Williams College News
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Williams College, ranked first among U.S. liberal-arts schools, plans the biggest borrowing in its 220-year history as education debt trails the $3.7 trillion municipal market by the most since 2010.
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U.S. colleges such as Boston University are using financial aid to lure rich students while shortchanging the poor, forcing those most in need to take on heavy debt, a report found.
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Stanford University and the University of Chicago, among the 10 highest-ranked U.S. schools, plan to offer tax-exempt revenue bonds amid the biggest rally this year in the $3.7 trillion municipal-debt market.
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Alumni like to rant, especially conservative alumni. The disgruntled fellows (it’s usually a fellow) seize any chance for a complaint session alleging whatever errors the school is committing are somehow greater than errors it made in the 1980s, or even the raucous 1960s.
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Maxon Mills, a 1950s feed-processing plant in Wassaic, New York, was saved from demolition when developers Tony Zunino and Richard Berry bought it in 2006.
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July 24 (Bloomberg) -- Eve Biddle and Bowie Zunino talks about founding the Wassaic Project, a thriving arts center and a summer festival in Wassaic, New York, with an annual operating budget of $160,000. (Source: Bloomberg)
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Amherst College President Anthony Marx will step down on June 30 to become president of the New York Public Library, giving him a broader opportunity to promote public education.
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Charles Payson Coleman III, known as Chase, is as close as one gets to American aristocracy.
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Indonesian lawmakers approved Perry Warjiyo to become the central bank’s deputy governor for monetary operations, moving closer to filling a post vacant since 2011 as the nation grapples with a falling currency.
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Indonesian lawmakers will assess candidates to become the central bank’s deputy governor for monetary operations today, seeking to fill a post that has been vacant since 2011 as the nation grapples with a falling currency.
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