Word: tuitions
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...boss of eleven teachers' colleges, eleven technical institutes, seven professional colleges, two four-year liberal arts colleges, two medical schools.* It has a faculty of 3,000 and a budget of $33 million. With 41,535 full-and part-time students, paying everything from $800 to no tuition at all, it is the second largest, and by far the most complicated, university...
...busy enough: "There were so many subjects I wanted to learn about. And being lazy by nature, I thought it would be good self-discipline to sign up for them." When Southwestern could not give him all the courses he wanted, he had simply enrolled at State, paying the tuition out of his own pocket...
...thought we were set. Then this passer disclosed he needed summer school to become eligible." The eager boosters, dazzled by the passer's ability and plainly charmed by his ingenuous requests for money, promptly sent him to Texas' Tyler Junior College. The boosters paid his tuition and fees and, just to make sure that he was comfortable, gave him $125-a-month spending money. "Then," said Coach Graham, announcing the payoff, the ingrate "enrolled at Texas U., not K-State...
...campuses started on another round of tuition boosts. Yale was upping its yearly charges to $1,600, an increase of nearly $200. Vassar was going even higher -from $1,600 to $2,000. ¶Success story of the week-from Atlanta's Emory University. In 1936, President Harvey W. Cox brashly announced that he would double his $10 million in assets in ten years. He did it in eight. In 1944, his successor, Goodrich C. White, announced that he would double them again. He did it in seven years. Last week Emory got a new windfall. The Rockefeller-supported...
Princeton will probably be the next of the Big Three to up its tuition. Francis R. B. Godolphin, Dean of the College, told the Tiger Undergraduate Council that the Princeton administration is considering a $100 rise effective next fall...