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UIT -UR Vol. XXI,. No. 9
/.A.G. cuts
CABRINI COLLEGE , RADNOR, PA.
ability to finance; • Equitable educational opportunity for all citizens of the Commonwealth implications for existing institutions and their students; • Current legislature bills related to higher education; by Michelle Perna • Pennsylvania Higher Education · In the last couple of weeks panic has Assistance Agency grants to students atgripped many st udents at Cabrini. Why? tending out-of-state institutions; Many students anticipated a tuition hike • Student representation on policy for the 1975-76 school year because of making bodies; Governor Shapp's budget for next year, • The roles of the Commonwealth which proposed dimi nution of a $12 Association of Students and the Pennmillion program to aid students attending sylvania Student Lobby in relation to the pr ivate colleges . state, Pennsylvania Association of A sigh of relief was heard on campus Colleges and Universities and inwhen on April 17, Sister Mary Louise stitutional administration; Sull ivan, President of the college, an• Undergraduate vs. graduate nounce d in a newsletter to the students, education; · " ... if !.A .G. Funds are not approved by • The role of proprietary schools in the state legislature your tuition for 1975Pennsylvania's higher education com1976 will not be increased above the munity. amount published in February, which was • On the governor's budget chart for $2,000 for tuition and $1,500 for room and . 1975-1976, private institutions like board." Cabrini College, do not even have a place T he situation, however, still remains among the other priorities. Governor cr itical, and while Cabrini and many other Shapp stressed at the conference . that private colleges may be able to freeze there was only so much in the budget and . their tuitions for a year or two, the loss of that he could not operate a deficit any the Institutional Assistance Grants longer . (!. A.G.) is a significant one . • After the meeting with the governor , On April 3, 1975, S.G.A. President Cabrini's student government held a Lawrence Sugden and Theresa Alberici, general student assembly. All students S.G .A. vice-president, attended a conwere urged to write letters to their fer ence in Harrisburg with Governor representatives in Harrisburg expressing Shapp together with hundreds of other their concern over the I.A.G .'s loss . st udents. Some topics of discussions . • The Pennsylvania Student Lobby we re: (P .S.L.), which i~ the statewide as• State fina ncing of the community sociation of collegiate student governcolleges; ments, criticized the governor's proposed • State financing of the state-aided inhigher education budget. The suggested stitutions; increases in Shapp's budget total $91.7 • State financing of the state-owned inmillion. Frank John Muraca, PSL chairstitutions; person, stated, "Shapp's budget shuts the • State financing of the state-related door to the future for thousands of Penninstit utions; sylvania's youth ... " Muraca also said, • Institutional assistance grants to "Students have always been willing to private institutions; bear most of the cost of their own • Pennsylvania Higher Education education but now Governor Shapp is in Assistance Agency student grants and · effect asking them to carry nearly all of servicing student loans; the increased burden of recent inflation.'' • Th e effects of inflation and recession . At the rate of Shapp's increases, no on 1) the state's ability to finance; 2) instudent will be able to attend school stit utions' ability to finance; 3) students' =-- unless they are independently wealthy!
Another student burden!
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April 29, 1975
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