1U.S.Office of the President, The Economic Report of the president (Washington, D.C. 1995),p. 274.
2U.S.Department of Education, Digest of Education Statistics 1996, p. 335, p. 333.
3Stevn Gold, State Spending Patterns in the 1990s (Alhany: Conter for the Study of the States, SUNY, 1995), pp.23-31.
4Edward Hines. State Higher Education Appropriations 1995-96 (Denver: State Higher Education Execotive Officers, 1996), This figure does not include local property taxes appropriated for hgher education.
5Halstcad, State profiles, Trend Data (1996), pp. 10, 18, 46, 66, p. 26.
6National Association of State Student Grandt and Aid Programs. NASSGAP 26^th Aunual Survey Report: 1994-95 Academic Year (Albany: New York State Higher Education: Services corporation, 1996), p.2.
7Halstead, State Profiles: Financing Public Higher Education, 1978 to 1995 (Washington, D. C. : Research Associates of Washington, 1995), p.32.
8Lucic Lapovsky, "Tuition Discounting Continues to Clinb: NACUBO Study Analyzes Six Years of Data." in Ponfolki (NACUB) Business Officers, February 1996, p.23.