The Oracle TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 21
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
Former congressmen discuss future burden of today’s debt
ORACLE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEU
By Wesley Higgins N E W S
E D I T O R
Regardless of political affiliation, no politician has said he or she wants to leave a worse future for tomorrow’s generation. On Monday evening, two former members of Congress were brought to the Marshall Student Center Oval Theater in
collaboration with USF Student Government and the Concord Coalition to put aside their differences and have an open conversation about the dangers of a rising national debt. George LeMieux, a former U.S. senate Republican, said the $17 trillion national debt would compound until today’s youth are crushed under its weight in the near future. “We say a trillion like we
know what it means, but it’s hard to get your brain around it,” he said. “If you spent a million dollars each day from the year 0 to today, you wouldn’t be able to spend a trillion dollars.” Debt has grown in “geometric proportions,” LeMieux said. The U.S. has never seen debt levels this high, adjusted for inflation, since WWII. The national debt reached $1 trillion in 1981 and is projected to
reach $20 trillion by 2020. Jim Davis, a former Democratic U.S. house representative, said the national debt would snowball until the majority of taxes inevitably went to paying interest. “The money that Congress could be spending on other programs is being spent on the interest,” he said. “Every day that we’re having to make interest payments, we’re making
choices that will affect the quality of your life years from now.” To reduce the debt, they said Congress must either raise taxes or slash spending. “The system now isn’t working,” LeMieux said. “There are solutions Democrats and Republicans differ on, but we don’t differ on the problem.” The largest source of debt is spending on Medicare and
n See DEBT on PAGE 2
USF alumna keeps on drumming
n Melissa
Salguero attempts to revive music program in her Bronx school after burglary. By Roberto Roldan M A N A G I N G
E D I T O R
As a video of her students playing a song they wrote themselves played on the back screen of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” stage, Melissa Salguero couldn’t hold back her tears. Salguero, a USF alumna who teaches music education at Public School 48 in the South Bronx, went to the set that day not realizing exactly what the show was going to be about. She was just happy to be in the presence of one of her favorite TV stars. “Melissa, come on down,” DeGeneres said after the video played. Salguero attempted to compose herself as she made her way to the stage.
In April, Salguero, who graduated from USF in 2009, arrived at PS 48 to find the school a shambles. She was the first one in the building that morning and the first to discover the school had been burglarized over the weeklong spring break. Sagluero entered her classroom in shock. Flutes, keyboards, saxophones and even her personal trumpet had been stolen. The USF Bulls posters on the walls from when Salguero led the Herd of Thunder (HOT) marching band were some of the only things that remained intact. Though she hadn’t had any serious conflicts since she began working at the school in 2011, her first thought was, “Who did I upset?” While the police took inventory of everything that was damaged, and Salguero tried to put her classroom back together, she held her daily music classes in the auditorium. “That was important to me, that students didn’t miss their music
n See MUSIC on PAGE 3
To donate to the Public School 48 Recovery Project, visit gofundme.com/PS48music. SPECIAL TO THE ORACLE