Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Schools that receive federal funding don't have the vast freedom you think they do. Signed, a smart person.
Okay, my friend. Care to cite number and verse?
Because citing sources is what the smart folks do, you know.
See, e.g., Titke IX. The vast majority of literate people know this already. Sad that I have to educate so many on the basics.
Wait. What about Title IX prohibits Emory University from offering the programs it does for undocumented immigrant students?
My response was to a sweeping -- or sloppily worded -- claim about schools' money and their freedom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Schools that receive federal funding don't have the vast freedom you think they do. Signed, a smart person.
Okay, my friend. Care to cite number and verse?
Because citing sources is what the smart folks do, you know.
See, e.g., Titke IX. The vast majority of literate people know this already. Sad that I have to educate so many on the basics.
Wait. What about Title IX prohibits Emory University from offering the programs it does for undocumented immigrant students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Schools that receive federal funding don't have the vast freedom you think they do. Signed, a smart person.
Okay, my friend. Care to cite number and verse?
Because citing sources is what the smart folks do, you know.
See, e.g., Titke IX. The vast majority of literate people know this already. Sad that I have to educate so many on the basics.
Wait. What about Title IX prohibits Emory University from offering the programs it does for undocumented immigrant students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oP. This is the point of my postAnonymous wrote:I donate money every year to my private university, and if I discovered they were diverting some of their funds from Americans to illegal immigrants, I'd stop donating.
PP. That's the point I was trying to make, also.
There's a similar thread running about a college offering a class that teaches students "resistance strategies" against President Trump, and the same applies there. When you take a political stand on a controversial issue, there will be fallout. Liberals are yelling "1st amendment rights," but I don't see anybody saying it's illegal to take divisive action and make divisive statements - it's just stupid. And potentially costly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Schools that receive federal funding don't have the vast freedom you think they do. Signed, a smart person.
Okay, my friend. Care to cite number and verse?
Because citing sources is what the smart folks do, you know.
See, e.g., Titke IX. The vast majority of literate people know this already. Sad that I have to educate so many on the basics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oP. This is the point of my postAnonymous wrote:I donate money every year to my private university, and if I discovered they were diverting some of their funds from Americans to illegal immigrants, I'd stop donating.
PP. That's the point I was trying to make, also.
There's a similar thread running about a college offering a class that teaches students "resistance strategies" against President Trump, and the same applies there. When you take a political stand on a controversial issue, there will be fallout. Liberals are yelling "1st amendment rights," but I don't see anybody saying it's illegal to take divisive action and make divisive statements - it's just stupid. And potentially costly.
Anonymous wrote:
meanwhile, the educated elite continue to segregate themselves from the middle class. Increase immigration to keep wages low, build walls around neighborhoods to protect from middle class families, and increase costs of education to keep the middle class out of the network to find good jobs and keep good opportunities.
The University recently sent a letter home to families informing them of a 3.9 percent increase in the bottom-line price tag of a year’s tuition as a full-time student at the University, which will amount to $67,136 for the 2017-2018 academic year. The cost reflects the comprehensive fee including tuition, a student government fee, and standard room and board.
http://bucknellian.net/75097/opinion/editorial-another-tuition-increase-headed-college-bubble-crisis/