document resume ed 089 636 institution · large percentage of the financial responsibility for the...
TRANSCRIPT
DOCUMENT RESUME
ED 089 636 HE 005 388
TITLE Illinois State Scholarship Commission Report.INSTITUTION Illinois State Scholatship Commission, Deerfield.PUB DATE Apr 74NOTE 80p.
EDRS PRICE MF-$0.75 HC-$4.20 PLUS POSTAGEDESCRIPTORS Colleges; Community Colleges; *Educational Finance;
Financial Policy; *Grants; *Higher Education;*Scholarships; *State Aid; Universities; VeteransEducation
IDENTIFIERS *Illinois
ABSTRACTThe Illinois State Scholarship Commission (ISSC) is
responsible for the administration of 9 state authorized and fundedfinancial aid programs for Illinois postsecondary students. The majorprograms consist of: (1) nonrepayable monetary awards, and (2)guaranteed educational loans. The purposes of the Commission'sprograms are to: (1) equalize educational opportunity; (2) preservediversity in higher education by permitting freedom of institutionalchoice; (3) conserve public funds by making it possible for needystudents to utilize unused spaces at Illinois nonpublic colleges; (4)
permit a student's in-school employment or loans to be at a modestlevel so as to not affect his studies or career plan; (5) combinewith institutional and federal aid and parents funds to meet thecollege costs of the institution of the applicant's choice. TheMonetary Award Program provides nonrepayable aid to needy students;neither test scores nor records are assessed when application ismade. The Illinois State Scholarship Program identifies high schoolseniors with superior ability; and the Illinois Guaranteed LoanProgram guarantees Moans made for educational expenses. This documentalso presents statistical tables concerning the Commission's ctherprograms: grants for children of Illinois prisoners of war,scholarships for bilingual students, and payments for veterans atpublic community colleges. (Author/PG)
co
.,AREVENT CF HEALTHJVCAT ,ON 6 WELFARE
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OfEDUCATION
E ,P,0E I .1
APRIL,1974
jt\%
ILLINOISSTATESCHOLARSHIPCOMMISSION
REPORT
ILLINOIS STATE SCHOLARSHIP COMMISSION
MEMBERS
William E. McManusChicagoSince 1957
Mrs. L. Goebel PattonWest FrankfortSince 1962
Harold ListonNormal
Since 1969
Mrs. Ray PolhillMilledgevilleSince 1970
E. Erie Jones Robert 6. DouglasPalatine KankakeeSince 1967 Since 1972
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
Joseph D. Boyd, Executive Director
James A. Eanes, Administrative Director, Scholarships and GrantsByron Himelick, Assistant Director, Scholarships and GrantsMrs. Elizabeth N. Fish, Assistant to the Director, Scholarships and Grants
Mrs. Carol Wennerdahl, Administrative Director, Loan ProgramRichard Wedemeyer, Assistant Director, Loan ProgramJames Gabler, Assistant to the Director, Loan ProgramSteve Skott, Collections Manager, Loan Program
Ralph J. Godzicki, Administrative Director, Agency OperationsRichard X. Nelli, Agency AuditorIvan D. Williams, Coordinator, Data ProcessingMrs. Florence Schallitz, Coordinator, Business Activities?Mrs. Phyllis B. Rich, Personnel Manager
William J. Hilton, Administrative Director, Office of Informational Services
Mrs. Rosa Ramirez, Coordinator of Community ServicesRobert V. Padjen, Coordinator of School and College Relations
Executive/Program/OperationsTollway North Office Center
102 Wimot RoadDeerfield, Illinois 60015
312/945-1500
Scholahhik and Grant Division,P. O. Box 607
Deerfield, Illinois' 60015312/945-1600
LOCATION
Printed By AuthoritySTATE OF ILLINOIS
April, 1974 5M
Office of Informational Services(Audiovisual Resources Center)
203 North Wabash AvenueSuite 1600
Chicago, Illinois 60601312/793.3745
Guaranteed Loan ProgramP. 0. Box 33
Deerfield, Illinois 60015312/945-7040
INTRODUCTION
The Illinois State Scholarship Commission, a Governor appointed body of seven persons, is responsible for theadministration of nine state authorized and funded financial aid programs for Illinois postsecondary students. Theaid programs of the ISSC, combined with institutional and federal aid and with the funds expected from parentsand the applicant, meet the college costs of the institution of the applicant's choice. The major programs consistof (1) nonrepayable monetary awards and (2) guaranteed educational loans.
Among the purposes of the Commission programs are to
Equalize educational opportunity by removing financial barriers to college
Preserve diversity in postsecondary education by permitting freedom of institutional choice
Conserve public funds by making it possible for financially needy students to utilize any otherwise unusedspaces at Illinois non-public colleges.
Permit a student's inschool employment workload and/or loans to be at a sufficiently modest level so asnot to adversely affect his studies or career plans
Combine with institutional and federal aid with the funds expected from parents and the applicant tomeet the college costs of the institution of the applicant's choice
The Monetary Award Program provides non repayable assistance to financially needy students; neither test scoresnor high school records are assessed as a necessary condition to apply for funds. Monetary award winners mustbe Illinois residents demonstrating financial need and be planning to pursue full-time undergraduate study atmore than 180 approved public or non-public colleges and universities, hospital schools of nursing or allied healthprograms located in Illinois. Financial need is determined by a standardized need_ assessment based upon acomprehensive review of the family financial strength and the specific cost of attending the approved Illinoiseducational institution of the applicant's choice. Students at varying levels of academic ability can participate inthe program provided they can successfully enter and continue to progress satisfactorily through a collegiate levelof study.
The Illinois State Scholar Program publicly and, with a personal Certificate of Merit, identifies those high schoolseniors who possess superior academic potential as measured by their test scores and high school records. TheState Scholar designation is an honorary recognition only; financial need is not a requirement, nor are StateScholars automatically entitled to a monetary award. To be eligible for financial assistance, a State Scholar mustsubmit an application to the Monetary Award Program and demonstrate financial need.
The Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program guarantees loans for educational expenses made to state residents byIllinois private banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions. The IGLP is responsible for verifying theeligibility of an applicant for the loan guarantee, processing requests for default payments from lenders, andcollecting loan payments under new agreements from those students who were earlier unable to meet theiroriginal agreement with lenders. The Commission reimburses the lender for the full principal amount and intereston a loan if the borrower dies, becomes disabled, or fails to meet contract obligations. Federal funds assume alarge percentage of the financial responsibility for the payment of all defaulted loans and the cost of interestsubsidy for those students qualifying for such benefits. Effective March 1, 197, eligibility for an interestsubsidized loan is related to an analysis of the family financial stregth. Loans are guaranteed to residents ofIllinois who are full-time undergraduates and graduates at collegiate and vocational institutions throughout theUnited States and some foreign countries.
In addition, the Commission administers the following other programs: benefits for dependents of Illinoisresidents who are prisoners of war or are musing in action, grants for children,of Illinois policemen, firemen andcorrectional officers killed in line of duty, scholarships for bilingual students and teachers, and matching grantsto public senior universities at which a scholarship fund has been established from voluntary contributions bystudents. Payments for veterans enrolled at public community colleges are alsO an ISSC responsibility.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ISSC Members, Administrative Staff, Location Inside Front Cover
Introduction
Table of Contents ii
Appropriation History1
Historical Table of Volume and Appropriation; 2
ISSC Organization 2
Advisory Committees 3
Institutional Representatives 5
Monetary Award Program, 1973.74 Academic Year 7
Capsule History of All Monetary Awards by Type Institution 8
Monetary Awards by Institution, 11
1971.72, 1972.73, 1973.74 (Best Estimates), and 1958.59 1973-74
An Analysis by Institution 22
(Relationship of ISSC Applicants and Enrolled Monetary Award Winners to Fall 1973 Full-time
Equivalent Enrollments, Tuition & Fee Costs, College BudgetslMean Weighted 1974.75
Tuition and Mandatory Fees by Type Institution 25
A Study of Increases in College Costs
A Study of Nonpublic Tuition. and Fees and ISSC Maximum Awards 26
Monetary Award Maximums 26
Percentages of Monetary Award Winners with Partial and Maximum Awards 26
Class Standing of All 1973.74 Enrolled Monetary Award Winners by Type Institution 27
Zip Code Areas of Illinois 28
Zip Code Area Analysis 1972.73 and 1973-74 Applicants 29
Historical Summary, Monetary Award Program 31
Quotation from Higher Education Student Assistance Law 31
Financial Need Analysis 32
Fundamental Essentials of Need Analysis Formula 33
Mean Total Parental Income and Asset Equity Analysis by Institution 35
Number and Percentage by Parental Income Ranges of All 1973.74 39
Monetary Award Applicants Named Monetary Award Winners
Class Level of Applicants, Monetary Award Winners, No Need Cases 40
Fall Full-time Equivalent Enrollment of Undergraduates by Class Level, 40
All ISSC Approved Institutions
Unmet Costs for Monetary ,"kward Winners 40
Award Winners' Mean Unmet Costs by Type Institution 40
Study of Parental & Student Characteristics Relating to Financial Need 41
Racial Background of Monetary Award Applicants 45_
Analysis by Racial Background, 1973.74 Award Year Announced Monetary Award Winners 45
Changes in Vocational Aspirations 46
Distribution by Age of Enrolled Monetary Award Winners 46
Announced Monetary Award Distribution by Amount of Award 47
Average Per Year Dollar and Percentage Increases in Mean Weighted Tuition and Mandatory Fees at Major 47
Illinois Nonpublic Institutions of Higher Learning
Military Veterans' Scholarships to Public Community Colleges 48
Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Benefits 49
Student to Student Program 49
Scholarships for Bilingual Students and Teachers 50
Benefits for Survivors of Illinois Policemen and Firemen 50
Scholarships for Survivors/Dependents of Correctional Workers 50
States with Comprehensive Scholarship/Grant Programs Based on Financial Need for Students Attending 51
Either Public or Private Institutions
Illinois State Scholar Program 52
An Analysis of Participation & Designated State Scholars by County 1964-65 to 1974.75 53
Enrolled State Scholars with Monetary Awards by Type Institution 54
Percentage of State Scholars Rank in Class 54
Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program Program Requirements 55
IGLP Operations Report 57
IGLP Statistical Summary 58
IGLP Student Population Profile 59
IGLP Historical versus Current Trends 60
Estimated Cumulative Number of Student Borrowers by County of Residence 61
Estimated Cumulative Number of Student Borrowers by State Location of Educational Institution 62
IGLP Approved Educational Institutions in Illinois 63
IGLP Approved Illinois Lending Institutions 65
Office of Informational Services MIS) 69
Index 73
Highlights 75
iii
ISSC Appropriation History from General Revenue or Guaranteed Student Loan Revolving Funds
Appropriation
70th GENERAL ASSEMBLY Monetary Awards(July 1957 June 1959) Administration
AcademicYearisi
$ 600,000 1958.59130,000
71st GENERAL ASSEMBLY Monetary Awards(July 1959 June 19611 Administration
$ 3,000,000 1959.60150,000 1960.61
72nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY Monetary Awards(July 1961 June 1963) Administration
$ 4,800,000 1961-62171,240 1962.63
4'd GENERAL ASSEMBLY Monetary Awards(July 1963 June 1965) Administration
$ 4,950 000 1963-64226,619 1964.65
14th GENERAL ASSEMBLY(July 1965. June 1967)
Monetary AwardsAdministrationGuaranteed Loan FundAdministration of Loans
$ 10,000,000 1965.66350,000 1966.6/500,00040,000
75th GENERAL ASSEMBLY(July 1967 June 1969)
Monetary AwardsAdministrationGuaranteed Loan FundAdministration of Loans
$ 29,800,000738,500
9,000,000400,000
4
1967.681968.69
76th GENERAL ASSEMBLY Monetary Awards $ 27,200,000(July 1969 June 1970) Administration 804,900
Guaranteed Loan Reserve Fund 1,900,000Lenders Administrative Cost Allowance 1,000,00
(July 1970 June 1971) Monetary AwardsAdministrationGuaranteed Loan Reserve FundAuthority to Spend from Loan Reserve
1969.70
34,600,000 1970.711,001,5007,100,0001,900,000
77th GENERAL ASSEMBLY(July 1971 June 1972)
(July 1972 June 1973)
78th GENERAL ASSEMBLY(July 1971 June 1972)
1
Monetary AwardsGeneral AdministrationGuaranteed Loan Administratior.Authority to Spend from Loan Reserve
$ 41,755,000804,000476,500
2,500,000
Monetary Awards $ 54,830,000Regular Monetary Awards $ 54,480,000Bilingual Awards 200,000Student to Student Prog. 150,000
General Administration 1,335,000Student Loan Support 3,500,000
Monetary AwardsRegular Monetary AwardsVeterans ScholarshipsBilingual AwardsStudent to Student Prog.Policem,.n /Fireman BenefitsPOW/MIA Benefits
Student Loan SupportAdministration
$ 55,352,0003,800,000
250,000200,000
25,00012,500
$ 59,639,500
4,000,0001,460,000
1971.72
1972.73
1973.74
HISTORICAL TABLE OF VOLUME AND APPROPRIATIONS
Fiscal '70 to '74
Monetary Award ProgramFY'70 FY'71 FY'72 FY'73
EstimateFY'74
Applications 64,000 80,200 97,660 113,940 112,970Total ISSC Monetary Awards 38,270 48,369 56,893 69,588 72,246
Private Institutions 19,256 23,016 25,747 29,121 29,525Public Institutions 19,014 25,353 31,146 40,467 42,721
Total New ISSC Awards 17,604 22,230 25,525 31,500 32,650
Appropriation-Monetary Awards(Millions) S 27.2 $ 34.6 $ 41 8 $ 54.48 $ 55.35
Appropriation-Categorical Programs(Millions) S .35 S 4.29
Loan ProgramCumulative Data
Number Loans Outstanding 107,021 137,452 168,715 185,877 197,500Total Value, Outstanding
(Millions) $ 114,0 $ 148.0 $ 182.0 $ 241.0 $ 280.00By Year Data 0 $
Estimated New Loans 17,600 22,091 23,056 16,013 12,000Number of Defaults 599 1,277 1,312 1,218 2,000Default Appropriation (Millions) $ 1.9 $ 1.9 $ 2.5 $ 3.5 S 4.00
Operations (Millions) .805 $ 1.002 S 1.281 $ 1.335 $ 1.46
Total Appropriations IM1 29.905 S 37.502 $ 45.581 $ 59.665 $ 65,10
ILLINOIS STATE SCHOLARSHIP COMMISSION ORGANIZATION
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS established the Higher Education StudentAssistance Law. It amends the Law and approves administrative, monetary award, and loan fund appropriations.
THE GOVERNOR OF ILLINOIS appoints members to the Commission and designates one member as a chairrhan.
THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PU3LIC INSTRUCTION is an exofficio member of the Commission; he is
responsible for approving all high schools for Commission purposes.
THE COMMISSION establishes policies and procedures not in conflict with or covered by the Higher EducationStudent Assistance Law, approves all student winners, approves all committee appointments, appoints theExecutive and Administrative Directors, initiates and approves recommendations for legislative and budgetaryneeds, and approves the participating colleges. The Executive and Administrative Directors administer theprogram of the Commission, assume responsibility for the operation of the Commission offices, and represent theCommission in public contacts.
All employees of the Scholarship Commission (professional and clerical) are employed under the University CivilService System of Illinois.
2
ISSC ADVISORY COMMITTEES
From the inception of the State Scholarship Commission, advisory committees have been a functioning aspect ofthe Commission. Members of these committees represent-broad educational interests throughout the state ofIllinois. Present committees and their memberships are:
General Advisory Committee
Vincent G. Chiaro, Director of Financial Aid, Sangamon State University; Robert W. Davenport, Director ofGuidance, Centennial High School, Champaign; Stephen Dougherty, Director of Financial Aid, Lincoln College,Lincoln; E. Martin Jehrt; Financial Aid Officer, Cook County School of Nursing, Chicago; Kenneth Kerr, Dean ofStudent Personnel Services, Eastern Illinois University; Rev. Chester A. Mitoraj, St. Hyacinth Parish, Chicago;Sister Mary C. Mulhern, Director of Admissions, Rosary College; Orville Nothdurft, Director of Admissions,Bradley University; Harold O'Neil, Dean of Student Services, John Logan College; Eugene O'Toole, AssistantDirector of Admissions, Illinois Central College; Anthony T. G. Pa !lett, Director of Admissions and Aid, TheUniversity of Chicago; Gene Primm, Senior Counselor, Illinois Valley Central High School; Ms. Marilyn Prior(Student), Bourbonnais; Eugene S. Riley, Project Director, Neighborhood Youth Corps, Waukegan; Wesley S.Simons, Area Head, Student Administrative Services, Western, Illinois University; Walter Steinberg, Principal,Luther High School South, Chicago; Curtis W.' Thomas, Assistant Coordinator, Comprehensive EducationCommission, E. St. Louis; David W. Turner, Principal, Morrison Community High School, Morrison; FarleyWoods (Student), Lockport.
Jury and Financial Need Advisory Committee
Robert Beckwith, Manager, Education Department, Illinois Chamber of Commerce, Chicago; Elwood Buchanan,Administrative Assistant to the Director, Student Work and Financial Assistance, Southern Illinois University,Edwardsville; Steve J. Danley (Student), Streator; John T. Flynn, Financial Aid Officer, Lake Land College; Mrs.Laura R. Grafman, Director of Financial Assistance, National College of Education; Ken Gunji, Coordinator ofFinancial Aids, Parkland College; Dan Hall, Associate Director of Financial Aid, Northwestern University; Dr.Gloria Lewis, Associate Professor, Guidance and Counseling in Education, Loyola University; Ms. Terri Wernsman(Student), Centralia; Gordon White, Director of Financial Aid, Lake Forest College; Joseph Zimny, Student Work& Financial Assistance, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.
Advisory Committee on Testing and Determination of Academic Potential
Walter Akhurst, Director of Admissions/Financial Aid, Rockford College; Jack Allen, Director of AdmissionsMillikin University; Miss Mildred Fox, College Consultant, Evanston Township High School; Miss Joan Jordan,Administrator of Division of Guidance, Pupil Personnel Services, Chicago Board of Education; Edward W.Robinson, Counseling and Testing Services, Western Illinois University.
Advisory Committee on Attrition
Roger H. Campbell, Director of Admissions, Northwestern University; Ted S. Cooper, Executive Director,
3
National Association of College Admissions Counselors; George Henning, Vice President for Special Services,Augustana College; E. Eugene Oliver, Director, School and College Rcejations, University of IllinoisUrbana;Joseph Quinn, Dean of Admissions, Quincy College; Dr. Richard Wagner, Special Assistant for GovernmentalAffairs, Illinois Board of Higher Education.
Data Exchange Advisory Committee
Two representatives from each of the following institutions:
Augustana College
Bradley UniversityLoyola University
Advisory Committee on Equal Educational Opportunity
University of Illinois at Chicago CircleWestern Illinois UniversityWilliam Rainey Harper College
Dr. Robert M. Crane, Professor, Social Justice, Sangamon State University; Vincent T. Demuzio, ExecutiveDirector, Illinois Valley Economic Developme-a Corporation, Carlinville; Leon Dingle, Dean, Allied HealthSciences, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago; Joseph H. Gloor (Student), Aurora; Dr. NanMcGehee, Associate Chancellor, University of IllinoisChicago Circle; Bill G. Pyle, Director, Southern IllinoisTalent Search Center, Carbondale; Mrs. Dorothy Reynolds, Community Representative, Chicago; CarmeloRodriquez, Executive Director, Aspira, Inc., Chicago; Ms. Marcia Roundtree (Student), Metropolis; Mrs. Diana G.Shipley, Elementary Guidance Counselor, Decatur; Domingo Tobias, Vice President, MexicanAmerican Councilon Education, Chicago.
Bilingual Program Committee
Eduardo Cadavid, Administrator of Special Language Services, Chicago Board of Education; Rev. Rubin Cruz,American Broadcasting Company, Chicago; Dr. Angel Diaz, Department of Special Education, Illinois StateUniversity; Alfred Galva°, American G. I. Forum, Chicago; J. leferino Ochoa, Executive Director, ArchdiocesanLatin American Committee, Chicago; Mike Santos, Association House, Chicago; Miss Maria Solis, American G. I.Office, Moline; Ms. Isabelle Torres (Student), De Kalb.
Illinois Guarpriteed Loan Program Advisory Committee
Jim Conroy, Supervisor of Special Accounts, Caterpillar Credit Union, E. Peoria; Milton Davis, President, SouthShore National Bank, Chicago; William Fox, Vice President, Cairo Bank and Trust Co., Cairo; Mrs. FlorenceFrith, Assistant Vice President, First Federal Savings and Loan, Chicago; Mrs. Lucille Ha !comb, Financial AidOfficer, Illinois State University; George Harris, Director of Financial Aid, Olive Harvey Jr. College; JohnLastofka, Assistant Vice President, Elmhurst National Bank, Elmhurst; Dr. Cathryn Mason, Guidance Counselor,School District 189, E. St. Louis; Jack Maxwell, Assistant Vice President, First National Bank of Olney, Olney;Mrs, Mary Jane Plapp, Director of Financial Aid, Millikin University; Harold Rabin, President/Owner, ElectronicTechnical Institute, Chicago; Bradford Townsend (Student), Springfield; Jim Zegunis, Assistant Vice President,Home Federal Savings and Loan, Rockford.
4
ILLINOIS STATE SCHOLARSHIP COMMISSION INSTITUTIONAL REPRESENTATIVES
State Scholarship Representatives receive all communications from the iSSC regarding student award decisions,recommendation procedures, and payment certification for their enrolled students. Almost without exception,these persons also serve as the chief financial aid officers and administer institutional, state and federal studentfinancial aid programs at their institutions.
Aero-Space Institute Dr. Alfred E. StottAmerican Cons. of Music Mr. Charles MooreArt Institute of Clip. Mrs. Dawn B. HeffernanAugustana College Mrs. Zen HoegnerAugustana Hosp. (Chicago) Mrs. Genevieve CarbAurora College Mrs. Rose Marie Har lessBarat College Mrs. Christel I. McDowellBelleville Jr. College Mr. Lee KnoebelBillings Hosp. (Chicago) Respiratory Therapy
Mr. Bill E. MorrisonBlack Hawk College Mr. David SprenkleBlack Hawk East Col. Dr. Arthur W. DecabooterBlackburn College Mr. Donald V. RaleyBlessing Hosp. (Quincy) Ms. Lauretta M. EnoBloomington-Normal School of Radio logic Tech.
Miss Judy 0. JonesBradley University -- Mr. Thomas P. CromwellCentral YMCA Com. Col. Mr. Robert D. CampbellChicago City Colleges:
KennedyKing Mr. Gregory E. CallawayLoop Mr. Charles JonesMalcolm X Mr. Arthur H. BellMayfair Mr. Paul Mall
Mire-Harvey Mr. George HarrisSouthwest Mrs. Ann S. CloughWilbur Wright Mr. Arnold Sternberg
Chgo. Col. of Osteopathic Med. Dr. R. A. KistnerChgo. Conservatory College Miss Jeanne HowardChicago Medical School /University Health
Sciences Miss La Verne UrichChgo. Nat. Col. of Naprapathy Dr. Charles A.
Vlas
Chicago State University Mr. Stephen A. ParkerColumbia College Mr. Hubert E. DavisConcorJia Teachers College Mr. Ernst RoemkeCook County Hosp. (Chgo.) Mr. E. Martin JehnCopley Memorial Hosp. (Aurora) Mrs. Alice RunyanDanville Junior College Mr. James E. HeerensDecatur, Corn. Col. of Mr. Lee L. WillettDecatur Mem. Hosp. Ms. Sharon D. MolineauxDe Lourdes College Sr. Mary CanisiaDe Paul University Mr. Kenneth C. ConwayDu Page, College Mrs. Car lye WattisEastern III. University Mr. Ross C. LymanElgin Community Col. Mr. James GalbraithElmhurst College Mr. Donald R. WeissEureka College Mrs. Genevia SagerEvangelical Hosp. (Oak Lawn) Ms. Elida L. MundtEvanston Hospital Ms. Caryl Ericsson
5
Felician College Sr. Mary ReginettaFreeport Memorial Hosp. Ms. Verda MitchellGoldberg, I. J. (Mt. Sinai Hospital Chicago)
Ms. Luella I. RillGovernor's State Univ. -41r. Richard S. AllenGraham Hospital (Canton) Ms. Betty J. StockovGreenville College Mr. Leo and KeillorHarper College, William Rainey\ Mr. Fred VaisvilHighland Corn. College Dr. Frederick VodaHebrew Theological Col. Dr. Joseph BabadIll. Benedictine College Sr. Alma BrothersIllinois Central College Mr. Emil HaeflingerIllinois College Mr. Philip E. BradishIll. College of Optometry Mr. Sheldon SiegelIII. Col. of Podiatric Med. Mr. John E. AndrewsIll. Eastern Jr. Colleges Dr. James S. SpencerIll. Inst. of Technology Mr. David BusseIllinois Masonic Medical Center (Chicago)
Miss Penelope MavrelisIllinois State University Mr. Frank S. SaurmanIllinois Valley Com, col. Mr. Robert J. MuellerIllinois Wesleyan Univ. Mr. Lynn NicheisonJoliet Jr. College Mr. Walter F. ZaidaJudson College Mr. Patrick H. ShieldsKankakee Community Col. Mr. Thomas DolligerKaskaskia Jr. College Mr. Dale MusselmanKendall College Mr. Frank CapozziKishwaukee College Mr. David LouisKnox College Dr. Walter M. NorthLake County, College of Mr. Sam MazmanLake Forest College Mr. Gordon WhiteLake Land College Mr. John T. FlynnLake View Memorial Hospital (Danville)
Mr. James L. LarabeeLewis and Clark Corn. Col. Mr. George C. TerryLewis University Ms. Jennifer JohnsonLincoln College Mr. Stephen DoughertyLincoln Christian College Mr. Arnold H. WhitlerLincoln Land Jr. College Mr. James E. RussellLogan College, John A. Mr. Harold R. O'NeilLoyola University Mr. James G. DwyerLutheran General & Deaconess Hospital
(Park Ridge) Ms. Erna M. RueggebergMedical Technology Miss Grace Lawrence
Lutheran Hosp. (Moline) Ms. Josephine A. BrandtRadiologic Technology Mrs. Ruth HollisRespiratory Therapy Mr. Charles L. McKnight
MacCormac Jr. College Mr. Kenneth DushekMacMurray College Mr. James R. Stefl
Mallinckrodt College Sr. Mary Leonore SchulzMcHenry College Mr. Andrew DecraeneMcKendree College Mrs. Ladoris WeberMemorial Hospital (Springfield)
Miss Hazel J. KellamsMennonite Hospital (Bloomington)
Mrs. Mary Ann WatkinsMethodist Hospital of Central Illinois (Peoria)
Mrs. Louise B. GuestMillikin University Mrs. Mary Jane Pi appMoline Pub Ilc Hospital Ms. Katherine R. DickMonmouth College Mr. Elwood BallMoraine Valley College Mrs. Elizabeth C. StitesMorris College, Robert Mr. William HoughMorton College Mr. Anthony P. KovanicMundelein College Miss Karan ReevesNational College Chiropractic Medicine
Dr. Ronald P. BeidemanNational Col. of Edication -- Mrs. Laura R. GrafmanNiles College The ileverend Donald E. CusackNorth Central College Mr. Richard J. LuzeNorth Park College Mr. Melvin SoderstromNortheastern Ill. Univ. Mrs. Anne T. KleinNorthern Ill. Univ. Mr. William HerrmannNorthwestern University Mr. Dan HallNorthwestern University Evening Division
Mrs. Adeline Ser ShenNorthwestern University Dental School and Dental
Hygiene Dr. Charles J. VincentNorthwestern University Medical School and
Med. Technology Dr. Gardner C. Van DykeOakton Community Col. Mr. Michael E. DessimozOlivet Nazarene College Mr. Clemens G. KruseParkland College Mr. Ken GunjiParks Col. of Aero. Tech. Mr. Richard W. KlemmPassavant Memorial Area Hospital (Jacksonville)
Ms. Mary MeehanPrairie State College Mr. Ellis G. Falki'rincipia Mrs. Dorothy M. HoltPritzker School of Med. Ms. Margaret KinnallyQuincy College Mr. Joseph QuinnRavenswood Hosp. (Chgo.) Ms. Mary 0. CastellanosReese Hosp., Michael (Chgo.) Mrs. Francis BargeRend Lake College Mr. Thomas R. BurkeRock Island Franciscan Hosp. Sr. Dorothy Lampe
Radiologic Technology Mrs. Orlana OlsonRock Valley College Mr. Richard DresserRockford College Mr. Walter AkhurstRockford Mem. Hosp. Ms. Evelyn FanlundRoosevelt University Mr. Robert L. FranklinRosa-y College Miss Charlotte KwederRushPresbyterianSt. Luke's Medical Center
(Chicago) Mr. Wayne A. Franckowiak
St. Anne's Hospital (Chicago) Miss Anna FranzenSt. Anthony Hosp. (Rockford) Sr. Mary LinusSt. Francis, College of Mr. Robert M. QuigleySt. Francis Hospital (Evanston) Ms. Estelle RogersSt. Francis Hospital (Peoria) Ms. Magdalen BaumannSt. John's Hosp. (Springfield) Sr. Agnes McDougall
Medical Technology Sr. AnthonySt. Joseph Hosp. (Joliet) Ms. Lois K. BenichSt. Mary of Nazareth Hospital (Chicago)
Sr. M. AntoniaSt. Xavier College Mr. Steven R. ThorndiltSandburg Jr. Col., Carl Mr. K. G. Klinck IISangamon State Univ. Mr. Vincent G. ChiaroSauk Valley Jr. College Mr. Ronald MarlierShawnee Corn. College Mr. Herman LawrenceSherwood Music School Dr. Arthur WildmanShimer College Mr. Ralph HoughSouth Chgo. Community Hosp. Ms. Josephine ChanSoutheastern III. College Mr. Joseph TraxlerSouthern III. Univ., Carbondale Mr. Joseph ZimnySouthern III. Univ., Dentistry Dr. Richard W. BrandSouthern III. Univ., Edwardsville Mr. Elwood BuchananSpertus Col. of Judaica Dr. Nathaniel StampferSpoon River College Mr. E. Warren PotterSpringfield Col. in III. Sr. Ursula McGannState Community Col. Mr. Kermith K. OwensSwedishAmer. Hosp. (Rockford) Miss Marilyn MillerThornton Community Col. Mr. Ronald CooleyTrinity Christian Cot. Mr. Ronald KronemeyerTrinity College Mr. Dwight FullerTriton College Miss Trudye WilsonUniversity of Chicago Mr. Fred R. Brooks, Jr.Univ. of III., Chicago Circle Mr. Phillip G. BauyherUniversity of Illinois Assoc. Medical Sciences,
Dental Assistants, Dentistry, Medicine,Nursing, Pharmacy Mr. William C. Wagner
University of III,, Urbana Mr. E. T. SanfordVandercook Col. of Music Mr. George ZafrosWaubonsee Community Col. Mr. Lawrence N. DukesWesleyPassavant Memorial Hci:%)ital (Chicago)
Miss Jeanine LarsonWest Suburban Hospital (Oak Park)
Ms. Sharon E. BolinWestern III. Univ. Mr. Herman R. KoesterWheaton College Mr. Paul SutcliffeWilliams Col., George Mr. Edward W. Stowe, Jr.
6
MONETARY AWARD PROGRAM
1973-74
Monetary awards are
applicable only toward tuition and mandatory fees for full-time undergraduate study at more than 180ISSC approved colleges, universities, hospital schools of nursing and died health institutions located inIllinois
made in amounts up to $1,300 annually but cannot exceed tuition and mandatory fees
assigned on the basis of financial need at the approved college of the student's choice and re-evaluate f ifthe college choice changes
sent to the educational institution in the name of the recipient after the institution confirms theenrollment of the recipient
renewable annually upon proper application
provided from funds subject to annual review and appropriation
The program provides that the applicant, to be eligible for a monetary award, must meet the followingrequirements:
be a citizen or permanent resident of the United States
be a resident of the state of Illinois
be a person of good moral character
be eligible to enroll as a full-time (at least 12 credit hours per term) undergraduate student and be ingood academic standing in an ISSC approved college, university, hospital school of nursing, or alliedhealth institution
not have received a baccalaureate degree or completed 150 semester hours or 225 quarter hours ofcollege level course work
demonstrate financial need as determined by the Commission from income/asset data supplied in theapplication filed by the announced deadline
Effect of Other Gift Aid
The student may receive other gift aid {scholarships and grants) and retain his ISSC award so long as
it is not in conflict with the ISSC award, which can only be applied toward tuition and fees
it does not exceed unmet cost as determined by the Commission; in the event the unmet cost isexceeded, the ISSC award is reduced or withdrawn, according to the recomputation
7
CAPSULE HISTORY OF ALL MONETARY AWARDS BY TYPE INSTITUTION(Best Estimates for 1973-74)
Award Yea,# Monetary
Awards % of Total $ MonetaryAwards % of TotalPrivate 2-Yr.
1958-59 14 .965,098 .87
1959-60 16 .615,689 .531960-61 12 .344,710 .31
1961-62 22 .499,572 .48
1962-63 12 .285,685 .29
1963-64 7 .162,760 .14
1964 -65 21 .3811,390 .39
1965-66 40 .5322,610 .54
1966-67 60 .6837,750 .66
1967-68 220 1.39162,637 ,1.49
1968 -69 533 1.81397,769 2.16
1969-70 653 1.71616,494 2.37
1970-71 1,093 2.261,054,314 3.25
1971-72 1,147 2.021,085,175 2.77
1972 -73' 2,420 3.482,033,240 3.99
1973 -74" 3,176 4.402,860,245 5.291958-74* 9,446 2.538,310,138 3.28Private 4-Yr.
1958-59 907 62.21 $ 485,182 82.791959-60 1,152 67.18901,663 84.361960-61 2,366 67.75
1,274,410 84.801961-62 3,109 68.94 1,679,872 84.291962-63 2,962 69.371,614,722 83.621963-64 3,136 69.601,707,889 83.791964-65 3,646 66.04 2,445,670 84.281965-66 5,001 66.763,586,903 84.731966-67 5,471 62.26 4,817,735 84.821967-68 10,072 63.418,747,543 85.141968-69 16,171 54.98
14,872,585 80.611969-70 18,603 48.6119,568,819 75.091970-71 21,923 45.3222,492,190 69.291971-72 24,600 43.2424,862,845 63.541972-73 26,701 38.37 28,630,747 56.041973-74 26,349 36.47 30,082,795 55.631958-74 172,769 46,28 167,771,070 66.19
All Private1958-59 921 63.17 $ 490,280 83.661959-60 1,768 67.79
907,352 84.891960-61 2,378 68.101,279,120 85.111961-62 3,131 69.421,689,444 84.771962-63 2,974 69.651,620,407 83.911963-64 3,143 69.751,710,649 83.921964-65 3,667 66.422,457,060 84 681965-66 5,041 67.293,609,513 85.411966-67 5.531 62.944,855,485 85.491967-68 10,292 64.808,900,180 86.631968-69 16,704 56.79
15,270,354 82.771969-70 19,256 50.3220,185,313 77.461970-71 23,016 47.5823,546,504 72.531971-72 25,747 45.2625,948,020 66.331912-73' 29,121 41.8530,668,487 60.03
' 1973-74' 29,525 40.8732,943,040 60.9211958 -74' 182,215 48.81 176,081,208 69.47
'Including Hospital Schools of Nursing and Allied Health Programs
8
CAPSULE HISTORY OF ALL MONETARY AWARDS BY TYPE INSTITUTION (Cont.)
(Best Estimates for 1973-74)
Award Year
# MonetaryAwards % of Total
$ MonetaryAwards % of Total
Public 2Yr.1958-59 13 .89 $ 2,813 .48
1959-60 27 1.044,255 .40
1960-6130 .86
4,272 .28
1961-62 26 .585,770 .29
1962 -63 10 .231,825 .09
1963-64 21 .474,397 .22
1964 -65 43 .787,806 .27
1965-66 91 1.2122,054 .52
1966-67 88 1.0020,105 .35
1967-68 333 2.1057,125 .56
1968 -69 1,405 4.78294,158 1.59
1969-70 2,833 7.40 537,554 2.06
1970 -71 4,401 9.10 960,053 2.96
1971-72 6,359 11.181,573.381 4.02
1972 --1.7318,604 12.36 2,315,357 4.53
1973-74 10,083 13.96 2,624,015 4.85
1958-74 34,367 9.218,434,940 3.33
Pubtic 4-Yr.1958-59 524 35.94 $ 92,924 15.86
1959-60 813 31.17157,189 14.71
1960-61 1,084 31.04 219.464 14.60
1961-62 1,353 30.00297,757 14.94
1962-63 1,286 30.12308,816 15.99
1963-64 1,342 29.78323,337 15.86
1964-65 1,811 32.80436,820 15.05
1965-66 2,359 31.49594,598 14.07
1966-67 3,169 36.06804,224 14.16
1967-68 5,258 33.101,316,427 12.81
1968-69 11,336 38.44 2,884,979 15.63
1969-70 16,181 42.28 5,335,741 20.47
197))-71 20,952 43.32 7,953,997 24.50
1971-72 24,787 43.57 11,601,889 29.65
1972-73 31,863 45.79 18,107,281 35.44
1973-7432,638 45.18 18,508,675 34.23
1958-74156,726 41.98 68,944,118 27.20
All PublicT958 7E9
537 36.83 $ 95,737 16.34
1959-60 840 32.21161,444 15.11
1960-61 1,114 31.90223,736 14.89
1961-62 1,379 30.58303,527 15.23
1962-63 1,296 30.35310,641 16.09
1963-64 1,363 30.25327,734 16.08
1964-65 1,854 33.58444,626 15.32
1965-66 2,450 32.71616,652 14.59
1966-67 3,257 37.06324,329 14.5V
1967-68 5,591 35.201,373,552 13.37
1968 -69 12,711 43.213,179,137 17.23
1969-70 19,014 49.685,873,295 22.54
1970 -71 25,353 52.428,914,050 27.46
1971-72 .31,146 54.7413,175,271 33.67
1972-73 40,467 58.15 20,422,638 39.97
1973-74 42,721 59.13 21,132,690 39.08
1958-74 191,093 51.19 77,379,058 30.53
9
CAPSULE HISTORY OF ALL MONETARY AWARDS BY TYPE INSTITUTION (Cont.)
