Blumenstyk, G. (1991, November 13). Public colleges, battered by recession, turn away thousands of students; higher admissions standards among methods employed. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. Al-Al, 32-32.
2.
Breneman, David W. (1993). Higher education: On a collision course with new realities. Washington, DC: American Student Assistance Corporation.
3.
Cage, M. C. (1991, July 17). Recession expected to bring long-term changes in state colleges' relations with governments. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A1-A1, A16-A17.
4.
Cage, M. C. (1992, February 12). Midyear budget cuts reported by public colleges in 22 states. The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A30-A30.
5.
Clayton, J. J. (1992, January 9). America is destroying public higher education. The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A48-A48.
6.
El-Khawas, Elaine. (1993, July). Campus trends 1993 (Report No. 83). Washington, DC: American Council on Education.
7.
Grassmuck, K. (1991, July 10). Colleges discover the human toll as they struggle to cut work forces. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A1-A1, A25-A25, 26-26.
8.
Grassmuck, K. (1991, September 18). More small colleges merge with larger ones, but some find the process can be painful. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A1-A1, A37-A39.
9.
Jacobson, R. L. (1991, November 20). Academic leaders predict major changes for higher education in recession's wake. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A34-A34, 35-35.
10.
Layzele, D. T. (1992, February 19). Tight budgets demand studies of faculty productivity. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. BI-BI, B3-B3.
11.
Leatherman, C. (1992, September 16). Recession's assault on U.S. colleges range from minor pains to gutted departments. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A17-A20, 21-21.
12.
Nicklin, J. L. (1992, August 5). 60% of all colleges hit by cuts in operating budgets, survey shows. The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A-25-A-25.