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Despite a recovering economy and exasperation in Congress, college tuition will be up sharply again next year - though experts say that once financial aid is factored in, students may not be worse off.Private institutions, which account for about half of American colleges and educate about 20 percent of four-year college students, will raise tuition on average 6 percent in 2004-2005 to just over $18,000, according to a survey released Thursday by the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.Public colleges, only slowly emerging from years of state budget cuts, will probably charge about 10 percent more on average next year, or $5,100, estimated Travis Reindle, director of state policy analysis at the American Association of State Colleges and Universities.The only good news for parents and students is that, like cruise lines and automobile dealers, colleges don t always charge the
stanley deutschland sticker price.NAICU says 86 percent of students at private college
stanley cup uk s pay less than full fare. Last year, when private colleges also increased tuition 6 percent, they increased financial aid for tuition and other expenses such as room and board by 15 percent. The net tuition is the thing to watch for - when the day is done how much m
stanley kubek oney is the family actually paying, said David L. Warren, NAICU s president.NAICU can t say for sure whether financial aid will make up for the increase again this year, but Warren said he expects net costs for students will hold steady or fal Vgtd Intricate Cardboard Models of Theoretical Flying Machines
When an advanced Soviet submarine sank in the Pacific in 1968, the CIA decided to risk World War III on a daring covert mission, using this massive barge to raise the sunken vessel and pry out its secrets. After Soviet submarine K-129 sank 1,500 miles Northwest of Oahu in March of 1968, few held out hope of ever recovering the vessel, or the 98 crewmen that died aboard it, from its three mile-deep watery grave. While multiple Soviet recovery forays failed to locate the wreck, the CIA managed to find it. In 1974, the agency set about raising the submarine from the depths. It was no easy task. For one, it was the middle of the friggin ; Cold War鈥攈ad the Russians discovered what the Americans were up to, it could have easily caused an international incident. For another, K-129 came to rest three miles below the surface鈥攆ar deeper than any sub-sea recovery operation that had ever been previously attempted. So not only did the CIA have to develop a new means of deep sea salvage, it had to do so in utter
stanley cup secrecy. And that where the Hughes Mining Barge came in. The Hughes Mining Barge, designated HMB-1, was a football field-sized submersible barge鈥?00 feet long, 100 feet wide, and 90 feet tall鈥攕porting a fully retractable roof, a gigantic internal moon pool, and a purpose-built crane dubbed Th
stanley mug e Claw. It was also the centerpiece of Project Azorian, one of the m
stanley cup ost sophisticated and expensive operations conducted by either side during the Cold War, costing $800 millio