(Best Estimates for 1973-74)
Award Year# Monetary
Awards % of Total$ Monetary
Awards % of Total
All 2-Yr.1958-59 27 1.85 $ 7,911 1.351959-60 43 1.65 9,944 .931960-61 42 1.20 8,982 .601961-62 48 1.06 15,342 .771962-63 22 .52 7,510 .391963-64 28 .62 7,157 .351964-65 64 1.16 19,196 .661965-66 131 1.75 44,664 1.061966-67 148 1.68 57,855 1.021967-68 553 3.48 209,762 2.041968-69 1,938 6.59 691,927 3.751969-70 3,486 9.11 1,154,048 4.431970-71 5,494 11.36 2,014,367 6.211971 -72 7,506 13.19 2,658,556 6.801e72-73" 11,024 15.84 4,353,597 8.521973-74* 13,259 18.35 5,484,260 10.141958-74* 43,813 11.74 16,745,08 6.61
ATI 4Yr.1958-59 1,431 98.15 S 578,106 98.651959-60 2,565 98.35 1,058,852 99.071960-61 3,450 98.80 1,493,874 99.401961 -62 4,462 98.94 1,977,629 99.231962 - -63 4,248 99.48 1,923,5348 99.611963-64 4,478 99.38 2,031,223 99.651964 -65 5,457 98.84 2,882,490 99.341965-66 7,360 98.25 4,181,501 98.941966-67 8,640 98.32 5,621,959 98.981.967-68 15,330 96.52 10,063,970 97.961968-09 27,477 93.11 17,757,564 96.251969-70 34,784 90.89 24,904,560 95.571970-71 42,875 88.64 30,446,187 93.791971-72 49,387 86.81 36,464,734 93.201972-73 68,564 84.16 46,737,628 91.481973-74 68,987 81.65 48,591,470 89.861958-74 329,495 88.26 236,715,188 93.39
All
Cumulative Average Cumulative %# Monetary % of All ISSC of All Dollars $ Monetary
Awards Awards Award All Years Awards
1958-59 1,458 .39 $402 .23 $ 586,0171959-60 2,608 1.09 410 .65 1,068,7961960-61 3,492 2.03 430 1.24 1,502,8561961 -62 4,510 3.24 442 2.03 1,992,9711962-63 4,270 4.38 452 2.79 1,931,0481963-64 4,506 5.59 452 3.59 2,038,3831964 -65 5,521 7.07 526 4.73 2,901,6861965-66 7,491 9.08 564 6.40 114,226,1651966-67 8,788 11.43. 646 8.64 5,679,8141967-68 15,883 15.68 647 12.69 10,273,7321968-69 29,415 23.56 627 19.97 18,449,4911969-70 38,270 33.81 681 30.25 26,058,6081970-71 48,369 46.77 671 43.06 32,460,5541971-72 56,893 62.01 688 58.60 39,123,2901972-73* 69,588 80.65 734 78.66 51,091,1251973-74* 72,246 100.00 748 100.00 54,075,7301958-74* 373.308 679 253,460,266
10
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION
1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 (BEST ESTIMATES) 1958-59 - 1973-74
PRIVATE 4-YR. # AWDS DOLLARS
CHGO COL.OSTCOR.
# AWIDS DOLLARS
AERO-SPACE
171-172 17 12,108 S ..173-'74
1 1,300172-'73 lo 8,290 158-174 1 1,30o'73-'74 6 5,I50158.,74 65 43;963 cHso CONS. COLLEGE
171172 24 26,958AMER. CONS. Music(72-173 4o 43,985171-172 5o 48,909 '73-174 50 58,575'72-'73 58 58,984 158-174 144 159,225
'73-'74 73 81,150158-174 249 245,623 CHGO MED. /UNIV. H.S.
171-'72 4 1,916ART INSTITUTE172 -173 8 6,442171-172 231 238,523 '73-174 14 12,500
'72-'73 306 347,392 158-174 26 20,858'73-'74 36o 437,750156-174 1,415 1,531+,486 COLUMBIA
171..172 190 198,570AUGUSTANA172-173 338 390,729171.-172 1,086 1,055,411 173-174 368 461,50o172-173 1,182 1,187,634 158-174 1,135 1,300,475173.174 1,163 1,243,225
,58-174 7,017 6,743,499 CONCORDIA
'71-'72 115 59,732AURORA172-173 162 112,518171-172 293 301,154 '73-174 162 127,6o0
'72-'73 357 375,288 158-174 918 524,653'73-'74 341 380,20of58-174 1,897 1,917,461 DEPAUL
171-172 2,470 2,501,148BARAT172.173 2,642 2,848,287
'71.172 123 125,208 173-174 2,681 3,065,850172-173 134 146,70o 158.17414,779 14,887,644
173-174 161 185,375158-174 831 868,o58 DEPAUL -LAW
171.1725 4,807BLACKBURN
172-173 10 11,990171.172 320 306,072 173-1749 11,225172-173 310 300050 158_174 31 34,055'73-'74 295 314,25o
(58-174 2,245 2,012,591 ELMHURST
'71 -'72 595 592,371BRADLEY072-173 738 791,694
171-172 1,594 1,614,033 '73-'74 814 921,000172-173 1,676 1,835,642 158-174 3,667 3,733,120'73-'74 1,6o0 1,829,400158-174 10,625 10,475,542 EUREKA
'71.172 258 257,948CHGO COL. NAPRAPATHY 172-173 251 257,288173.174 4 1,44o '73-'74 246 269,525158-174 4 1,44o 158-174 1,615 1,561,062
# Awos
MONETARY AWARDS BY
DOLLARS
INSTITUTION (CONT.)
ILLINOIS WESLEYAN
# AWD3 DOLLAR,
GEORGE WILLIAMS171 -172 215 222,930 '71-'72 878 926,532'72 -'73 266 287,297 172-173 948 1A5,971173.'74 268 308,500 ;73.174 929 1,085,900158-174 1,272 1.304,375 158-174 6,089 6,154,087
GREENVILLE JUDSON171.172 301 299,420 171-'72 94 92,4801(2-173 346 346,434 '72-'73 97 103,450173-174 300 334,100 173-'74 120 131,600158.174 2,006 1,972,014 ;58.174 552 558,742
HEBREW KNox
171-1723 2,016 '71-'72 558 590,352'72-'73 3 3.600 172-173 608 678,9873 2,400 173-174 554 667,35o59. tr
21 18,746 158-174 5,631 5,267,253
ILL. BENEDICTINELAKE FOREST
171.172519 502,531 171.172
92 93.534'72-'73 563 561,780 172./73 104 118,771173.174515 528,10o '73 -174 135 158,300158.074 3,296 3,098,147 158-174 919 885,602
ILLINOIS COLLEGE LEWIS171-172 417 393,941. 171-172 799 738,207172-'73 411 378,994 '72-'73 1,004 1,036,052'73-174 334 317,050 173-174 1,002 1,219,650158.174 2,847 2,582,906 158.174 4,921 4,871,536
ILL. COL. OPTOMETRYLINCOLN CHRISTIAN
171.172 25 .25,235 '71-172 123 89.947'72-'73 12 13,350 172-173 132 118,875'73-'74 14 17,400 73_174
139 138,000158.F7478 77,518 158-174 765 572,269
ILL. COL. PODIATRIC LOYOLA'72-'73 23 24,150
171.172 2,960 3,041,005173-174 14 16,950 172-173
3,059 3,260,424158.17437 41,100 173-174 3,018 3397,050
158.174 20,467 20,011,503ILL. INST. TECH.
171-172 850 841,517 LOYOLA DENT. ASST.'72-'73 838 848,255 171.'72
7 3,816'73-'74 812 877,150 172-173 4 2,567158.174 8,109 7,170,836 173.174
5 3,125,58.'74 32 17,226
ILL. INST. TECH.-KENT LAW
171-172 4 4,105 LOYOLA DENY. NYG.'72-'73 3 2,965 171-172 24 24,288'73-174 0 0 172-173 27 27,600158-174 13 12,803 173-174 12 13,550
158-17490 90,897 12
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION (CONT.)
# AWDS DOLLARS # AWDS DOLLARS
LOYOLA DENTISTRY NAT. COL. Eouc.
171-172 26 28,800 '71.172 203 203,026
'72 -'73 1 1,200 172-173 247 293,894
'73-'74 2 1,650 173-174 274 339,625
158-174 54 53,292 158_174 1,272 1,392,750
LOYOLA LAW NAT. COL. ED. -URBAN'71-172 2 1,636 171-172 39 43,756
'72 -'73 0 0 '72 -'73 7o 74,508
'73-'74 1 1,300 '73-174 79 94,65o
158-t74 5 4,156 158-174 310 328,844
LOYOLA MEDICINE NILES
171-172 8 7,488 171-172 223 207,72o
172-173 4 4,000 '72-'73 212 200,625
'73-'74 3 2,95o 173_174 179 185,350
158-174 36 36,734 158-174 1,770 707,755
MACMURRAY NORTH CENTRAL
171-172 447 485,166 171-172 412 399,240
'72-'73 441 492,032 +72-t73 391 406,310
173-174 408 480,925 173_174 370 401,050
158_174 4,059 4,006,343 158_174 2,664 2,582,179
MCKENDREE NORTH PARK
171-172 203 206,104 171-.172 328 325,108
172-173 246 291,363 172-173 415 413,255
173.174 277 341,900 173_174 343 382,150
158-174 1,370 1,460,543 158-174 2,25o 2,145,034
MILLIKIN NORTHWESTERN
171-172 679 698,252 171 -172 1,197 1,225,952
172..173 656 712,957 172-173 1,275 1,432,808
173-174 693 803,725 173_174 1,237 1,487,925
158-'74 4,60o 4,638,188 158-174 10,778 5,592,455
MONMOUTH NU DENTAL
171-172 373 386,990 171.'72 20 20,574
172-173 378 390,063 172-173 4 3,450
173_174 380 426,700 173-174 9 11,150
t58-174 2,621 2,542,362 158-174 7o 76,722
MUNDELEIN NU DENTAL Hyo.
171-172 425 423,046 173-174 6 7,800
172-173 454 465,859 158_174 6 7,800
173_174 418 467,70o
'58_174 3,405 3,161,069 NU EVENING Div.173.174
31 26,650
NAT. COL. CHIRO. 158_174 31 26,650
171-172 16 16,064
172-173 16 18,776 NU MEDICINE
173-174 17 19,60o 171-172 12 12,672
158-174 94 88,165 172-173 16 16,150
173.174 18 18,500
13 158-174 6o 58,238
,
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION (CONT.)
# AWDS DOLLARS
NU MED. TECH. RUSH MEDICAL
# AWDS DOLLARS
171 -172
'72-'73173-174
158-174
OLIVET NAZARENE
1
0
2
3
320
343
334
1,899
264
0900
1,164
311,762
341,629
351,700
1,829,343
172-173
'73-'74158-174
ST. FRANCIS
3
4
7
291
291
288
1,827
3,3755,200
8,575
277,974
278,42o
300,075
1,492,550
171.172
172-173173-174
'58-'74
'71..'72
'72-'73
'73-174'58-174
ST. XAVIERPARKS 171-172 443 441,351171-172 72 72,979 172-173 538 570,622
'72-'73 98 161,685 173-'74 602 676,375
'73-'74 127 192,325 158_174 3,028 2,952,516158-.74 575 728,051
SHERWOODPRINCIPIA 171-172 4 2,490171-172 39 37,632 '72-t73 3 2,028172-173 39 43,900 173..74 2 1,430173-174 42 51,300 158-'74 13 7,958158-174 28o 261,185
1
0
1
900
0
900
SHIMER
8o
81
59574
73,131
77,550
59,950498,809
171-172
'72-173.73.174
158-174
'72-173173./74
158-174
QUINCY SPERTUS171-172 991 973,779 '72-173 2 889
'72-'73 969 975,821 173-174
173-174757 823,65o 158-174 2 889
'58.174 5,584 5,390,889
TRINITY
ROCKFORD 171.'72 149 152,674171-172 226 220,392 '72 -'73 172 177,124
'72-'73 241 234,614 '73-174 169 181,875173-174 207 234,450 158-174 950 962,690158-'74 1,546 1,439,412
TRINITY CHRISTIANROOSEVELT 171.172 118 121,427171-172 1,138 1,340,145 172-173 125 125,605'72-173 1,310 1,785,430 173 -174 123 134,400173.174 1,297 1,818,15o '58_174 806 785,724158-174 6,510 7,702,717
UNIV. OF CHGOROSARY 171..172 342 361,621
171'172298 291,828 '72-173 371 414,251
'72-'73 360 364,489 '73-174 376 450,750173.174 359 397,850 '58 -'74 4,928 4,283,903158.174 2,383 2,173,468
14
# AWDS
MONETARY AWARDS BY
DOLLARS
INSTITUTION (CONT.)
AWDS DOLLARS
KENDALLVANDERCOOK
171-'72 27 26,856 171.172 151 153,765172-'73 31 34,650 172.073 166 180,255173-174 34 37,125 '73-'74 147 175,815158-17 197 178,250 158-174 941 978,212
WHEATON LINCOLN171.172 188 185,528 171-172 109 105,192'72-'73 202 220,108 '72 -'73 131 130,365173-174 200 234,800 173.174 169 181,975'58-174 1,913 1,755,618 158-174 631 621,642
DISCONT. PRIV. 4-VA MACCORMAC
'71-172 93 82,080'...ARTHAGE 139 71,310 172-173 131 137,488158-174 173.174 10I_ 114,050
158-'74 519 466,953CHICAGO TECH.158-174 2 870 MALLINCKRODT
171./72 6 3,094MARYKNOLL 172-173 6 3,295158.174 15 11,181 173.174
5 3,450158-174 17 9,839
ST. DOMINIC
.161 118,650 ROBERT MORRISt58.174
TOLENTINE
17
12
50
12,072
9,675
39,305
'72-'73t73.174
158.174
SPRINGrIELD
196
149
96
901
202,959
155,550106,800
929,429
'71.'72
'72-'73173.174 (cLosED)
158.174
171.172 197 164,409ALL PRIV. 4-yR 172-173 184 148,473171-172 24,60o 24,862,845 173.174 166 131,700172-'73 26,701 28,630,247 158-174 1,163 839,818173.t74 26,349 30,082,795158-174 172,769 167,771,070 DISCONT. PRIV. 2-YR
Pap,. 2-YR MONTICELLO
158.174 4o 33,775CENTRAL YMCA
171-172
158.174
385
818
1,241
2,920
367,810
869,892
1,445,050
3,117,231
ST. BIDE
39 13,060158.174
WINSTON CHURCHILL
158.174 157 148,250PELICIAN171.172 10 5,868 ALL Pape. 2-Ya
'72-'73 12 6,390 171-172 1047, 1,085,175173.174 14 8,900 1,597 1,631,708158.174 58 32,893 173.174
1,939 2,167,740
158.174 7,386 7,211,101
15
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION (CONT.)
Awos DOLLARS # AWDS' DOLLARS
HOSP. $CH. NURS. ALLIED HEALTH GRAHAM, CANTON(FIRST AWARDS, 1972 -73) 172*173 21 17,863
173.t74 23 18,525AuGusrANA CHICAGO I58174 44 36,388'72..173 9 3,609173.174 22 11,325 ILL. MASONIC, CHGO158_174
31 14,934 172173 9 4,960173-'74 8 4,775BILLINGS, CHGO RESP. THER. 158..174 17 9.735173.'74
2 boo158.'74 2 boo LAKE VIEW MEM. , DANVILLE
172173 13 2,966BLESSING QUINCY 173.174
11 1,900'72 -'73 13 3,267 158-174 24 4,866173-174 15 4,02558 174 28 7,292 LUTH. GEN. & DEAC. PK RIDGE
'72-'73 21 9,950COOK COUNTY, CHGO 173.174 22 16,825'72 -'73 67 20,695 153.174 43 26,775'73-'74 69 23,725153.174 136 44,420 LUTH. OEN. & CEAC. MED. TECH.
'73-'74 1 210COOK CNTY INHAL. THER. 158..174 1 210'73-174158.174
COOK CNTY RAD. TECH.
1
1
10
10
425
425
2,500
2,500
LOTHERANA MOLINE
40
43
83
35,400
37,225
72,625
'72-'73
'73-'74158-174173.174
158.174
LUTHERAN, MOLINE RAO. TECH.COPLEY MEM., AURORA 172173 1 40'72-'73 15 7,980 173-'74 0 0173.174
33 15,650 158-174 1 40'58-174 48 23,630
LUTHERAN, MOLINE RESP. THER.DECATUR MEN., DECATUR 172-173 3 1,013172-173 25 7,775 173_174 4 2,050173-174 43 16,200 158-'74 7 3,063158.174 68 23,975
MEMORIAL, SPRINGFIELDEVANGELICAL, OAK LAWN
1723:17
21 6,437172-173 18 8,410
1 17 35 12,575'73-174 41 26,400 158.174 56 19,012'58-174 59 34,810
MENNONITE BLOOMINGTONEVANSTON HsqL EVANSTON 172173 43 43,068'72-'73 25 10,925 173-174 55 48,70o173.174 47 26,525 ,58...t74
98 91,788158-174 72 37,450
METH. OF CENT. ILL., PEORIAFREEPORT MEM., FREEPORT 172173 15 4,708172-'73 14 3,990 173-174 29 8,950173-174 26 7.275 158-174 44 13,658158-174 40 11,265
18
17
MONETARY AWARDS BY
# AWDS DOLLARS
INSTITUTION (CONT.)
IY Awos DOLLARS
MICHAEL REESE, CHGO ST. FRANCIS, PEORIA172.173 23 4,620 172-173 16 6,558173_174 4o 8,25o 173-174 44 18,800158.174 63 12,870 158-174 6o 25,358
MOLINE PUDLICLJLIOLINE ST. JOHN'S, SPFLD172173 16 7,375 172-173 46 24,669173-174 25 11,850 173 -174 85 66,85o158_174 41 19,225 158.174 131 91,519
PASSAVANT Mem., JACKSONVILLE ST. JOHN'S MED. TECH.172-173 33 19,676 '73-'74 1 215173.174 46 29,795 158.174
1 .215158-174 79 49,471
ST. JOSEPH JOLIETRAVENSWOOD, CHGO 172-173 17 6,825'72-'73 31 20,305 173.174
33 13,25o173_174 46 38,775 158-174 5o 20,075158_17477 59,080
ST. MARY NAZARETH, CHGOROCK ISLAND FRANCISCAN,_ R. f. 172-173 22 17,478172-173 11 6,690 173-'74 38 28,925'73-'74 24 16,280 158.174 6o 46,403158-174 35 22,970
S. CHGO COMMUNITY, CHGOROCKFORD MEM., ROCKFORD 172-173 22 7,869'72-'73 21 10,273 '73-'74 37 13,975173-174 40 20,720 158-174 59 21,844158_174 61 30,993
SWEDISH- AMER., ROCKFORORUSH-PRES.-ST. LUKE'S. CHGO 172173 31 10,918'73-'74 16 20,400 173-'74
33 14,950t58-174 16 20,400 158-174 64 25,868
RUSH - ALLIED HEALTH CHGO WESLEY - PASSAVANT, CHGO*173-174 1 1,200 172-173 61 20,327158-174 1 1,200 173.174 66 28,870
158-174 127 49,197ST. ANNE'S, CHGO
'72-'73 22 8,136' W. SUBURBAN, OAK PARK173-174 38 20,475 172-173 16 6,430158-f74 6o 28,611 173.174 18 7,970
158-174 34 14,400ST. ANTHONY, ROCKFORD
'72..173 23 11,893 ALL HSN'S ALLIED HEALTH173-'74 26 17,760 172-173 823 406,533158.1,74 49 29,653 173.174 1,217 685,305
158.174 2,040 1,091,838ST. FRANCIS, EVANSTON
'72-'73 35 21,527 ALL PRIV. INSTITUTIONS173-'74 40 26,810 171_172
25,747 25,948,020'58-'74 75 48.337 172-173 29,121 30,668,488
173..1/4 29,525 32,943,040'INCLUDES J. WARD THORNE, 172./73 '58.174 182,215 1761081,208
PUBLIC 4-YEAR # AWDS
MONETARY AWARDS BY
DOLLARS
INSTITUTION (CONT.)
# AWDS DOLLARS
CHICAGO STATE
854
1,304
1,604
4,693
355,256
880,009
1,000,230
2,475,855
SIU DENTAL-EOWS
2
2
MED. SCI.
1,830
1,83o
171-'72
172-'73173-174
158-174
173-174
/58-'74
u. or ILL.- Assoc.
171-'72 18 8,129EASTERN '72 -'73 32 23,222171.172 1,785 943,399 173-174 34 23,910172-173
1,979 1,202,660 158-174 110 63,162173_174 1,885 1,053,065w158_174 10,185 4,748,116 U. OF ILL.-CIRCLE CAMPUS
171-172 3,585 1,629,049GOVERNOR'S STATE
'72-'73 4,728 2,703,485171-172 68 21,428 '73-174 4,762 2,767,840172-f73 169 88,073 158-174 20,633 9,661,587173-174 196 98,670'58-174 433 208,171 U. or ILL.-DENT. ASSIST.
171-172 2 920ILLINOIS STATE '72-'73 8 5,280171-172 3,007 1,415,1'86 173-'74 5 3,300'72-'73 3,987 2,118,801 '58-'74 19 10,770173-174 4,417 2,441,680158_174 18,432 8,038,066 u. or ILL.-DENTISTRY
171-172 19 13,368NORTHEASTERN
'72-'73 32 23,058171-172 865 348,010 173-174 33 33,680172-173 ,2201,220 742 ,953 158-174 155 98,149173-174 1,484 828,100158-'74 4,519 2,185,564 U. OF ILL.-MEDICINE
171_172 2 1,811NORTHERN
'72-'73 6 4,978171-172 3,520 1,693,066 173-174 2 1,250172-173 3,749 1,948,192 158-174 107 49,206,73_t74 3,636 2,003,010158-'74 21,559 8,847,799 u. or ILL. - NURSING
171-172 75 36,195SANGAMON STATE 172-173 128 77,024'71 -'72 98 41,480 173_174 161 100,900172-173 150 72,821 '58-174 572 282,247173_174 183 92,500158_174 471 219,319 u. of ILL. PHARMACY
171-172 105 51,580SIU - CARBONDALE '72-'73 142 92,926171-172 3,102 1,550,283 173-'74 152 97,66o172-173 3,987 2,286,294 158-174 712 345,380173_174
3,850 2,171,930'58=174 19,510 8,696,644 U. or ILL...URIANA
171-172 3,977 1,849,171slu-cowARosvILLE '72-'73 5,425 3,217,601171-172 1,682 812,675 '73-'74 5,289 3,125,000172-173 2,099 1,250,964 '58 -'74 33,465 13,709,562173_174 2,050 1,221,130'58-174 8,313 4,143,635
18
19
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION (CONT.)
I Awos DOLLARS I AWDS1 ------
WESTERN CHGO CITY-MALCOLM X
DOLLARS
171.172
172-173173_174
158-174
DISCONT. PUBLIC 4-YR
2,023
2,715
2,893
12,802
830,584
1,366,569
1,442,990
5,151,951
171-172
'72-'73173.174
167-174
CHGO CITY- MAYFAIR
95141
263
56o
3,800
4,853
9.33518,988
171-172 35 1.789SIU -ALTON 172-t73 44 1,580158.'74 22 3,687 173.174
- , L'67-174
98
23o
3,46o
9,225
SIU-E. Sr. Louis
158-174 9 1,046 CHGO CITY-OLIVE/HARVEY
171-172 59 2,100
ALL PUBLIC 4-,1,B 172-173 50 2,020171.172 24,787 11,601,889 173 -174 183 6,490172-173 31,863 18,107,281 167-174 396 14,126
'73-'74 32,638 18,508,675 t158_174 156,726 68,944,118 CHGO CITY- SOUTHWEST
171-172 54 2,e56
PUBLIC 2 -YR 172-173 56 1,940173-174 8o 2,820
BELLEVILLE 167-174 288 11,567
171-172 216 39,255
'72-'73 301 56,741 CHGO CITY-WRIGHT173.174 348 83,090 +71-172 78 2,900158-174 1,203 241,634 172 -173 116 4,130
'73-'74 107 3,780
BLACK HAWK-EAST 167-174 477 15,745171.172 55 19,244
'72-'73 76 28,853 DANVILLE173-174 91 36,090 171-172 167 41,417
158-174 313 104,825 172-173 204 52,041
'73-'74 231 60,360BLACK HAWK-MOLINE 158-174 853 212,143171.172 407 131,078
172-173 556 179,088 DECATUR
'73-'74 588 200,310 172-173 53 12,460158_174 2,070 631,537 '73-174 71 17,755
158-174 124 30,215
CHGO CITY-ALL CAMPUSES'
158-167 22 1,103 DUPAGE
171 -172 292 106,779
CH00 CITY-KENNEDY/KING '72-173 372 142,152
171.172 43 1,647 173-'74 385 147,520
172-173 102 3,560 158.174 1,440 506,667173 -174 48o 16,990t67_174 738 24,599 ELGIN
171 -172 127 36,083
CHGO CI1Y..L009 172.173 205 57,090
171 -172 107 4,051 173-174 159 43,400
172-173 95 3,280 158-174 698 190,901
'73-'74 218 7,745167-174 589 19,284 *FIGURES UNAVAILABLE BY SEPARATE CAMPUSES
FOR 1958-59 THROUGH 1966 -67
# AWDS
MONETARY AWARDS BY
DOLLARS
INSTITUTION (CONT.)
# AwDS DOLLARS
HARPER KASKASKIA
'71-'72 183 57,814 '71-'72 179 28,921
'72-'73 237 78,135 172-173 197 33,249
'73-'74 233 89,840 '73-'74 213 36,070
158_,74 868 279,339 158_174 86o 132,953
HIGHLAND KISHWAUKEE
'71-172 111 27,437 '71 -'72 79 19,066
172-173 114 29,311 '72-'73 105 33,867
'73-174 142 45,080 173-'74 143 47,320
'58_174 584 169,352 158-174 418 121,246
ILLINOIS CENTRAL LAKE COUNTY
171_172 285 53,104 '71-'72 137 33,137
172-173 326 62,609 172-173 152 38,530
'73-174 304 56,810 173-174 140 39,85o
158_174 1,277 235,662 158-174 555 142,693
ILL. EAST.-LINCOLN TRAIL LAKE LAND
'71-'72 31 2,624 '71-'72 312 60,479
'72-'73 31 2,755 172-173 390 80,318
'73-'74 44 4,165 '73-'74 4o6 77,56o
'58 -'711 115 10,328 158_174 1,546 303,429
ILL. EA',T.-DLNEY CENT.
9,150
10,216
9,890
46,770
LEWIS-CLARK
86
202
299
598
12,647
58,736
85,320
157,928
'71-'72 99'72-173 120
173-174 111
'58_'74 476
171-172
'72 -'73
'73_174
158-174
ILL. EAST.-WABASH VALLEY LINCOLN LAND
1 71- '72 45 3,905 171-,72 273 52,115
'72-'73 50 4,411 '72 -'73 297 69,898
'73_174 61 5,500 '73-'74 274 64,385
158-174 237 23,819 158-14 1,141 245,553
ILLINOIS VALLEY LOGAN
'71-172 192 25,728 '71 -'72 73 5,361
172-173 202 35,547 '72-'73 101 8,435
'73_174 209 42,740 '73-'74 143 11,375, 58- , (3 y66 156,482 '58 -'T4 409 31,666
JOLIET MCHENRY
'71-172 254 76,819 '71-'72 61 19,804
172-'73 252 76,009 172-173 68 22,506
'73-174 281 85,080 '73-'74 79 26,300
'58_,74 1,233 344,596 158-174 285 93,916
KANKAKEE MORAINE VALLEY
'71-172 108 32,356 '71 -'72 160 45,541
172-173 144 43,073 '72-'73 277 77,938
'73-'74 142 43,390 173-174 251 66,005
158-174 563 171,886 ' 58_ ' 7)4 889 231,369
20
21
MONETARY AWARDS BY INSTITUTION (CONT.)
MORTON
# AWDS DOLLARS
SPOON RIVER
# ANDS DOLLARS
s
171-172 86 27,811 171-172 88 17,693172-173 104 32,010 t72_173 102 27,726173-174 109 32,775 '73-'74 8o 21,350158-174 439 113,819 158-074 633 147,552
OAKTON. STATE COMMUNITY171.172 32 8,958 '71-'72 9 69
172.173 66 18,286 '72 -'73 10 155173_174 8o 23,245 173.174 10 175
158-174 187 52,975 158-174 32 417
PARKLAND THORNTON
171-172 231 76,616171'172
313 136,546
172-'73 371 121,752 172-173 53o 247,573173-174 548 213,730 173-174 615 288,510
158-174 1,462 492,281 158-174 1,938 787,442
PRAIRIE STATE TRITON
171.172 179 68,771 171-172 209 49,431
'72_173234 89,058 172-173 321 91,073
'73-'74 238 91,230 '73-'74 367 99,610
158-174 912 329,991 158-174 1,130 288,386
RENO LAKE WAUBONSEE
171-172 37 1,162 171-172 94 21,355
172-173 81 8,104 116 27,597173-174 99 9,820 :7723::77134 131 30,965
158-174 288 21,168 158-'74 485 114,136
ROCK VALLEY ALL PUBLIC 2-YR
171-172 261 108,051 171'172 6,359 1,573,381
172-173 462 187,102 '72 -'73 8,604 2,315,357173-174 457 189,875 173-174 10,083 2,624,015
158-174 1,625 621,483 158.174 34,367 8,434,940
SANOESURG ALL PUBLIC
171-172 161 30,078 171-172 31,146 13,175,271
172-173 203 45,097 172-'73 40,467 20,422,638
'73-'74 183 39,190 173-174 42,721 21,132,690158_174 765 154,701 158-174 191,093 77,379,058
SAUK VALLEY ALL 4-YR
'71 -'72 177 57,984 171_172 49,387 36,464,734172_173 240 87,945 172-173 58,564 46,737,528173-174 24o 88,750 173-174 58,987 48,591,470
158-174 939 322,242 158_174 329,495 236,715,188
SHAWNEE ALL 2-YR (INCL HSWAHI171.172 46 7,893 171_172 7,506 2,658,556
172-173 69 11,375 172-'73 11,024 4,353,597173.174 65 11
r 505 173.174 13,259 5,484,260
158_174 25o 34,553 158_174 43,813 16,745,078
SOUTHEASTERN ALL INSTITUTIONS
171-172
'72-'73+73.'74
158-v74
31
5984
261
1,899
5,1757,460
22,189
171.172
172.173173.1714
158-174
56,89369,588
72,246
373,308
39,123,290
51,091,125
54,075.730253,463,266
AN ANALYSIS BY INSTITUTION RELATING TO ENROLLMENT, COLLEGE COSTS, AND COLLEGE CHOICE
FALL 173 TOTAL TOTALUNDERGRAD TOTAL ISSC % OF ENROLLED % OF TUITION COLLEGEFULL-TIME APPLICANTS FALL ISSC AWARD FALL & FEES 804.4TEQUIVALENT FOR 173-174 1973 WINNERS 1973 1974-75 1974_75
INSTITUTION ENROLLMENT ACAD. YEAR FTE 1973.74 FTE ACAD. YR* ACAD. YR*PRIV. 4-YR
AFRO -SPACE 73 13 17,8 6 8.2. $ 800 $ 2,700AMER. CONS. MUSIC 230 92 4o.o 73 31.7 1,292 3,762ART INSTITUTE 782 487 62.3 360 46,o 2,174 4,074AUGUSTANA 2,106 1,683 79.9 1,163 55.2 2,238 4,178AURORA 669 439 65.6 341 51.0 2,150
14, 1XBARAT 534 190 35.6 161 30.1 1,900 4
BLACKBURN 556 377 67.8 295 53.1 7,615 3,515BRADLEY 44,218 2,165 51.3 1,600 37.9 2,200 4,040CHGO Cot.. or OsTEoP. Pico. 35 4 11.4 1 2.9 2,500 14,400
CHGO CONS. OF Music 101 59 58.4 50 49.5 7,400 3,300CHGO MED./UNIV. HEALTH SCI. 67 41 61,2 14 20.9
ii048 2,948CHGO. NAT. COL. OF NAPRAP. 20 5 25.0 4 20,0 360 2,260COLUMBIA 838 461 55.0 368 43.9 1,648 3,548CONCORDIA 1,040 235 22.6 162 15.6 1,053 2,798DELOUROES 44 0 -- 0 -- 704 2,604DEPAUL 4,807 3,343 69.5 2,690 56.o 2,010 4,240ELMHURST 1,274 986 77.4 814 63.9 2,48o 4,490
EUREKA 421 326 77.4 246 58.4 1,965 3,965GEORGE WILLIAMS 588 370 62.9 268 45.6 2,043
349GREENVILLE 744 389 52.3 300 40.3 1,760 3,621(7/
HEBREW THEOLOGICAL
ILL. BENEDICTINE79
987
6
737
7.6
74,73
515
3.8
52.2
1,170
1,965 3 t3393, 9ILLINOIS COLLEGE 688 441 64,1 334 48.5 7,65o 3,30o
ILL. COL, OPTOMETRY 52 29 55.8 14 26.9 2,339 4,549
ILL. COL. PODIATRIC MED. 41 26 63.4 14 34.1 3,000 4,900ILL. INSTITUTE OF TECH, 1,958 1,116 57.0 812 41.5 2,300 4,350
ILLINOIS WESLEYAN 1,671 1,156 69.2 929 55.6 2,814 4,804
JUDSON 333 147 44.1 120 36.0 2,625 4,930
KNOX 1,167 717 61.4 554 47.5 3,195
11::9977;LAKE FOREST 991 167 16.9 135 13.6 3,129
LEWIS 2,155 1,468 68.1 1,102 51.1 1,560 3,685LINCOLN CHRISTIAN 597 182 30.5 139 23.3 1,288 2,782LOYOLA 6,631 4,187 63.1 3,220 48.6 1,970 4,045MACMURRAY 793 544 68.6 4o8 51.5 2,690 4,670MCKENOREE 525 363 69.1 277 52.8 1,970 3,950MILLIKIN 1,353 902 66.7 693 51.2 2,598 4,468
MONMOUTH 910 463 50.9 380 41.8 2,8252 4,650MUNDELEIN 791 521 65.9 4/8 52.8 1,865 3,771NAT. COL. CHIROPRACTIC 54 28 51.9 17 31.5 1,190 3,090
NAT. COL. EDUC. 716 446 62.3 353 49.3 2,40o 4,580
NORTH CENTRAL 783 516 65.9 370 47.3 2,298 4,048
NORTH PARK 1,090 479 43.9 343 31.5 2,335 4,33o
NORTHWESTERN 7,495 1,722 23.0 1,303 17.4 3,180 5,355OLIVET NAZARENE 1,566 446 28.5 334 21.3 1,458 3,158PARKS 744 165 22.2 127 17.1 1,534 4,441
PRINCIPIA 820 52 6.3 42 5.1 2,932 5,196
*As OF MARCH 21, 1974
22
AN ANALYSIS BY INSTITUTION RELATING TO ENROLLMENT, COLLEGE COSTS, AND COLLEGE CHOICE (CONT.)
INSTITUTION
FALL 173
UNOERGRAo
FULL-TIME
EQUIVALENT
ENROLLMENT
TOTAL ISSC
APPLICANTS
FOR '73-'74
ACAD. YEAR
% OF
FALL
1973
FTE
ENROLLED
ISSC AWARD
WINNERS
1913-74
% OF
FALL
1973FTE
TOTAL
TUITION
& FEES
1974-75ACAD. YR
TOTAL
COLLEGE
BUDGET
1974.75
ACAD. YR
PRIV. 4-YR (CONT.)
