8 Tuition-Free Colleges
http://blogs.static.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/22573.html
During difficult economic times, the cost of higher education
leaves many students wondering if they can afford to go to college. For
those who want to avoid being saddled with huge loans, the U.S.
government offers one of the best deals around: Enroll at one of the
five service academies tuition-free and receive free room and board.
(And you thought the Grand Slam promotion at Denny’s was cool.) But if
military service isn’t for you, here are eight other schools that offer
tuition-free educations:
1. College of the Ozarks

Several
schools share the “Linebacker U” and “Quarterback U” monikers in
reference to the NFL talent that their college football programs
produce, but the only “Hard Work U” is located in Point Lookout,
Missouri. In 1973, a Wall Street Journal reporter bestowed
that title on the College of the Ozarks, where students pay no tuition
and work at least 15 hours a week at a campus work station. Jobs are
taken seriously at the school of 1,400; students are graded on their
work performance in addition to their academics.
History: In 1906, Presbyterian missionary James
Forsythe helped open the School of the Ozarks to provide a Christian
high school education to children in the Ozarks region, which spans
parts of Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Kansas. The school added a
two-year junior college 50 years later and completed its transition to
a four-year college program
in 1965. The school was renamed College of the Ozarks in 1990 and has
established itself as one of the top liberal arts colleges in the
Midwest.
Notable: College of the Ozarks was No. 4 on the Princeton Review’s list of the top 10 Stone-Cold Sober schools in 2008.
Famous Alum: Actress and model April Scott, who played Daisy Duke in the straight-to-DVD prequel of Dukes of Hazzard – Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning. Scott has also appeared in Entourage, as a briefcase-toting model on Deal or No Deal, and on various magazine covers.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Silver
Dollar City, an amusement park in nearby Branson, Mo., harkens back to
simpler times with its 1880s theme. In addition to thrills, roller
coasters at the park offer scenic views of the Ozarks.
2. Deep Springs College

Deep
Springs is a two-year, all-male liberal arts college located on a
cattle ranch and alfalfa farm in the Inyo-White Mountains of
California’s High Desert. To get an idea of just how isolated the
school is, consider the explanation for its policy forbidding smoking
in any of the school’s buildings or near hay bales: “We’re 45 minutes
from the nearest emergency services, so a fire could be disastrous.”
Every student admitted – 10 to 15 per year – receives free tuition,
room, and board, and works at least 20 hours a week on the ranch. The
manual labor ranges from washing dishes to milking cows. Most students
complete their degrees at prestigious four-year schools after leaving
Deep Springs.
History: Deep Springs was founded by Lucien Lucius
Nunn, a pioneer in electrical engineering who helped design the Ontario
Power Plant at Niagara Falls. While working for the Telluride Power
Company, which provided power to gold mines, Nunn invited young men to
work for him in exchange for an education. The work-study program
became known as the Telluride Institute in 1905. Nunn was driven out of
the company in 1912 by a powerful stockholder who believed Nunn’s
unconventional means of attracting workers was detrimental to the
business. Nunn decided to start a completely new educational endeavor
at Deep Springs, which admitted its first class of 20 in 1917.
Notable: Academics, labor, and self-governance are
the three pillars of the Deep Springs experience. Students have a say
in what subjects to study, what professors to hire, and even what
applicants to admit.
Famous Alum: William T. Vollmann, a novelist and
journalist with a propensity for writing about dangerous firsthand
experiences, including a trip into Afghanistan with the Mujahideen in
1982. Vollmann has written more than 20 books, including Europe Central, which won the 2005 National Book Award for Fiction.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Given that
students are generally prohibited from leaving the ranch during the
semester, online shopping via the somewhat reliable Internet connection
is one of the only viable options.
3. UC-Irvine School of Law, Class of ’12

In an effort to attract the best and brightest students for its inaugural class, the UC Irvine School of Law
is offering a free ride to all 60 students admitted this fall. Dean
Erwin Chemerinsky, a constitutional law scholar, told reporters, “Our
goal is to be a top-20 law school from the first time we are ranked.”
By early February, the number of applicants at California’s first new
public law school in 40 years had topped 1,000. The school will rely on
grants and donations to cover the estimated $6 million it will cost to
put each of the students in the first class through the program.
History: There is some precedent for a professional
school offering free tuition to its inaugural class. In 2008, the
Central Florida College of Medicine received nearly 3,000 applicants
after offering the same deal to each member of its inaugural class.
Notable: Chemerinsky, an adamant defender of the
separation of church and state, as well as abortion rights, was hired,
fired amid political pressure from conservatives one week later, and
then rehired as Irvine’s law school dean in 2007.
Famous Alum: You? It’s not too late to apply.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: In-N-Out burgers. Lots and lots of In-N-Out burgers.
4. Berea College

