To the editors:
Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles seems to have a very selective memory when he states that expanding financial aid would be similar to having "to sell the family silver just to keep food on the table" (News, March 2).
Harvard improved its already strong financial position in the '80s when it, in concert with other top schools, conspired to illegally fix tuition costs and eliminate merit-based financial aid. This practice increased tuition rates much more rapidly than most family incomes. Knowles would have more accurately described expanding financial aid as returning illegally-obtained funds to the American public. If the administration is serious about making the Harvard experience available to all, it should move to increase financial aid to working-class families. CHRISTOPHER G. ROBERTS '01 March 2, 1998
Read more in Opinion
Splitting HistoryRecommended Articles
-
Financial Aid History Made YesterdayThe latest reform of Harvard's financial aid policy comes at a pivotal moment in University history and is the most
-
Bring It DownLast week, Harvard announced tuition, room and board for the 1998-99 school year will amount to $31,132. Though the smallest
-
Harvard Hikes Tuition to $32K, Up 3.3 PercentHarvard's tuition will increase for the 1999-2000 school year, rising by 3.3 percent to $32,164, which includes room and board.
-
Tuition and Expenses To Rise 4.5% Next Year, But Will Be Offset by Financial Aid Growth, Officials SayCLARIFICATION APPENDED The cost of living at and attending Harvard College will rise by 4.5 percent this year, but an
-
Why We GaveThink all the people who enriched your life at Harvard, and consider giving to Senior Gift.
-
An Impossible BurdenLet us complete the work of the civil rights activists that preceded us and open the gates to higher education to all Americans.