Steven A. Camarota, research director at the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington. “If we have laws and then ignore them, that is far more corrosive than anything else 1 can think of to liberal democracy, to rule of the people, to a functioning society.” California, Texas, New York and Utah have changed state laws to permit chil dren of illegal immigrants to enroll in public colleges and qualify for in-state tuition rates. In Pennsylvania, policymakers are not discussing the issue. And a New Jersey bill that would make tuition discounts possible has been overridden by budget woes and post-Sept. 11 anti-immigrant sentiments. Elsewhere, political skirmishes have broken out-most notably in Virginia, where a clash between a community col lege and the state’s attorney general led to a law denying tuition breaks to illegal Robeki O. WILLIAMS • KRT CM Carlos de los Santos. 21. sits on the family couch at his home in Norristown. Pa. Caries illegal alien despite the fact that he has been living in the United States for 14 years. As lawmakers haggle, thousands such as de los Santos remain in limbo. Brought here as children, they say, they are stuck in marginal jobs with no future. “What we're pretty much asking,” de los Santos said in fluent English, “is just to be equal to the rest of the people.” Nationally, there are more than seven million illegal immigrants, according to a report issued earlier this year by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Seven out of 10 are from Mexico. It is difficult for foreign nationals to obtain U.S. residency without a relative, a willing employer or a sponsor. That is why many remain illegal resi dents. For low-income students, community colleges are often the only affordable option. And just about any adult can enroll. . “It’s not our nature to deny, access to anyone,” said Diane Bosak, executive director of the Pennsylvania Commission for Community Colleges. But that was not de los Santos’ experi ence. He has lived in Norristown, home to a burgeoning Mexican population, since his early teens. His parents smuggled him into the United States from Mexico at age 7. He worked his way through Norristown Area High School. A 20-year-old U.S. Supreme Court rul ing on a Texas case guarantees that right in the interest of social order. But when the B student applied at Montgomery County Community College in Pennsylvania, he left the Social A&M junior Ruggiano is Softl immigrant status, he lied and said lie. a legal United States resident. “I just never went back,” de los St said. In Pennsylvania, where higher edit tion is decentralized, the 14 communf colleges run admissions and tuition breaks as they see fit. Bosak said. If Montgomery County Communii] College determines an applicant is uni umented, the student must sign a indicating illegal status and paythefe eign student rate, admissions head Jos Rodriguez said. Some students have become i working the system-providing taxpaje identification numbers instead ofSoci; Security numbers. A bill in New Jersey wouldallow illegal immigrants to pay in-statetoiti at the state’s three public universiliis nine state colleges and 19commA colleges. They must have attended a New| high school for at least three years a| either graduated or received a GEDtl But the legislation has stalled sina being introduced in June. Critics sayj sage could cost the state up to $5 mil a year. Assemblywoman Nilsa Cruz-Perei Camden, N.J., Democrat who co-spot sored the measure, says taxes paidb) illegal immigrants should count for something. “These are kids that are raised here, our communities, and they’re notablet attain higher education,” Cruz-Perezsa “This is not what this country is allabe Bj if After spei end on the i Kansas, the ’ will return h< Corpus Chris For the f road trips, th 12) came a\ defeating Kl on Sunday, h be more cor ning, but tl improvemen down the Jay ly errors th them on the i The story Isp m PEOPLE IN THE NEWS Schwarzenegger to host special for TV heroes and villians Residence Halls Mid-May to May Leases Available Double occupancy - share your room, cut the cost A great lifestyle Price guarantees - you get our lowest price Dedicated student services community Extended hours of operation - we meet your schedule Unparalleled levels of service Don’t Miss This! Individual Leases Private bathroom for every bedroom Furnished & unfurnished apartments Full-size washer & dryer in every apartment Roommate matching available Deadbolt lock & key for each bedroom Ethernet & cable connection in each bedroom Stop By Today - Win a MINI! 601 Luther Street West (I block south of Oisen Field) College Station, TX 979-680-3680 ^ www.melrose.com LOS ANGELES (AP) — Arnold Schwarzenegger, who’s portrayed robots both killing and kindly, will host an upcom ing TV special about the top 100 heroes and villains of the screen. An American Film Institute poll asked voters to choose among 400 nominated charac ters from American film history and decide which should be considered wicked or virtuous. Schwarzenegger’s T-800 killer robot is nominated twice, once for the attacking character he played in 1984’s original “The Terminator,” and again for 1991’s “Terminator 2: Judgment Day,” in which the android he played was a protector. The show is scheduled for June 3 on CBS and will feature interviews with actors including Kirk Douglas, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates, Glenn Close, Harrison Ford, Dennis Hopper and Christopher Reeve. AFI has sent ballots to near ly 1,500 directors, actors, stu dio executives, critics and oth ers in the entertainment indus try. Some characters are nomi nated en masse, such as the zombies from 1968’s “Night of the Living Dead” and “The Wild Bunch” cowboys! director Sam Peckinpah’s! western. Previous AFI lists incl| the 100 best American fil by “Citizen Kane” andtl funniest movies, with Like It Hot” at No. 1. Tull Frontal Fashion' host to about style NEW YORK (AP)—Ai Landry, host of WE: Wo® Entertainment’s “Full W Fashion,” describes her pen style as having an elenid 1 drama. “I’m not a minimalist M not over the top,” said# year-old actress, whose" include 2000’s “Beaii| directed by Sally Field anJ ring Minnie Driver. Landry, a former Missl] says “get-it-for-less” is one favorite segments on the 1 TV show because “that’s" 1 my friends in Levi’s can “I’m a shopper but good bargain,” she ti Associated Press in an ii “I own a few designer pie 1 I wear Target.” Landry said her firs “fashion experience”-tlie 2003 New York shows-was overwhelming and exciting “Full Frontal Fashion" to Sunday nights on theWE 1 network earlier this month