Sunday, November 8, 2009

Education

On Education by U.S. News Staff

Mission Accomplished, A 'Say Yes to Ed' Program Ends

July 09, 2008 04:15 PM ET | Eddy Ramírez | Permanent Link | Print

A millionaire philanthropist from Boston has kept a promise he made 17 years ago and, along with other donors, helped a group of mostly low-income children with special needs attend college.

The children were second graders at the Charles G. Herrington School in Cambridge in 1991 when George Weiss extended them an invitation to the "Say Yes to Education" program and its offer of a free college education. Thirty-five of the original 69 students are now college graduates; the student who went the furthest graduated this spring with a doctoral degree in pharmacy. All but eight students earned high school diplomas or geds.

The Cambridge program has now closed its doors, but similar programs continue to run in Philadelphia, New York, and Hartford, Conn. The estimated cost to Weiss: $35 million.

Tags: education

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About On Education

Report cards may come out only twice a year, but education news happens every day. Here is where U.S. News writers grade the latest developments, from school districts banning the game of tag to congressional debates that affect college affordability. Check regularly for the most recent updates.

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