QUINCY 1,446 991 68.5 757 52.4 $ 1,632 $ 3,572
ROCKFORD 602 276 45.8 207 34.4 2,20,1 4,050
ROOSEVELT 3,053 1,767 57.9 1,297 42.5 2,006 4,096
ROSARY 719 466 64.8 359 49,9 1,900 3,900
RUSH MEDICAL 52 10 19.2 4 7.7 2,955 4,855
ST. FRANCIS 573 393 68.6 288 50.3 1,780 3,68o
ST. XAVIER 888 727 81.9 602 67.8 1,95o 3,840
SHERWOOD 46 7 15.2 2 4.3 963 3,439
SHIMER 209 86 41.1 59 28.2 2,480 4,320
SPERTUS 214 1 5 0 -- 970 2,87o
TRINITY 687 212 30.9 169 24.6 2,024 3,884
TRINITY CHRISTIAN 292. 188 64.4 123 42,1 1,650 3,450
UNIV. or CHICAGO 2,036 529 26.0 376 18.5 2,896 5,211
VANDERCOJK 97 43 44,3 34 35.1 1,495 3,295
WHEATON 1,848 274 14.8 200 10.8 2,241 4,186
ALL PRIV. 4-YEAR 66,899 34,661 51.8 26,349 39.4
PRIV. 2-YEAR
CENTRAL YMCA 2,193 1,522 69.4 1,241 56.6 1,340 3,240
FELICIAN 75 17 22.7 14 18.7 750 2,650
KENDALL 454 184 40.5 147 32.4 2,200 4,200
LINCOLN 540 213 39.4 169 31.3 2,300 3,990
MACCORMAC 135 168 124,4 101 74.8 1,650 3,550
MALLiNCKROOT 61 8 13.1 5 8.2 900 2,800
ROBERT MORRIS 144 147 102.1 96 66.7 1,950 4,005
SPRINGFIELO 493 221 44.8 166 33.7 1,320 3,22o
ALL PRIV. 2-YEAR 4,095 2,48o 6o.6 1,939 47.4 ---
ALL PRIV. 2-& 4-YEAR 70,994 37,141 52.3 28,288 39.8 --- ---
PUEN.IC 4-YEAR
CHICAGO STATE 3,774 2,471 65.5 1,604 42.5 484 2,384
EASTERN ILLINOIS 7,266 2,831 39.0 1,885 25.9 599 2,374
GOVERNOR'S STATE 935 276 29.5 196 21.0 450 2,350
ILLINOIS STATE 15,202 6,534 43.0 4,417 29.1 611 2,601
NORTHEASTERN ILLINOIS 4,881 2,059 42.2 1,484 30.4 476 2,376
NORTHERN ILLINOIS 14,801 5,497 37.1 3,636 24.6 604 2,604
SANGAMON STATE 1,255 251 20.0 183 14.6 466 2,366
SIU-CARBONOALE 15,742 6,085 38.7 3,850 24.5 579 2,514
slu-EowARosvILLE 8,105 2,912 35.(. 2,052 25.3 590 2,490
U. OF ILL.-CIRCLE 16,441 6,829 41.5 4,762 29.0 696 2,596
U. OF ILL.-PROFESSIONAL 1,495 718 48.0 387 25.9 _.. - --
u. or ILL.-URBANA 25,202 9,122 36.2 5,289 21.0 686 2,626
WESTERN ILLINOIS 13,052 4,613 35.3 2,893 22.2 561 2,364
ALL PUBLIC 4-YEAR 128,151 50,198 39.2 32,638 25.5
23
AN ANALYSIS BY INSTITUTION RELATING TO ENROLLMENT, COLLEGE COSTS, AND COLLEGE CHOICE (CONT.)
INSTITUTION
FALL 173
UNDERGRAO
FULL-TIME
EQUIVALENT
ENROLLMENT
TOTAL ISSC
PLICANTS
FOR 173-174
ACAD. YEAR
% OF
FALL
1973
FTE
ENROLLED
ISSC AWARD
WINNERS
1973-74
% OF
FALL
1973
FTE
TOTAL
TUITION
& FEES
1974-75
ACAD. YR
TOTAL
COLLEGE
BUDGET
1974-75
ACAD, YRPUBLIC 2-YEAR
BELLEVILLE 2,978 531 17.8 348 11.7 $ 286 $ 2,186BLACK HAWK 3,470 976 28.1 679 19.6 432 2,332CHGO CITY COLLEGES 24,084 2,761 11.5 1,429 5.9 172 2,072DANVILLE 1,466 359 24.5 231 15.8 286 2,186DECATUR, COM. COL. OF 758 120 15.8 71 9.4 307 2,208OuPAcc, COL. OF 3,965 578 14.6 385 9.7 480' 2,380ELGIN 1,805 279 15.5 159 8.8 340 2,240HARPER, Wm, R. 5,285 391 7.4 233 4.4 471 2,371HIGHLAND 811 219 27.o 142 17.5 344 1,244ILLINOIS CENTRAL 5,325 549 10.3 304 5.7 224
2ILL. EAST. JR. COLLEGES 1,721 327 19.0 216 12.6 93 1:14ILLINOIS VALLEY 1,431 302 21,1 209 14.6 212 2,112JOLIET 2,817 463 16.4 281 10.0 355 2,255KANKAKEE 882 236 26.8 142 16.1 384 2,284KASKASKIA 1,094 319 29.2 213 19.5 182 2,083KISHWAUKEE 1,075 186 1743 143 13.3 374 2,274LAKE COUNTY 2,336 229 9.8 140 6.o 344 2,442
LAKE LAND, 1,666 618 37.1 406 24.4 207 2,107LEWIS-CLARK 1,630 422 25.9 299 18.3 344
11LINCOLN LAND 2,715 389 14.3 274 10.1 279 21.'9LOGAN, JOHN A. 1,153 215 18.6 143 12.4 84 1,984MCHENRY 717 115 16.0 79 11.0 400 2,300MORAINE VALLEY 3,187 444 13.9 251 7.9 32o 2,220MORTON
OAKTON
1,217
2,286157128
12.9
5.6
109
8o
9.o
3.5
382-1,.1.03
2,282
2,240PARKLAND 2,317 747 32.2 548 23.7 444 2,344
PRAIRIE STATE 1,970 33o 16.8 238 12.1 46o 2,360REND LAKE 754 136 18.0 99 13.1 100 2,000ROCK VALLEY 2,857 693 24.3 457 16.0 512 2,412SANDBURG, CARL 848 (..,... 31.8 183 21.6 257 2,157
SAUK VALLEY 1,181 309 26.2 24o 20.3 448 2,348SHAWNEE 433 101 23.3 65 15.0 192 2,092SOUTHEASTERN 634 130 20.5 84 13.. 96 1,996
SPOON RIVER 498 too 28.1 80 16.1 288 2,188;STATE COMMUNITY 1,724 14 .8 10 .6 54 1,954
/THORNTON 2,171 928 42.7 615 28.3 560 2,460)
',Byromi
,---...._------WAUBONSEE
6,163
1,215
630
212
10.2
17.4
367
131
6.o
10.8372276
2,272
2,176
ALL PUBLIC 2-YEAR 98,639 15,953 16.2 10,083 10.2 - --
ALL PUBLIC 2-ac 4 -YEAR 226,790 66,151 29.2 42,721 18.8 ..-
ALL 2-YEAR 102,734 18,433 17.9 12,022 11.7 - --
ALL 4 -YEAR 195,050 84,859 43.5 58,987 30.2 -.-
GRAND TOTAL* 297,784 103,292 34.7 71,009 23.8 ... ...
*NOT INCLUDING HOSPITAL SCHOOLS OF NURSING
24
A STUDY OF INCREASE IN COLLEGE COSTS'
FOR STUDENTS AT ISSC APPROVED ILLINOIS COLLEGES
1958 1959
MEAN
BY TYPE
1966-1967
MEAN
INSTITUTION
1969-1970
MEAN
1974-1975
MEAN
% TUIT.
& FEES
% COLL.
COSTSMEAN TOTAL MEAN TOTAL MEAN TOTAL MEAN TOTAL INCREASE INCREASE
TUITION COLLEGE TUITION COLLEGE TUITION COLLEGE TUITION COLLEGE SINCE SINCETYPE INST. & FEES COSTS & FEES COSTS & FEES COSTS & FEES COSTS '58-'59 '58-'59
ALL $ 542 $ 1655 $ 906 $ 2293 $ 1237 $ 280 $ 1290 $ 3232 138.01% 95.29%PRIVATE 4-YR. 655 1807 1168 2561 1550 3167 2026 4001 209.31% 121.42%PUBLIC 4-YR. 155 1260 244 1579 338 1900 581 2510 274.83% 99.21%PRIVATE 2-YR. 559 1886 950 2 733 1304 3031 1494 3379 167.26% 79.16%
PUBLIC 2-YR.** 428 1316 467 1689 702 2284 281 2181
*TOTAL COLLEGE COST FIGURES INCLUDE TUITION & FEES & AVG. BOARD & ROOM, BOOKS, & PERSONAL/MISC. EXPENSES
**OUT-OISTRICT COSTS FOR 158-159, 066-'67, AND 169-170; IN-DISTRICT COSTS FOR 174-t75
TYPE INSTITUTION
MEAN WEIGHTED 1974-75 TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES*
BY TYPE INSTITUTION
MEAN
WEIGHTED 174_175
TUITION & FEES
ESTIMATED MEAN
174-175
!SSC AWARD**
PERCENTAGE MEAN ISSC
AWARD TO MEAN
WEIGHTED
TUITION & FEES
PRIVATE 2-YEAR $ 1,413 $ 1,118 79.1PRIVATE 4-YEAR 2,138 1,142 53.4HOSPIT..L SCHLS OF NURSING 707 560 79.2ALL PRIVATE 2,033 1,116 54.9
PUBLIC 2-YEAR 331 26o 78.5
PUBLIC 4-YEAR 612 567 92.6
ALL PUBLIC 546 495 90.7
ALL INSTITUTIONS $ 1,152 $ 748 64.9
*WEIGHTED BY NUMBER OF ENROLLED 1973-74 ISSC MONETARY AWARD WINNERS AND ANNOUNCED (AS OF 2/1/74)
TUITION AND FEES FOR 1974.75 FOR EACH INSTITUTION
**ASSUMES $1,300 MAXIMUM, NOT TO EXCEED TUITION AND FEES
25
A STUDY OF NONPUBLIC TUITION AND FEES AND ISSC MAXIMUM AWARDS 1958-59 TO 1973-74
A COMPARISON OF MEAN TUITION -AND MANDATORY FEE CHARGES OF MAJOR ILLINOIS*
NONPUBLIC INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING AND THE ISSC MAXIMUM AWARD
AC ADEM IC
YE AR
,58_159
i65-,66
167-168
168-,69
'69 -'7o
170_171
171-172
!72-173
173-,74
MEAN WEIGHTED (NO. OF ENROLLED
MONETARY AWARDS) TUITION & FEES
$730
$ 1,062
$ 1,245
1,431
$ 1,543
$ 1,682
$ 1,887
$ 1,990
$ 2,109
$ 2,213
UNWEIGHTED MEAN TUITION & FEES
$736
$ 1,088
$ 1,275
1,478
$ 1,594
$ 1,753
$ 1,953
$ 2,095
$ 2,216
$ 2,350
ISSC MAXIMUM
$600
$600
$75o
$ 1,000
$ 1,100
$ 1,200
$ 1,200
$ 1,200
$ 1,200
$ 1,300
PERCENTAGE - ISSC MAXIMUM TO:
WEIGHTED MEAN
82%
56%
60%
70%
71%
71%
64%
60%
57%
59%
UNWEIGHTED MEAN
82%
55%
59%
68%
69%
68%
61%
57%
54%
55%
*LOYOLA - DEPAUL - BRADLEY - NORTHWESTERN -
- AUGUSTANA - QUINCY - ILLINOIS WEsLEYAN -
MULLIKIN - KNOX - UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO - ILLINOIS BENEDICTINE - MACMURRAY - NORTH CENTRAL - ELMHURST
AWARD YEAP
1958-59 TO 1963-64
1964-65 TO 1965-66
1966-67 TO 1967-68
1968-1969
1969-70 To 1972-73
1973-1974
MONETARY AWARD MAXIMUMS
PERCENTAGES OF MONETARY AWARD WINNERS W:TH PARTIAL AND MAXIMUM AWARDS
AWARD YEARS 1969-70, 1971-72, AND 1973-74
MAXIMUM AWARD - NOT TO EXCEED
$600 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
$750 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
$1,000 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
$1,100 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
$1,200 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
$1,300 OR TUITION AND MANDATORY FEES
PARTIAL AWARDS
MAXIMUM AWARD IF TUITION & FEES
IS LESS THAN LEGAL MAXIMUM
MAXIMUM LEGAL AWARD
($1200 IN 169-170 AND '71 -'72;
$1300 IN 173-174)
1969
-70
1971-72
1973-74
16.6
18.2
20.0
49.7
50-3
52.0
33.7
31.5
28.o
CLASS STANDING OF ALL 1973 -74 ENROLLED MONETARY AWARD WINNERS
BY TYPE INSTITUTION
OF
OF GRANO % OF
OF
GR4NOTYPE TOTAL TOTAL TYPE TOTAL TOTAL
PRIVATE 2-YEAR PUBLIC 4-YEAR
FRESHMEN 1,169 60.3 FRESHMEN 8,903 27.3
SOPHOMORES 714 36.8 SOPHOMORES 7,492 23.0
JUNIORS 53 2.7 JUNIORS 9,033 27.7
SENIORS 3 .2 SENIORS 7,210 22.0
TOTAL 1,939 2.7 TOTAL 32,638 45.2
PRIVATE 4-YEAR ALL PUBLIC
FRESHMEN 7,686 29.2 FRESHMEN 14,737 34.5
SOPHOMORES 6,490 24.6 SOPHOMORES 11,476 26.9
JUNIORS 6,749 25.6 JUNIORS 9,259 21.6
SENIORS 5,424 20.6 SENIORS 7,249 17.0
TOTAL 26,349 36.5 TOTAL 42,721 59.1
HOSPITAL SCHOOLS ALL 2-YEAR
OF NURSING FRESHMEN 7,556 57.0
FRESHMEN 553 44.7 SOPHOMORES 4,952 37.3
SOPHOMORES 254 20.5 JUNIORS 565 4.3
JUNIORS 286 23.1 SENIORS 186 1.4
SENIORS 144 11.7 TOTAL 13,259 18.4
TOTAL 1,237 1.7
ALL 4-YEAR
ALL PRIVATE FRESHMEN 16,589 28.1
FRESHMEN 9,408 31.9 SOPHOMORES 13,982 23.7
SOPHOMORES 7,458 25.3 JUNIORS 15,782 26.8
JUNIORS 7,088 24.0 SENIORS 12,634 21.4
SENIORS 5,571 18.8 TOTAL 58,987 81.6
TOTAL 29,525 40.9
ALL TYPES
PUBLIC 2-YEAR FRESHMEN 24,145 33.4
FrfgHMEN 5,834 57.9 SOPHOMORES 18,934 26.2
SOPHOMORES 3,984 39.5 JUNIORS 16,347 22.6
JUNIORS 226 2.2 SENIORS 12,820 17,8
SENIORS 39 .4 TOTAL 72,246 100.0
TOTAL 10,083 14.0
27
ZIP CODE AREAS OF ILLINOIS
28
ZIP CODE AREA ANALYSIS - 1972-73 and 1973-74 AWARD YEAR AFFLICANTS FOR MONETARY AWARDS
600
Chicagoland - N. E. Suburbs
1972-73
8,423
31.4
52.0
48.0
3.9
62.2
31.4
6.4
58.1
38.2
3.7
11.5
8.3
1.90
3.34
48.7
$ 14,898
$ 15,236
$ 1,907
2.3
5 26,707
5.3
58-2
1973-74
7,913
28.3
52.7
47.3
5.3
65.0
29.2
5.8
56.4
39.2
4.4
11.1
9.2
1.90
3.36
49.0
$ 15,732
$ 16,240
$ 2,032
2.3
$ 29,809
5.0
57.4
601
Chicagoland - N. W. Suburbs
1972-73
7,698
29.8
53.2
46.8
7.7
66.0
25.7
6.2
58.3
37.7
4.0
16.4
8.1
1.90
3.31
48.4
$ 13,932
$ 14,361
$ 1,582
S.4
$ 23,109
5.7
52.4
1973-74
7.491
24.3
52.6
47,4
9.6
70.0
24.3
5.7
57.9
37.6
4.5
17.2
8.3
1.91
3.33
48.9
$ 14,831
$ 15,413
$ 1,840
2.8
$ 26,983
4.9
56.4
602
Evanston
1972 -73
856
16.7
47.7
52.3
10.3
68.7
21.6
9.7
44.4
50.5
5.1
9.2
13.1
1.84
2.89
50.2
$ 14,048
$ 14,393
$ 1,873
6.2
S 26,387
18.1
59.6
1973-74
842
15.3
43.3
56.5
13.3
77.4
15.9
6.7
43.6
50.4
6.1
11.4
17.0
1.82
2.96
50.8
$ 14,453
$ 15.187
$ 1,894
5.1
$ 28,672
15.3
62.8
603
Oak Park-River Forest
1972-73
852
25.1
52.1
47.9
7.4
74.1
19.5
6.5
47.2
48.6
4.2
7.3
12.6
1.84
3.74
50.6
$ 14.167
$ 14,844
$ 1,610
2.8
$ 25.242
8.7
5.0
1973-74
835
22.6
48.4
51.6
9.3
76.8
18.1
5.2
44.7
50.0
5.3
9.9
10.9
1.88
3.66
50.9
$ 14,954
$ 15,734
$ 1,794
2.9
$ 27,727
7.3
52.5
604
Chicagoland - S. F. Suburbs
1972-73
10.901
23.4
51.9
48.1
5.2
69.4
23.6
7.1
59_4
36.5
4.0
2100
9.3
1.89
3.10
48.7
5 13,361
$ 13,805
$ 1,570
3.9
S 70,955
5.9
50.8
1973-.74
10,680
21.5
51.7
48.3
6.5
71.9
22.4
5.7
58.7
36.9
4.4
20.6
9.7
1.90
3.32
49.1
$ 14,249
$ 14,769
$ 1,696
3.7
$ 23,812
4.9
49-2
605
Chicagoland - S. W. Suburbs
1972-73
.4,318
27.8
54.0
46.0
6.9
68.0
26.3
5.6
53.8
42.3
4.0
12.4
7.9
1.90
3.37
49.0
$ 14,213
$ 14,581
$ 1,737
2.6
$ 24,970
4.8
55.5
1973-74
4,042
26.1
52.9
47.1
9.0
68.6
26.1
5.4
53.3
42.0
4.7
13.2
8.1
1,92
3.38
49.2
$ 15,318
$ 15,777
$ 1.909
2.7
$ 27,745
4.1
54.7
606
Chicago 1972-73
39,663
15.1
48.7
50.9
6.2
79.2
11.9
8.9
49.7
45.4
4.9
8.7
12.8
1.83
3.06
49.9
$ 11,812
$ 12,203
$ 1,354
10.4
$ 19,896
20.9
54.4
1973-74
41,004
12.7
47.1
52.9
7.8
81.5
11.1
7.4
52.3
42.4
5.3
13.9
13.8
1.85
3.09
-0.4
$ 12,873
$ 13,313
$ 1,497
9.4
$ 22,318
18.6
52.4
609
Kankakee Area
1972-73
1,661
22.5
50.4
49.6
9.9
72.9
20.2
7.0
70.0
26.0
4.0
22.9
7.8
1.91
1.12
48.8
$ 11,686
$ 12,183
$ 1,332
6.0
S 22,488
9.6
56.7
1971-74
1,573
20.2
50.1
49.9
10.2
73.9
19.8
6.3
67.1
28.3
4.6
23.1
7.6
1.92
3.06
49.1
$ 12,417
$ 13,098
$ 1,492
4.7
$ 26,154
6.5
55.1
610
Rockford Area
1972-73
2,248
28.7
51.5
48.5
4.9
73.1
19,4
7.5
72.4
22.5
5.1
29.1
7.1
1.91
3.13
48.0
$ 11,387
$ 11,810
$ 1,337
5.5
$ 25,657
7.2
54.7
1973-74
2,115
27.6
48.8
51.2
6.9
73.1
20.6
6.4
71.1
23.0
5.9
29.7
8.2
1.91
3.14
48.5
$ 12,198
$ 12,793
$ 1,496
.5.3
$ 30,395
6.3
55.7
611
Rockford-Loves Park Area
1972-73
1,791
21.0
50.2
49.8
7.8
73.1
19.8
7.1
69.3
26.2
4.5
31.2
7.4
1.91
3.00
48.9
$ 12,524
$ 12,958
$ 1,430
4.7
$ 17,821
6.4
40.7
1973-74
1,763
18.1
50.0
50.0
10.2
77.3
17.0
5.7
69.7
24.5
5.8
32.8
7.9
1.91
3.01
49.1
$ 13,202
5 13,644
$ 1,479
3.6
$ 19,918
4.3
56.3
612
Rock Island Area
1972-73
2,812
22.3
52.9
47.1
8.1
71.4
22.8
5.8
67.1
29.1
3.5
36.0
7.1
1.91
3.07
48.4
$ 12,053
$ 12,473
$ 1,470
4.9
$ 23,097
5.6
50.0
1973-74
2,548
19.9
51.3
48.7
9.2
73.1
21.6
5.2
67.7
27.1
5.2
36.5
6.9
1.93
3.07
48.6
$ 12,942
$ 13,567
$ 1,589
4.6
$ 25,104
5.3
51.1
611
LaSalle Area
1972-73
1,684
29.2
52.1
48.9
3.3
75.8
18.9
5.4
78.9
17.8
3.3
22.5
8.9
1.89
3.09
49.3
$ 10,995
$ 11.4c9
$ 1,25:
4.8
$ 23,372
5.1
50.6
1973-74
1,728
29.1
51.3
48.7
4.1
73.4
20.0
6.6
73.4
21.7
4.9
21.0
8.8
1.91
3.21
49.6
$ 12,047
$ 12,682
$ 1,455
5.3
$ 28,463
5.1
50.8
$ 4,374
$ 4,657
$ 4,299
$ 4,620
$ 5,520
$ 5,571
$ 4,755
5 5.394
$ 4,323
$ 4,021
$ 4,248
$ 4,520
$ 4,825
$ 5,205
$ 4,053
$ 4,194
$ 3,805
$ 4,233
$ 4,007
$ 4,158
$ 3,801
$ 3,990
$ 3,631
$ 4,012
614
Galesburg Area
1972-73
2.273
23.2
52.3
47.7
11.4
75.2
18.6
6.2
66.9
29.0
4.1
21.9
5.7
1.93
2.76
48.2
$ 11,276
$ 11,659
$ 1,364
6_1
$ 23,882
5.7
55_0
$ 3,880
1973-74
2,189
21.7
52.4
47.6
14.2
76.1
18.0
5.9
68.2
27.0
8.9
20.6
6.5
1.93
2.79
48.6
$ 12,338
S 12,820
$ 1,542
5.3
5 27,217
5.8
54.0
S 4,097
615
Peoria Area
1972-73
1.402
28.5
53.4
46.6
7.4
68.0
25.7
6.4
66.8
29.3
3.9
20.1
5.4
1.93
3.00
47.8
$ 12,328
$ 12,773
$ 1,503
3.2
5 23,254
5.6
52.5
S 3,837
1973-74
1,300
27.5
54.0
46.0
8,8
65.9
29.0
5.1
65.4
29.8
4.9
19.7
4.8
1.95
1.07
47.9
$ 13.918
$ 14,330
$ 1,743
3.0
$ 26,069
4.9
51.4
$ 3,901
616
Peoria 1972-73
1,821
24.0
53.5
46.5
10.6
72.5
19.3
8.1
57.1
39.3
3.8
20.2
9.6
1.88
3.16
48,5
$ 12,577
5 11,054
$ 1,511
5$ 19,490
8.4
51.0
$ 4,126
1973 -74
1,657
22.1
55.1
44.9
13.6
75.3
18,2
6.8
56.5
40.0
3.6
19.0
10.0
1.89
3.14
49.1
$ 13,575
$ 14,216
$ 1,661
5.4
S 21,812
7.4
53.0
$ 4.705
617
Bloomington Area
1972-73
1,853
24.1
57.6
42.4
16.2
74.5
18.6
6.9
75,2
20.9
3.9
9.9
6.7
1.91
2.99
48.3
$ 12,003
$ 12,442
$ 1,491
5.0
$ 26,162
6.6
57.0
$ 3,987
1973 -74
2,003
19.9
60.0
40.0
21.3
77.5
17.7
4.8
76.3
20.2
3.5
8.2
7.2
1.92
3.09
48.1
S 13,181
$ 13,813
$ 1,641
2.8
29,521
6.0
57.8
5 4.231
618
Urbana Area North
1972-73
2.707
18.1
52.2
47.8
17.8
70.9
21.8
7.4
87.0
9.5
3.5
23.3
7.4
1.90
3.03
47.8
5 12.329
S 12,763
S 1,498
5.8
5 22,284
9.9
57.1
5 4,142
1973 -74
2,815
14.7
52.3
47.7
21.6
76.8
17.4
5.8
90.9
6.6
2.5
28.9
r 4
1.91
3.06
48.3
$ 12,865
$ 13,430
S 1,499
5.6
$ 21,908
6.4
54.4
$ 4,090
619
Urbana Area South
1972 -73
1.100
21.4
51.8
48.2
12.1
71-8
21.2
2.4
88.1
9.6
7.0
24.9
7.3
1.91
2.80
47.8
$ 11,025
$ 11,492
$ 1,271
5.7
5 20,193
6.1
60.3
5 3,687
1973-74
1.099
19.3
47.9
52.1
14.3
74.9
18.8
6.3
86.0
10.5
3.6
29.0
7.1
1.92
2.78
47.7
$ 11,868
$ 12,330
$ 1,418
5.3
$ 23,546
5.5
57.3
$ 3,642
620
East St. Louis Area North
1972-73
2,932
23_3
50.4
49.6
6.5
75.2
17.9
6.9
81.2
16.0
2.8
14.6
8.5
1.89
2.97
48.7
$ 11,124
$ 11.556
$ 1,277
6.5
$ 19,628
6.5
47.2
$ 4,080
1973-74
2,977
20.4
48.4
51.6
9.3
76.1
18.3
5.6
80.1
16.4
3.5
19.0
8.2
1.91
2.94
49.4
$ 12,165
$ 12,630
$ 1,449
5.9
$ 23,790
6.6
46.1
$ 4,239
622
East St. Louis Area South
1972-73
4,685
19.1
49.0
51.0
7.3
77.4
15.1
7.5
79.4
17.7
2.9
16.0
8.8
1.89
3.29
48.7
$ 11,038
$ 11,383
$ 1,233
10.2
5 19,944
9.6
47.6
5 3,914
1973-74
4,522
16.4
47.4
;2.6
8.3
79.5
14.2
6.3
79.3
18.2
2.6
16.0
9.6
1.90
3.27
49.3
$ 11,761
$ 12,162
$ 1,348
10.1
5 22,902
7.8
46.4
$ 4,167
623
Quincy Area
1972-73
1,833
20.6
56.0
44.0
10.4
81.4
11.9
6.7
42.4
53.6
4.0
12.0
6.7
1.92
2.98
48.5
$ 10,461
$ 10,915
S 1,161
7.7
$ 22,791
5.4
54.4
$ 3,554
1973-74
1,640
20.2
53.3
46.7
10.6
81.5
12.5
6.0
44.9
50.0
5.1
13.9
6.4
1.93
3.03
48.6
$ 11,167
11,705
$ 1,311
7.8
$ 26,789
5.8
53.4
$ 3.738
624
Effingham Area
1972-73
1,430
22.5
54.6
45.4
6.3
78.1
15.2
6.7
86.2
10.8
2.9
29.1
8.8
1.90
3.09
49.0
$9.641
5 10,120
5 1,063
9.2
5 24,709
6.0
47.8
5 3,350
1973-74
1.347
20.0
51.6
48.4
6.9
78.3
16.2
5.5
85.5
10.7
3.8
32.7
7.2
1.92
3.06
49.6
$ 10,185
$ 10.743
$ 1,144
7.3
$ 29.601
5.5
48.5
$ 3,490
625
Springfield Area East
1972-73
2,046
21.9
54.9
45.1
7.5
72.2
21.1
6.7
68.3
28.6
3.1
20.6
6.6
1.92
2.95
47.9
$ 12,096
$ 12,459
$ 1,418
4.7
$ 21,270
7.2
54.6
$ 3,863
.1973-74
1,930
22.1
52.1
47,9
9.6
72.9
21.2
5.9
65.0
30.3
4.7
18.1
7.3
1.92
2.92
48.5
5 13,056
$ 13,549
5 1,594
4.0
$ 22,842
5.5
53.7
$ 4,262
626
Springfield Area West
1972-73
1,570
22.7
54.1
45.9
7.4
74.4
19.7
5.9
56.4
39.8
3.8
17.0
5.8
1.92
2.97
48.1
$ 11,652
$ 12,077
$ 1,326
4.9
$ 22,529
8.1
57.4
$ 4,187
1973 -74
1,411
22,5
53.2
46.8
8.8
75.3
18.9
5.8
56.5
38.6
5.0
23.8
5.9
1.94
2.88
48.5
$ 12,441
$ 12,923
$ 1,477
4.8
$ 26,040
7.1
56.6
$ 4,302
627
Springfield
1972-73
1,330
20.9
52.6
47.4
6.5
71.7
21.5
6.9
64.9
31.1
4.0
34.4
10.2
1.86
1.20
49.2
$ 12,533
$ 12,951
$ 1,385
5.6
$ 18.179
8.6
60.0
S 4,392
1973-74
1,191
19.8
50.5
49.5
7.9
72.3
20.1
7.4
67.5
27.8
4.8
33.3
10.2
1.89
3.33
49.7
$ 13,613
$ J4,164
$ 1,519
4.5
$ 21,384
7.0
61.5
5 4,508
028
Centralia Area
1972-73
1,547
21.8
51.9
48.1
7.0
76.6
18.0
5.4
85,7
11.9
2,4
31.4
7.9
1.91
2.63
48.8
$9,961
$ 10,443
$ 1,171
8.4
$ 21,452
7.0
49.7
$ 3,630
1973 -74
1.556
18.3
50.3
49.7
7.8
76.8
18.0
5.2
87.3
10.3
2.4
34.3
8.0
1.91
2.55
49.5
$ 10,663
$ 11,215
$ 1,289
8.1
$ 24,685
7.6
49.7
5 4,118
629
Carbondale Area
1972-73
1,822
13-8
50.0
50-0
19.3
78.3
14.6
7.1
91.5
5.7
2.8
18.3
11.3
1.86
2.63
49.3
S 10,357
$ 10,731
$ 1,191
12.0
$ 16,804
9.3
53.6
$ 3,825
1973-74
2,166
12.0
49.4
50.6
21.1
79.0
13.3
7.7
91.8
5.1
3.1
19.3
10.9
1.89
2.61
49.3
$ 11,183
$ 11,556
5 1,331
11.0
$ 20,301
8.3
52.7
$ 4,006
All Areas
1972-73
113,388
21.1
51.1
48.9
7.2
74.0
18.6
7.4
60.4
35.5
4.1
15.5
9.6
1.88
3.13
49.0
$ 12,390
$ 12,804
$ 1,466
6.6
$ 22.255
11.0
54.2
$ 4,338
1973-74
112,446
18.6
50.0
50.0
9.0
76.2
17.4
6.4
61.0
34.3
4,6
17.8
10.2
1.89
3.14
49.4
$ 13,323
5 13,818
$ 1,604
6.1
5 25,257
9.7
52.9
* 4,622
HISTORICAL SUMMARY
1965 - 66
to
1973 - 74 Award Years
Monetary Awards
Variables
1965-66
1466-67
1967-68
1968-69
1969-70
1970-71
1971-77
1972-73
1973-74
(Dear Estimate)
Projected
1974-75
(Best Estimate)
Total Applications
11,930
14.950
29,300
47,000
64.000
80.200
97,660
-------
113.940
112,970
133.000
Total Announced Awards
8.324
10,371
17,641
36,932
47.029
59.507
71,063
89,524
40,224
106,400
Total Enrolled Awards
7,491
8.788
15,883
29,415
38,270
48.369
56,893
69,588
72,246
88,450
2 Enrolled
90.0
84.7
90.0
79.6
81.4
81.3
80.1
77,7
80.1
83.1
Total Announced Dollars
$ 4.554,049
$ 6.720.284
$ 11,490,078
$ 23,313.584
$ 32.2b,595
$ 41,865,310
$ 50,958,829
$ 65,492,246
$ 67,332,237
5 78,400,000
Total Enrolled Dollars
$ 4,226.165
$ 5.679,814
$ 10,273,732
$ 18,449,491
$ 26,058,608
5 32,460,549
$ 39.123.290
S 51.091,126
5 54.075,730
$ 62,700.000
Enrolled
92.8
84.5
89.4
79.1
80.8
77.5
76.8
78.0
80.3
80.0
Percentage Enrolled -
Public Colleges
32.7
37.1
35.2
43.2
4°.7
52.4
54.7
58.2
59.1
66.0
Percentage DollarsEnrolled
Public Colleges
14.6
14.5
13.4
17.2
22.5
27.5
33.7
40.0
39.1
43.4
Average Award - Enrolled
$564
$ 646
S 647
$ 627
$ 681
$ 671
$ 690
$ 734
$ 748
5 709
Percent ¢es
a Applicants/Announced
Monetary
69.8
69.4
60.2
78.6
73.5
74.2
72.8*
78.6
79.9
80.0
N Applicants/Enrolled
Monetary
62.8
58.8
54.2
62.6
59.8
60.3
58.1*
61.1
63.9
66.5
elf not for denial of certaineligible applicants because of limited
funds, the percentages would be 81.5%
and 65_07.
*The General Assembly has foundand hereby declares that the
provision of a higher education for all
residents of this State who desire
such an education and
are properly qualified EherefOre is
important to the welfare and security
of this State and Nation, and
consequently is an important
public purpose; many
qualified students are deterred by financialconsiderations (ram completing their
education, with a consequent
irreparable loss to the State and
Nation of
talents vital to welfare andSecurity.
The number of qualified
persons who desire higher education is
increasing rapidly, and the
physical facilities, far-
Orley, and staffs of the institution,
of higher learning operated
by the State will have to be
expanded greatly to accommodatesuch persons, with an
attend-
ant sharp increase in the cost ofeducating such persons.
A system of financial assistance
of scholarships, grants, and
guaranteed loans for qualified
resi-
dents of college age will enable
them to attend qualified institutions
of their choice in the
Stare, public or private."
Quotation from Higher EducationStudent Assistance Law
(School Code of Illinois, Section
30-15)
FINANCIAL NEED ANALYSIS
Concepts and Procedures
The Highc, Education Student Assistance Law states that, to authorize a monetary award, the ScholarshipCommission must find that "fironcial resources are such that, in the absence of scholarship aid, he (the applicant)will be deterred by financial considerations from completing his education at the qualified institution of his choice."
The parents or legal guardian of every applicant for monetary assistance are required to submit confidential information concerning their financial strength. The authorization statement on all confidential statements must besigned, certifying the parents' willingness to submit an official copy of their federal income tax return, if requested.The Commission denies awards to those applicants whose reported financial strength is not in basic agreement withtheir federal income tax returns. Substantial efforts are made to obtain accurate information, and the degree ofaccuracy is verified by both internal checks and personal review of federal returns.
Need analysis systems now in use rely upon an estimate of what the family could for should) be able t.' provide andnot what they will provide. The major variables which affect the determination of need are size of family, totalincome, equity in assets, schooling costs for siblings, and expectations from student earnings and his assets. Ifdetermined need was based upon what the parent and applicant would be willing to provide in financial support,there would be obvious inequities in any program that required equitable determination of awards.
The Commission's need analysis system, facilitated by the use of computers, determines what the parents orguardian and student could provide for college cost in a given year. The annual objective assessment is made toestimate the difference between the expected family contribution and the dollar costs of attending the collegedesignated by the applicant. Need is always related to the college choice and its costs.
To bring as much science, equity. and ohjectivity as possible to a most challenging responsibility, the Commission'sadvisory committee on financial need analysis reviews annually the need assessment procedures and the specialtreatment required for applications showing most unusual circumstances. The committee considers questions whichpertain to business and economic conditions in Illinois, to parents who own or operate farms or business, and tosituations which have been raised by their constituents.
The financial aid officers of Illinois colleges have accepted, to a very large degree, our need computation findingsas being as accurate and fair as can be obtained through a printed form. Parents react to Commission decisions inan almost direct relationship to what they consider to be necessity or luxury in their family budget. A reasonablesacrifice on the part of the family to help meet college costs is a basic premise of the Illinois State ScholarshipCommission procedures.
What is Financial Need?
"Financial need" as defined by the Illinois State Scholarship Commission is the dollar deficit between the approvedISSC COLLEGE COST BUDGET and the total resources available to the student at his selected college. Anyfinancial nepri which remains after the ISSC award is assigned is reported as UNMET COST to the college. TheUNMET rrKT figure represents the amount of additional gift aid the student could receive from other donorswitnout aftecung the amount of his ISSC award.
32
FUNDAMENTAL ESSENTIALS OF NEED ANALYSIS FORMULA
(As Used for 1974.75 Awards)
The Need Analysis Formula below contains the basic essentials for about 85% of all ISSC applicants. Farm ownersor tenants, business owners, and students receiving large amounts of veterans' or Social Security payments wouldnot find the steps described below as an accurate guideline, since their circumstances would require special treatment.
TO DETERMINE EXPECTATION FROM PARENTAL INCOME:
Add: Parent(s) taxable and non-taxable income
Subtract: Federal/state taxes
Maintenance Allowance ($3000 plus $750 per eachtax dependent)
Housekeeping Allowance (If mother or widower works,enter 25% of the earnings to a maximum of $2,000)
Sibling schooling (tuition to $500 maximum forelementary/secondary private for each sibling)
Other dependents (Enter $750 for any tax dependentother than own child, spouse, or self)
Extraordinary expenses (Enter the difference between15--6 of total income and itemized deauctions onFederal Income Tax return to a maximum of 40%of taxable income)
Total subtraction
Multiply: Remainder by the appropriate factor:
$ 0 to $ 4,999 26%
$ 5,000 to $ 5,999 27%
$ 6,000 to $ 6,999 28%
$ 7,000 to $ 7,999 29%
$ 8,000 to $ 8,999 30%
$ 9,000 to $ 9,999 31%
$10,000 + 32%
Result: Available dollars from income for college costs
If two tax dependent children in college, reduce 25%If three or more in college, reduce 50%
TO DETERMINE EXPECTATION FROM PARENTAL ASSETS:
Add: All equity in home and other real estate, value of savings and investments,business and/or farm equity, and student assets (if above $500)
Subtract: Business/Farm Allowance (Ilse one-half of equity in same)
Emergency Allowance ($750 per tax dependent)
33
$Remainder
FUNDAMENTAL ESSENTIALS OF NEED ANALYSIS FORMULA (Cont.)
