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Notre Dame
Saint Mary's
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Breaking News from the Associated Press at the New York Times

 The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's May 13, 2005 

ND tuition, fees continue to rise

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In what has become as traditional as football and finals for university students across the country, the cost of a Notre Dame education has risen once again.

Tuition and fees increases, which were announced in the spring for the 2003-04 academic year, jumped from $32,515 to $34,680 for each on-campus student. While a $1.660 rise in tuition itself has constituted the bulk of the increase, the University's Board of Trustees approved a 2003-04 tuition package that added for the first time a $50 per semester Health Center Access Fee to its undergraduate tuition.

Ann Kleva, director of University Health Services, said that the increase was made after Health Services, the University Counseling Center and the Office of Alcohol and Drug Education submitted a joint budget proposal to the Office of Student Affairs suggesting the need for increased funding to the three organizations, which classify themselves as wellness and prevention services for the University community.

After careful review, the proposal was approved by the administration and passed on to the Board of Trustees, which gave the addition a positive nod as a component of the 2003-04 tuition and fees package.

"This is not taken lightly," Kleva said. "[The administration] is very sensitive to any tuition increases. But to be able to provide these programs on campus, you've got to support them."

Notre Dame is not alone among its peers nationally when it comes to charging students for medical services within its general tuition package. A large part of the health and wellness organizations' report to Student Affairs included benchmarking the University's programs with those of other comparable national institutions, such as Boston College, Duke, Indiana University, Clemson and Texas A & M, among others. Most of these institutions, Kleva said, charge students directly for services rendered, on top of the annual health services fee.

"They charge anywhere from $55 per semester at Texas A & M to over $200 per semester at Duke," she said. "We thought $50 per semester was a realistic and workable fee to help us out in the future."
  Continued...


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