Probably telling you what you want to hear. |
Let me share a little history. In the late 1970’s, Virginia Tech allowed visits by the opposite sex according to this approximate schedule:
Friday 5 pm to Midnight Saturday Noon to Midnight Sunday Noon to 5 pm Tuesday 5 pm to 10 pm One dorm had no visitation privileges whatsoever. We called it the vault. Getting caught with a girl in your room at 10 minutes past midnight on Saturday night would land you in the same amount of trouble as discovery of drugs or a firearm. Now this was an example of a conservative leaning school, at a time when virtually no other public university had such restrictions. By contrast today, no public university could be said to lean conservative, with possible exception of some schools in Utah. They all lean liberal but to varying degrees. |
TX A&M is quite proud to be called conservative |
DP. I have a kid at VT so can only speak to that school - it’s very middle of the road politically, which we appreciate. There are groups for everyone, but you don’t see inane protesters disrupting life for everyone else. Very refreshing. |
Thanks for sharing. |
If you think Liberty is the center, your views aren't reliable. |
UVA is similar. People protest but do it respectfully. Probably helps that most of the Deans live on the lawn with their families |
|
That is one weekend and students weren't forced to move to hybrid education because they can't safely get to class. Protesting is very American, respectful protest is preferred... it's when we cross into blatant disruption of people's lives and safety where it becomes a problem. Both sides have a voice, that's the point. Last I checked, VT and UVA students were going to class. |
The PP was not sure if CNU had Hillel - I answered that question with a Yes. CNU has some church-going students as well as some socially liberal students, based on the clubs on campus. Read the campus newspaper to get one view into the campus culture. |