Subtract: Thrift Retirement Allowance (based on age ofor widow):father
Up to 24- S 4,000 45 49 S15,00025 - 29 S 6,000 50 54 - S17,00030 34 S 8,000 55 59 S19,00035 39 S10,000 60 64 S21,00040 - 44 S13,000 65 Up $23,000
Divide:
Result:
Widow/Widower Allowance (Enter 520,000)
Total subtraction
Remainder by the number which is eight times the numberof parents plus four times the number of tax dependentchildren = by number
Available dollars from assets for college costs S
TO DETERMINE EXPECTATION FROM THE APPLICANT:
The amount of student self-help is related to the College Cost Budget and is one-fourth ofthe College Cost Budget, but not less than 5500 nor more than $1,000. (If family income isless than S6,000 and there is no expectation from assets, 5500 is expected regardless ofcollege costs)
TO DETERMINE ISSC AWARD:
College Cost Budget (Illinois college selected by student) is abort 51,900 plus tuitionand mandatory tees
Subtract: Available dollars from income
Available dollars from assets
Available dollars from applicant
Remainder
Total subtractionRemainder
Remainder: The difference of the College Cost Budget and the total dollarsavailable from the family is the basis on which an awardcan be assigned. (Awards cannot exceed tuition andmandatory fees to a maximum of $1,300. Awards lessthan 51,300 are made in S150 intervals.)
Students' Earnings and Assets
ISSC Award $
Balance is Unmet Cost $
1. The dependent applicant's resources from income and assets will be combined with the parents' financial strength in theassessment of need. For example, the expected self -help and federal/state taxes will be subtracted from applicant's income withbalance added as parental non-taxable income.
2. The independent applicant's resources from income and assets will be combined with spouse's (11 appropriate) after federal/statetaxes and maintenance allowance are subtracted before assessing need.
34
MEAN TOTAL PARENTAL INCOME ANO ASSET EQUITY ANALYSIS BY INSTITUTION
ALL APPLICANTS, MONETARY WINNERS, AND NO NEED CASES FOR 1973-1974 AWARDS
ALL MONETARY AwARD APPLICANTS
ALL ANNOUNCED MONETARY AWARD WINNERS
APPLICANTS WITH No FIN.
NEED
MEAN
PARENTAL
MEAN
ASSET
MEAN
MEAN
PARENTAL
ASSET
MEAN
PARENTAL
MEAN
ASSET
INSTITUTION
NUMBER
INCOME
EQUITY
NuNsER
INCOME
EQUITY
NUMBER
INCOME
EQUITY
Alum-SPACE
AMER. CONS. MUSIC
ART INSTITUTE
13
92
487
8,346
8,593
9,592
11,135
10,081
12,005
988
449
6,205
8,073
8,712
10,655
9,693
9.199
4 4
38
13,162
20,021
12,214
14.85,'612543
AUGUSTA NA
1,683
114,941
25,723
1,319
13,071
18,946
364
21,716
50,280
AURORA
1439
11.229
16,755
399
10,424
12,658
4o
19,472
57,616
BARAT
190
13,301
17,761
173
12,314
14,929
17
46,58o
BELLEVILLE
531
9,869
15,175
422
8,468
11,988
109
g:993
27,515
BLACKBURN
377
12,822
21,110
326
11,738
16,607
51
19,751
49.897
BLACK MAwK
859
10,382
14,020
667
8,7o6
11,333
192
16,208
23,355
BLACK HAWK EAST
117
9,83o
16,256
98
8,765
12,523
19
15,322
35,515
BRADLEY
2,165
13,409
20,341
1,841
11,973
15,432
324
21,589
48,234
CENTRAL YMCA
1,522
4,123
1,346
1,507
3,971
7.099
15
19,413
26,137
CHICAGO Cyr. COLLEGES
KENNEDY..KING
1,111
4,360
1,675
1,071
3.955
1,226
4o
15,217
13,697
LOOP
43o
5,104
2,191
4403
4,400
1,468
27
15,624
12,979
MALCOLM X
37o
3,537
1,348
362
3,286
12:12:18
814,888
12,099
MAYFAIR
152
6,512
4,188
133
4,814
19
18,400
17,982
01.IVE4IARVEY
314
5,468
3,083
296
4,855
2,476
le
15,548
13,061
SOUTHWEST
155
10,182
13,714
114
3;162
10,709
41
15,940
22,069
WILBUR WRIGHT
229
8,22o
7,059
191
6,572
4,970
37
16,723
18,035
CHICAGO CONS. COLLEGE
59
9,720
11,003
53
8,529
8,304
6
f7.:61
26,542
CHICAGO STATE
COLUMBIA
2,547
461
7,343
7.367
5.776
7,833
2,327
439
6,38o
6,761
4,376
6,074
220
22
19,466
20,589
42,929
CONCORDIA
235
13,015
19.757
172
11,343
14,932
63
17,578
32,930
DANViLLE
359
10,383
14,784
268
8,657
11,363
91
15,446
24,858
DECATUR
120
9,744
10,118
97
8,324
7,450
23
21,372
DEPAUL
3.343
12,038
17,264
3,056
11,235
14,710
287
20,5
9144,463
DUPAGE
578
11,722
19,314
432
9,963
15,234
146
16,9
3031.389
EASTERN
2,831
11,657
19,124
£,059
9.713
13,907
772
16,840
33,773
ELGIN
Et.mmuRsT
EUREKA
FELICIAN
GEORGE WILLIAMS
GOVERNOR'S STATE
GREENVILLE
HARPER
HEBREW
HIGHLAND
ILL. BENEDICTINE
ILLINOIS CENTRAL
ILLINOIS COLLEGE
ILL. EASTERN JR. COLLEGES
LINCOLN TRAIL
OLNEY CENTRAL
WABASH VALLEY
ILL. INSTITUTE TECHN.
ILLINOIS STATE
AI
ILLINOIS'ALLEY
ILLINOIS WCSLCYAN
JoLlcr
JuosoN
KANKAKEE
KASKASKIA
KENDALL
KismwAuKEE
KNox
LAKE COUNTY
LACE FOREST
LAKE LAND
Lewis
LEWIS & CLARK
LINCOLN
LINCOLN CRISTiAN
LINCOLN LA'.0
LOGAN
LOYOLA
LOYOLA - DENTAL ASSIST.
LOYOLA- DENTAL HYGIENE
279
986
326 17
370
276
389
391 5
219
737
549
441 56
186
85
1,116
6,534
302
1,156
463
147
236
319
184
186
71z
229
167
618
1,468
422
213
182
389
215
3.917 8
29
11,638
11,845
12,203
9,860
10,733
6,208
11+737
12,690
17.917
10,317
15,949
9,814
12,537
9,941
9.633
9,316
13,135
11,240
10,782
14,708
11,130
11,851
10,102
9,758
9,267
9,355
15,001
10,391
13,206
9,637
12,683
8,885
11,254
10,636
9.995
7,824
13,087
12,809
14,765
15,716
18,281
15,220
13,151
15,066
5,325
19,475
18,566
20,679
25,055
25,717
16,172
22,136
14,052
23,909
19,367
20,982
16,980
18,717
26,340
17,628
17,295
14,908
22,462
7,791
13,035
25,278
14,306
22,181
19,566
18,233
11,478
12,838
15,673
11,644
8,897
18,519
34,862
24,026
198
908
289
14
333
258
343
273 14
161
582
398
366
47
145
71
962
4,996
233
1,013
336
139
187
2148
175
150
64o
180
156
482
1,250
321
199
153
314
183
3,476
224
11,062
10,957
8,944
9,525
5.367
10,735
10,528
18286
,
8,88o
14,393
7,484
11,314
8,455
8,187
12,030
9,217
9,564
'3,643
9,240
11,455
8,577
8,288
8,833
7,824
13,903
8,478
12,681
8,233
11,431
7,458
10,546
9.353
8,562
6,489
12,084
10,834
13,412
11,838
15,476
11:07427
11,027
12,166
114Z,627ii
rfC61
16,746
10,916
18,674
13,262
16,950
11,700
16,177
20,468
12,920
14,665
10,632
15,664
6,690
11,991
21,115
10 ,440
19,301
14,709
15,205
8,567
11,784
9, 427
9,114
7,344
15,506
21,923
18,774
81 78
37 3
37
18
...,
46
118 1
58
155
151 75 9
41
14
154
1,537
69
143
127 8 49
71 9
35
7749
10
1 A 71 14
29 75
32
441
16,903
25,196
21,062
50,929
21,936
42,363
114,135
23,063
21,601
18,264
t:617188
19,209
52;:g79
17,692
16,445
40,750
14,3o5
43,619
21,865
42,119
15.997
29,763
18,509
48,235
111.74:76(71
30,425
42,421
16,629
50,325
20,035
46,164
17,823
14 ,894
34,153
27,293
7126,,r3-0T
67,938
18,720
30,086
62,998
15,919
31,225
14,896
46,209
18,759
29,198
15,917
37,923
24,125
59,882
17,421
28,506
21,390
69,328
19,892
36,781
15,936
866
25,866
21,317
27,824
N7,
406
48,630
15.993
22,236
15,456
120,996
4:23
4
11140:7:4.9
47,801
740,533
INSTITUTION
MEAN TOTAL PARENTAL INCOME AND ASSET EQUITY ANALYSIS BY
ALL MONETARY AWARD APPLICANTS
ALL ANNOUNCED MONETARY
INSTITUTION -
AWARD WINNERS
CONT.
APPLICANTS WITH NO FIN. NEED
NUMBER
MEAN
PARENTAL
INCOME
MEAN
ASSET
EQUITY
NUMBER
MEAN
PARENTAL
INCOME
MEAN
ASSET
EQUITY
MEAN
MEAN
PARENTAL
ASSET
NUMBER
INCOME
EQUITY
MACCORMAC
168
;1,313
13,632
147
10,155
11,769
21
19,424
26,6
75MACMuRRAY
544
14,946
23,134
478
13,644
18,026
66
24,379
60,126
MALLINCKRODT
811,083
15,113
57,109
17,360
317,705
11,367
MCHENRY
115
10,956
18,595
89
9,029
15.794
26
17,554
28,181
McKENoREE
363
11,125
17,814
329
10,113
13,637
34
20,921
58,229
MILLIKIN
902
14,079
24,328
779
12,933
18,328
123
21,396
62,323
MONMOUTH
463
13,319
21,700
422
12,447
18,783
41
22,291
51,721
MORAINE VALLEY
444
11,832
17,404
306
9,649
13,430
138
16,673
26,215
MORTON
157
11,244
16,333
120
9,616
12,670
37
16,525
28,210
MuNDELEiN
521
12,050
16,235
452
10,832
12,154
69
20,024
42,969
NAT. COLLEGE OF EDuC.
341
12,497
18,816
308
11,501
12,918
33
21,763
73,866
NAT. COLLEGE OF ED.-URBAN
105
7,314
5,133
101
6,795
4,043
420,435
32,650
NILES
233
14,951
22,970
193
13,440
17,978
4o
22,238
47,055
NORTH CENTRAL
516
13,652
23,392
435
12,326
20,180
81
20,937
40,642
NORTH PARK
479
72,988
78,914
409
11.531
14,498
70
21,505
44,767
NORTHEASTERN
2,059
8,897
10,888
1,729
7,447
7,583
33o
16,511
28,203
NORTHERN ILLINOIS
5,497
11,940
17,424
4,113
9,846
12,879
1,384
18,172
0,931
NORTHWESTERN
1,722
15,863
27,200
1,518
14,667
21,383
204
24,768
70,485
OAKTON
128
10,021
17,107
94
7,677
11,563
34
16,501
.32,436
OLIVET NAZARENE
446
11,326
13,032
390
10,038
10,674
56
20,297
29,453
PARKLAND
747
8,676
11,165
639
7,250
8,030
108
17,113
29,772
PARKS
165
11,864
17,431
151
11,026
14,571
14
20,900
48,286
PRAIRIE STATE
330
10,245
11,465
276
8,836
9,612
54
17,441
20,935
PRINCIPIA
52
15,392
25,122
45
14,906
17,200
718,511
76,053
OvINcy
991
12,622
21,229
851+
11,321
17,478
137
20,735
44,614
REND LAKE
136
8,372
14,096
117
7,337
10,648
19
14,750
35,330
ROBERT MORRIS
147
11,371
17,661
132
10,210
13,023
15
21,590
58,474
ROCKFORD
276
13,103
21,895
239
11,928
16,935
37
20,656
53,935
ROCK VALLEY
693
10,145
13,073
561
8,758
9,609
132
16,041
27,792
ROOSEVELT
1,767
6,665
6,781
1,716
6,295
5,643
51
19,340
45,081
ROSARY
466
13,040
19,783
403
11,846
16,480
63
20,675
40,905
St. FRANCIS
393
73,886
20,848
314
12,163
17,273
79
20,736
35.057
ST. XAVIER
727
12,415
18,224
666
11,696
9,199
61
20,394
41,318
SANDBURG
SANGAMON
SAUK VALLEY
SHAWNEE
SHERWOOD
sHimER
SOUTHEASTERN
SIU-CARBONOALE
SIU-EowARosviLLE
SPERTUS
SPOON RIVER
SPRINGFIELD
STATE COMM.-E. ST. LOUIS
HoRNToN
TRINITY
TRINITY CHRISTIAN
TRITON
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
UNIV. OF ILL. - CIRCLE
UNIV. OF ILL."*DENT.ASSfT
UNIV. OF ILL.-URBANA
VANDERCOOK
WAUSONSEE
WESTERN ILLINOIS
WHEATON
pForEssioNAL ScHooLs
HOSP. SCHLS. NURSING
ALL
270
,
251
309
101 7
86
13C
6,085
2,912 1
140
221 14
928
212
188
630
529
6,829 7
9,122
43
212
4,613
274
757
1,925
105,214
10,386
8,463
10,411
8,148
12,682
13,782
9,465
10,499
9,310
2,500
10,679
13,208
3,596
10,360
12,569
13,349
10,912
14,825
9,629
9,332
13,114
11,296
10,818
12,007
14,286
10,947
11,723
11,248
15,909
15,266
8,541
15,682
17,863
1414,630
15,326
12,945
1,700
21,780
20,607
2,294
13,449
17,998
23,191
17,604
25,315
12,032
15,615
23,266
16,459
18,351
20,697
23,126
15,630
18,941
14,096
219
213
247
90 4
71 98
4,707
2,499 1
98
187
13
765
196
158
473
469
5,779 7
6,016
37
156
3,201
228
657
1,475
85,631
9,108
6,882
8,675
7,397
9 9,795
11,994
7,268
8,475
8,122
2,500
8,899
1212,432
2,744
8,637
11,815
12,513
8,888
13,609
8,243
010,203
10,277
9,058
9,705
13,084
9,690
9,940
9,644
8,154
7,213
11.371
6,417
7,086
13,908
10,122
10,793
9,962
1,700
16,057
4'
19,834
-
10,603
1117,E5212
2,
18,859
8,742
15,615
11,388
10,354
11,754
14,864
16,534
12.337
14,044
12,527
51 38
62
11 3
15
32
1,378
413
- 42
34 1
163
16
30
157
6o
1,050
3,106 6
56
1,412
46
96
449
19,583
15,878
17,330
17,326
14,295
16,531
22,242
16,193
17,417
-
16,499
,832
14
17,478
14,674
21,799
17,756
17,010
24,499
17,277
-
18,758
17,580
15,902
17,227
20,189
19,547
17,578
18,265
24,741
30,047
30,782
25,917
27,143
36,584
28,437
30,809
30,994
35,135
34,777
16,500
26,805
36,973
54,524
33,696
75,78o
30,140
38,629
54,105
36,731
33,920
555.796
38,821
35,072
36,082
Yd
Number and Percentage by Parental Income Ranges of All 1973-74 Monetary Award Applicants
Named 1973-74 Monetary Award Winners (Maximum and Partial Awards)
(with Illinois College Choice on Tape Record as of 10/5/73)
Cumulative Percentage of All Reported Income
Public Colleges
Private Colleges
All Colleges%age
Win-
ners
Income Range
(Dollars)
All
Public
Public
Private Private
4-Yr.
2-Yr.
2-Yr.
4-Yr.
#
#Appli-
Winners cants
%age
Win-
ners
#%age
#Appli-
Win-
Winners cants
ners
#
#Appli-
Winners cants
$0
- 2,999*
17.97
17.67
24.82
45.00
12.66
12,654
12,709
99.6
5,701
5,709
99.9
18,355
18,418
99.7
3,000- 3,999
19.30
19.10
26.56
46.38
13.64
978
987
99.1
369
374
98.7
1,347
1,361
99.0
4,000- 4,999
21.65
21.61
29.22
49.67
15.53
1,650
1,666
99.0
736
743
99.1
2,386
2,409
99.0
5,000- 5,999
24.69
24.85
32.77
53.33
17.98
2,137
2,172
98.4
934
944
98.9
3,071
3,116
98.6
6,000- 6,999
28.22
28.58
36.96
57.03
20.88
2,464
2,516
97.9
1,084
1,098
98.7
3,548
3,614
98.2
7,000- 7,999
32.63
33.31
42.16
59.96
24.57
3,090
3,175
97.3
1,324
1,343
98.6
4,414
4,518
97.7
8,000- 8,999
3.24
38.08
47.51
63.85
28.69
3,079
3,216
95.7
1,492
1,516
98.4
4,571
4,732
96.6
9,000- 9,999
42.46
43.56
53.67
67.48
33.24
3,515
3,697
95.1
1,626
1,653
98.4
5,141
5,350
96.1
10,000-10,999
48.12
49.49
60.14
71.36
38.27
3,680
3,967
92.8
1,774
1,826
97.2
5,454
5,793
94.1
11,000-11,999
54.11
55.78
66.46
75.12
43.88
3,708
4,125
89.9
1,957
2,018
97.0
5,665
6,143
92.2
12,000-12,999
60.20
62.06
72.86
78.40
49.82
3,505
4,131
84.8
2,032
2,112
96.2
5,537
6,243
88.7
13,000-13,999
66.26
68.11
78.51
82.63
56.25
2,899
3,900
74.3
2,196
2,310
95.1
5,095
6,210
82.0
14,000-14,999
71.98
73.85
83.37
85.82
62.58
2,306
3,616
63.8
2,110
2,240
94.2
4,416
5,856
75.4
15,000-15,999
77.21
79.04
87.57
88.57
68.59
1,649
3,243
50.8
1,926
2,122
90.8
3,575
5,365
66.6
16,000-16,999
81.92
83.64
91.05
91.54
74.19
1,199
2,832
42.3
1,755
1,988
88.3
2,954
4,820
61.3
17,000-17,999
85.84
87.45
93.63
93.97
79.04
806
2,302
35.0
1,435
1,719
83.5
2,241
4,021
55.7
18,000-18,999
89.16
90.61
95.71
95.77
83.33
575
1,897
30.3
1,172
1,506
77.8
1,747
3,403
51.3
19,000-19,999
91.75
93.06
96.94
96.72
86.93
354
1,408
25.1
897
1,249
71.8
1,251
2,657
47.1
20,000-20,999
93.71
94.83
97.87
97.63
89.74
190
1,027
18.5
636
978
65.0
826
2,005
41.2
21,000-21,999
95.25
96.19
98.43
98.58
92.05
142
763
18.5
487
812
60.0
629
1,575
39.9
22,000-22,999
96.38
97.17
98.78
99.02
93.83
82
540
15.2
331
617
53.6
413
1,157
35.7
23,000-23,999
'7.24
97.83
99.07
99.21
95.32
45
371
12.1
265
511
51.9
310
882
35.1
24,000-24,999
97.90
98.31
99.39
99.27
96.46
30
292
10.3
173
388
44.6
203
680
29.9
25,000-25,999
98.43
98.80
99.55
99.49
97.27
22
268
8.2
97
280
34.6
119
548
21.7
$26,000-Up
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
6665
.9
200
939
21.3
206
1,604
12.8
Totals
102,480
49,542
15,943
3,167
33,828
50,765
65,485
77.5
32,709
36,995
88.4
83,474
102,480
84.4
Mean Income
$10.992
$9,372
$7,464
$12,839
$8,610$10,597
$11,236 $12,379
$9,639
$11,240
Mean Income/
No Need Applicant
$17,452
$21,102
$18,275
*90% of the cases in this income level are emancipated students arbitrarily coded at $2,500.
CLASS LEVEL OF APPLICANTS, MONETARY AWARD WINNERS, NO NEED CASES
1969-70, 1971-72, 1973-74 Award Years
Applicants Monetary Awd. Winners No Need Cases
Percentage of 69-70 71-72 73-74 69-70 71-72 73-74 69-70 71-72 73-74
Freshmen 49.6 43.2 39.3 39.2 36.3 35.0 69.5 63.1 54.4
Sophomores 23.8 25.5 24.5 27.9 28.1 25.5 16.8 18.4 20.7
Juniors 15.3 17.4 20.9 18.5 19.2 22.3 8.6 11.1 15.6
Seniors 11.3 13.9 15.3 14.4 16.4 17.2 5.1 7.4 9.3
FALL FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT ENROLLMENT OF UNDERGRADUATES BY CLASS LEVELALL ISSC APPROVED INSTITUTIONS
1969-1970 1971-1972 1973-1974
Number%- of
Total Number%Total Number
cofTotal
Freshmen 122,004 44.6 131,588 43.7 135,530 44.8
Sophomores 65,898 24.1 74,260 24.7 71,233 23.5
Juniors 44,396 16.2 49,475 16.5 49,308 16.3
Seniors 41,184 15.1 45,536 15.1 46,701 15.4
Total 273,482 100.0 300,859 100.0 302,772 100.0
UNMET COSTS FOR MONETARY AWARD WINNERS
1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
AWARD WINNERS'BY TYPE
MEAN UNMET COSTSINSTITUTION
1971 -12 1973-74
Mean unmet cost,if any
$ 554 $ 739 $ 889 Public Jr. $ 791 $ 1,054
Public sr. 697 846Mean unmet cost,
all cases$ 517 $ 727 $ 880
Private Jr. 896 969
%age cases withno unmet cost
6.7 1.7 1.0 Private sr. 855 1,028
Professional 894 962
40
A STUDY OF PARENTAL AND STUDENT CHARAC-ARISTICS RELATING TO FINANCIAL NEED -
(Tape Record Data as of
Applicants
1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
Number of students 51,258 80,827 96,926
Parental Characteristics
Mean total income $ 10,176 $ 11,204 $ 11,442
Mean taxable income $ 9,888 $ 10,766 $ 10,817
Mean non-taxable income, if any $ 1,864 $ 2,061 $ 2,474% with non-taxable income 21.0 28.0 28.1
Mean total asset equity $ 15,856 $ 16,461 $ 17,519Mean asset equity, if any $ 17,842 $ 20,388 $ 23,7257. no asset equity 11.0 19.0 26.2
Mean business/farm asset equity, if any $ 47,596 $ 50,062 $ 55,462
Mean home equity, if any $ 12,788 $ 14,448 $ 17,082Mean home equity, all cases $ 9,091 $ 10,643 $ 13,3887, owning home
Mean other real estate, if anyMean other real estate, all cases
71.0
$ 8,353$ 694
74.0
$ 9,080$ 809
78.4
$ 10,729$ 1,001
% owning other real estate 8.3 8.9 9.3
Mean savings/investments, if any $ 4,248 $ 6,179 $ 8,761Mean savings/investments, all cases $ 2,888 $ 2,766 $ 4,390% no savings/investments 32.0 55.0 49.9
Mean number parents 1.85 1.80 1.60Mean age of father 47.7 47.7
o
49.4
% widows 6.5 7.1 8.9% widowers .9 1.0 1.3
Mean number tax dependent children 3.03 2.92 2.58
Percentage mothers working 51.9 52.3 49.9Mean working mothers' income $ 3,667 $ 4,486 $ 5,353
Expectation to meet college costs fromparental income: mean, if any $ 911 $ 1,072 $ 1,329
mean, all cases $ 782 $ 859 $ 9957. no expectation 14.0 20.0 25.1
Expectation to meet college costs fromasset equity: mean, if any
mean, all cases7. no expectation
41
$ 547 $ 524 $ 622$ 159 $ 142 $ 201
71.0 73.0 67.7
APPLICANTS, MONETARY AWARD WINNERS, AND NO NEED CASES, 1969-70, 1971-72, 1973-74
11/69, 9/71, and 1/74)
Monetary Award Winners No Need Cases
1969-70 1971-72 1973-74 1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
41,832 64,659 77,329 9,426 16,169 19,597
$ 9,088 $ 9,758 $ 9,713 $ 15,051 $ 16,984 $ 18,273
$ 8,783 $ 9,314 $ 9,125 $ 14,799 $ 16,508 $ 17,494
$ 1,862 $ 2,032 $ 2,439 $ 1,871 $ 2,204 $ 2,60122.0 29.0 27.8
$ 12,163 $ 12,698 $ 12,812$ 13,974 $ 16,563 $ 18,862
13.0 23.0 32.1
$ 29,519 $ 35,782 $ 41,240
17.0
$ 32,246$ 33,244
3.0
$ 81,913
24.0 29.2
$ 31,510 $ 36,082$ 32,474 $ 37,124
3.0 2.8
$ 77,729 $ 83,058
MI 401 .1.
M M
1.83 1.76 1.53 1.94 1.95 1.61MD - - - 1MM.
7.2 8.3 10.6 4.3 3.3 4.11.0 1.1 1.5 .5 .5 .4
3.09 2.95 2.55 2.78 2.79 2.63
51.7$ 3,549
51.1
$ 4,39347.9
$ 5,292
52.6$ 4,182
56.9
$ 4,82157.4
$ 5,512
$ 638 $ 764 $ 981 $ 1,947 $ 2,004 $ 2,282$ 532 $ 576 $ 674 $ 1,897 $ 1,991 $ 2,262
17.0 25.0 31.3 2.6 .6 .9
$ 257 $ 29657 $ 58
78.0 80.0
360 $ 1,024 $ 836 $ 98985 $ 613 $ 482 $ 657
76.3 40.0 42.0 33.6
42
A STUDY OF PARENTAL AND STUDENT CHARACTERISTICS RELATING TO FINANCIAL NEED -
Applicants
1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
Expectation to meet college costs fromincome & asset equity: mean, if any $ 1,109 $ 1,242 $ 1,528
mean, all cases $ 982 $ 1,038 $ 1,244% no expectation 11.4 16.4 18.6
Mean parental income by type institution:
Public junior $ 10,003 $ 9,188Public senior $ 10,795 $ 10,801Private junior $ 9,190 $ 7,420Private senior $.11,843 $ 12,756Professional $ 10,049 $ 11,111
Student Financial Characteristics
Mean reported student assets, if any $ 663 $ 706 $ 674Mean student assets, all cases $ 342 $ 283 $ 299% no student assets reported 48.0 60.0 55.7
Direct resources (i.e., veterans'payments) to meet college costs:
mean, if anymean, all cases
$ 643$ 44
$ 724$ 44
1,080$ 64
% none reported 93.0 94.0 94.0
Percent emancipated or self-sypportingor with parents on public aid 3,2 3.8 19.6
Other gift aid: mean, if anymean, all casesnone reported
Percent of students married
Percent malePercent\female
Percentage selecting:Public seniorPublic juniorAll public
Private seniorPrivate juniorAll private
Professional
43
$ 519 $ 608 $ 653$ 53 $ 52 $ 36
89.9 91.5 94.5
1969-70
MISCELLANEOUS
Applicants
STUDENT DATA:
1973-741971-724.2 6.1 8.7
52.5 52.2 49.747.5 47.8 50.3
44.0 48.6 47.57.2 12.3 15.0
51.2 60.9 62.5
44.6 36.7 32.01.7 1.8 3.0
46.3 38.5 34.9
2.5 .6 2.6
APPLICANTS, MONETARY.AWARD WINNERS & NO NEED CASES, 1969-70, 1971-72, 1973-74
Monetary Award Winners No Need Cases
1969-70 1971-72 1973-74 1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
$ 721 $ 839 $ 1,060 $ 2,608 $ 2,527 $ 2,948$ 622 $ 667 $ 813 $ 2,584 $ 2,525 $ 2,948
i3.8 20.5 23.3 .9 .1 .0
$ $ 8,520 $ 7,551 $ $ 14,772 $ 16,177$ - -- $ 8,907 $ 8,809 $ $ 16,407 $ 17,887$ $ 8,201 $ 6,675 $ $ 18,633 $ 18,736$ $ 11,003 $ 11,738 $ $ 20,228 $ 21,115$ - -- $ 9,015 $ 9,556 $ - - - $ 16,677 $ 18,179
$ 594 $ 636 $ 603 $ 909 $ 911 $ 876$ 293 $ 238 $ 248 $ 560 $ 463 $ 498
51.0 63.0 58.9 38.0 49.0 43.2
$ 587$ 37
$ 696$ 38
$ 1,014
$ 70$ 813$ 74
$ 798$ 66
$ 1,825$ 44
94.0 95.0 93.1 91.0 92.0 97.6
3.9 3.9 24.6 .6 .7 2.0
$ 512 $ 584 $ 630 $ 552 $ 993 $ 1,034$ 53 $ 58 $ 41 $ 49 $ 24 $ 16
89.6 90.0 93.5 91.2 97.6 98.5
UNRELATED TO FINANCIAL NEED
Monetary Award Winners No Need Cases1969-70 1971-72 1973-74 1969-70 1971-72 1973-74
- - -- - -
39.6 43.8 45.2 62.8 64.5 59.57.2 11.3 14.0 7.5 12.6 15.7
46.9 55.1 59.2 70.3 77.1 75.2
50.7 42.2 35.1 28.9 21.5 21.02,0 2.0
, 2.7 .5 .6 1.052.7 44.2 37.8 29.4 22.1 22.0
.4 .6 3.0 .3 .8 2.8
44
1967-68
RACIAL BACKGROUND OF MONETARY AWARD APPLICANTS
1970-71 1972-73 1973-74 AWARD YEARS
DATA SOURCE: 167-168 AND 170 171 PROJECTED FROM RANDOM SURVEY OF ENROLLED WINNERS
172-'73 AND 173-174 FROM STUDENT RESPONSE ON APPLICATION
BACKGROUND
1967-1968 1970-1971 1972-1973 1213-1974
PERCENT
NUMBER OF TOTAL
PERCENT
NUMBER OF TOTAL
PERCENT
NUMBER OF TOTAL
PERCENT
NUMBER OF TOTAL
CAUCASIAN 15,136 95.30 40,504 83.74 87,122 76.84 81,002 71.72
ALL MINORITIES 747 4.70 7,401 15.30 25,239 22,26 28,642 25.36
BLACK AMERICAN 492 3.10 5,616 11.61 19,842 17.50 22,498 19.92
SPANISH SURNAMED/ 387 .80 1,939 1.71 2,553 2.26
LATIN AMERICAN (NOT ASKED)
ORIENTAL AMERICAN 175 1.10 547 1.13 771 .68 847 .75
AMERICAN INDIAN 16 .10 boo* 1.24* 306 .27 350 .31
OTHER 64 .40 251 .52 2,381 2.10 2,394 2.12
NOT INDICATED 0 464 .96 1,020 .90 3,298 2.92
TOTALS 15,883 100.00 48,369 100.00 113,381 100.00 112,942 100.00
*THE TERM "NATIVE AMERICAN" WAS ALSO USED IN 170-171 SURVEY AS A SYNONYM TO THE CATEGORY OF AMERICAN
INDIAN, AND IT IS ASSUMED THESE FINDINGS ARE OVERSTATED.
ANALYSIS BY RACIAL BACKGROUND
1973-74 AWARD YEAR ANNOUNCED MONETARY AWARD WIFNERS
BACKGROUND
# OF
Awos.
OF
TOTAL
(AWARD STATUS AS OF
PERCENTAGE OF ALL
BY CLASS LEVEL
10/3/73)
PUBL.
4-YR.
PUBL.
2-YR.
PRIV.
4-YR.
PRIV.
2-YR.
PERCENT
MALE/FEM.FR, SOPH. JR. SR.
AMERICAN INDIAN 288 .34 42.7 25.0 20.5 11.8 43,4 21.1 26.9 8.6 50.7/49.3
BLACK AMERICAN 19,314 22.56 41.9 26.4 20.1 11.5 49.0 17.8 25.8 7.4 39.2/60.8
CAUCASIAN 59,031 68.96 32.6 25.2 23.1 19.1 43.7 15.0 39.2 2.1 53.6/46.4
ORIENTAL AMERICAN 6148 .76 34.3 24.4 22.5 18.8 57.2 5.4 35.1 2.3 51.2/48.8
SPANISH SURNAMED/
LATIN AMERICAN 2,198 2.57 48.5 26.2 15.6 9.6 50.8 10.8 28.6 9.8 52.5/47,5
OTHER 1,898 2.22 29.3 25.0 24.7 21.0 47.9 11.1 36.9 4.1 53.7/46.3
NOT GIVEN 2,226 2.60 30.1 24.6 24.7 20.6 47.9 14.8 34.7 2.7 53.5/46.5
TOTAL 85,603 100.00 35.0 25.5 22.3 17.2 45.4 15.4 35.6 3.6 50.3/49.7
45
CHANGES
IN VOCATIONAL ASIRATIONS
1969-70
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1973_74
AWARD YEARS
PERCENTAGES
FIEL0
0 F
VOCATIONAL ASPIRATIONS
ALL
WITH
FRESHMEN ONLY
STATE SCHOLARS
STATE SCHOLARS
MONETARY AWARDSIWITH MONETARY AWARDS'
ALL GRANT MONETARY AWARD WINNERS
69-
7022
.71
71-72
72_73
73-74
71-72
72-73
73-74
69-70
71-72
72-73
73-74
UNDECIDED
5.8
5.0
4.4
6.o
6.o
5.1
8.8
8.2
8.4
.1.2
71 6.o
5.4
6.3
6.5
EDUCATION
19.1
18.4
15.8
12.5
10.8
15.6
11.1
9.6
25.1
26.6
25.4
20.9
18.1
SOCIAL SCIENCE/RELIGION
11.6
12.2
11.7
10.7
9.9
7.9
8.o
6.9
13.9
13.8
13.8
13.1
12,4
BUSINESS/POLITICAL/PERSUASIVE
12.0
12.4
14.2
15.3
17.3
13.4
14.6
17.2
17.7
18.0
18.4
19.2
20.9
SCIENTIFIC
17.8
18.1
18.7
17.1
15.8
19.9
16.o
13.7
7.7
7.4
7.1
6.2
5.7
AGRICULTURE
.7
.9
.9
1.3
1.2
1.0
1.4
1.4
1.4
1.1
1.3
1.5
1.3
HEALTH
8.4
8.3
9.2
13.4
17.0
11.3
17.4
22.4
6.4
6.8
8.2
12.7
15.4
ARTS /HUMANITIES
14.5
14.6
15.2
14.6
13.4
14.5
13.4
12.2
12.6
13.4
13.8
13.6
12.8
ENGINEERING
9.7
9.5
9.2
8.2
7.4
10.5
8.6
7.7
4.9
4.7
4,4
4.1
3.8
TRADE /TECHNICAL
.4
.5
.5
-7
.6
.6
.6
.8
1.6
1.3
1.9
2.0
2.1
OTHER
.1
.2
.2
.2
.4
.1
.2
.1
-3
-3
-3.8
TOTAL NUMBER
15,495
15,892
16,446
16,554
14,560
5,424
5,429
4,652
26,191
41,009
48,182
67,247
70,974
DISTRIBUTION BY AGE OF ENROLLED MONETARY AWARD WINNERS - 1972-73 AND 1973-74
A G E
I
N uf M
8 E R
%0 F
T 0
T A L
CUMULATIVE PERCENTAGE
1972-73
A1973- 7 4
972-73
1973-74
1972-73
1973-74
UNDER 18
44/
I781
.65
1.11
.65
1.11
18
12,172
12,955
17.58
18.35
18.23
19.46
19
16,296
15,993
23.54
22.65
41,77
42.11
20
13,384
13,228
19.33
18.73
61.10
60.84
21
10,893
8.985
15.73
12.72
76.83
73.56
22
5.354
4,428
7-73
6.27
84.56
79-83
23
2,066
2,483
2.98
3.52
87.54
83.35
24
1,781
2,025
2.57
2.87
90.11
86.22
25
1,487
1,830
2.15
2.59
92.26
88.81
26 - 30
3,206
5,120
4.63
7.25
96.89
96.06
31 - 35
1,120
1,430
1.62
2.03
98.51
98.09
36 - 4o
514
682
.74
.97
99.25
99.06
141 - 5o
438
558
.63
-79
99.88
99.85
5i - 6o
73
97
.11
.14
99-99
99.99
61-
vp4
9.01
.01
100.00
100.00
ANNOUNCED MONETARY AWARD DISTRIBUTION BY AMOUNT OF AWARD*
PERCENTAGE COMPARISON
1971-72 1971-74
1971-72 AND 1973-74
1971-72 1973-74
$ 1300 28.02 $ 600 1.66 1.72$ 1200 33,67 1,51 $ 451 - $ 599 34,91 19.24
$ 1051 - $ 1199 .o8 .13 $ 450 3.07 4.17$ 1050 2,4o 1.75 $ 301 $ 449 5.11 4.68
$ 901 - $ 1049 .26 .43 $ 300 4,31 4.09$ 900 1.99 1.58 $ 151 - $ 299 4.56 3.76
$ 751 - $ 899 .25 .12 $ 150 1.45 3.79$ 750 1.75 1.37 $ 1 - $ 149 4.49 3.58
$ 601 - $ 749 .04 20.08
*MONETARY AWARD LEGAL MAXIMUM WAS $1200 IN 1971-72, $1300 IN 1973-7h.
AVERAGE PER YEAR DOLLAR AND PERCENTAGE INCREASES IN MEAN WEIGHTED TUITION AND
MANDATORY FEES AT MAJOR ILLINOIS NONPUBLIC INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING
YEARS
No.
