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Word: tuition (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

Look what I was reduced to! Can't we at least open Winthrop, for God's sake? Enough with this subsidization of Harvard Square businesses! Enough with this nickel-and-diming on a $29,000 tuition! Enough of the %$*&#ing Border...

Author: By Eric F. Brown, | Title: Gimme Some Good Grubbin' | 9/18/1996 | See Source »

...dean also successfully managed the Faculty's finances, finishing his tenure with a net surplus. The budgetary success did not come without its costs, however: Bundy was the first dean to raise tuition more than once within a four-year period, setting a precedent of frequent tuition hikes that remains to this...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Former FAS Dean, Aide To Kennedy Dies at 77 | 9/17/1996 | See Source »

...limited time only, you can have this free, exclusive guide to Boston just for paying your tuition bill and showing up for registration. Here are my top picks for spending a lazy afternoon or evening...

Author: By Elizabeth T. Bangs, | Title: What to Do at Harvard Until the Year 2000 | 9/9/1996 | See Source »

...keep it modest. The President had declared the era of Big Government over, so it would be hard to condemn him for thinking small. But when it comes to families, Clinton said, you can think big about many small things. His laundry-list speech included tuition tax credits, adoption tax credits, money for child care, child-nutrition programs, literacy initiatives, family leave, even an environmental measure to help protect vegetables. These were the bricks of Clinton's "bridge to the future," but the man who helped find them was back in Connecticut, far from the cheers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONVENTION '96: SKUNK AT THE FAMILY PICNIC | 9/9/1996 | See Source »

...earlier bipartisan commission on Social Security did send Clinton a plan for some long-range reforms in that system; he ignored it. Meanwhile, the President has been proposing what would amount to an entitlement to two years of college education, to be financed by a $1,500-a-year tuition tax credit. The cost would be modest--an estimated $8 billion over six years--and the President has offered specific revenue increases and spending cuts to meet it. All the same, talking up a new entitlement is no way to prepare citizens for the painful future steps that will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONVENTION '96: THE LEARNING CURVE | 9/2/1996 | See Source »

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