Thanks
to a large endowment, every student admitted to Berea College in
Kentucky receives a full-tuition scholarship valued at more than
$90,000. Students are required to work at least 10 hours a week in one
of more than 140 departments, and while room, board, and books are not
covered, the work-study program enables some of the 1,500 students to
lighten their financial load even more. Berea offers degrees in 28
fields.
History: Berea was founded in 1855 by Rev. John Fee –
an ironic name for the founder of a tuition-free college if there ever
was one – as the first interracial and coed college in the South.
Classes at the school were fully integrated until the Kentucky
Legislature passed a law in 1904 that prohibited school integration.
The law was amended in 1950 to allow integrated education above the
high school level and Berea returned to its roots, becoming the first
school in Kentucky to re-open its doors to African-Americans.
Notable: Berea’s motto is “God has made of one blood all peoples of the earth.”
Famous Alum: Carter G. Woodson, an African-American
historian, journalist, and author. After graduating with a Bachelor of
Literature degree from Berea, Woodson earned his PhD and taught at
Howard University.
He pioneered the celebration of “Negro History Week” in 1926, which
would serve as the precursor to “Black History Month” as we know it
today.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Berea is
home to the Kentucky Artisan Center, a 25,000-square-foot facility that
showcases Kentucky-made arts and crafts in a variety of exhibits.
5. Olin College of Engineering
Olin
College is a school of 300 in Neeedham, Mass., where every admitted
student receives four years of free tuition valued at $130,000. The
school is funded by a $400 million grant from the F.W. Olin Foundation
and ranks as one of the top undergraduate
engineering programs in the country. There is great emphasis placed on
philanthropy at Olin; students are encouraged to develop creative ideas
that address societal needs and help make the world a better place.
History: The school is named for Franklin W. Olin, who
founded the Olin Corporation and made a fortune selling ammunition.
Olin was a great philanthropist, too. Since 1938, the F.W. Olin
Foundation has contributed more than $300 million in grants to colleges and universities
throughout the country. The same foundation financed the development of
Olin College, which was completed in 2002. The school graduated its
first class in 2006.
Notable: Indicative of the entrepreneurial spirit
of the school, six Olin students are taking a year off to develop
educational Internet software – think Google Docs meets Facebook – for
local middle school students. The students expect the software, which
will include built-in features that allow parents and teachers to
interact with and monitor their students’ work, to be operational by
mid-April.
Famous Alum: He’s not exactly famous, but Alex
Dorsk does have a cleverly titled blog chronicling his time aboard a
research vessel with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Honor the
legacy of F.W. Olin, who played two years of professional baseball
after graduating from Cornell, with a trip to Fenway Park in nearby
Boston.
6. Cooper Union

Located in Manhattan, Cooper Union offers degree programs
in art, architecture, and engineering, and every admitted student
receives four years of free tuition valued at $130,000. According to a
recent article in the New York Times, applications for early decision
to the school were up 70 percent this year. The admissions rate at
Cooper Union is about 8 percent, while the enrollment is a little more
than 900. The Cooper Union endowment is valued at nearly $600 million.
History: Peter Cooper, who invented the first
locomotive in the United States, believed that education of the highest
quality should be “as free as air and water,” so he founded Cooper
Union in 1858. Cooper’s greatest legacy may have come 14 years earlier,
when he received the first American patent for powdered gelatin. A
cough syrup manufacturer bought the patent from Cooper, developed a
prepackaged gelatin dessert, and named it Jell-O in 1897.
Notable: The Great Hall on the Cooper Union campus
has been the site of several historic speeches. Abraham Lincoln
outlined his views on slavery – namely that he didn’t want to see it
spread – in a famous address there, while Mark Twain spoke at the
school’s inauguration.
Famous Alum: Milton Glaser, who founded New York Magazine and designed the ubiquitous I Love New York logo.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Fifth Avenue is a start.
7. Curtis Institute of Music

Like Juillard, the Curtis Institute of Music is considered one of
the most prestigious performing arts conservatories in the world.
Unlike Juillard, tuition at Curtis is free. Every student admitted to
the school of 160 in Philadelphia is provided a full scholarship, and
all piano, harpsichord, composition, and conducting majors are lent
Steinway grand pianos. As part of their training,
students at Curtis host over 100 public concerts each year, and receive
one-on-one instruction from the musically accomplished faculty.
History: Mary Louise Curtis Bok founded the Curtis
Institute in 1924 as a place for talented young performers to prepare
for careers as professional musicians. She named the school in honor of
her father, Cyrus Curtis, the founder of Ladies Home Journal and a fellow music lover.
Notable: According to the school’s Web site, 17
percent of the principal chairs in America’s top 25 orchestras and four
music directorships in the top 50 are held by Curtis-trained musicians.
More than sixty alumni have performed with the Metropolitan Opera.
Famous Alum: Anthony McGill, a member of the
Metropolitan Opera and the clarinetist in the quartet that played at
Barack Obama’s Inauguration last month. Also: Leonard Bernstein.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Buy a membership to the Franklin Institute to supplement your musical education.
8. Alice Lloyd College

All
students at Alice Lloyd College in Pippa Passes, Ky., are required to
work at least 10 hours per week in exchange for free tuition. Students
who need additional financial aid to pay for room and board may work up
to 15 hours per week. Jobs at the school of 550 are assigned based on a
student’s work experience and personal preference.
History: Alice Spencer Geddes Lloyd, a former
publisher and editor of The Cambridge Press, moved from Boston to
Eastern Kentucky in 1916. With the help of June Buchanan, Lloyd
chartered what was then called Caney Junior College in 1923. The school
became an accredited four-year college in 1980.
Notable: The call letters for Alice Lloyd College’s
non-commercial radio station, which has broadcast inspirational
programming around the clock since 1998, are WWJD-FM.
Famous Alum: Carl D. Perkins, who served in the
U.S. House of Representatives from 1949 until his death in 1984.
Perkins’s legacy lives on in the form of the Perkins Loan, a need-based
Federal student loan.
How to Spend the Money Saved on Tuition: Elk were
introduced to Kentucky in 1997 as part of a restoration project and
Knott County, which includes Pippa Passes, is now known as the elk
capital of the East. Tours are available through several outlets.