OF
YEARS
PER
AVERAGE
YEAR
INCREASE
DOLLARS PERCENTAGE
1958-59 to 1963-64 6 $ 55 7.61963-64 TO 1965-66 Z $ 92 8.61965-66 TO 1967-68 2 $ 93 7.51967.68 to 1968-69 1 $ 112 7.81968-69 TO 1969-70 1 $ 139 9.01969-70 TO 1970-71 1 $ 205 12.21970-71 to 1971-72 1 $ 103 5.51971-72 to 1972-73 1 $ 119 6.01972-73 TO 1973-74 1 $ 104 4.91973-74 TO 1974-75 1 $ ill 4.7
1958-59 to 1974-75 17 $ 94 7.5
47
MILITARY VETERANS' SCHOLARSHIPS TO PUBLIC COMMUNITY COLLEGES
In August, 1969, the General Assembly author red the Commission to make payments from its regular monetaryaward appropriation in the form of tuition awards for eligible veterans at Illinois public community colleges. Thisform of financial assistance, which may be used concurrently with G. 1. Bill 'wile its, covers tuition and certainfees. Certification for eligibility for this program is verified by the respective colleges arid the Illinois JuniorCollege Board. Beginning with FY'74, veterans' scholarship payments were made horn a separate appropriationadministered by the ISSC.
1972-73 Military Veterans' Scholarships
Institution No. of AwardsMean Credit
Hours Per Term Total $ Paid
Belleville 637 0,C301 8.8 S 95,033.50Black Hawk 683 (1,7311 8.9 191,691.55Chgo City-Malcolm X 233 (2331 13.4 4,630.00Danville 195 (5541 9.9 51,439.70Decatur 220 (6491 9 5 37,677.60Du Page 929 13,5271 11.0 390,595.00Elgin 311 17641 8.2 65,246.00Harper 609 11,515) 7.9 155,069.80Highland 144 1367) 9.8 32,642.00Illinois Central 1,092 (2,841) 8.3 168,985.80Illinois Eastern 84 1320) 13.8 5,210.00Illinois Valley 215 (7811 7.3 39,147.00Joliet 570 11,311) 8.3 120,137.10Kankakee 240 (772) 6.7 64,167.00Kaskaskia 150 (319) 10.8 19,135.90Kishwaukee 280 (730) 8.2 69,132.50Lake County 489 (1,289) 8.3 103,371.26Lake Land 257 (9061 13.2 43,973.75Lewis-Clark 546 (1,1211 7.7 144,774.00Lincoln Land 897 13,032 9.9 173,035.55Logan 125 (4471 12.3 9,614.50McHenry 186 14431 8.5 47,385.50Moraine Valley 421 11,126) 9.0 101,672.00Morton 275 (609) 7.6 59,310.00Oakton 165 (438) 8.7 41,464.00Parkland 418 (1,499) 0.1 123,278.25Prairie State 396 11,007) 8.5 122,170.60Rend Lake 81 (134) 11.6 5,153,76Rock Valley 756 (2,138) 8.1 287,657,74Sandburg 211 (781) 10.0 42,882,80Sauk Valley 235 15121 9.0 59,848,51Shawnee 57 (1691 12.6 8,131.00Southeastern 57 (1901 10.7 6,193.50Spoon River 82 (1651 9.2 14,025.00Thornton 458 (924) 9.4 148,329.94Triton 980 (2,469) 7.7 185,438.50Waubonsee 424 11,018) 8.1 71,056.00
Total 14,108 139,111 I 9.1 S 3,308,706.61
'The first number refers to largest total of mdiyiauals assisted m any term of 1972-73; the number in parenthesesrefers to total ownber of tern) payments.
48
SUMMARY OF PAYMENTS BY YEARS TOVETERANS AT It) i.101S PUBLIC COMMUNITY COLLEGES
No. of Awards(Term Payments) Dollars
1969.70 5,051 $ 771,048.001970-71 21,559 1,740,788.651971.72 29,496 2,625,498.001972.73 39,111 3,308,706.61
Totals to Date 95,217 $ 8,446,041.26
P.O.W./M.I.A. DEPENDENTS' EDUCATIONAL. BENEF ITS
The Commission is authorized to pay up to $1300 in tuition and mandatory fees to any Illinois institution ofhigher education on behalf of the spouse and/or dependent child(ren) of any Illinois resident officially reportedto be a prisonerof war, missing in action, killed or at least 90% permanently disabled since January 1, 1960.Eligibility for this program is not based upon financial need.
Benefits include tuition and mandatory fees for full or part-time undergraduate or graduate study and areapplicable for a period of 8 semesters or 12 quarters of study. Payments are applicable at any not-for-profitIllinois institution of higher learning. Financial need is not a requirement for eligibility.
1972.73 benefits: 4 persons at 4 different schools $1,969.50
STUDENT TO STUDENT PROGRAM
In June, 1912, the Illinois General Assembly established an ISSC administered program providing to public senioruniversities of the state a stated maximum of "dollar for dollar" matching funds for any contributions theyreceive toward establishing special scholarships for needy students on these campuses. The money must be usedin support of undergraduate Illinois residents attending these campuses. The funds matched by the universitiesmust be raised from voluntary contributions under a plan developed and approved by the students, with amaximum contribution of $4 per year from any individual student.
Participating PublicSenior Universities Dollars Paid 1972.73
Chicago State UniversityGovernor's State UniversityNortheastern Illinois Univ.Sangamon State UniversitySouthern III.EdwardsvilleUniv. of III.-Urbana
Totals
49
$ 255.31
5,056.00(Not participating)
(No awards)
34,867.5092,0901)0
Best Estimates ofDollars Paid 1973.74
(Not participating)$ 10,500
14,5009,500
42,00096,000
$ 132,268.81 $ 172,500
BILINGUAL GRANT PROGRAM AWARDS, 1972-73
Beginning with the academic year 1972.73, the ISSC was directed to administer a program which providesscholarships in amounts up to $1300 per year toward the tuition and fees of undergraduate students who arebilingual but who are not certified to teach in the state of Illinois and must undergo additional course work inorder to become so qualified. The uncertified teacher is eligible for up to two years of grant assistance throughthis program and must agree to teach for two years after certification in a school with a substantial enrollmentof nonEnglish speaking
Institution
students. Eligibility for this program is
Institution
not based upon financial need.
Aurora 1 $ 800 Mundelein 5 3,822Belleville 2 403 Niles 2 2,400Central YMCA 15 9,230 North Central 1 400Chicago City North ,ark 1 640
Mayfair 4 120 Northeastern 22 5,139.10Loop 3 110 Northern 9 4,553
Chicago State 72 26,862 Roosevelt 38 32,118De Paul 4 3,200 Sauk Valley 2 689Elgin 1 150 SIUCarbondale 3 1,201.50Felician 6 3,150 Thornton 1 560George Willip,rns 1 1,200 friton 6 2,067.52Harper 2 472 11 of ICircle 35 18,020Kendall 2 1,200 U of IUrbana 1 686Loyola 4 2,670 Waubonsee 8 1,752McHenry 1 800 Western 2 1,291.50Moraine Valley 1 310 TOTALS 255 S 126.016 62
BENEFITS FOR SURVIVORS OF POLICEMEN AND FIREMEN
ISSC provides educational benefits for the children, aged 25 or under, of policemen and firemen killed in the lineof duty while employed by, or in the voluntary service of, the state of Illinois or any public entity in this state.Awards are provided annually in amounts up to $1300 per year for four years of full-time undergraduate study.Need is not a factor in eligibility.
1972.73 benefits: 1 student $1200
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR SURVIVORSAIEPENDENTS OF CORRECTIONAL WORKERS
ISSC is authorized to provide assistance of up to $1300 per year for survivors and dependents of employeesof the Illinois Department of Corrections who were killed or became 90.100% disabled while in the line ofduty in a security position with the department. To be eligible, the employee must have had responsibilityfor inmates of any correctional institution in this ;tate. Payment can be made at approved public and privateinstitutions of higher learning. Eligibility for this program is not based upon financial need.
1972.73 benefits: No awards made
50
STATES WITH COMPREHENSIVE SCHOLARSHIP/GRANT PROGRAMS BASED ON FINANCIAL NEED
FOR STUDENTS ATTENDING EITHER PUBLIC OR PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS
NUMBER
OF U. S. CENSUS
TOTAL DOLLARS
APPROPRIATED
PER
CAPITASTATE AWARDS* 1970 POPULATION 1973 -74 AWARDS t'APPROPo
ALASKA Soo 302,173 $ 1,000,000 $ 3'31CALIFORNIA 33,144 19,953,134 34,709,160 1.74
CONNECTICUT 2,911 3,032,217 1,747,300 .58
FLORIDA 3,368 6,789,443 3,835,001 .56
ILLINOIS 75,500 11,113,976 55,352,000 4.98INDIANA 15,650 5,193,669 10,078,190 1.94
IOWA 6,750 2,825,041 6,300,000 2.23KANSAS 2,905 2,249,071 2,650,000 1.18
MAINE 300 993,663 184,000 .19
MARYLAND 10,629 3,922,399 3,425,000 .87
MASSACHUSETTS 16,000 5,689,170 9,500,000 1.67
MICHIGAN . 23,425 8,875,083 16,275,000 1.83
MINNESOTA 7,670 3,805,069 6,300,000 1,66
MISSOURI 6,798 4,677,399 3,368,090 .72
NEW JERSEY 43,479 7,168,164 25,920,0(41 3.62
NEW YORK 281,700 18,190,740 82,000,c00 4.51
NORTH DAKOTA 628 617,761 167,500 .27
OHIO 45,000 10,652,017 19,800,000 1.86
OREGON 3,760 2,091,385 t,85o,000 .88
PENNSYLVANIA 99,744 11,793,909 64,000,,Yyl 5.43
RHODE ISLAND 68o 949,723 550,000 .58
SOUTH CAROLINA 3,300 2,590,516 4,000,000 1.54
TENNESSEE 3,500 3,924,164 2,155,000 .55TEXAS 9,000 11,196,730 5,000,000 .45
VERMONT 3,865 444,732 2,593,620 5.83
WASHINGTON 2,585 3,409,169 1,380,000 .40
WEST VIRGINIA 1,575 1,744,237 500,000 .29
WISCONSIN 17,035 4,417,933 10,643,60o 2,41
ALL OF ABOVE 721,701 158,612,687 375,283,370 $ 2.37
(78.06% OF U.S. TOTAL)
'BEST ESTIMATES AS OF FALL, 1973
THE SCHOLARSHIP COMMISSION ACTIVELY IDENTIFIES WITH THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS, WHICH ARE RE-
LATED TO THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE COMMISSION:
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF STATE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF HIGHER EDUCATION LOAN PROGRAMS
EDUCATION COMMISSION OF THE STATES
COLLEGE ENTRANCE EXAMINATION BOARD
AMERICAN COLLEGE TESTING PROGRAM
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF STUDENT FINANCIAL AID ADMINISTRATORS
MIDWEST ASSOCIATION OF STUDENT FINANCIAL A10 ADMINISTRATORS
ILLINOIS ASSOCIATION OF STUDENT FINANCIAL AID ADMINISTRATORS
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Or COLLEGE ADMISSIONS COUNSELORS
ILLINOIS ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE ADMISSIONS COUNSELORS
51
ILLINOIS STATE SCHOLAR PROGRAM
The Illinois State Scholar Program publicly and personally identifies those high school seniors who possess superioracademic potential. Each student named a State Scholar receives a Certificate of Merit from the Illinois StateScholarship Commission. Besides receiving statewide recognition from the various news media in the state, thenames of the State Scholars are given by the Commission to the colleges and universities in Illinois. The distin'thonor of being named a State Scholar is further highlighted by the fact that many colleges and universities activelyseek the State Scholar for admission.
How an Applicant Becomes a State Scholar - The Competitive Selection Process
During the spring or summer, prior to the high school senior year, the prospective Scholar takes the designatedexamination. Currently the American College Testing Program examination is required. The applicant must desig-nate the Illinois State Scholarship Commission (Code #10471 as a recipient of the scores. A minimum weightedtest score (currently English standard score x 4; mathematics standard score x 3; social studies standard score x 3;and natural sciences standard score x 2) is established for those for whom an end of junior year rank in high schoolclass will be obtained. Weighted test scores of 270 to 290 and higher have had ranks requested from high schoolsfor the past five years. The rankin-class and size of class are converted to a rank standard score to convert rank tomake it roughly equivalent to high school grade average. Standard score rankin-class is multiplied by a weightingof six and added to weighted test score. The sum of this addition is weighted selection score, and the highestweighted selection scores are named as State Scholars.
Selection score information for the State Scholars of the past seven years is shown below:
Mean MeanNo. of .weighted Mean Mean ACT Weighted Rank
Award State Selection Selection Composite Test StandardYear Scholars Scores Score Score Score Score
1968-69 16,963 395-up 452 26.7 319.4 22.1 (90.51 Percentile Rank)1969-70 16,019 419-up 465 27.4 328.8 22.7 (92.32 Percentile Rank)1970-71 16,526 424-up 46
527.4 328.7 22.8 (92.62 Percentile Rank)
1971-72 16,517 420-up 462 27.2 326.0 22.7 (92.32 Percentile Rank )1972-73 16,215 418-up 462 27.1 325.0 22.9 (92.93 Percentile Rank)1973-74 15,184 416-up 460 26.9 323.0 22.9 (92.93 Percentile Rank )1974-75 15,435 416-up 462 27.5 324.9 22.9 (92.93 Percentile Rank)
Percentile Rank = Size of Class minus (Rank -in -Class minus .5)Size of Class
Conversion Table: Percentile Rank to Standard Score Rank: 30 (99.75 to 99.99), 29 (99.53 to 99.74), 28 (99.19 to99.52), 27 (98.62 to 99.18), 26 (97.79 to 98.61), 25 (96.41 to 97.78), 24 (94.53 to 96.40), 23 (91.93 to94.52), 22 (88.50 to 91.92), 21 (84.14 to 88.49), 20 (78.82 to 84.13), 19 (72.58 to 78.81), 18 (65.56 to72.57), 17 (57.93 to 65.55) and 16 (50.00 to 57.92).
Selection Criteria for State Scholars
1958-59 to 1963- 64: test scores only1964-65 to Present: test scores and high school record
Time of Required Examination for State Scholar Applicants
1958-59 to 1966-67: early in senior year1967- 68 to Present: late in junior year
52
63
AN ANALYSIS OF PARTICIPATION AND STATE SCHOLARS BY COUNTY LOCATION OF HIGH SCHOOL
IN THE SCHOLARSHIP COMPETITIVE PROGRAM 1964.65 TO 1974.75
'Ns.. 799 1,933 9,094 1,333 5,269 16,6157:,i265 682 3,062 353 7,879 6,351
I
1,029 2,260) 347 e37
DI KALB KANE !,
223,447
2,984 12,356wi
3,632ii,,--,
1,114 4,297 2707:610277
1,1371,478
539 IT,. . ..,.1:02j--376
2,497- 10,202
,le
1 ,68 63,038
aW :Z.STEPP° PN WINN, Niro' 7:717N7FE. pa Nu. 7LAKE
ft. '5,678Rci_f_c's+-Ah' 2,029
1 MERCER
843%. 230
HANCOCK
Nni 1'440438
ADAMS
\ 3,165). ,:no
t--jphRkkN
2 61 1,10975 372
SON
mcpcitouc,i
1,746511
253'BPPro' 92
175
L
\. 847263
4.4`. CA'
J 78
ALL ILLINOIS
467,196 participants149,691 State Scholars
EACH COUNTY
Numbers in bold face indicatenumber of participants.
Numbers in italics indicatenumber of Stale Scholars.
4.9
HENRY BUPEAppLA SALES
2,296694
1236
F 75,833 "-
257 I
6,7892,076890
KNCA
3,3501,048
FULTON
STARA
551164
8,984L2,665
1,724
521
T L1-
2,016 4,672579 May 1,686
733 AN
209
436
' LAYNCSTON
1,679
<LEAN
4,5751,516
580
1,252
(Ass 677 56,4
178 . 141,1
1,55711 6,220
so. -y NMuRGAN
222. 446 2,181M Ij
E,K1
661173
ESE 8391921
A1
M ACOu
2,001598
337
.15
1,647505
YJNP T:OAM Pro
619221
HAI T
1,031
5,443 i325'
1,748 jv 1,1051. 595 263 ,--L, 160
1,035 2'4371- 707
277 406
'932380
3,51t1
1,108 I
1,9431
722
PRON,u0V,
LhAY. A yN
yEHMIEION I
4,261 3,3191,701 976 i
1,386 FAT, E TYE
10,0773,208
51 '.LAIR
al\ 9,0912,702
461- 801217
680187
1,457379'
WENoN
1,450
AR!
1,649454
588 4301,107 158 171
14,,. 331 j RAND,* P,+ HEE,
709 ,5. 5189 1,264
309
\lc.- 772\. 259
380CLAP
704174
WON
;ASP,
1,012 I
304 I
AP;61 1\
81187
CRAW.
528 957280 ;
776 708 j283 2231'
574 k `512I"'AK, )6."'.1
147 110 _tI
31184
137
NAME 1.)N 1 WHO(
327 922.91 231
SA . ii;, 4* 4).
1,5401,45
616 207 C...489
6
uNP
207 41
A.
421fr**.
1-r-v 593 157 78 11/.58 3:5;1 167 45 is i
eliFex *S ,--11-- 4o.t.,,,I IAA,
176 : 1"/" "...t.4.,;: 71,1149,191
!*--4e)%
ENROLLED STATE SCHOLARS WITH MONETARY AWARDS - BY TYPE INSTITUTION
ACADEMIC YEARS 1968-69 1969-70 1970 -71 1971 -72 1972-73 1973-74
,TYPE INSTITUTION
& ACADEMIC YEAR
PERCENT PERCENT
OF TOTAL TYPE INSTITUTION OF TOTAL
FOR YEAR & ACADEMIC YEAR FOR YEAR
PUBLIC 2-YEAR PRIVATE 2-YEAR
1968-69 257 2.1 1968-69 47 .4
1969-70 48o 3.2 1969-70 52 .4
1970-71 496 3.5 1970-71 46 31971-72 642 4.2 1971-72 57 .4
1972-73 690 4.6 1972-73 49 .31973-74 602 4.5 1973-74 4o .3
PUBLIC 4-YEAR PRIVATE 4-YEAR
1968-69 4,991 40.9 1968-69 6,914 56.61969-70 6,277 42.4 1969-70 7,990 54.o1970-71 6,003 42.2 1970-71 7,688 54.0
1971-72 6,318 41.2 1971-72 8,303 54.21972-73 6,342 42.5 1972-73 7,748 52.o
1973-74 5,655 42.0 1973-74 7,028 52.2
ALL PuBLIc ALL PRIVATE
1968-69 5,248 43.0 1968-69 6,961 57.01969-70 6,757 45.7 1969-70 8,042 54.31970-71 6,499 45.7 1970-71 7,734 54.31971-72 6,960 45,4 1971-72 8,360 54.61972-73 7,032 47.2 1972-73 7,797 52.3
1973-74 6,257 46.4 1973-74 7,o68 52.5
HOSPITAL SCHOOLS OF NURSING
1972-73 82 .5
1973-74 147 1.1
YEAR
PERCENTAGE OF
TOP 1%
STATE SCHOLARS
T°1:'5.1
RANK -IN -CLASS
TOP 1O
SECOND
QUARTER1963-64 9.8 37.1 56.6 12.61964-65 12.2 49.6 73.5 2.91965-66 15.2 56.9 82.0 1.21966-67 11.2 45,0 70.9 3.51967-68 11.3 46.2 72.4 2.81968-69 6.8 29.1 49.4 15.3
1969-70 8.1 34.1 58.1 8.91970-71 8.4 34.7 58.9 8.61971-72 8.4 33.9 57.4 9.o
1972-73 8.9 35.8 6o.o 8.11973-74 8.9 36.1 60.3 7.8
54
ILLINOIS GUARANTEED LOAN PROGRAM
In 1966 the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program was established with the goal of assuring that no qualified studentwould be denied an opportunity to pursue a program of postsecondary education because of financial reasons.The results have been most gratifying. In 1973 Illinois banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unionsmade loans in the amount of $32,000,000 to Illinois students.
At its inception the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program contracted with these commercial lenders to reimbursethem for 100% of their principal loss on any student loan account which the borrower did not pay in full. As ofSeptember, 1971, the Guaranteed Loan Program was authorized to pay lenders any uncollected accrued interestwhich might be due on any defaulted account. At that time also the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program wasauthorized to guarantee loans to students who were not United States citizens but were permanent residentsof the country.
From 1966 the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program Operated with a reserve fund appropriated by the State ofIllinois, and the Program contracted with its lenders to maintain one dollar on reserve for every ten dollars ofthe Program's share of the liability on the loans it guaranteed. In 1969 the Illinois agency signed a reinsuranceagreement with the federal goverriment- which committed the federal government to reimburse the state agencyfor 80% of the dollar amount of each default claim paid to lenders. In 1972 the Illinois legislature amended the"Higher Edacation Student Assistance Law" to pledge the full faith and credit of the State of Illinois to coverany potential default obligations of the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program, thereby removing any further needto maintain dollars on reserve.
Many persons have contributed to the success of this program, and the Commission is very grateful for the interestand support of our state officials and legislature and for the cooperation of the educational community. Muchof the success this program has experienced must also be crcditcd to the suppcirtive attitude of the private lendingcommunity, which has invested millions of dollars and countless numbers of man-hours to make an educationaldream a reality for many Illinois students.
PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS
Student Eligibility
The student applicant must be:
1. A citizen or a permanent resident of the United States.
2. A resident of the state of Illinois
A) Attendance at an Illinois school
Any student attending an approved school located within the state of Illinois may be considereda resident of the state of Illinois for the purposes of the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program. Thisapplies only to those students who are engaged in course work requiring supervised classroominstruction and would not include those students taking home study or correspondence courses froman Illinois school.
8) Attendance at a nonIllinois school
If a student is attending an approved school which is not located in Illinois, the following residencyrequirements apply:
DEPENDENT STUDENT If during the 12 months preceding the application for a loan, theapplicant has (1) resided with, or (2) been claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes by, or
55
(3) received in excess of $600 from a parent or legal guardian, the applicant is declared to be a"dependent student" according to federal regulations. In such cases, the parent(s) with whom thestudent resides must be a resident of Illinois.
INDEPENDENT STUDENT If none of the three conditions described in the above paragraph,"Dependent Student", has Dccurred during the 12 months preceding the application for a loan, theapplicant is declared to be an "independent student" according to federal regulations. In such cases,the student is considered to be a resident of the state of Illinois if he has resided in the state for atleast six consecutive mon 'hs in some capacity other than that of a full-time student.
3. A fullfime student.Loan Amounts
Yearly Maximums: Freshman year $1,000; Sophomore year $1,500; Each academic year thereafter $2,500(Minimum Loan: $150)
Total Maxi, .1ms: $10,000 (Undergraduate borrowing limited to a total maximum of $7,500)
Cost of Loan
WHILE THE BORROWER IS IN SCHOOL The annual percentage rate of interest is 7%. However, if the borrowerand his family can demonstrate financial need (in accordance with federally prescribed formulaswhich measure thefamily's financial resources), tht federal government will pay the accruing interest on the borrower's behalf. Allother borrowers must make arrangements to pay such interest as it accrues.
DURING THE REPAYMENT PERIOD The annual percentage rate of interest remains 7%, and all borrowers mustply this interest as it accrues during the repayment period. (Note Some loans disbursed prior to December 15,1968, were eligible for partial payment by the federal government of interest which accrues during the repaymentperiod.)
Repayment of Loan
The student mutt contact the lending institution within five months after ceasing full-time study to arrange for therepayment of his loan. Payments of not less than $30.00 per month must begin nine months after graduation or ces-sation of full-time study. The usual repayment period will be approximately 60 months (unless such a repaymentperiod would result in a monthly payment of less than S30.00). However, the lender may offer longer repaymentschedules lup to 120 months) if the amount borrowed and the borrower's circurnstz:nces would indicate a longerrepayment period.
Deferment of Repayment
A student is eligible to have the principal portion of any required payments deferred if he returns to full-timestudy at an approved school, or if he is serving in the armed forces. the Peace Corps, or VISTA. If the borrower'sloan(s) was eligible for federal payment of interest benefits (see ''Cost of Loan" above) at the time it was originallydisbursed, the federal government will pay all interest which accrues during such periods of deferment. All otherborrowers must make arrangements to pay vich interest as it accrues even though the principal payments aredeferred. (The lender may, at his option, extend repayment deferments to borrowers in the case of family illness,financial hardship, return to part-time study, etc., if the lender judges the borrower's circumstances to warrant suchdeferment. Borrowers must make arrangements in all cases to pay accruing interest on such deferments.)
Approved Schools
Most colleges, universities, schools of nursing, and many vocational and technical schools are eligible Generally,any public or private educational institution located in the United States (and some foreign countries) that offersat least a one-year program of study leading to a degree or employment in a recognized occupation is eligible. Tobe eligible a school 'must be approved by the United States Commissioner of Education and the Illinois StateScholarship Commission.
Approved Lenders
A listing of approved lenders is available upon request from the IGLP office. Most banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions in Illinois are potentially eligible for approved status. Approved status in the program doesnot require the lender to honor every loan request submitted to it.
56
ILLINOIS GUARANTEED LOAN PROGRAMOPERATIONS REPORT TO DECEMBER 31, 1973(FIRST LOAN GUARANTEED AUGUST 22, 1966)
Student Loan Applications
Number of Students 142,672Number of Loans 240,849Average Loan Amount 1,096.00Average Borrower Outstanding Indebtedness 1,985.00Total Amount Guaranteed $264,076,056.00
Reinsurance Information
Federal Reinsurance Payments (Effective Sept. 1,1969) $ 4,560,526,00
Recoveries of Defaulted Loans $ 980,612.00
Loan Guarantee Capacity
The Full Faith and Credit of the State of Illinois is Fledged as theReserve Fund for Student Defaults.
67
ILLINOIS GUARANTEED LOAN PROGRAM
Statistical Summary
1970-71-72-73
Number
1970
Number
1971
Number
1972
Number
1973
Dollars
Guaranteed
Dollars
Guaranteed
Dollars
Guaranteed
Dollars
Guaranteed
January
1,878
$2,499,836
1,888
$1,939,974
2,019
$2,075,664
1,687
$1,774,510
February
1,521
1,395,300
2,239
2,170,978
2,418
2,411,599
4,470
4,584,056
March
1,045
988,752
1,544
1,530,344
1,509
1,457,770
140
132,973
April
1,238
1,238,928
1,485
1,470,145
1,059
1,063,266
251
230,489
May
1,228
1,345,931
1,295
1,401,660
1,104
1,208,891
742
746,730
June
1,819
2,020,141
1,954
2,175,052
3,732
4,214,074
866
936,888
July
4,807
5,550,052
4,635
5,334,229
93
96,819
1,282
1,657,757
August
9,495
10,889,941
9,206
10,733,982
1,562
1,762,862
2,775
3,712,399
September
6,789
7,619,356
6,838
7,751,494
11,303
13,190,392
6,338
8,260,101
October
2,538
2,779,432
2,731
3,019,999
5,622
6,382,294
3,485
4,558,691
November
1,941
2,060,095
2,063
2,205,809
1,700
1,850,973
2,408
3,019,422
December
2,113
2,232,769
2,438
2,539,385
2,208
2,369,406
1,829
2,182,388
Calendar
Total
36,412
40,620,533
38,316
42,273,051
34,329
38,084,010
26,273
31,796,404
Cumulative
141,931
152,005,496
180,247
194,278,547
214,576
232,362,557
240,849
264,15 ,961
STUDENT POPULATI.ON PROFILE
January 1, 1974
TOTAL AMOUNT GUARANTEED SINCE 8/66MINUS TOTAL REPAYS AND DEFAULTSNET AMOUNT GUARANTEES OUTSTANDINGTOTAL ELIGIBLE FOR INT SUBSIDY 89%
STUDENTS
142,67227,321
115,351127,574
DOLLARS
264,076,05635,056,824
229,019,232233,099,568
GUARANTEED SINCE 8/66
# STU DOLLARS
GUARANTEED LAST 12 MO.TO NEW BORROWERS
% # STU DOLLARSSEX
%
MALE 62% 88,207 169,130,622 54% 7,238 9,489,215FEMALE 38% 54,465 94,945,434 46% 6,132 7,414,450
RACENEGRO 11% 15,521 27,969,332 15% 2,045 2,563,346AMER. INDIAN 00% 145 323,796 00% 36 59,648ORIENTAL 00% 105 223,223 00% 49 57,969SPAN SURNAME 00% 611 1,271,673 01% 123 158,159OTHER 89% 126,290 234,288,032 84% 11,117 14,064,543
MARITAL STATUSSINGLE 79% 112,596 204,953,787 80% 10,635 13,032,011MARRIED 18% 25,600 51,121,533 15% 1,950 2,801,669DIVORCED 02% 2,684 5,067,397 03% 416 582,055WIDOWED 00% 242 445,359 00% 39 55,782SEPARATED 01% 1,194 1,936,362 01% 176 258,068NOT KNOWN 00% 356 551,618 01% 154 182,080
PARENT RELATIONDEPENDENT 74% 104,804 191,013,649 72% 9,592 11,539,165INDEPENDENT 26% 37,719 72,809,173 28% 3,720 5,295,770NOT KNOWN 00% 149 253,234 00% 58 68,730
ADJ FAMILY INC0 -3000 21% 27,167 50,823,148 20% 2,676 3,369,039
3001-6000 18% 26,019 45,172,767 13% 1,718 2,172,371
6001-7500 10% 14,607 25,564,993 07% 973 1,176,7127501-9000 10% 14,746 26,328,808 07% 987 1,180,192
9001-12000 19% 27,331 50,785,006 15% 1,944 2,330,35312001-19999 13% 19,161 38,617,499 11% 1,433 1,744;326
15000- 03% 4,688 10,938,723 08% 1,132 1,543,106NOT REPORTED 06% 8,953 15,845,112 19% 2,507 3,387,566
ACADEMIC YEARFRESHMAN 23% 32,856 29,708,659 38% 5,021 4,595,817
SOPHOMORE 18% 25,425 40,342,862 18% 2,422 3,001,717
JUNIOR 18% 25,938 50,837,664 17% 2,338 3,371,415
SENIOR 29% 41,129 98,847,971 14% 1,843 2,711,286
GRADUATE 12% 17,321 44,324,578 13% 1,746 3,223,430
NOT KNOWN 00% 3 14,322 00% 0 0
59
HISTORICAL VS
TOTAL GUARANTEES LAST 12 MONTHSNEW BORROWERSRENEWAL LOANS
AVERAGE LOAN LAST 12 MONTHS
CURRENT TRENDS
STUDENTS
24,80154% 13,37046% 11,431
DOLLARS
31,706,81316,903,66514,803,148
1,278
GUARANTEED SINCE 8/66
#stu DOLLARSCURRENT STATUS
INTERIM OR DEF INT 41% 58,180 114,092,763PAYOUT OR DEF PAYOUT 39% 55,692 111,530,292TOTALLY REPAID 16% 22,167 27,135,092DEATH AND DISABILITY 00% 361 588,963DEFAULT 03% 4,793 7,332,769OTHER 01% 1,479 3,396,177
SCHOOL LOCATIONIN ILLINOIS 70% 99,545 179,484,986OUT OF STATE 26% 37,705 71,805,933FOREIGN COUNTRY 04% 5,422 12,785,137
SCHOOL TYPEFOUR-YEAR PUBLIC 56% 80,291 144,971,918FOUR-YEAR PRIVATE 29% 41,755 84,282,312TWO-YEAR PUBLIC 03% 4,153 4,720,201TWO-YEAR PRIVATE 01% 2,063 2,665,321VOCATIONAL 06% 8,737 9,607,687NOT KNOWN 05% 5,673 17,828,617
YEAR OF BIRTH1939 OR BEFORE 04% 4,999 9,084,239
1940-1945 10% 14,968 28,944,2531946-1948 25% 34,302 68,986,170
1949 11% 16,376 34,031,9511950 12% 16,446 32,720;6461951 10% 14,777 29,024,958195 09% 12,143 22,335,5271953 06% 9,077 14,433,7801954 04% . 5,932 7,672,172
1955 OR AFTER ** 02% 3,202 3,412,248NOT KNOWN * 07% 10,450 13,430,112
GRADE AVERAGE - PERCENTAGE ONLY
A 08% B 35% C 28% D 01% F 00% UNKNOWN 28%
* "Race" and "Year of Birth" not included on first 10,000 applications.** Investigation reveals students falsely reported current year as year of birth.
60
ESTIMATED CUMULATIVE NUMBER OF STUDENT BORROWERS BY COUNTY OF RESIDENCE
DAV,ES,
%% 851
NAM/4
1) 421
1,013
0.-,1
2,3951RUCK ISLAM;.
MLR( ER
253
! ARMEN
143 502
SON
HAhcocK mCX)NOUGH
519 884 .
ADAMS
1,488
726score
92
PIKE
167
STEPHO N'UN IMP:AO RAii1, 7.171 71i N., 1:A1
873 2,744 400 1,563
oc..1 1 1
593DE KALB KA%
50,403
1,134 12,809
4,384
LE
552
HE NR)
954
KNOX
1,269
BUREAU
707
LA SALLE
76iS'A I7A RUIN Y
162MARSHAL.
FULTON
550
CASS
MORGAN
El(214 A
1,679
7,432
of !
300 Ik
3,075
306
0,41Nrial (Oa
WOOF 762
3,894 532
VI #1,l 1
1,775 1V SON 1
225 LI 4,4'..
AA \,,-;') 571
280 173 I Ln__
A', .AMN
2913,034
138-)t MACOUPIN
c AL 287\lot"r 685
84 180
%....0,.) 3,792
)ST CLAR
3,601
251RAMX,i P11
.%\ 282
61
Mt:LEAN
2,237
nAN,AFII
1,255
AN
454
OE WO'
172
MA, I h
2772,566 o..r.L
1
298
,Fr1QUOIS
549
iiAMPAIGN
- 2,658
M ,MiRl
488 1, TUI if
196
I ph
545
1r ,t9N
149
VERMILION
812
242433
337 ISHE LL7L t_
232 CI A,Aio a A..
283
A',14LA.,
MAR1
759
372
213
Li A4.
114235
CRAW, R[N,
166 235
LAWRENLE
308 1 339 I"- 1'113345
246 145;11 .
