Help


from Brown Corpus
« »  
An example of a more definite class bias is noted in proceedings of the Commission on the Financing of Higher Education sponsored by the Association of American Universities and supported by the Rockefeller Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation.
This Commission recommended against the use of federal government funds for the assistance of private universities and against a broad program of government-supported scholarships.
This might be said to be an upper- or an upper-middle-class bias, but the Commission published as one of its staff studies a book by Byron S. Hollingshead entitled Who Should Go To College??
Which recommended a federal government scholarship program.
Furthermore, the Commission set up the Council for Financial Aid to Education as a means of encouraging private business to increase its support of private higher education.
Thus, the Commission acted with a sense of social responsibility within the area of its own convictions about the problem of government support to private education.

2.030 seconds.