158
Art IRSON
485
11.,
3857"
L1/4.1,778 417
164 158
ki15'1149P
HAM., *UN wHlIE
112 397 r}A,NE GALLA,Z404,..t
326 112 /-it
34
ES
TIM
AT
ED
CU
MU
LAT
IVE
NU
MB
ER
OF
ST
UD
EN
T B
OR
RO
WE
RS
BY
ST
AT
E L
OC
AT
ION
OF
ED
UC
AT
ION
AL
INS
TIT
UT
ION
63
ILLINOIS GUARANTEED LOAN PROGRAM
APPROVED EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONSIN ILLINOISJANUARY 1, 1974
ALTON KITZMILLER BEAUTY COLLEGE CHICAGO ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGYALTON ST JOSEPHS HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO ILLINOIS MASONIC HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGARLINGTON HIS JOHN AND LOUIS BEAUTY SCHOOL CHICAGO ILLINOIS MASONIC HOSP SCHOOL OF X -RAY TECHARLINGTON HTS NORTHWEST COMM HOSP SCHOOL OF X -RAY TECH CHICAGO INSTITUTE OF BUSINESS & COMP EDUCAURORA AURORA COLLEGE CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTANTS SOCIETYAURORA COPLEY MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO IPPOLITO SCHOOL OF COSMETOLOGYAURORA COPLEY MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH CHICAGO JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOLAURORA JOHN AND LOUIS BEAUTY SCHOOL CHICAGO LOUIS A WEISS MEM HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECHAURORA ST JOSEPH MERCY HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH CHICAGO LOYOLA UNIVERSITYBELLEVILLE BELLEVILLE JUNIOR COLLEGE CHICAGO LUTHERAN SCHOOL OF THEOLOGYBELLEVILLE COIFFURE SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE CHICAGO MACCORMAC JUNIOR COLLEGEBLOOMINGTON ILLINOIS WESLEYAN COLLEGE CHICAGO MARY THOMPSON HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHBLOOMINGTON MENNONITE HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO MCCORMICK THEOLOGICAL SEMINARYBLOOMINGTON STEPHENS ACADEMY CF BEAUTY CULTURE CHICAGO MEADVILLE THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL OF LOMBARD COLLEGEBLOOMINGTON UNIVERSITY BEAUTY SCHOOL CHICAGO METROPOLITAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESSCAHOKIA PARKS COLL OF AERONAUTICAL TECHNOLOGY CHICAGO MICHAEL REESE HOSP SCHOOL OF CYTOTECHNOLOGYCANTON GRAHAM HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO MICHAEL REESE HOSP SCHOOL OF MEDICAL TECHCANTON SPOON RIVER COLLEGE CHICAGO MICHAEL REESE HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGCARBONDALE SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY CHICAGO MOSER SECRETARIAL SCHOOLCARBONDALE SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIV VOCATIONAL TECH CHICAGO MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCARLINVILLE BLACKBURN COLLEGE CHICAGO MUNDELEIN COLLEGECARTERVILLE JOHN A LOGAN COLLEGE CHICAGO RATIONAL COLLEGE OF EDUCATION-URBAN CAMPUSCARTHAGE ROBERT MORRIS JUNIOR COLLEGE CHICAGO NEW IMAGE ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTURECENTRALIA KASKASKIA COLLEGE CHICAGO NILES COLLEGE-LOYOLA UNIVERSITYCHAMPAIGN BURNHAM CITY HOSP SCHOOL OF MED TECH CHICAGO NORTH PARK COLLEGE & THEOLOGICAL SEMINARYCHAMPAIGN BURNHAM CITY HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH CHICAGO NORTHEASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITYCHAMPAIGN ILLINOIS COMMERCIAL COLLEGE CHICAGO NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY-CHICAGO CAMPUSCHAMPAIGN PARKLAND COLLEGE CHICAGO NORWEGIAN-AMERICAN HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHAMPAIGN UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO PIVOT POINT BEAUTY SCHOOLCHAMPAIGN UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS - DEPT OF ART CHICAGO PRESBYTERIAN-ST LUKES HOSPITAL SCH OF NURSINGCHARLESTON EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY CHICAGO PRESBYTERIAN-ST LUKES HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO ALEXIAN BROTHERS HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO PROV/OONT HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO ALLIED INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CHICAGO RAVENSWOOD HOSP MED CENTER ANESTHESCHICAGO AMERICAN ASSN OF MEDICAL RECORD LIBRARIANS CHICAGO RAVENSWOOD HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGCHICAGO AMERICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC CHICAGO ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITYCHICAGO AMERICAN SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE CHICAGO ROSELAND COMM HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO AMERICAN TECHNICAL SOCIETY CHICAGO RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGECHICAGO ART INSTITUTE SCHOOLS CHICAGO RUSH-PRESBYT-ST LUKES HOSP ANESTHESCHICAGO AUGuS1ANA HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO SELANS SYSTEM OF BEAUTY CULTURECHICAGO AVIATION TRAINING ENTERPRISES CHICAGO SHERWOOD MUSIC SCHOOLCHICAGO BELL A HOWELL SCHOOLS INC CHICAGO SOUTH CHICAGO COMM HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGCHICAGO BRYMAN SCHOOL CHICAGO SOUTH CHICAGO COMM HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO BUSINESS METHODS INSTITUTE CHICAGO SPERTUS COLLEGE OF JUDAICACHICAGO CAREER ACADEMY OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO ST ANNES HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSINGCHICAGO CATHOLIC THEOLOGICAL UNION CHICAGO ST ANNES HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO CENTRAL YMCA COMMUNITY COLLEGE CHICAGO ST BERNARDS HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO CHICAGO CITY JUNIOR COLLECES CHICAGO ST ELIZABETHS SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH
KENNEDY-KING COLLEGE CHICAGO ST ELIZABETHS HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGLOOP COLLEGE CHICAGO ST JOSEPH HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHMALCOLM X COLLEGE CHICAGO ST MARY OF NAZARETH HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGMAYFAIR COLLEGE CHICAGO ST XAVIER COLLEGEOLIVE HARVEY COLLEGE CHICAGO SWEDISH COVENANT HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSINGSOUTHWEST COLLEGE CHICAGO UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOWILBUR WRIGHT COLLEGE CHICAGO UNIV OF CHICAGO SCHOOL OF CYTOTECHNOLOGY
CHICAGO CHICAGO COLLEGE OF AUTOMATION CHICAGO UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO CIRCLECHICAGO CHICAGO COLLEGE OF COMMERCE CHICAGO UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS MEDICAL CENTERCHICAGO CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHY CHICAGO VANDERCOOK COLLEGE OF MUSICCHICAGO CHICAGO CONSERVATORY COLLEGE CHICAGO VOGUE ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTURECHICAGO CHICAGO MEDICAL SCHOOL CHICAGO WALTHER MEMORIAL. HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSINGCHICAGO CHICAGO STATE UNIVERSITY CHICAGO WORSHAM COLLEGE OF MORTUARY SCIENCECHICAGO CHICAGO THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY CHICAGO HIS PRAIRIE STATE COLLEGECHICAGO CHICAGO WESLEY MEM HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING CHICAGO HIS PRAIRIE STATE COIL SCHOOL OF DENTAL ASSISTCHICAGO CHICAGO WESLEY MEM HOSP SCH OF X -RAY TECH CICERO MORTON COLLEGECHICAGO COLUMBIA COLLEGE CRYSTAL LAKE MCHENRY COUNTY COLLEGECHICAGO COMPUTER AND BUSINESS SKILLS INSTITUTE DANVILLE DANVILLE JUNIOR COLLEGECHICAGO CONTROL OATA INSTITUTE DANVILLE LAKE VIEW MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGCHICAGO COOK COUNTY GRAD MED SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH DANVILLE ST ELIZABETH HOSP SCHOOL OF MEDICAL RECORDSCHICAGO COOK COUNTY HOSP SCHOOL OF INHALATION THER DECATUR COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF DECATURCHICAGO COOK COUNTY SCHOOL OF NURSING DECATUR DECATUR MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF RADIOLOGIC TECHCHICAGO OEBBIES SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE DECATUR DECATUR SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL NURSINGCHICAGO DEPAUL UNIVERSITY DECATUR HILLIKIN UNIVERSITYCHICAGO DEvRY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY DEERFIELD TRINITY COLLEGECHICAGO EOGEWATER HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH DEKALB NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITYCHICAGO ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE DES PLAINES NORTHWEST AMERICAN SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURECHICAGO ENGLEWOOD HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH OIXON DIXON PUBLIC HOSPITAL SCHOOL Of X-RAY TECHCHICAGO EUGENIE BAUERLE SCHOOL OF BEAUTY OIXON SAUK VALLEV,(CLLEGECHICAGO FELICIAN COLLEGE DOWNERS GROVE GEORGE WILLIAMS COLLEGECHICAGO GRANT HOSP OF CHICAGO SCHOOL OF NURSING EAST PEORIA ILLINOIS CENTRAL COLLEGECHICAGO GRANT HOSP SCHOOL FOR MED REC LIBRARIANS EAST ST LOUIS CENTREVILLE TWSHIP HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHCHICAGO GREER TECHNICAL INSTITUTE EAST ST LOUIS STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGECHICAGO HOLY CROSS ACADEMIC INSTITUTE EDWARDSVILLE K JANSEN SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURECHICAGO I. J. GOLDBERG SCHOOL OF NURSING EDWARDSVILLE SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITYCHICAGO ILLINOIS COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY EFFINGHAM 0 CHRYSLER SCHOOL Of BEAUTY CULTURECHICAGO ILLINOIS COLLEGE OF PODIATRIC MEDICINE ELGIN ELGIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE
ELGIN JUDSON COLLEGE OAK PARK WEST SUBURBAN HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECHELMHURST ELMHURST COLLEGE OGLESBY ILLINOIS VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGEELMHURST MEM HOSP CF DUPAGE SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH OLNEY OLNEY CENTRAL COMMUNITY COLLEGEELSAH PRINCIPIA COLLEGE OLNEY PICHLAND ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTUREEUREKA EUREKA COLLEGE OLNEY RICHLAND MEMORIAL HOSP X-RAY TECHEVANSTON EVANSTON HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING PALATINE WILLIAM RAINEY HARPER COLLEGEEVANSTON EVANSTON HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF RADIOL TECH PALOS HEIGHTS TRINITY CHRISTIAN COLLEGEEVANSTON EVANSTON SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES PALOS HIILS MORAINE VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGEEVANSTON GARRETT-EVANGELICAL THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY PARK FOREST GOVERNORS STATE UNIVERSITYEVANSTON KENDALL COLLEGE PARK RIDGE LUTHERAN GEN & DEAC HOSP SCH OF NURSEVANSTON NATIONAL COLLEGE OF EDUCATION PARK RIDGE LUTH GEN 8 DEAC HOSP SCR OF X-RAY TECHEVANSTON NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY PARK RIDGE STOCK MARKET INSTITUTE INCEVANSTON SEABURY-WESTERN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY PEKIN FLAMINGO BEAUTY COLLEGEEVANSTON ST FRANCIS HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING PEORIA BRADLEY UNIVERSITYEVANSTON Sr FRANCIS HOSPITAL SCH OF RADIOL TECH PEORIA FLAMINGO BEAUTY COLLEGEEVERGREEN PK LITTLE CO OF MARY HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING PEORIA HI-FASHION BEAUTY COLLEGEEVERGREEN PK LITTLE CO OF MARY HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECH PEORIA METHODIST HOSP OF CENTRAL ILL SCH OF NURSFREEPORT HIGHLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE PEORIA MIDSTATE COLLEGEFREEPORT LA MOLO SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE PEORIA PEORIA COLLEGEGALESBURG CARL SANOBURG,COLLEGE PEORIA ST FRANCIS HOSP SCHOOL OF ANESTHESIAGALESBURG GALESBURG COTTAGE HOSP SCH OF NURSING PEORIA ST FRANCIS HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGGALESBURG KNOX COLLEGE PEORIA ST FRANCIS HOSP SCH OF RADIOTECHNOLOGYGALESBURG YOUNG SCHOOL OF BEAUTY PEORIAGLEN ELLYN COLLEGE OF DUPAGE PEORIA HEIGHTS STEPHENS ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTUREGJDFREY LEWIS AND CLARK COMMUNITY COLLEGE QUINCY BLESSING HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSINGGRAYSLAKE COLLEGE OF LAKE COUNTY QUINCY BLESSING HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHGREENVILLE GREENVILLE COLLEGE QUINCY GEM CITY COLLEGEHARRISBURG SOUTHEASTERN ILLINOIS COLLEGE QUINCY QUINCY BEAUTY ACADEMY INCHARVEY HARVEY AMERICAN SCH OF BEAUTY CULTURE QUINCY QUINCY COLLEGEHARVEY INGALLS MEM HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH QUINCY ST MARY HOSP SCHOOL OF MEDICAL TECHHERRIN JOHN A LOGAN COLLEGE QUINCY ST MARY HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHHINSDALE HINSDALE HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING RIVER FOREST AQUINAS INST OF PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGYHINSDALE HINSDALE SANIT & HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECH RIVER FOREST CONCORDIA TEACHERS COLLEGEINA REND LAKE COLLEGE RIVER FOREST ROSARY COLLEGEJACKSONVILLE FLAMINGO BEAUTY COLLEGE RIVER FOREST SELANS SYSTEM OF BEAUTY CULTUREJACKSONVILLE ILLINOIS COLLEGE RIVER GROVE TRITON COLLEGEJACKSONVILLE MACMURRAY COLLEGE ROBINSON LINCOLN TRAIL COLLEGEJACKSONVILLE PASSAVANT MEM AREA HOSP SCH OF NURSING ROCK ISLAND AUGUSTANA COLLEGEJOLIET ALLA MAES SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE ROCK ISLAND CELE WHAN ACADEMY OF BEAUTYJOLIET COLLEGE OF ST FRANCIS ROCK ISLAND ROCK ISLAND BEAUTY COLLEGEJOLIET JOLIET JUNIOR COLLEGE ROCK ISLAND ROCK ISLAND FRANCISCAN HOSP SCH OF NURSJOLIET JOLIET SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE ROCK ISLAND ST ANTHONYS HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHJOLIET RICKYS SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE ROCKFORD HERZING INSTITUTEJOLIET SILVER CROSS HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING ROCKFORD MIDSTATE COLLEGE OF COMMERCEJOLIET SILVER CROSS HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECH ROCKFORD NOLAS SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTUREJOLIET ST JOSEPHS HOSPITAL SCH OF NURSING ROCKFORD ROCK VALLEY COLLEGEKANKAKEE KANKAKEE COMMUNITY COLLEGE ROCKFORD ROCKFORD COLLEGEKANKAKEE KANKAKEE SCHOOL OF AERONAUTIC INC ROCKFORD ROCKFORD MEM HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGKANKAKEE OLIVET NAZARENE COLLEGE ROCKFORD ROCKFORD MEM HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECHKANKAKEE ST MARYS HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECH ROCKFORD ROCKFORD SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL NURSINGKEWANEE BLACK HAWK EAST COLLEGE ROCKFORD ST ANTHONY HOSP SCH OF INHALATION THERKEWANEE KEWANEE PUBLIC HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECH ROCKFORD ST ANTHONY HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGLA GRANGE LA GRANGE SCH OF COSMETOLOGY ROCKFORD ST ANTHONY HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHLAKE FOREST BARAT COLLEGE ROCKFORD SWEDISH AMERICAN HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGLAKE FOREST LAKE FOREST COLLEGE ROCKFORD SWEDISH AMER HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHLA SALLE LA SALLE SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE ROSELLE LLOYDS FLYING SERVICELEBANON MCKENDREE COLLEGE SHELBYVILLE SPARKS COLLEGELINCOLN FLAMINGO BEAUTY COLLEGE SKOKIE HEBREW THEOLOGICAL COLLEGELINCOLN LINCOLN COLLEGE SKOKIE SKOKIE VALLEY COMM HOSP SCH OF X-RAY TECHLINCOLN LINCOLN CHRISTIAN COLLEGE SOUTH HOLLAND THORNTON JUNIOR COLLEGELISLE ILLINOIS BENEDICTINE COLLEGE SPRINGFIELD BISCH AIRWAYS INCLITCHFIELD LITCHFIELD BEAUTY ACADEMY SPRINGFIELD CONCORDIA THEOLOGICAL SEMINARYLOCKPORT LEWIS UNIVERSITY SPRINGFIELD FLAMINGO BEAUTY COLLEGELOMBARD NATIONAL COLLEGE OF CHIROPRACTIC SPRINGFIELD J EDWARD KING SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHMACOMB WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY SPRINGFIELD LINCOLN LAND COLLEGEMALTA KISHWAUKEE COLLEGE SPRINGFIELD MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGMATTOON LAKE LAND COLLEGE SPRINGFIELD MEMORIAL HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHMATTOON RICHLAND ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTURE SPRINGFIELD MODERNISTIC SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTUREMAYWOOD LOYOLA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY SPRINGFIELD SANGAMON STATE UNIVERSITYMAYWOOD LOYOLA UNIV STRITCH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE SPRINGFIELD SOUTHERN ILL UNIV SCHOOL OF MEDICINEMOLINE BLACK HAWK COLLEGE SPRINGFIELD SPRINGFIELD AREA VOCATIONAL CENTERMOLINE LUTHERAN HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING SPRINGFIELD SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE IN ILLINOISMOLINE MOLINE BEAUTY SCHOOL SPRINGFIELD SPRINGFIELD SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTUREMOLINE MOLINE PUBLIC HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING SPRINGFIELD ST JOHNS HOSP SCHOOL OF ANESTHESIAMOLINE MOLINE PUBLIC HOSP SCH OF X -RAY SPRINGFIELD ST JOHNS HOSP SCHOOL OF MEDICAL TECHMOLINE STERLING COSMETOLOGY SCHOOL INC SPRINGFIELD ST JOHNS HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSINGMONMOUTH MONMOUTH COLLEGE SPRINGFIELD ST JOHNS HOSP SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHMORRISON MORRISON INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY STERLING STERIING SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTUREMORTON GROVE OAKTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE SUGAR GROVE WAUBONSEE COMMUNITY COLLEGEROM CARMEL COLBORNS ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTURE INC TAYLORVILLE CHRYSLER ACADEMY OF BEAUTY CULTUREMOUNT CARMEL WABASH VALLEY COLLEGE ULLIN SHAWNEE COMMUNITY COLLEGEMOUNT CARkou SHINER COLLEGE URBANA MERCY HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSINGMUNDELEIN ST MARY Of THE LAKE SEMINARY URBANA MERCY HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF X-RAY TECHNAPERVILLE EVANGELICAL THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY URBANA UNIV OF ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF AVIATION
NORMALNAPERvILLE BORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE
ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITYVILLA PARKWAUKEGAN
AR ROBERTS SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTUREMUELLER SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE
OAK BROOK BETHANY THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY WAUKEGAN SAWYER COLLEGE OF BUSINESSOAK BROOK NORTHERN BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY WEST CHICAGO AVIATION TRAINING ENTERPRISESOAK LAWN EVANGELICAL SCHOOL OF NURSING WHEATON WHEATON COLLEGEOAK PARK OAK PARK HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING WINNETKA HADLEY SCHOOL FOR TOE BLINDOAK PARK WEST SUBURBAN HOSP SCHOOL OF NURSING 64
65
1974 APPROVED LENDING INSTITUTIONS
ThE FIMCIPL INST ITUIrCNS USTED BEIi ARE APPCVE TO It IMA'TEED LOANS, SINCE THE FUNDS DUNG LOANED AREPRIVATE ASSETS OF TdE LENES AND SIOiE PA1JCPAT!ON IS (NIPELY VOLUNTARY ON THE PART OF THE LENDERSI THE DEGREEOF PAR1ICIPMON THE O(C(SLOK OF WNETA.R TO LOAHI AND 1K WItAT AMOAJIT ARE PT THE O1SC(T1OK OF THE LENDER.
ASIRCAFON
AO,NTlADO SONAL BANFAL ALASALA ONALE DCALEAtOLlSALL ON CAL BALLCRIC.RALPAITAMONTAITOFA
ALICIAALICIAAL I ON
ALION
ANC ORANNALANA
ANT COCA
APPLE RINEPABCO8LAO O& A
ADCIAAZRILB B
LINOTON HISAUIIF.G1ON HIS891 I'.OION PA-IsARLINGTON HIS&AROWGMI r
881 HUBA GHLAND
A5F.MORE
A S IONATHENSATKINSONA TI ASIA
ALBURNAUGUSTAALUE OLA
AIR DNAAURORAAURORA
JRORA
AURORA
RHISIONA VON
BARR I PEOTON
MARTMATILSOBATAVIASATANIRSLARDSTOWNB IA A OS 1 085BEICAPEA
SCCPAtR CITYSCtLIRL(BAA LBS AILS
SftItYILLLSEtSAt NI OCUE
lIttlESOB
SE ME NT
B3(NCAX.R AURA S TRNT CAADDLSA 51811 RANKAIAITRGL ARNN OF ASOCROPA11457 TRUST A SANINGS BANKPEOPLES BANAL OF ALBIRSCITIZARS RATIONAL BURNNATIONAL ss Cr9054 31ALICAN3UIN STATE BARKFIRST NATIONAL BANPSTATE BANK OF VLtIRTCNFARMERS 51411 Ms .31 ALPHA11451 NATIONAL BANKAUTN MRKIRG ARC TFL.L5T COALICIA A 1515 LAO LOAN ASSiKIBST IBATICApAL SARA- £ TRUSIOPPO 5041515 1 LOAN AGSN
i.&CLECE ALICIA WA-S £411 CR10 UNP lAST UTICRAL BANKANCHOR STATE ANAL
ANNA NUTEOBUU BANKANNA STAlL RANKSTATE BANAL or LANOVARSTATE BANAL or ARTIoCIAAPPLE AC VIA STATE BARKR000LA A-A4KS1EA3 A ICON 4534FIRST RATIONAL BANKFIRST PAM CPAAL BAKYFUIDNIE 14(011 ANIONUPLINATON FEDERAL SAVINGSBAN' AND TBUSI CIPANANOATA POINT 51MB BANK'.URTA1'AEST AUST I SUACiLS SARADRR(SMITH STAtE BATIKSTATE BANK OF APT4uRSTATE BANK or ASHLAFITASitBOlI STATE BANKASATON BARB B 1RU5 CC
ATHINS STATE BARKATKINSON TAUST A SirIUSATLANTA NATIONAL BASKNIAOUV SIFITE BATIK
STATE BANK QF AUBURNSTATE BARK OF AUGUSTAAURORA NATIONAL MA-BCATERPILLAR AURORA (AOL 04 u.tRFIRST AMERICAN BATIKFIRST F(C SM B LOAN ASS'.MC-LBNIS NATIONAL BANKOLD SECOND NATIONAL SOAKAILLIF RATIONAL BANAL OF AURORAFIRST 'tAB (ORAL BANKSTATE BANK OF *01510411AKC'tS sTATE BANKFIRST NAIL BARK B TAUST CCFIRST RATIONAL BANKSABTELSO 59014(5 BAPARBATAAIB RANKFIRST NATIONAL BARKF IHSR NAT IONAL BANKFIRSI STAIR BUNKFARMERS STATE BANKFIRS! STATE BANKBANK OF B(LLLNTILEBEI.UNII.LE PIUS SAYINGS SARACCTIZB.NS SIOIKUS I (GAS BSSNFIRS! NATION/I B-ARKGREATER 90(1481111 SAY S INBANK OF ETLIW000'BELVEDERE RAT BANK I TRUST COBOONE STAlK BANKFIRST NAT B4NV TRUST COSIATA SANK OR BOM(NIFIPS! NATIONAL SARAB(F,SEPIAILL( SIATA BANKFRAMERS STATE BANK9*51 00 RONIOSSENIOR COAtIJPP!Tf (tANIBANK OP ICNG4BPL(LINCAKN FIEILRAL SM I INOPAAIC SAl 1515 1 L011. ASURSUBURBAN SR Al 515 1 LOAN *555BETHBLTO NATIONAL BANKSCOTT STATE SINKTHE ID1AST UlIONBI BARB111011 504415 (P401 (RID UN8.4FICATI 55115 BARBCORN BAiT 89511(0(101 58514135 4 lOAN ASSI.I A A riOtlAt (BIDET UNIONAlLISON COXINTA BLAKNBTIARAE BANK
STOIC/ARM tNS IMPI ((0 CR UNBELIE ICIARO SAT A LOAN ASSRFIRST kAII0NL BASK55*15 BANS
DANA.
SARI
(N 5441
P 0 72PALS 'AORTAI ADDISON BARD717 VAN1! TRAiL ROADP 0 BOA 323
P 0 504 TOOF 0 80* 289206 LAST OROBDAFIPAl RAIN STFELTP 0 804 7
F U BOA 97LOCK BOA CP 0 BOA 338620 LAST SQ000WAP2110 STATE STREET200 005? TAAIFO STBROADWAY AT P1008PQ BOA AllF 0 BOA AP05030201 SCIUTAA MAIN STR011P 0 BOA TOOP 0 BOA RIB443 LAKE 5111(1BOA 3807106 EAST RAIN121 SOUTH GAO 519(11105 170Tl3 SOUTH lASS UYLNiE26 EAST CAPOBILI S'PEET903 EAST KINSINCTON R04080 100lii SOUTH ARLIPtCIOR APISPDX S109 538TH VINE126 oEST EDITOR STREETBOA VP CD-IF USAP 0 BOB 138
P 504 6323504 15B
125 NORTH lAPINFITp AND JEFIKASONP 0 BOA 215O SOUTH BROADWAYP 0 BOA 3481851 WEST GALENA BOPJLCVAAD3D! 8051 CALERA BOAJUEpARO34 SOuTH 0R0801148T37.39 SOUTH FEVER STRAITQU43 NORTH LAIB STRAITBGi 88P 0 BOA 165WASHIPAUTON ARC 41.91
04 SOUTH COCK 5111(1Up BOB ITS213 CARL ILK BOB 23614 (051 WILSON STROEI155 iKST WILSON STARTP 3 BOA 2601 0 BOA 020159 PEAT IELE STEER
4800 41661 lAIN STREETPUBLIC SOtARLHASHIPIOTON AT 111GM15 PUBLiC SAPRREID (451 WASHINGTON STRECT214 SOUTH RANNHE III YDAD130 301114 STATE STREET
024 NORTH STATE STREET110 SwIll STATE STRICT201 EASE BIXLMAN STBEETIi SCAT 13824 yOST 4AIR ST BOB SiB
801 235PUBLIC SQUARE101 PUBLIC SAOIJARE5500 53 LPIARLR P030£655 8051 CLIP ROAD92-31 wEST 1(4)48K ROAD5)0-4 WEST OATH SIREETTOT PRAIRIE STREETII 0 BOA 388
1131 wEST (HOBBS SEELT211 4,00TH AlVIN 5160(1209 NORTH LIST STRICT115 EAST NAASMINGTOF. S'Bt(T1701 TOPIURDA AVEFRACTOAAA NI EAIPO521 '808101 191141120 ROAlVI CLAdLA StRAtI2)09 EASt OArtA,,0 AVENUE11360 SOUTH 461(85 MINuS1905, SOUTH 41055(1141 88(111.15SORB50, 394801 213ROECBOx 426321 IVOS SlAtES50 20P-Q SOW P2940 3JTN '18811$ 95(14GB110801156
1300 S00(yttt ROAD5136 WA5NhGtØAI ATAFILA
P 0 504 839
IROOK'OBI8JC YL (P
BUFFALOBUFFALO GROVEBUNKER HILLBUSHNELl.BA P041
CAHOKIACA- LAO
CALLJMET (IT!C'JABR lOGE
CAMP GROAtCRAFT POINT1*509111. I1LLCARTON
CANTON
CANTON
CANTON
CANTOR
CA PR ON
CAR 9041 CA L C
CA VBOPIC.R LI
CARBANCAL C
CARBON CA
CARL ITAAILLECAPt I'lL' ILLECATLILE03814(1(ARM I
CRAM I
CARP I
CARVE NIBES V IL LICARAI(R 'III BC A.? AOL L TOP
CANTH.U3I
C OR I AC E
CART
CASE'LA S ICA TL IN
OCIATRAL IACENTRAL IACBNT4AL IACBFRO COBDOC KR ON 1C K
CAU9MPAIGN
CAYRAFTA ION
CA.RwA ION000IFTA IONC '14FF A ION
CAKAD40NIGN
CAAAFT A IAN
CARIIPA IONCAAPMPA IAN
CFANDL(BPILL(C HAP IN
CHARLOSIONC 'KARL A S TORI
CAIATFMO KTSWORTI4CMI ROA
(HE RAY
C AL S F E A
CPA (SF ER
(1150(10 ISLECA ICAGOCl-IC AGOC -ICAGO
HICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICRCOCHICAGOCHIC BOOCHIC AGO
CHICAGO(H 10*00CII IC A CO
(441(9(0(P411.800
OK IC 5(1
1111 tACO
1,110 AGO(IIITUAGUCHICAGOCHICAGO(411102CHICAGOCHICAGO-
CHICAGO
CE( AGO(ALCAGICpTCAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGO141(850CHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGO
CHICAGO
(4(0600( II TO AGO
BROOLPOIT RATIONAL BARBBUCKLES STAlE BARKPIRHORS STATE BANKBANK OF BUFFALO CRONEFIRST NATIONAL SANKFARMERS A MERCIRANFS STATE BARBPIRS7 RAT SANK OF BARONBANK OF CAHOKIAFIRST BANK APIS TRUST (COAPARALBANK OF BIKER OAKSPEOPLES NATIONAL BANKCAMP DRONE STATE SARAFARMERS STATE BANKFEAST STATE BANK(ANTON STATA DISKCANTON wERKS CR1011 NI041(OFIHANITV BASK AND TRUST COFEAST FEDERAL SAYINGS 8 LOANNATIONAL. BASK OF CANTONCAFRON STATE BANKCAABORDOL( (N I IPPPRO'PT A5SN(ARBONCALE NATIONAL BANKLARSOFIDALE 508 1 LOAN *5501FIRST NATIONAL BOSSCAALINVILL( NATIONAL BANKPARMAPS I 14(RCAUANTS NAT BANKPAAHESS AND HKRCIANTS BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKFIRST RATIONAL SARA-TIRT 101101 BANk OF CAPIPI104115 COUNIF BANVSUBURBAN BRIAR AND TRUST (0E3PPTIRN STIlE BANK(REENE COUNTI NATIONAL BANKFIRST RATIONAL BARKRAPINE TRUST COMPIPAFIRST SCOUR 045K CARP AROAISANk OF CASEYCASEY RATIONAL BANKFIRST RATIONAL BANKFIRST NAT BASK AND TRUSTFIRST STATE BASKOLD NATIONAL BANKSTATE SANK OF CEllO 00000F*AMEAS STATE USAAOP(RI(AN RATIONAL BANKBANK CF ILLINOISCItAPIPATON RATIONAL BANK1401400105 SCHOOLS CR1011 UNCCV$4EDCIAL BUNKTOAST 1,8110594. BlAIRUNIV OF ILL (MOLDIER CR UNIJNIRERSIII FEDS 1101 SAl I LAUI ILITI E'4PLDYEET CAEEICT UNPSOPLES ST AAIVK OF CIUANELCRY1LLECIIAPIPI STATO AUNtCHARLESTON NATIONAL BARRCOACS COUNTY \AIICN*L BASICCH.ATAAM CcHBHJNEIT BANK11112(415 BANKRATIONAL BANA OF CAEIVO,ASTATE BANK OF CHERRYBUENA VISTA NATiONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BASICCIiEST(RFICO 51*11 88110ALL ¶4114115 BRIOGEFORI CR (UN 1041AAlAJ..I'MOlCU TAtIST I 5*914155APICAl All RAIL BARK I TRUSTASHLAIT SOAINAS & LOAN ASSNRSALAN. STATE BASKBANK OF R.A5II4Uw000CAPITOL 51814,03 A LOAN 0054.CENTRAL TAEDIT UNIONCENTRAL RATIONAL BRYAN.CHICAGO FEDERAL SAYINGS I LICHIC000.T0BYPCOLLJIKBIA MAT I05.UL lANACONTEA.CNTAL Itt PAIL BANKCOSFLA'04. 11*5 NATIONAt BANK£1141060 SABINGS 4 ICON A5,NSANLEB EAADtT*IBS CF PINIONDM05 BARKDROVERS NATIONAL BANKE.IC'IANC( 'A*IlOIAAL SARAFIRST ICOPM4ERCIAL BANKFIBS! FEDERAL SAN £ 144 A55sTOPS? NATIONAL BANDHARRIS IBUST I 5*NI'.SS BANALHIRITORC' PLAZA BARK1(915 K100RAL SM I IN ASSIA44994 00.94 9844K 1 TRUST CO419110 PAIR (0-OF KESARAL CR LANLND(PINO*SC0 SAAB OP 014108(0INCAEASON.N. F800PX IS CR O'RIOAJOFVCRSOR STATS BARKtArt SHORt NATIONAL BANKtIlL VIEW BlAST I 564 BARKLAKTSIDK SANKBASALIE NATIONAL BANS(V1WPIORL( TRUST I SA,INO-S BANI
ISO I19jSi (II
BR (IN
P 0 003 5F C BOO 317TEN ERS1 DUNUIE ROADBOB 8BOO 149200 NORTH WALTI'Jl BO A900 GPP(R CANOKIA A0ADBOO 41456141(30* AVIMUB93 PINES 0*0 (IR BOA 29201 509114 PROSPECT STREET
201 EAST )(FFERSON BOA I
P NORTH 1*144 STREET410 (151 ELM STREETOAR NORTH RAIN20 '01ST ELIP STREIT
00 WEST ELM BOA ITO(061,11 04 6TH AND ShilL108.110 RORIH ILLINOIS AVENUE100 NORTH ILLINOIS BOA 940F C BOO 2461P 0 BOR 92000515105 SQUARE BOA 41(11 0 BAR 270SIC BIll SIRS El197 TAIBFAA STREET201 EASt RAIN SIRIET116 WEST 11415AIS LAST 44015 STOE(I54 KENNEDY MIP15RIAL 091912 SOUTH 10111 STREET600 NOATPA 144141 STREEtBOX 391BLJI ISOAS 44101-8.14 II BOY 379
01 8(51 ALABAPSAII STub (ONIRALDRAWER BlAD SOuTH LOCUST STREETO 0 BOA 803101 SOUTH LOCUST STREETP 0 BOA 428149111 STR0(T 501 014 0 BOB 31117142 WISE CHUICH SIRCET201 NORTH RANDOLPH 903 230310 FLORA DRIVE14 EAST UNIVERSITY MENUS90 AlVIN STR011512 SOOTY THIRO STREETTEl LAST IBSEN STREET209 65SF CLARK STREETI NORTH 418141 STARTBID SUPERIOR STAGErSIRTA AND MONROE STR011S701 613111 STREET201 WCST PH.LLBIRAO P 0 501 ABA501 CASt LOCUST
P 0 008 85 148144 STREET1309 SWCIAICK P 0 503 268STATE I TAYLOR STRUTS0 0 BOX 167500 6531 261RSEPEETIII SOUTH OEARSORPI STAIdLISALLE AT II*SPIINGTOAI4568 500111 9.54110443 65(1054443 SOUTA ASHLAND 011(500lAPS 18(51 LAAREI4CE AVENUE4725 6535 S0LMONT 6A(NU(1.361 SOuTH IHOSTETYN MENUS20 ,00TH LASILLE STB(IT00 NORTH STATE STREEt
1-) NORTH 000PAORA6250 NORTH HARLEMPIT SOIJTH LAS.ALLE STREETSilT NORTH CLARK STR0116400 SOuTH P10.8541 *085.100 3uTN1 LAPRJIIE AWEIFILL(-LAS NOBTH WESTERN AIDS'IUEADA STAlE? I *SHIL.AAO 051*/C180 SOUTH LASALLE STRUT4-341 401,141 CLARA STREET1 SOuTH 014950041
IONS FIRST PIAT1ONAL 0181*331 41551 MONROE SIRILI
00 5110114 WAC4ER 09101PAl V.441* STARS STREETISOB 1151 5360 StIll?IBOB [651 5311 StRUT9935 SOUtH 0011808 ORORt0000 '458 380TIA 3191(1SAGE WIST LAWAERC6AO5411IE
603 *,0RTH 142(410.10. AV(P8.jt
3204 P061,4 &SI4LHPIS 4RCPB$E2265 44 1 41MG 001801)6 NIOBJTII tAAA[LI STREET
0 R( 61*
AVtNut09044$
CEICAGOCA I CR00C CRUD
CHICAGOCftI CAUOCHICAGOC MO CAGA)
CHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGO
HlCA0OCII I C000CHICAGOCHICAGOCII (AGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCA C CR00
CHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGOCHICAGO IllSCHICAGO ITSCHICAGO HISCHICAGO ITSCHILL C011IECLUCOIHEC HR 5505CHA CORERS
CICEROCICEROCICEROCEROCESSNA PARECLAREYIDOS HILLSCLAY dINCLIRITORCLINICAlCOAL CITYCOAL YALLENCO8DEJA
C DL tIlES TICOELIIRSABLDL
AL IllOr C LEECI AL 11151 lIECDL AIR CA
C AL LA
CDOIILAIRDCOtAT(AAJIIICORDER
ARDPS
CRESSY ILL BCUBA
BAA C C R C N
DALLAS CITYcAIlFcTH
DAIIYILEEDASAILLEOASICLLEBK AltARDECAOUR
DECATURDECATURDECATURDECATURDECATURDC (A I UR
DECATURDECATURDC ERT ICLO
DEEAF IELDDLERUCLODEBALIDELAYIDDES PLAPICSDES PiAIYCS1*5 P1015(5DIUAICAOIYERHON01101101105DO1fC'icWNCQS GROVEDOWNERS GROVEBU 00015DUPO
DWIGHTDWIGHTEASY ST COAlSEAST ST COAlS(ARLAILLEtOOT ALTOSLAST OUBRQiALAST DURUQUEtO S F DUMOCEEASE HOuSEEAST AIDEIRELAST ISOLAS! RAXIFIELAST PIOOIALAST PEORIACAST PEORIA
SAT BASK OF ALBAYT PARKNORTH SHARP NATACAUL BASKFHCVAIHERS TRUST COASVBAORT'WEST SATIGNAL BANKPLTLRSOPA STATE BASKPIONEER TRUST I SAICIGS 10111PROSPECT FED AY A LII 0555PULIMACH BANK AID IRUST COSEARO 11SL AID TRUST COMPANYSLAIN SATTOASUL BARKSELTRELIASCE FEDERAL OH USSOUTH CENTRAL TAME & TRj$T 00SOUTh SHORE FtATU)S.AL BASEST PRUL FEDERAL 51505 A ENSTEEL CITY SUTIMAL RASHTILlERS YEGEBYL ALiG5 I iSLANCES ATWYILL BASE OF CHICAGO
5ERSITY 50110501 BANKWEST HNIHLASD SAY A Lii ASONWEST PULLMAN SAW I LA ASSAWEST PULLMAN WORkS EARL CR UNWISCONSIN STEEL EFRI CR US3RD ORDER Of ST FRANCIS CR USCHICAGO HIS FED SAY A LOAN011(000 HIS SAT OSAL MAYFIRST !iATIQNA YANK
OLYMPIA STATE BASKCILLICOTME STATE BANK1RUITT-M#TTENS (ROB SATFIRST RATIONAL BATIKSTATE BOOK )F CHYCT.$ANCECO EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNICAFIRST NAT1ORAL BANKHORTON PARR FEDERAL SAY A IAWES'ERS NATIONAL BASK£15550 PARK STATE BASKROSE CF CIAFESDOFI IIftLSCLII CITY BAYIRITIG COlOANDEAlT? COUSTY SAT BASKJOHN WARAIR BASKFIRST NATIONAL BASKCOAL YALLIR STATE BARKFIRST 5*10501 BANECOLCHOSIER STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL BOARHOME PEERAL SAY A CASTATE MAE OF COLLIACYILLACOLUMETA BLDG A LOIS 65SF.STATE BARK OF EGLUSASTATE BASK OF COYSIATIDFIRST NATIORAL SAllESPATE BASK Of CONDESCITIZENS STATE BONYFIRST 5*1105*1 BATIKSTATE BASK OF CUBAFARMERS STATE BANKBARE OF DALLAS CITYFARMERS STATE BANKFEAST NATIONAL BANKFEAST 58*1555 A LOAN 0555PALMER-AMERICAS NATIONAL BASKSECOND NATIONAL BATIKCITIZENS 5*110501 BASKDECATuR ADA CREDIT USD05DECATUR 515AM DEPOT CR tJNFIRST !IATICSAL BASKHORALD A REYLA CREDIT lEIOSMILL IRIS WATCCARL BASKMELLER CO CARLOKEES CR LANORIHIOWEI TAMSECURITY 5111505 A LEAN *055SOY CAPITAL BASKDEERBR30K STATE BANKODARAF1ELE STATE 8601KFIRST ¼1T105RL BASKDEARLA TRUST I 5001105 BASKDELANO STATE BANEDES PLAISES NATIONAL BANKDES PLAISTS TRUST B SAY BANEFIRST NATIONAL BANK
INST SAT CORAL BLASECOYAtNITR BANK OF DI VERNONCITA NATIONAL BASK I TRUST COBIRDS NATIONAL BANEFIRST NATtONAL BANKDOWSEAS GROVE TRATIONAL BASKCIDJEISS NATIONAL BEST00 Q001¼ STAtE BASKOUPO STATE SAYINGS BASKDURANCI STATE BANKDANK OF DWIGHTFIRST NATIONAL BASKEDOCHOTIT BASK & TRUST COUNION NATIONAL BASKNATIONAL BASK OF LKRIVILC(OLIN EPRL)YEIS CREDIT USIONLAST DCBL,GAIE SOVIAGS BASKTA! STATE 00SF OF EAST OLBUOVILF1AS! SAT tONAL BASKCOlOSA ANNIE STATE BASEDEERE TIIAKYESTLR CRFDIT hAlOSEAST MEItSI WORKS CR UNIONSTATE RANK OK LAST HOUSECAICRP!1IAY EARLEHEES CR UNCOI+uNI TV DANAFIRS! RATIONAL BASKTAZEWILI SAl I LOAN *555CITIZENS BANK Of EDISBUROBASK QT EDWAROSYTICETOT KEUCRAL SAy B IA ROSSNAT lOAM BASE A TROST C01FF INOMAIC STATE BASEFIRST *IfOH.AL BASKILL 5ILARATITC(SAY B LA ROSSWRSHIIIGEOYK SAT I LA 0555WOOd CAD CS)ETN BLABEASE CJNTI BOSE A TRUST COBIROETI A 505$ BANKERSfIRST STATE MAECLIA NATIONAL BASKFIRST FEDERAL SA B INfIRST TiABIONAL BATIKRAIIE COILSIN tUC4AO CR hAUNOIW YASTECREAL MAR I TRuST COSUR*M5 IifllçYifrL BASKELHXARB CN4liItY BANEELANtALE S11E RANK
3424 WEST LAWEESCE AVENUE1737 HOWARD STREET50 SOOTH LASALLE STRUT3985 HILBAUCEE ANEFALIE3232 WEST PETERSEN ANISUE4000 WEST SOOTH AW1AE1715 WEST 4TTII STREET400 EAST 111TH STR0113801 WEST ARTIIONGTOAhAS CYST 87TH STFEOI2351 WEST CHICAGO UYEAI!EASS WEST ADOSEBELT ROAD7154 SOUTH JEFFERO BOULEVARD67(0 WEST MCIII' AIIN'JEbOO YOST 31ST SOVIEt5501 SOUTh HEOJII 00150K11108 SOUTH RTCHIGAN1154 EAST 55TH STREET1 NORTH BACKER DREHE530 WEST 19TH SIADET1015 WEST 12010 STREET2664 EAST 106TH STREETYSSO WEST SlOT STREET1630 CA'*CO ROADP 0 BAR JOE1140 IKALSTED STALE!IRS OLIARIA PLAZA007 SCAlY 250 ST P 0 BAR 231207 NORTH 2ND SHR(E
P 0 BOA IOU702 WEST MADISON AVENUE5731 IFS! DTN STREET6000 WEST (6558K5221 WEST 25TH STREET5801 BEST ClAMOR ROADID? SOUTH SECOND STREET200 PARK ARESUEP C BOX 465All PUBLIC SQUARETJ1 SOUTH SIDE SOKLAOE658 SOUTH UROADAIAR200 1ST STREET P 0 PDX 56P G 600 DRYDEPOT STREET701 EAST 71015 STREET115 LAST MAIN STREET102 11051 MAIN STREET238 NORTH MAIN STREETP 0 BOA 10P 0 SOY IP El BOB 3RS
P 0 600 RB5015 STREET P 0 501 117P 0 SIR F
790 OAK STREET BOA AP 0 BOB 1181? WEST MAIN STREET320 NORTH YERNILION STREET2 EAST HAIR STREET27 NORTH VERMILION STREET236 NORTH WATER4666 FARIES PARKWAY1103 EAST CANTRCLL STREET1)0 NORTH WATER STREET123 WISE NORTH S1REET1 MILL 16111 COURT STRICT550 NORTH COWARD STRUT033 EAST PORSIIING ROAD243 SOUTH WATER STREET1001 EAST DLDORO150 SOUTH WRUKEGOS ROAD3001 CAREAFIOLD ROAD126 tYE(RTIELO ROAD353 EAST LINCOLN YGANARP 0 BAR 21Y17* LEE STREETI2?3 OAKTOS STREET730 LEE STREETP 0 B0 TEEp 0 NOR 157
02 GALESA AVENUE101 FIRST STREET1122 CHICAGO STREET027 CURTISS STREET
5110 MAIN STREETIS EAST 15115 STREET00 SOUTH SECOND STREET
115 CKSTER STREET37 EAST STREET22 WEST STREET
*743 STATE SOVIETCOLLINSAILLE I MISSOURIMV RAILROAD STREET4T3 NORTH SYlAIRIOCK STREET242 WALL STREET209 SESSENOIRP 0 BOX lfl701 62ND IYERUE'101 13111 AVENUE
11TH 01(506 6 3RD STREET521 9TH STREET
6010 WESt WASHINGTON STREET235 EAST WASHINGTON STREET
40 EAST WASHINGTON STREETIII EAST 'WASHINGTON SEREET00 EAST WASHINGTON ST P 0 BC!
330 WEST NANDALIA*0 NOR 13?TOO ST LOSES STREET133 WEST JEFYERSCN212-214 WEST OEFFCRSON115 WESt SECTION2013 wEST JEfFERSON AKERUE99 NORTH (LII SOREIT122 NORTH MAIN STREET15 FOA1R15 SIREEt916 KOIJATH 511111ZR EAST HIC000 SIRE IT28 50*114 OHOYE AVENUE6 505014 GROWL ANEMIC197* LAPElS A 0 501 1241 SOUSA CRETE500 EASt DEvCS AVENUEP 0 500 212
0 BOO lAP
ELKUALLI ELKH1LLE STATE LANKULMOHJRST BANK OF ELI*IURSTILMEAGAST EI.MHJRST NATIONAL BATIKEIShTLRST YORK STATE RANK TRUST CO1110*00 FARMERS STATE ROSAELTOD PARK FIRST SECURITY TB B SAY AKEHDNGTOII TAYLOR STATE BASK(NFTELD FIRST RATIONAL TASKERIE ERIE STATE BASEENANSTEI. ENRNSCN BRIE15050105 FIRST NATIONAL BAtIK & TRUST COEYANSTOFY SAT BASK OF NORTH OUASSTON(5055105 STATE SATICNRL BARKEVERGREEN TARK CONCORDIA FED SAY A LINEAERGREEPI PARK FIRST NATIONAL BANKEIEACEERN PARK STANDARD BANK I TRUST COIAIR6URY AATIOTII4L SANK Of FADYSCRYFOERFIEL) FAIRFIELD NATIONAL BANEFAIRFIELD WAYNE COUNTY BANKFAIRVIEW FATRTI(W STATE RANKING COFUIRVIEW hITS ELITFII FEDERAL SUE & LOANFAIRVIEW IllS LINCOLN TRAIL STATE BASKFA4ISA STATE BANK OF FARINAFARMER CUR EARHER CITY STATE BANKFERRIS FARMERS STATE BANKFLANAGAN FLASAUAA STATE BATIKFLORA F lAST NATIONAL BATIKFOREST PARE FOREST PARK RATIONAL BANKFOREST TURK NORTH AMERICA SUAIAGSFORREST F lAST STATE DANKFORRESTON TORRESTON STATE BASKFRANKFURT FPANKWORT STATE BANKFRASELIA OAEAE FRANKLIN GRORE BANKTRANKLIN PARK FRANKLIN PARK BANKUREOBURG FIRST IAATIOSAL BATIKFREEPOAT FIRST NATIONAL BANKPREEPORT MICRO SWITCH T*L CR UK.!RKLPORT MII3WEST BASK OF FREEPORTURELPORT STATE BASK OF FREEPORTFOLIOS EULIOII STATE BANK10616 NA FEAST NATiONAL BRIEGALESA SALTIER STATE ROSE B TRUST COGALESYURG BASK OF GALESBUROGALESBIJRO C44oYlITY BANK OF GALEOBURGGALESPURO FARMERS I MECHANICS BANKGALESBURO FIDELITY FEDERAL SAY I INGOLISRUAG FIRST NAT RANK I TRUST COGALESBURG GALE EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNIONGALES8URG GALOSIURO B&RLENGTOM CR RNG*LESBARG MOIRE SOOTYIGS & LOAN 1555GALVA FIRST NATIONAL BASK10*150 GALVA 5091505 & lOAN ASSNGARDNER EICHANGE BANKGCNESEO CENTRAL TRUST I SAAPNGS BANKOENESEO FARMERS NATIONAL BANDGENEVA flRSI NATIONAL BANKGENERA STATE BANE OF GENEYAGENOA GENOA STATE BANEGERMAN NRLLET GERMAN AMERICAS STATE SAllEGERYIASTOIIS GKRYATNTOVW1i SAViNGS SANEGIBSON CIII FIRST NAflONAL RANK A TRUST CeGIBSON CiTY GIBSON VIDERAL SAY I LXI ASSSGIFFORO GJFPCAD STOIC BANKGILLESPIE PEOPLES STATE BANKGILMAS FIRST NATIONAL RANKGIRARD STATE BASK OF GEWDGLEN ELLIN OUPAGE TRUST CcHRAAVGLEN ELLYN FIRSI SECUR BARK OF GLEN ELLYNGLENDALE FIRST 5(03911! BANKGLENs 101 GLENVIEW CATHOLIC CREDIT ANIONGLETISIfW GLEIIUIEW STATE BANKGOCOFE! 000FAET STATE BANKGOLCONCA FIRST NATIDYWAL BASKGOLDEN GORDAR STATE 50.1KVG000FIELO 0000FIELD STATE BASEGRAND RIDGE FIRST NATIONAL BANKGRANITE CITY AMERICAN NATIONAL lANKGRANITE CITI FIRST GRANITE ClIP NAT BAREGRAMITI (17K TRUST SAVINGS BANKGRANITE (171 U STARCH EIRLGYEES ER UN
lIED NATIONAL 8*56OUR YIHONI ( RANK, OF CROYHONTOAR ASLAKI LRFI COUNTY SAT 1 6065GRAYYILL( PEOPLES YIATICSAL MATGREAT tANS GREAT LAKES CREDIT UNIONGREEN ROCK HENRI COAST BASKGREERFITLO FARMERS STATE BASK
BRADfORD SATEONAL BAREC.R(EIVAILLE P lIST NATIONAL BANKGRIOIEl SlATE BANK OF GRIDLEYItA,.EL IlAMEL ST ATE P021K104311705 SECURITY STATE BASK
STATE BAlK Of h.AJIONDIlAARSH1R( 51*10 BANK OF I.PJcSIICRE50505(1 II0.CHOAER STATE 6*0KM8RDIN BASK OF (0114005 COUNTEHARRISBURG FIRST NATIONAL ROSAMAAAISSLAPO RARRR1SOURG NATIONAL BASKNARRISBURO THE BUNK CF IlARRISRURURARNOD FIRST STATE BASKHAAAYRPD HARIARD STATE BASK (HAPALI FIRST NATIONAL BASKJ4ARNER WYMAN GORDON CREDIT LJTRIDStA lANA HAVANA NATIONAL RANK
HAVANA IBAHASA SAYINGS I LOAN 0555165050 STAlE MNKOF MANRNA
HLATiEPIS P115*5 COAST! BASKHENRY HENRY STATE BARKIVLRSCME* STATE BASK OP IIE*S(I4SRIIIGI4A101 FARMERS I EACRCIIAYITS SAllEHIGIILASO FIRST NATIONAL MSKHIGIHIASO PARK HIGLASO FORK SAN I LOAN 65551101*16010 PARK BASK Qf HIGHLAND PARKAIGR*LAAD.PARE FIRSt NATIONAL SAllEHILISIORO HILLSBORO YAAT1COAL BAREAILLSSOWO MONTGOMERY COANOY UT MATIHILLSOAALI (ltD (ARMORS I FVZRCAAAMTS BASEHILLSIDE BANK DY HILETITDLMJRICKCER VIIAICKIEY SlATE BANKHIRISCALE BASE OH HIN$BRLEHIRSOLILE FIRS! YWATECASAL AttAXIISSOAEE 141550011 HIRAYESTIN (*1 CR AlAHOFFMAN FARMERS SLATE BANEV*OTsAs ASTATIS SABURBAT 5050 OF YIOPT)AAts COTS
hC)R5 StATE BANK1WCI4CTPCO BASE 0$ 00(11*00II5C#RST0N CITY RATIOSAt BOSE
P 0 BOA 187TAO SOOTH YORK RCA0107 SOUTH NORK STREET534 SCAL;TH KORK STREET P 0 BCE 120TEl EAST MACTI7315 WEST GRAND AVENUEP 0 BOA 68P 0 REX DRAWER Ci915 8TH AAENUE100110111 STREET800 DM15 STREET2951 CEATRAL STREET1603 ORRRNGTON AVENUE9730 SOUTH WESTERN 6*65013101 WEST ASIA STREET2400 WEST 9511 STREETP0 BOX T36F 0 BOO 428215 SOUTHEAST DAD STREETP 0 BOO 0186000 SDVIH ILLINODS
10950 LINCOLN TRAILP 0600 746333 GOUTIH HAITI STREETP 0 BOO 38
101 EAST NORTH AVENUE1348 MADISON STREOT7S2S MADISON S'REOT133 EAST K.A.ACKP 0 BOO 27628 NEBRASILS STREETP 0 BOO 248 ELM STREET3044 ROSE STREETP 1 BOO IV101 WEST STEFIIENSOS STREETCHICAGO ASO SPRINGCRESTI000 A WINTER DREHE27 EAST STEPHENSON STREET413 ELEREATY AVENUEiTS FERRY STREETZIB SOUTH CO4YCRCL302 EAST MAIN STREET1360 NORTH HESDLRSON P 0 508 ID?21 EASt MAINP 0 BOX 1301200 LAST MAIN STREETIOPOUTA BOIJLERARDSOUII SEIIINART STREETSO LAST MAIN STREETTT2 NORTH ENHANCE STREET110 AORTA (OCHANGE STREETDEPOT STREET P 0 ROE 288P090089121 0531 F1XST STREET21 NORTH 1111*0 STREET*0 BOO 10832? VEST HAIR STREET
MAIN 0210 MARKETITS NORTH CAURCIR STREET402 NORTH SASGANON AVENUE304 SOUTH RAYONP 0 5CR 148104 SOOTH CENTRAL232 VTT CENTER P 0 8CR 69IDE 1511111 STREET515 ROOSEVELT ROAD1148 GLEN ELLEN ROAD1755 GROVE STREET1625 GLENVEEW ROAD50000EY ROADP 0 BOO OSTP 0 BOO 088P0500135105 WEST MAIN STREET11024(0K! & F(HL ISO ROOD1060 EDISON AVENUE1901 1015011900 19TH STREETP 0 BOY 3%PB 50653202 CENTER STREETP 0 BOY 2188ILAlNG 290102 TOT STREET
TOO EAST COLLEGE202 WEST MAIN P 0 5CR 340P 0 BOA AP 0 80% 97972 BROADWASP 8 BOE 128211 501)11 STATE STREET200 WROHEHOTTA
2 EMS! LOCUST STREET2 NORTH ElSE STRECT2 ItS! WALNUT32 NORTH 41CR STREET53-35 NORTH OPEN STREETT14 EAST TSOTH STREETTISTA I HOOO SIREOSS117 SOUTH ORANGE210 WEST MAIN STREETTOT 11001 HAIR StREETROBOT EEC700 2ND STREET P A 800 107104 SOATH SPIN STREETT222 BROADWAY1000 BROACHER!1520 SHERIDAN ROAD1835 FIRST STREET510 CENTRAL AYENLEPOD SOUTH MAIN STREET212 SOYJTK 110111 STREETHAlSSTAEEt111(15100 SN40PPISS (ENTER101 1*51 LINCOLN SOT 1236490 EAST OGDEN A1501FSD SOUTH LINCOLNI S 600 C01211101INE ROAD
11*0 *OETLU ROADP 0 BOX lOSDOOR BlOKE YDADBOO Souls HAPROP SIMEET 66
67
HOPE DALE
HULLHuISONVIILE
ILLIOPOLISINGRAmAMIPANIA
IROQUOISTRYING TON
ITASCAIUKA
JACKSONVILLEJACKSONvILLEJACKSONVILLE
JEASEYWILLEJERSEYKILLEJOHNSTON CityJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJOLIETJONESBOROKAMPSVILLEKANKAKEEKANKAKEEKANKAKEEKANKAKEEKANKAKEEKANKAKEEKANSASKEWANEEKEWANEEKEWANEEKEYESPORTKINCAIDKINOERHOOKKINMODYLA GUNGELA GRANGELA GRANGELA GRANGELA HARP(LACONLAVE BLUFFLAKE FORESTLAKE FORESTLAKE VILLALAKE ZURICHLANARKLANSINGLANSINOLANSING
LASALLELASALLELATHLM1
LANRENCEvILLELAWRENCEVILLELEBANONLELANDLENALENALE RNA
LEROYLEWISTOWNLEKINGTONTINALINCOLN.LINCOLNLINCOLNLINCOANw0010
LINCOLNU000LISLELITCHFIELDLITCHFIELDLITCHFIELDLITTLE YORKLOCKPORTLOCKPORTL0m8ARDLOM8ARDlOSTANTLOUISVILLELOVES PARKLORINGIONLYONSMACKINAWMACOmBMACOMBMACOMBMACOmBMA CON
mAkomETMALDENMALTAMANHATTANMANITOMANLIUS
MANSFIELDMANTES°MAPLE PARKMARENGOMARENGOMARINEmARISSA
MARKKAMmAROAMARSEILLESMARSHIVIL
NARTVIALEMASCOulAmMASCOuTAmMAS(OuTANMASON CITEMATTESONMATTOON&TATT00%
MATT"MAKON00MAYWN00MAK*000MAZOLA
MOOR,
ENAMCHENAvm BB
THE COMMUNITY BANKSTATE BANK OF HULLFARMERS 6 MERCHANTS BANKFARMERS STATE BANKINGRAHAM STATE BANKIPAyA STATE 8870IROQUOIS FARKAS STATE BANKCOMMUNITY TRUST BANKTHE ITASCA STATE BANKILO STATE BANKELLIOTT STATE SANKFARMERS STATE BANK 6 TRUSTFIRST NATIONAL BANKJERSEY STATE SANKSTATE BANK OF JERSEYvILLEBANK OF JOHNSTON CITYCATERPILLAR JOLIET EMPL CR UNEJAECENTRAL CREDIT UNIONEAST JOLIET BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANK
JOLIET WIRECO FEDERAL CR UNLOUIS JOLIET BANKNATIONAL SANK OF JOLIETUNION NAT BANK 1 TRUST COFIRST NATIONAL BANKBANK OF KAMPSy1LLEA 0 SMITH EMPLOYEES CR UNARmOuR KANKAKEE CREDIT UNIONFIRST BANK Of MEADOWSIEWFIRST TRUST 6 SAVINGS BANKKANKAKEE FED SAY A LOAN ASSNPEOPLES BANK MARYCREST 1951KANSAS STATE BANKKEWANEE NATIONAL BANKPEOPLES NATIONAL BANKUNION FEDERAL SAY 6 LOAN ASSN 104STATE BANK Of KEyESPORTMIDLAND CONNUNITy BANK 100KINDERHOOK STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL &ANABANK OF LA GRANGE PARK 407EDICEw000 BANK 1023
FIRST NATIONAL BANKLA GRANGE STATE BANK 14
STATE BANK OF LA KARPE P
FIRS' NATIONAL BANKFIRS' NATIONAL BASKFIRST NATIONAL olle 265HID -WEST NATIONAL BANK 241
LAKE VELA TRUST 6 SAY LANK SOOSTATE BANK OP LAKE 71mIrooWHANGE STATE BANKBANK Of LANSINGFIRST FEDERAL SAY OF LANSINGLANSING SAYINGS 6 LOAN ASSNLASALLE NATIONAL BANKLASALLE STATE /LANKSTATE BANK OF LATHAmLAKRENCENILLE NAY BANK I TRUSTLAWALNCEvILLE TEXACO EMPL CR UNLEBANON TRUST 1 SAYINGS BANKLELAND NATIONAL BANKCITIZENS STATE BANKLENA STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANK'LEROY STATE BANKLEWISTOWN NATIONAL BANKPEOPLES BANK OF tEFINGTONSTATE BANK OF LIMAFIRST NATIONAL BANKLOGAN COUNTY BANKSTATE NATIONAL BANK Dr LINCOLNBANK OF LINCOLNWOODFIRST NATIONAL BANKBANK OF LISLEFIRST NATIONAL BANKLITCHFIELD RANK 6 TRUST COLITCHFIELD NATIONAL BANKFIRST STATE BANKBANK OF LOCKPORTFIRST NATIONAL BANKSTATE BANK OF LOMBAROROST SUBURBAN SANKFARMERS STATE BANKCLAY COUNTY STATE BANKPARK STATE BANK.m..(NOKARE STATE BANKBANK OF LYONSFIRST SECuAlty BANKCITIZENS NATIONAL BANKMAW SAVINGS 6 LOAN ASSNUNION NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MACOMBPEOPLES BANK OF MASONcommuNITy BANK Of MAHOmETrARMERS 6 TRADERS STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL SANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKPEOPLES STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKPEOPLES STATE BANKMANTENO STATE BANKFIRST STAID BANKMARENGO FEDERAL SAY 6 LOANMARENGO STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL SANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKTAI-STATE BANKBANK OF MARIAUNION NATIONAL BANKTHE DuLANEr NATIONAL BANKFIRST SANK Of MAR1vItLEBANK a MASCOuTAMFIRST NATIONAL BANKMASCOuTAM SWAGS 6 LA ASSNMASON CITY NATIONAL SANKMATIESONSICHTON STATE BANKCENTRAL NATIONAL SAN((105 EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CR UNFIRST TAT TONAL BANKFIRST FED SAY 1 LOAN ASSNFIRST NATIONAL NARKMATI4000 PROVISO STATE BANKRAZON STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL SANKNICSEhAf_STATE BANK4044S STATE BANK
0 BOX 327
0 80A 2770 BOA 27B0 BOA 40 BOA 1210 BOX 1310 BOA 185
108 WEST IRVING PARK0 BOX 73 PUBLIC SQUARE00 WEST STATE STREET22 WEST MORTON AVENUE00 NORTH STATE STREET00 SOUTH STATE STREET01 WEST BROADWAY P 0 NOR BAANNAHON ROAD/01J1ERAILWAY CO1 EAST CASS STREET
8 NORTH CHICAGO STREET27 NORTH COLLINS STREET812 NEST JEFFERSON STREET21 NORTH CHICAGO STREET
WEST JEFFERSON STREET
0 80x 68OUTE 44 SOUTH0 BOA 511
MEADOWVIEW CENTERONE DEARBORN SQUARE310 SOUTH SCHUYLER AVENUE
EAST COURT STREETP 0 BOA 368201 NORTH TREmONT STREET207.209 NORTH TRETIONT STREET
NORTH TRZTIONT STREETBOA 155
EAST MAIN STREET
P 0 BOA 190LA GRANGE ROADWEST S5TH STREET
620 WEST BURLINGTON AVENUESOUTH LA GRANGE POAD0 BOA 115
311 5TH BOA t30 SCRANTON AVENUE
EAST DEERPATHEAST OFERPATH P 0 BOA 3 4EAST GRAND AVENUE
OS MAIN STREET126 NORTH BROAD STREET3115 RIOGE ROAD2320 THORNTON ROAD P 0 BOA 43518207 BuRNNAM AVENUE105 MARQUETTE STREET654 FIRST STMTP 0 BOX 5P 0 BOA 59711TH AND CHERRY107 EAST ST LOUIS STREET200 NORTH RAN STREETP 0 80x 86152 WEST MAIN STREETP 0 BOA 97201 EAST CENTER STREET120 EAST WASHINGTON STREETMAIN AND CEDAR STREETSP 0 BOA NB501 PULASKI STREET103 PULASKI STREETS08 BROAD/FAT P 0 BOA 3404431 WEST TWO AVENUE6401 NORTH LINCOLN AVENUE4733 MAIN STREET324 NORTH STATE STREET401 NORTH MADISONP 0 BOA 309P 0 BOA 245 _826 EAST NINTH STREET814 STATE STREET211 WEST ST CHARLES ROAD837 SOUTH WESTMCRE AVENUE
P 0 BOA 2485800 NOTCH SECOND102 WEST STATE STREET8601 WEST OGDEN AVENUEP C 00A 247127 SOUTH SLOE SNARE215 EAST JACKSON STREET119 NORTH RANDOLPH STREET804 WEST JACKSON P 0 BOA 188191 NORTH FRONT STREET)12 EAST ELMP 0 800 215
230 SOUTH STATE STREETP 0 SOT DRAWER MP 0 BOA 248
303 SECTION LINE ROADP 0 BOX 218102 NORTH STATE STREET100 WEST WASHINGTON STREETP 0 500 485111 NORTH MAIN3120 WEST 159TH STREET101 EAST MAIN STREET100 EAST BLUFF P 0 NOR 89602 ARCHER AVENUESTATE ROUTE 1599 EAST MAIN STREET121 EAST MAIN STREET101 WEST MAIN STREETP 0 BOA 1St21155 GOVERNORS HIGHWAYP 0 BOA 6091305 SOON THIRD STRUT1515 CHARLESTON AVENUE801 SOUTH FIFTH AYE 0 0 BOY 538150 SOUTH FIFTH AVENUE411 MADISON STREETDEPOT STREET3614 WESt ELM STREET3S10 WESt ELM STREETP 0104 95
MELROSE PARKMELROSE PARKMELVINHENDONMENDOTAMENDOTAMEREDOSIAMETAMORAMETROPOLISMETROPOLISMILFORDMILLEDGEVILLEMILLSTADTmINCINK
MINOOKAMOKENAMOLINEMOLINEmOLINEMOLINE
MOLINENOOSEMOLINEMOMENCEKoMENCE
MONMOUTHMONMOUTHMONMOUTHMONTICELLOMONTICELLO'MORRISMORRISMORRISMORRISON
MORRISONMORTONMORTONMORTON GROVEMOUNT MORRISMT AUBURNMT CARMELMT CARNETm7 CARROLLMT MORRISMT OLIVEMT PROSPECTMT PROSPECTNT PULASKIMT PULASKIKT STERLINGMT STERLINGMT PERSONMT VERNONMT VERNONMuRPNySBOROmuRPHYSBORO
NAPERVILLENAPERVILLENAPERVILLENAPERVILLENASHVILLENASHVILLENAUV100
NEBONEW ATHENSNEW BAOENNEW BERLINNEW BERLINNEW LENORNEWMANNEWTONNEWTONNIANTICNILESNILES
NOBLENOKOmISNORMALNORMALNORRIS CITYNORTH AURORANORTH CHICAGONORTH CHICAGONORTH8R0ovNORTHFIELDNORTKLAKEOAK BROOKOAK BROOKOAK LAWNOAK LAWNOAK LAWNOAK PARKOAK PARKOAK PARKOAK PARKOAKLANDOBLONGODELL()FALLON
()FALLON
OGDENOGLESBYOGLESBYOKAWVILIAOKAWvIlltOLNEYOLNEYONARGAONEIOAORIONORLAND PARKDUOOSWEGOOTTAWAOTTAWAOTTAWAOTTAWAPALATINEPALATINEPALATINE
PALESTINEPALOS HEIGHTSPAMPANAPAA1SPARIS
PARK RIOGT
MELROSE PARK NATIONAL BANKPAYSAVER CREDIT UNIONMELVIN STATE (LANKHENDON STATE BANKFIRST STATE BANKNATIONAL RANK OF MENDOTAFARMERS A TRADERS STATE BANKFIRST NAT BANK OF METAMORAFIRST NATIONAL BANKNATIONAL STATE BANKCITIZENS STATE BANKMILLEDGEVILLE STATE BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKmow STATE BANKTRI-COUNTY BANKMOKENA STATE BANKDEERE 1 COMPANY CREDIT UNFIRST NATIONAL BANKMIDWEST NATIONAL BANKMOLINE NATIONAL BANKPLOW 6 PLANTER EMPL, CREDIT UNSOUTHEAST NATIONAL BANKUPTOWN NATIONAL BANKEASTERN ILL TRUST A SAW BANKPARISH BANK 6 TWIST COCOMMUNITY NATIONAL BANKMONMOUTH TRUST 6 SAY BANKNATIONAL BANK OF MONMOUTHFIRST STATE BANKNATIONAL BANK OF MONTICELLOFED PAPER BD EMPL CREDIT UNFIRST NATIONAL BANKGRUNDY COUNTY NATIONAL BANKMORRISON GEN Fitt EMPL CR UNWHITESIDE COUNTY BANK
FIRST NATIONAL BANKMORTON COMMUNITY SANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKAABLE CREDIT UNIONFIRST NATIONAL BANKBANK OF MT CARMELSECURITY BANK 6 TRUST tOMT CARROLL NATIONAL BANKCITIZENS STATE BANKNATIONAL BANK OF 14T OLIVEFIRST NATIONAL BANKMT PROSPECT STATE BANKFARMERS BANK OF MT PULASKIFIRST NATIONAL BANKBROWN COUNTY STATE BANKFARMERS STATE BANKRANK OF ILLINOISFIRST BANK I TRUST COMPANYSECURITY BANK 6 TRUST COCITY NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKBANK OF NAPERVILLENAPERVILLE NAT BANK 4 TRUST CONAPERVILLE SAVINGS 6 LOANWASHINGTON BANK 6 TRUST COFARKAS 1 MERCHANTS NAT BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKSTATE BANK OF NAUV00STATE BANK of NEBOSTATE BANK OF NEW ATHENSBANK OF NEW BADENFIRST STATE BANKWARREN-BOYNTON STATE BANKNEW LENOX STATE BANKFIRST STATE BASKFIRST NATIONAL BANKPEOPLES STATE BANKSTATE BANK OF NIANTICBANK OF NILESOEMPSTER PLAZA STATE RANKNOBLE BUILDING 1 LOAN ASSNFIRST NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKTHE BANK OF ILLINOISNORRIS CITY STATE BANKBANK OF AURORANAT BANK OF NORTH CHICAGONORTH SHONE SAY IL LOAN ASSNFIRST NATIONAL RANKBANK OF NORTHFIELDAUTOMATIC EMPLOYEES CR UNNATIONAL BANK OF OAK BROOKOAK BROOK BANKCOLONIAL SAYINGS 6 LOAN ASSNFIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OAK LAWNOAK LAWN TRUST 4 SAVINGS BANKAVENUE STATE BANKFIRST BANK OF OAK PARKOAK PARK TRUST 6 SAVINGS BANKSUBURBAN TRUST 6 SAYINGS BANKOAKLAND NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKODELL STATE BANKBANK OF ()FALLON
FIRST NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANK
FIRST FEDERAL SAY 1 IN ASSNFIRST NATIONAL SANKFIRST NATIONAL SANK
OLD LACHANCE NATIONAL BANKFIRST NATIONAL BANKOLNEY TRUST S BANKING COMPANYoNAAGA STATE BANKANDERSON STATE BANKSTATE BANK OF ORION°ALAN) STATE BANKSTATE BANK OF 05000$440 COMMUNITY BANKBAKELITE OTTAWA PLASTICS CR UNFEAST NATIONAL BANKGLASs WORKERS Omit UNIONOTTAWA NATIONAL BANKFIRST BANK S TRUST COWAN,PALATINE NATIONAL SANKSUBURBAN NATIONAL SANK4AMERS STATE BANKPALOS RANK A TRUST COPERSI NATIONAL MIPEOPLES BANK 04 PAKACETIZEN5 NATIONAL BANKEDGAR COUNT! BAUR 81guit to
41ktt SAVINGS OF PAAEC 81004
17TH AVENUE AT LAKE STREET4419 WEST NORTH AVENUE100 EAST MAIN P 0 BOX 175P 0 BOX 8706 WASHINGTON STREET801 -805 WASHINGTON STREETP 0 BOX 151123 EAST PARTRIDGEP 0 BOX 479P 0 BOX 52936 EAST JONES STREETP 0 BOX 3473 EAST WASHINGTON STREET137 WEST FIFTH STREET207 mCNOAMON STREET11100 FRONT STREETJOHN DEERE ROAD501 15TH STREET2200 36TH AVENUE.506 15TH STREET338 6TH STREET3535 23RD AVENUE1601 15tH STREET228 NORTH DIXIE HIGHWAY29 DIXIE HIGHWAY311 NORTH MAIN STREET100 SOUTH MAIN STREET100 EAST BROADWAY201 WEST MAIN STREET100 WEST WASHINGTON STREETP 0 BCE 125220 WEST MAIN STREET201 LIBERTY STREET207 LARCH STREET220 EAST MAIN
80 EAST JEFFERSON STREET671 WEST JACKSON STREET6201 WEST OE/OSIER STREET404 NORTH WESLEY AVENUEP 0 BOX 127601 MARKET STREET400 MARKET STREET
102 EAST MARKET P 0 BOA 1922 WEST MAIN STREET120 EAST MAIN P 0 BOX 803RANDHURST CENTERBUSSE AVENUE 6 EMERSONP 0 BOX 189
101.103 EAST MAINP 0 SOX 31BROADWAY AT ELEVENTH101 SOUTH 10TH STREET119 NORTH 9TH STREET1301 WALNUT P 0 BOX 8311403 WALNUT DRAWER C503 NORTH WASHINGTON STREET136 SOUTH WASHINGTON STREET24 NORTH WASHINGTONWASHINGTON 6 CARTNER101 WEST ST LOUIS STREET101 EAST ST LOUIS STREETA 0 BOX 218P 0 BOX 118201 NORTH VAN BUREN P 0 SON A1 EAST HANOVER
P 0 MI 8110 WEST MAPLE14 WEST YATES STREETP 0 SOX 32104 WEST WASHINGTON STREET
7100 WEST OAKTON STREET8720 DEMPSTER STREETP 0 BOX 217122 WEST STATE STREET210 BROADWAY102 WEST COLLEGEMAIN STREET200 WEST JOHN STREET1811 SHERIDAN ROAD701 TENTH STREET1300 MEADOW LANE400 CENTRAL400 NORTH WOLF ROAD2121 (NCO DRIVE2021 SPRING ROAD4740 WEST 95th STREET9430 SOUTH CICERO AVENUE4900 WEST 95th STREET104 NORTH OAK PARK AVENUE11 MADISON STREET1048 LAKE SUM840 SOUTH OAK PARK AVENUE
P 0 Box G200 SOUTH wAuPANSIELINCOLN AVENUE II HIGHWAY SO200 SOON LINCOLNEAST I BROADWAY P 0 BOA 208145 EAST 14ALNuT STREET110 EAST WALNUT STREETP 0 BOA 128WALNUT S NASHVILLE101 MAIN STREET600 CAST MAIN STREET107 NORTH tHEstAuT614 SOUTH RAILROAD1100 4TH STREET0612 WEST 143RD STRUT
ID NORTH MADISON500 CHESTNUT STREET701 LASALLE STREET800 CNEstNut STREET122 WEST 8A01506 STREET
35O 441*COTH
428EutettuAt
600 EAST NORTHWEST HIGHWAY101 NORTH PAIN STREET12111 SOUTH HARLEM AVENUE106 SOUTH LOCUST StREEtLOS EA51 THIRD STREET
10110-114 WEST C
sRt1.1D2 Utit W000
OOTSTRtEEiT
t
123 NORTH NORTHWEST HIGHWAT
PATORR F4ST STATE BANKSTATE BAMK OF FA
PATTON rARYRERS RCtAN1S NAl BANKPARTON F lAST NATIONAL BANKPRCATONBCA BANK OF PKCATONIC*
FIRST NA OMAL SANK A TRUSTPKREM RER.(1 NATIONAL BMPROYLA CTR1L LITY SAAINLS I LOANPRORIA COI4IEYCIR4. NATIONAL B/Ni(PEORIA FIRST YROCRAL SAN & EN RSSNPEORIA FIRST NIATUAL SAUINOSREORLR FBIST P*ATONAL BANKFEORIA JAFFERSON TRuST 8 SAVINOSPEORIA MADISON PARK BANKPLOAIA PEOR1A SELL (R(DII UNIONP(ARLR PAIR IA AINOS 4 LOAN ASSNPEORIA PIONEER STARE BANKPEORIA PROSPECT NATIONAL BAIPEORIA PYIDENT FEDERAL SAT & EN
PEORIA SACRIDAN BANK OK PEORIAPCORA 5311K SIDE 181151 1 SARINOSPEORIA UNIAERSTF NATIONAL BANKPERU COLONIAL TRUST I SATIMO BANRPERU FIRST N IONAL BANKPTEASBuJYG FIRST NATIONAL BARKPETERSBURG NATIONAL BANK OP PET ASDUROPII.O PuikO ERU NOR BANKPINCANERAILLE PIRST NATIONAL BANKPCKVIILEE FALRPPA-AALI. TATE BANKPIPER CITY STATE BANK OP RIPER CITY
PLAINKIELO NATIONAL RANKPiANo C*tiT BANK CF PLANOPLERSONT hILL CITIZENS STATE DANKPLFTiTh COYBIJNITY STATE BANK
POLO htAi tONAL BANKPCNT1RC BANK OF PONTIACPNTIRC TONTIAC NATIONAL RANKPOPLAR CYCTE POPLAR UROVE STATE BANKPOE BYRON PORT BYRON STATE BATIKPCTCMYC 000NINE STATE BANKPRAIRIE OL ROtARY 51*10 BANKPRINCETON CITIZENS FIRST MAYIONAL BANKPRIgETON FIRST STATE BANKPRINCERILLK PRINCKKILLI STATO 8AM
SYI.R0W$A NATIONAL BANKQILINCY COI+RJN!TY NATIONAL BANK00111CR GEM CITY SAVINGS 4 LOAM ASSNQKI#CY ILLINOIS STATE BAHUQIJINCY MERCANTILE TRUST 8 SAHINoSQIJINCY QITINCY-PEOPLES SAY A UN ASSNQUINCY STATE STREET BANK B TANSY COQJINCY TOEN I COUNTRY 8AM OP QUINCTRATIRIN BANKIN STATE BANKT.ANTOEuL BANK OF BANTOIJA.RAYITOLL CNANETE flELO CIT EMPU CR UNRARTOIA.. GRANUlE NIL lIAR! CA UNIONRANTOIJL FIRST NATIiAL BANKRARITAN RAP ITAN STATE BAN!RAYNOND F lAST NATIONAl. BANKRED BOO FIRST STATE SARA OF RED BOORBCI*CND STATE BANK OF BICRIOThONIXE KARM RIDGE FARM STATE RANTYIXWAY BRLLRTIN COUNTT S!A'E BANKRIVER cORES! AEOOR FOREST STAlE SANK B TB CORIVEREALE I 148 cLOREES (BROIl UNIONAIRERTOM BIAEYTON CORMINITY BANKROBERTS ROBERTS STATE BANKROBINSON DYD CCkuNTV STATE BANKROBINSON THE SECOND NMIONVL BATIKRCC4IELLE NATIONAL BARR OF 4DCHILI.E80CR CITY ROCK CITY BANKROCK FALLS ROKR FALLS NATIONAL BANK140CR ISLAND FARMALL EMPLOYEES CA UNIONROCK ISLAND FIRST NATIONAL RANK80CR ISLAND POCK .SLA1ID BANK $ TRUST COROCK ISLAND 5(86115 E14LOKE(S CREDIT UNIONROCKYORD ALPINE STATE BANKROCRJOAS AMERICAN MAT BANK I TRUST
*TIOD CREDIT UNIONROCEFORD CENTRAL NAB BANK A TRUSTROCKFORD CITY NAT BANK I TNUSK COROIKIORO COLONIAL BATIK OP ROCKFORO#OCKKORO FIRST FED SAY I LM ASSMBOCKYORD FIRST NAT RANK I TRuST CO#OCKIOAD OBEENLEE MPLOVEES CR UN#OCFJORD HOME FEORRAL SANINOS I LOANBOCKYORD ILL NAT BANK TRUST COR0(KcORO NORTH TOIIIKY NATIONAL BANKROCKYORD MORTIPWESI RANk OF QOCKFORD
ROCKFOPD BELL CREAIT UNIONROCETORO SOLJTWEATE SANKROCKFORO STATE BANK OP ROCKF000#OCv.FORD 5U$OSTRANP CBEOIT UNIONBO(KFORD UNITBO LABOR CRED1A UNIONBOCKTON MACFlOWN STATE BANKPOOLING MEADOWS BANK QF ROILING HEADOSROO)iOuSI R300YAlUSE NATIONAL BANKROSEULE ROSKLK_E STATE BANE I TRUST CO
SCY000PSURO STATE TANKROSEVILLI ROSEVILLE STATE BANK P 0 80* 157QOSSVILLI TIE IS! APT RARKOF POSS'YIKL.KRUS4YRILIE RJS14AILLE STATE BANKRUSAVILLE SCIKJYLE$ STATE RANKSOUTH CNIC*GO IS AMERICAN NATIONAL BANKSAINTE P50111K SAIFITE MARIE STATE BUNRSALON MARION COUNTY SA I LA RSSNSALEM SALEM IATIK%AL BUSYSAIDWICIY SATIONICM STATE AAKSAUNIMIN STATE BATIK OF SAUTIEMIN
UTIGYLAL $PJIKOY SANAMAKA558AM STATE BRAN
SOMILLER PARK FIRS! RATIONAL BARKSCS(C.A CO.AJNITY STATE BANKShANNON FIRS! STATE RANASIRIIN(ETKWN FIRST NATIONAL RANK
FARMERS STAVE 0ANSMELIT COUNT! STATE BATiK
SKEI.OIQN SMELDOII BuILDING LOAN ASS$YSHBP,NIN CBOIUNS STATE BATIKSIOCEt 510011 STATE BARK
A1LVBS BANK OF SIEVESSKE*Et FEAST 'IRIISNAL BANESAIKI1 08.0 OYLARD BAtIK 1 TRuST COSiiKt( VttETrPt FEDE&AL CR1011 IAN5141 tMtOM BPS! NAtIONAL BANKSQINAi1 FA4.VIRS ST BOO BANR
P 0 800 II?141 SOUTH SIDE CATCAGO ROADlOT NORTH TAFTP 0 BOO ISO407 MAIN P 0 BOA 428AlAROTI COURT STRUT31 SOUTH FOURTH STREET210 SOUTNIEST JKPPERSON STREET301 SOuTIWES! ATAMS STREETlIT NORTH JERPEOSON AAtYIUETOO MAIN STREETITS MAIN STREET P 0 BOA 609123 SOUTHWEST JEFFERcON AAENUE3100 WEST HAANDN IIIGAWAY320 hILTON STREETiCY SOUTHWBST JIIPERSON STREET7901 NORTH LJNIAERSITR STREET3129 NORTH PROSPECT ROAD129 SOIJTHSEST JEFPEBSON STREET4125 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD219 SOUTHWEST ADAMS STREET3109 NORTH UNIURYS ITT925 SHOUTING PARK ROAD1910 8TH STREETP BOA 299P 0 BOA 270102 WIST RASADNUTONI NORTH LAIN STREETIT WEST EATER STREET4 EAST PEOR1ARIO LOCKPORV STP(ETIT EAST MAIN STREET102 lOATH MAINP 0 BOA 260101 WEST MASON STREET300 WEST WASHINCTON223 NORTA MILL STREET108 NORTH STATE STREET124 NORTH MAINP 0 BOA 66P 080K 130606 SOUTH MAIN STREETITS SOUTH MAIN STAEETP 0 BOA A12TH & BYOAOKAR3333 BROADWAY036 MA*SVIAE STREET501 HAMPSHIRE STREET440 MINE STREET700 MAIN STREET801 STATE STREET524 AORTA 30TH STREET
P 0 BOO 67P 0 800 ZSSP 0 BOX iOTA201 EAST SANGAI4ON AVENUEP 0 BOA 8P 0 BOx 46101 14051 MARKET P 0 BOY TAS5611 BROPDWATSTATE I OWEN STREETSP o BOA 567023 LIAR SIRERI140TH & STEWART AVENUE409 NORTH 7TH STREETP 0 BCO 128P 0 BOA 205P 0 BOY 322SiX LINCOLN HIGYIWOF108 101117 STREET100 FIRST RNEFUE4206 STIR AAENLE2ND AVENUE $ 11TH STREET230 lATH STPEETDAD STPEET & 11TH AKERUBALPINE I HIGACREST501 7TH STREET1400 10CR ARENLE201 lOATH MAIN STROBE1100 BROADWAY1410 SOUTH ALPINE ROAD612 NORTH MAIN STREET401 EAST STATI STREET2136 17TH STRUT1107 EAST STATE STREETlla SOOTH MAIN STOEETPORGY 20063106 REAlM ROC AT V! AWENL)E702 EAST JEFFERSON STREET551 SAVOR 4001GW ROAD
4043 LAST STATE STREET25)1 11114 STREETRON NORTH CHuRCh.110 RAIN STREET3250 KIBCMEPP 001140P 0 BOA lBS108 EAST IRA1TO FRYE1UO WEST HIGGINS
ROT AORTA CKI.AUGP 0 BOO 186CONGRESS STREET3031 CHICAGO ROADTO BOo 38ITO WEST MAIN STBIEI205 14050 MAIN STREET100 lOST ERuuBEHP 0 AlA 1
228 RAIN STREETP 0 AOl 101RISTI OLD VIlER ROAD116 WILLIRTRS STAIE1P G 808 85P 0 BOA 0111 SOuTH *5019 STREETI3OSOK,Tp{ MEACAN STAtE!IRS SOUTH FOjATH STREETP0 BOA 276P 0 801 6I1Tl5EREEII IS! ANERUE8000 LiNCOLN ANENUC00 OtA OACNAVD5565 WESt IOURIT
P0 BOB 3MBOB SOAJIA EIEPiOT STREEt
5001111 BILOIT BESLT WELLES LYAL LIUOIT ANSOUTH EAGIN STATE RANK OF SOUTH (41514SOOTH NOLLAHO SOUTH HOLLAND TA $ SAY BANKSPARTA FIRST FED SAY I LN AESNSPARTA SPARTA FEDERAL BAA $ LASPRING TAILOR SPRING WALLET tilT BUlKSPRINGFIELD AMERICAN STATE RANKSPRINGFIELD BANK OF SPRINGFIELDSPRINGFIELD CAPITOL BANK OF SPRINGFIELDSPRINGFIELD FIRST FED SAY A UNASSMSPRINGFIELD FIRST NATIONAL BANKSPRINGFIELD lit lotS NATIONAL EASTSPRINGFIELD LAND OP LINCOLN BANKSPRINGFIELD SECURITY FEEIERAL 5KV & II WS$NSPRINGFIELD SPAINCFIELO MARINE BANKSPRINGFIELD SPRING! JILT SACROO HEART CR INSPRINGFIELD TOWN A COUNTRY BAKESi ANNE ST ANTE NATIONAL BANAST CHARLES ST CHARLES NATIONAL BATSi CHARLES ST CHARLES SAN I ICAN ASSYISt COARLES STATE TANKST EL4V PAYETIE COUNTY BANKSi JACOB STATE TANK OK ST JACOBST JOSEPH STATE RANK OF NT JOSEFST LIBORY STATE TANK OF ST LIBORYST PETER FIRST STATE RATIBSTAUNTON !IRST COYNIUNITI STATE BATESTAUNTON FIRST NATIONAL BANKSTAUNTON STAUNTON HOME ASSOCIRTIONSTEILKATLIl FIRST NATIONAL BANKSTEPLING CENTRAL NATIONAL BANKSTERLING FIRST NATIONAL BATIKSTEWAROSON ITIAROSON NAITONA. BANKSTILLMN VALLEY STIY.L#AN NALLER NATIONAL BANKSTOCKTON A EAST NATIONAL ROSASTONEFORT SALINE COUNTY STATE BANKSTAEATOR FIRST rED(R.KL SAW RUN ASSNSTRIATOR TAE STREATOR NATIONAL BANKSTRONGHURST SANK OF STRONGIAURSTSLBLETTK FARMERS STATE BANKSUIt IVAN FIRST NATIONAL lANKSUIL lEAN STATE BATIK OF SIJLLIAATI510*410 F 1851 FEDERAL SAl 4 IN ASS!SYCAMTE HAT 8*14K 1 TRUST COMPANTTABLE GROVE TABLE GROWL STATE BANKTEUTOPOLIS TEuTKPOLTS STATE BATIKTROMSON TYIKYRSON STATE BANKTIALET PAVY BRIHON BANK & TRUST COMPANYTJSKIKNA TISKRWA STATE BANYTOLEDO FIRST NATIONAL BANKTOLONO CiTIZENS lANK OF TOLONOTOLIjCA (ITITENS NATIONAL 8014KTONICA TONICA STATO BANKTOOLON STATE BAN!TRENTON CG*UNDTT RANK OF TREN'ONTROT TROT SECURITY BATIKIASCOLA FIAST FEDERAL SAY & LN MSSNTLISCOLA F IFST NATIONAL BANK I TRUST1USCOLA TUSCOLA NATIONAL BANKTUSCOLA U S I (HAL CREDIT ANIONURBANA RUSEY F1RST NATIONAL BANKuRBANA CI4AAAAIGN GOOFIlY BANK & TRuSTORBAU CITIJENS B'JILOING 4551URBANA NATIONAL BANK CF URBANAYRNOALIE FARMERS 8 IIERCHIANTS 8811KVANOALIA FIKST NATIONAL BANKARRNR TIORSAAOL COUNTY STATE BANKAERTHORT AEAIYCINIT STATE BANKVERONA VERONA EACIIATIGE BANKVIENNA EACHERS SPARE SANKVILLA GROAt VILLA GROAT STAlL BANKVILLA PARR RILLA PARK TRUST 1506 BANKVIOLA BANK OF RIOLAYIADEN FAAMERS A MERCHANTS STATE BANKVIRDEN STATE BARK OF WIAOEN'\AIRGINIA PLTEF ISA SKILES A CO RANKHOST FRAAKTT FIBS! C0R4LNITT BARKWALNUT CITIZENS FIRST STATE DANKWARREN CITIZENS NATIONAL BANKHAASAW HILL-000GE BOATING C10IPANYWASHINGIO4I FIRST NATIONAL BANKWASHINGTON WASHINGTON STATE BANKWATERLOO FEAST NATIONAL BANKWATERLOO STATE BANT QF WATERLOOWATERMAN ARTEEMAN STATE BANKIHATSEKY FIRSt TRUST 4 SAYINGS BANKAVTSEYA IROQUOIS fEDERAL 506 4 ENWATSEK.A RYTSEKN FIRST NATIONAL BANKWAUCONTA IEYUCC}NOA NATIONAL RANKWAUKEGAN AMER 10014 FIAT RANK A TRUSt COWAUKEGAN CITIZENS NATIONAL BARKIIAUFEGAN CONSUMERS COOPERPTI!E CA UNWAAERLR lhtPAU0 STAll BAYIRWAYNE CITY FiRST NATIONAL BARRWELLINGTON WELLINGTON STATE BARKWONORVA AENONA STATE RANKWEST CHICAGO REST CHICAGO SAY A LOAN ASSNWEST EKICAGO WEST CHICAGO STATE BANKWEST SALEM FUST STATE BANKWESTERN SPRINOS FEAST NATIONAL BANKWESTERN SPAINOS WESTERN SRRINES 580 IL!WESTHMDNT ROSY OK WESTICTITWYIEATON GARY ETIEATON BANKWHEATON IY3RT$ORNE BANK OF WYIIATONWHEATON IWYICU TON NATIONAL BATIKWHEELING AllElE INO TRUST 1 SAYINGS BASKAHITTINOTON STATE BANK 1K WHITTIYHGTONWTLLIAAISRILLI WTLLIOISYILLE STATE BANKRIL4EIIE THE WILMETtE USEWINCHESTER WINChESTER NATIONAL B.1N!WINK IELO BATIp OF WINF1ELOWINYE1KA TIE FIRSt NATIONAL BARrNINNETKA THE WINWNETNA BAN!W!NSLOW STATE BANK OF WINSLOWWIT! SECURIT% NAtIONAL RANT16000 BIYEB I1RST NAtIONAL RANKW000StO(K FEASt AIATTONAL BANKW000SIOCA STATE BATIK OF W000STOCKWORTH FEAST SlATE BINK (IF wIABs19*91! THE TINS! NATIONAL BANKWT104ING R1ONN6 BANK I TRuST (08*105 011K RANT Of 96105 0108NOR ATTIRE THE BANK OF HOARVIELt
T(4T1ILL( NATIONAL BANKZEBGUN RANK OF TEIGLER11034 FIRST SAYINGS I LOAN *5511ZION ZION S1PTE lANA A TAST CO
LU WELT ALAABIJltI
TOT EAST STATE STREET18178 SOUTH PARK RIENUE111 WEST BR000HAV165 WEST BROADWAY201 EAST ST PALL STREET120 SOUTH CIKATIAR ROAD2600 STEVENSON DRIVE1BZS SOUTH SIATH STREET625 EAST MONROE STREETFIFTH 8 ROAMS100 NORTH FIFTH STREET1155 NORTH 9TH STREET
SlO EAST MONROE STREET114 50111 511Th STREET
1400 EPS LAIREFICE AVENUE2301 SOUTH MACARTHUR BOULERYRDP 0 BOY 378200 WEST LAIN STRUTP 0 OUR 268I EAST MAIN STREETMAIN STREETP 0 BOX iTSICR NORTH MAIN STREET
P 0 BOA 127
AT? WEST NORTH STREET115 SOUTH ELM STRIETP 0 80*243 114 WEST MAIN319 WEST DROYDIWAB302 FIRST ATENUCODS 4TH AVENUEP 0 501 90TOE EAST PAIN STREET133 REST FRONT STREETP0 BOA 98123 EASY kTIN STREET
III EAST MAIN STREETMAIN A BRATADNARP 0 ROY ITS1 SOUTH MAIN STREET208 SOUTH HAMILTON7447 WEST OTTO STREETP 0 BOY TOP 0 801 66P0 BOY 242POBORTBS7500 OAK PARK ROEN1IE
P 0 BOY 216P 0 BIlE I2TP 0 BOW 447102 NORTH MAIN SIPEUTP 0 800 S102 WEST MAIN STREET
104 EAST BROADWAY
100 EAST MARKET STREET104 WEST NORTH CENTRAL100 NORTH 'LAiN STBE(T211 NORTH MAIM P 0 BOA ARP 0 BOY TTB201 WEST MAINTOO EAST MAIN STREETTO? 5011114 RACK H ) BOU 392001 PIIILO ROAD
P010% 30P 0 80% 270510 MALN STAEET
DIVISION STAEET P0 BOY 12SP 0 BOA TBSTO NORTH 'LAINP 0 BOA IDF 0 BOE 345P 0 BOY 266TOO SOOTH SPRINGFD(LBPOROUSTb NORTH JEFFERSON STREET129 SOUTH MAIN135 P66114 STREET501 PLAIN STREETP 0 AOl 1891110 PEORIA STREET P0 80112922% GOUTA RAINP 0 BOY lIPTIM POST LINCOLN 7 0 ROY 2'AP 0 801 8200 lAST ChERRY STREET216 SOLIH FOURTH STREET118 511TH MAIN2323 SRYINO AVENUE214 WASHINGtON STREET2420 WASHINSTCN STRUTP 0 BOA 103
P 0 BOA 67108 CHESTNUTIT) WEST WASHINGTON STHLIT156-Ill WEST WASHINGTON101 YIOHIH MAiN STREET44S6 4111.7 ROVE
ROt BABIBMUTON STRBII109 'htjRtlh CR55 AVENUE120 EAST ROSIER STREET1500 NORTIRINAIN STREETliE 809111 ROLE 5TPLIV4 500114 MILWAUKEE AAINLE
BOA VPGBTRIA1200 CENTRAL R4ENUEP 0 BOA 7CHURCH 6 HIGI4L8KE YOAO790 ELM STRUT391 ELM STREETP 0 BOO 1891 REST BASRC'AAVWOOD RIVER $ LOPENAP 0 BOK S*9106 SOUTh BETITIOBI STREET682$ ROSS 111TH STREEt
0 8107 14P 0 BOA BOO
P 0 BOA 2*6SAB (OATRT5EDE OENAEB10? EAST RANE0KLTIP 0 SO! B2580 SMERIDAN ROAD1612 SI(REOAJA ROAD
THE OFFICE OF INFORMATIONAL SERVICES {OIS)
tLiiNDS STATE
ikVISSION
1 1- icFINANCIAL AID 1
INFORMATIONIlk
Scene at October, 1973, College Fair, sponsored in Chicago by the National Associationof College Admissions Counselors, Over 15,000 parents and students participated in theFair, where OIS staff organized and conducted a series of financial aid seminars, andhelped to man a financial aid information booth.
The Office of Informational Services was established within the Illinois State Scholarship Commission in May of1971. The office is located in Chicago's "Loop," at 20 North Wabash, Room 1600, and is the first and onlyISSC branch office in the history of the Commission. The office is staffed by three professional workers and twofull-time secretaries, with limited part-time student help.
The activities of OIS are many and varied, but all of them reflect the major purposes of the office, which are:
1. to communicate opportunities for financial assistance that are available to Illinois college-bound youthwho have financial need;
2. to assisto school and community counselors by providing them with information, application materials,and in-service training in the use of ISSC programs and services;
3. to provide assistance and support to the other divisions of ISSC in their efforts to serve Illinoisresidents.
Specific activities of the office are summarized under each of these purposes in the following paragraphs.
Communicating Opportunities for Financial Assistance
Over 40% of OIS worktirne is devoted to the general promotion of ISSC programs and services by way ofseminars and conferences which are directed at various segments of the Illinois public through visits to schools,colleges, and community agencies; through aggressive use of the news media; and through a variety of innovative
69
outreach efforts designed to supplement the other approaches described.
Cognizant of the need for more information about financial aid resources other than those directly controlled byISSC, OIS staff have made a special effort in all of their promotional activities to articulate the availability of aidfrom other state sources, and from federal and institutional sources, and to show how these rarious programsrelate to and are distinct from the Commission's offerings. This more comprehensive approach towardcommunicating opportunities actually works to insure the use of ISSC programs among students vho haveexceptional financial need and who could not afford to attend college with only the assistance provided by theISSC.
OIS staff assumed the primary responsibility for organizing the agency's annual financial aid seminar series in thefall of 1972 and 1973. These seminars were held throughout the state for the purpose of informing school andcommunity counselors about ISSC programs and services, and about general developments in the area of collegefinancial aid. These seminar series were manned by professional staff from all of the ISSC divisions, with OISstaff serving as presenters and coordinating staff travel and housing accommodations during the six weeks ofmeetings.
The following comparative history of ISSC seminar attendance since 1969, the last year for which accuraterecords are available, illustrates this agency's improving ability to reach and inform growing numbers ofcounselors of all types about the Commission's offerings. The most recent and most noticeable expansion in thearea of community counselors (counselors from outside any school system such as employees of various stateand federal social service agencies, church groups, and youth workers in private organizations) is a direct result ofOIS outreach efforts into previously underserved communities.
Category of Participants 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973
High School Counselors/Auministrators 1,000 869 986 1,186 992
Representatives from PostsecondaryI nstitut ions 101 208
Cwnniunity Cuunselw s 119 247
TOTALS 1,000 869 986 1,406 1,447
During 1972 and 1973, meetings for interested parents and students were also incorporated into the seminarseries as a means of augmenting the local efforts of school and community counselors in Illinois communitiesoutside of the Chicago metropolitan area. During 1972 over 2,000 parents and students took advantage of thisopportunity for direct interaction with agency staff. The number dropped to 1,000 in 1973 because ofreductions in the number of seminars held throughout the state.
In addition to our re^ seminar series, OIS staff have run a special series of "open seminars" in the Chicagooffice for local school and community counselors who were not able to participate in the fall series. Each yearthese highly informal smallgroup discussions have attracted an average of 150 participants from northeasternIllinois.
Outside of Commissioninitiated seminar activities, OIS staff have also participated in a number of majorconferences and meetings that were sponsored by other agencies and organizations throughout the past year.Principal among these have been two Student College Interview Sessions, which were sponsored by the NationalScholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students on behalf of minority high school students in Illinois, and theannual College Fair of the National Association of College Admissions Counselors, which attracted over 16,000participants in October of 1973. 1n addition, OIS staff cooperated with the U.S. Office of Education in
conducting Basic Educational Opportunity Grant Program training sessions for Illinois school, college, andcommunity counselors, and in disseminating information about the Basic Grant Program throughout the state.Over 15,000 BEOG applications were made available to the Illinois public during the summer of 1973 as a resultof staff efforts, with the result that many citizens of this state were among the earliest applicants to this newfederal program of grant assistance.
Seminars represent the most expensive and time-consuming aspect of the ISSC's outreach efforts, and we areconstantly challenged to identify the most suitable times and locations where these meetings can be heldthroughout the state, and to make it as convenient as possible for our various publics to participate. OIS staffhave spearheaded both long-range and short-range planning in this area, and are continualy working to insure atleast a periodic agency presence in northwestern, central, and southern Illinois.
The major ISSC seminar efforts are seasonal, usually occurring in the fall, but OIS staff are involved in numerousmeetings throughout the year, which are executed in the course of visits to schools and agencies throughout thestate. Over the past year OIS staff have conducted over 120 visits to Illinois high schools and colleges, and nearly100 visits to community agencies. Most of the agency visits have been made in connection with the CommunityOutreach Program (COP), a network of community-based counseling contacts which serve low-income youththroughout the state. This program of visitations has significantly extended our outreach capabilities beyond theannual seminar series and has brought staff into direct contact with over 9,500 parents and students.
In recent months OIS staff have had many important opportunities to discuss ISSC programs and services onIllinois radio and television broadcasts, and a special effort has been made to make fuller use of these media inour promotional activities. During 1973, staff appeared on 12 radio and television shows, making presentationswhich ranged in length from 15 minutes to one hour and which were directed at thousands of Illinois residents.Information is also being shared with local newspapers on a frequent basis, and efforts have been made to releaseinformation to high school and college newspapers whenever appropriate.
Assisting School and Community Counselors
The school guidance officer is the major source of counseling information for thousands of high school youth inIllinois and across the nation. As such, the demands upon his time and energy are tremendous. He is the maincontact point for every opportunity which might be addressed to students in his school, and he is expected tokeep abreast of them, despite the rapidly changing nature of education in America today. In addition he isfrequently called upon to perform tasks which, at best, have only a tangential bearing on his counselingresponsibilities, so that he must work extra hard to avoid a reduction in his professional services to youth.
In recent years, the growing importance of financial aid to college-bound youth and the frequent lack of accurateand timelyirtformation about existing aid opportunities have only served to further complicate the life of theschool guidance officer. ISSC staff have always made available to counselors in each Illinois high school suppliesof information and application materials for use among young people who wished to participate in our programsand services, but since the mechanics of applying for financial aid have generally become more complicated inrecent years, ISSC staff have felt the need to provide the school counselor with more intensive support onmatters related to financial aid.
In addition to help received from the in-school counselor, each year thousands of candidates for collegeadmission and financial aid receive their primary motivation toward higher education from counselors in socialservice agencies of various kinds. Hence, the establishment of the Community Outreach Program, through whichnearly 3,000 individuals and agencies are kept abreast of developments in the area of college financial aid.
In recognition of the importance of these two groups of counselqrs, each has been assigned a full-timecoordinator in the Office of Inforrnztiuoll Services. The Coordinator of School and College Services relates most
71
closely with in-school counselors and college personnel,. while the Coordinator of Community Services works withparticipants in the Community Outreach Program. Each coordinator spearheads information disseminationactivities for his counselors, plans and executes in .service programs, and gathers feedback which can then bepassed on to other ISSC staff for use in program planning, or on to the Commission for consideration in policymaking.
Fifty percent of OIS worktime is devoted to non-seminar activities which are designed to be of direct benefit toIllinois counselors and the young people they serve. Over the past year these activities have included:
publication of The Messenger newsletter four times each year, as a means of keeping counsrilors currenton financial aid developments. Subscriptions to the newsletter are available upon request by anyone whoadvises prospective college students about financial aid opportunities.
publication R! tticIllinois College Handbook, a reference tool which summarizes for the busy counseloressential admilion and financial aid information about Illinois institutions of higher learning approvedfor pzrticipation in the ISSC Monetary Award Program. The Handbook was made available to 4,000school and community counselors during 1973. This is the third year in which ISSC has uncit.4taken mepublication of this popular book.
publication of the Directory of Nonschool Agencies, a reference document for use by colleges seekingrecruitment contacts in local communities, and an important vehicle for intercommunication betweenschool and non-school counselors.
the development of a special series of audiovisual aids (slides and overhead transparencies) for use byschool and community counselors as they work to publicize ISSC programs and services among localyouth. This "Money for College" audiovisual tool has seen made available, without charge", to nearly2,000 school and community counselors throughout the state.
the conduct of a two-day Educational Resources Conference for participants in the ISSC CommunityOutreach Program in September, 1973. The conference attracted community counselors from all overthe state for the purpose of bringing them up to date on developments in financial aid, admission, jobplacement, and career counseling.
Even when OIS activities do not directly involve the school and community counselor, they support himindirectly. by reducing the need for general information among the parents and students he is charged withserving, thus enabling him to spend more time on major counseling problems.
In Support of Other ISSC Divisions
In conducting its promotional activities, OIS is actually communicating information on behalf of the Division ofScholarships and Grants and the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program, which are not staffed to publicize thebenefits they provide on the scale on which such publicity is needed. Hence, insofar as the goals of ISSC areconcerned, OIS is a supportive entity to these two major divisions, though its particular work objectives and itsmethods of implementing those goals are often initiated independently by OIS staff and carried out withagency-wide approval.
In addition to answering phone and written inquiries on behalf of these divisions, and assisting them in thedissemination of application materials, OIS staff also assist in the design of applicatibns and informationalpublications, help in evaluating the effectiveness of agency procedures on the publics we serve, and representthese divisions both at public meetings and through the news media. During the past year OIS staff have alsodeveloped plans for the translation of key ISSC informational materials into Spanish.
72
INDEX
Administrative staff - inside front cover
Advisory committees - 3-4
Age distribution - of enrolled monetary awr.ad winners 46
Announced monetary award winners - number of 31,parental income/asset data 35.38, parental Income rangeof 39
Applicants (Monetary Award Program) - by institution22.24, analyiis of by zip code area 29.30, parentalincome/asset data 35.38, class level, 40, financial charac-teristics 41.44, racial background 45
Applications (Monetary Award Program) - volume 2, 31
Appropriations - by legislative session 1, by academic year 1,by fiscal year 2
Assets - see parental assets, student assets
Attrition (Advisory Committee on) - 3
Audiovisual center - inside front cover, services 72, 75
Basic Educational Opportunity Grants - assistance with byOffice of Informational Services - 71
Bilingual Advisory Committee - 4
Bilingual Scholarship Program - I, 1, 50, 75
Borrowers by county of residence - 61
Borrowers by state location of educational institution - 62
Choice of institution - i, 29.30, 32, 43-44
Citizenship requirements - Monetary Award Program 7,Loan Program 55
Claims and Collection Department (Loan Program) - 75
Class standing - enrolled monetary award winners by typeinstitution 27, percentages of applicants, winners, no needcases 40; Loan Program 69
College cost budget - 32,34, by institution 22.24
College costs - i, 22.24, 25
College Fair 71
Commission - administrative staff, members inside frontcovet, organization i, 2, purposes i
Community Outreach Program (COPT - 71, 72
Correctional Officers' Survivors/Dependents' Benefits i, 60,75
Cost of loan (interest) - 56
Data Exchange Advisory Committee - 4
Defaults on loans - 2, 65, 69, 75
Deferment of loan repayment - 66
Dependent students (Loan Program) - 55-56
Dependents other than appliCants (Monetary AwardProgram) - 33
Determination of financial need - 32.34
73
Directory of Non-school agencies - 72
Educational Resources Conferences - 72
Eligibility (student) - Monetary Award Program 7, LoanProgram 65-56, State Scholar Program i, 62, Veterans'Benefits 48, POW/MIA Program 49, Student to StudentProgram 49, Bilingual Scholarships 60, CorrectionalWorkers' Benefits 60, Policemen/Firemen's Benefits 60
Enrolled winners - 11.21, 31, State Scholars with monetaryawards 64
Entitlement - 7
Equal Educational Opportunity Advisory Committee - 4
Family contribution - 32.34, 41-42
Federal income tax returns - see income tax returns
Financial need - analysis concepts and procedures 32,formula 33-34, study relating to 41-44
Firemen's Survivors Benefits see Policemen/Firemen'sSurvivors Benefits
Fiscal year appropriations - 2
Full faith and credit - 55, 58
Full-time equivalent student enrollment - by institution22.24, undergraduates by class level all ISSC approvedinstitutions 40, percent assisted by ISSC 76
General Advisory Committee - 3
Housekeeping allowance - 33
Higher Education Student Assistance Law - 2, 56; quotation31, 32
Historical versus current trends (Loan Program) - 60
Illinois College Handbook - 72
Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program - 65-68
Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program Advisory Committee - 4
Income tax returns 32. 33
Independent students - Monetary Award Program 34, 4144;Loan Program 66
Institutional representatives -
Interest rate - 65
Interest subsidy - 59
Jury and Financial Need Advisory Committee - 3
Lenders' administrative cost allowance -
Lending institutions (approved) - 66,65.68
Loan Program - see Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program
Loans outstanding - 2
Maintenance allowance - 33
Marital status - (Monetary Award Program) students 20.30,43-44; (Loan Program) 69
Matching grants - see Student to Student Program
Maximum award - 7, 26,34
Maximum loan amounts - 56
Members of Commission - inside front cover
Messenger (The) - 72
Monetary Award Program - i, 1, 2, 7.47
Monetary award winners - i, 1, 2, 7; capsule history by typeInstitution 8.10, by institution 11.21, analysis byinstitution 22-24, maximum and partial awards 26,winners' class standing by type institution 27, analysis byzip code area 29-30, historical summary 31, parentalincome/asset data by institution 35.38, unmet costs for40, characteristics relating to financial need 41.44, racialbackground 45, vocational aspirations 46, age distribution46, also state scholars 64
Need analysis system - 32.34
Non-Illinois schools (Loan Program) - 56
Office locations, addresses, telephone numbers - Inside frontcover
Office of Informational Services - 69.72, 75
Operations report (Loan Program) - 68
Organization of ISSC - 2
Other gift aid - 7, 43
Other states' comprehensive scholarship/grant programs 51
Parental asset data - 33.34, 35-38, 39, 41-44
Parental income data - 33-34, 35-38, 39, 41-44
Partial awards - 26, 47
Permanent resident - Monetary Award Program 7, LoanProgram 55
Policemen/Firemen Survivors' Benefits - i, 1, 50
Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Dependents' Benefits -1, 49, 75
Programs administered by ISSC - i, 75
Racial background - of applicants 45, of winners 45
Reinsurance agreement with federal government (LoanProgram) - 55, 68
Renewability of monetary awards - 7
Repayment of loans - 66. 69, 60, 75
Reserve fund (Loan Program) - 1, 65
Residency - Monetary Award Program 7, Loan Program 65
Resolving fund (Loan Program) - see reserve fund
Scholarship and Grant Division - see Monetary AwardProgram
Schools - approved for Monetary Award Program 11.21,22.24, approved for Loan Program 56, 63-64
Selection scores for State Scholar Program - 52
Self-help expectations (Monetary Award Program) - 32, 34
Self supporting students - Monetary Award Program 34,43-44; Loan Program - see independent students
Seminars for financial aid - 70, 71
Sex distribution - (Monetary Award Program) of applicants,winners, no need cases 43-44, percentages applicants byzip code areas 29-30; (Loan Program) 69
Sibling schooling allowance - 33
State Scholar Program - I, 52, 75, applicants named SS's29.30, selection criteria 62, selection scores since 19686952, time of required exam 52, analysis of participants andSS's by county of high school location 63, enrolled SS'swith monetary awards 64, percentage of SS's rank in class54
States with comprehensive programs based on financial need-61
Statistical summary of volume by month (Loan Program) -58
Student assets - 34, 43-44
Student Collage Interview Sessions - 70
Student Population Profile (Loan Program) - 59
Student to Student Program - i, 1, 49
Table of Contents -
Testing and Determination of Academic Potential (AdvisoryCommittee on) - 3
Thrift retirement allowance - 34
Tuition and fees - by institution 22.24, study of majornonpublic institutions 26, by type institution 25, dollarand percent increases in for major nonpublic institutions47
Unmet cost - 7, 32, 40
Veterans' benefits (at community colleges) - i, 1, 4849, 75
Vocational aspirations of winners - 46
Widow/widower allowance - 34
Winners - see Monetary award winners
74
76
HIGHLIGHTS
Programs/Activities
1. Monetary Awards In 1973-74 a total of $54.1 million was invested in 72,250 financially needyundergraduates to assist them to attend the Illinois college of their choice. Since 1958, the ISSC has made373,308 monetary awards totaling $253.46 million. Two-thirds of these awards and 70% of the total dollarshave been made in the past four years. Since 1966-67 (the past seven years) there has been an annualaverage growth of 9,000 additional awards and $6.9 million in award dollars. By type institution, thefollowing percentages of all full-time equivalent undergraduates were assisted by ISSC in 1973.74: privatesenior, 39A%; private junior, 47.4%; public senior, 25.5%; public community, 10.2%; all schools, 23.8%.
2. Special Awards The ISSC has responsibility for the following categorical awards: (1) payment of tuitionfor veterans at Illinois public community colleges, (2) bilingual scholarships/grants, (3) dependents ofPOW /MIA and disabled veterans if condition developed since 1960, (4) dependents of policemen, firemen,and correctional workers killed or permanently disabled in line of duty, and (5) matching dollars toscholarship dollars voluntarily contributed by students at Illinois public senior universities.
3. Office of Informational Services To better communicate opportunity for financial aid to all financiallyneedy students, especially those from minority/poverty backgrounds, a special office and new efforts werebegun in May, 1971. Located in the downtown area of Chicago, this office has, in three years,accomplished the following: direct contact with over 800 community based volunteers (nonschool) workingwith youth; a newsletter keeping all co-workers with youth informed of the variety of educational aidprograms; a speakers' bureau of aid experts; and a special effort to work with other state agencies (i.e.,Department of Public Aid) to coordinate all the state's efforts in more nearly reaching the goal of equaleducational opportunity. A new audiovisual resource library is a recent development of this office.
4. State Scholars To personally and publicly recognize academic excellence, the ISSC annually names about,15,500 scholars from approximately 800 of the Illinois public and nonpublic secondary schools.
5. Guaranteed Loan Program By January 2, 1974, the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program had provided$264.0 million to 143,000 Illinois residents since its inception in 1966. About $36.0 million is lentannually by Illinois banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions to students attending approvedcolleges, universities, and specialized vocational and technical schools throughout the country. During 1973,54% of the loans were guaranteed to first-time borrowers, and the average loan during this period was$1,278.00. As of January 1, 1974, approximately 41% of the students were in school, 39% were inrepayment, 16% had totally repaid, and 4% had defaulted.
6. Claims and Collection Activity Since 1969, the Claims and Collection Department has functioned as an
integral part of the Illinois Guaranteed Loan Program. The Department has been charged with the primaryresponsibility to prevent defaults, when possible, to collect monies from individuals whose accounts wererepurchased, because of our guarantee agreement, and to coordinate the claims and collection activity withthe federal program of reinsurance. Currently, one-half of the claims received from lenders are resolvedprior to the necessity of repurchase with state funds. By January, 1974, approximately $1.0 million hadbeen collected from these repurchased accounts.