crispin-waugh
Crispin Waugh
crispin-waugh

I think it has to do with the number of programs. Grad programs are fairly rare so one being unisex has a larger effect than an undergrad one being unisex.

replicated fact that co-educational environments are detrimental to girls and women

Co-ed issues aside, how are these small liberal arts colleges just now having financial difficulties? There are more people going to college than ever before. And tuition has risen leaps and bounds ahead of inflation at nearly all (Mary Baldwin’s is $30,000/year which is actually pretty cheap compared to other small

The difference being that the club house doesn’t really provide any particular benefits based on gender/sex and doesn’t recieve money from State or Federal governments.

#NotMyHashtag?

You’re unstable

That’s the perfect example. There are so many colleges available for men, just like there are many golf clubs open to women. Whoever claims that men should just leave the few women colleges alone has a hard time arguing in favor of opening the few men only golf clubs to women too. That’s the pesky little detail about

.Currently working at a small liberal arts college and enrollment drives everything. Your yearly budget is based on a projection of an enrollment goal. If you don’t make goal (lets say within 10 students)...no big deal, you can move some money around. If you don’t make it within say, 40 students, your year can be

I went to an all girl high school. It was my decision. There was a few private high schools in my area, and my parents let me pick, and I chose the all girl one. It felt the most comfortable to me at the young age of 13. No joke, it was the best decision I ever made.

DOn’t normalize the “#NotMy” prefix. It’ll lose it’s power and fall prey to mockery.

Apart from whether or not there is merit in single-sex institutions of education, if you want a school to stay afloat despite economic pressures, you have to fiscally support that institution.

Those are clearly mallards

I’ve finally deciphered the headline at the start of the newscast: “Local Sports Hero Now As Tall As Hospital”

They eventually evolve into their final form: Matt Bullard, who had about as much mobility as a traffic obstruction.

Unfortunately, by the end of his career, Keith Ballard WAS a bollard.

The statement above was released after the one you posted (letter you posted on around 14th and 16th or 17th they added that bit to their website). They did call him out, but i do think that they have been weak against him.

I also think the reflexive accusations of antisemitism for anyone who disagrees with Israel does incalculable damage to Jews world wide. It dilutes the power of pointing out actual antisemitism, it lets bigots blame all Jews for the actions of a foreign country most have never been to, and it feeds the narrative that

I get the instinctive reaction to be over-protective towards Israel, but I am so over the idea that any criticism of Israel = anti-semitism. My family’s been in the US since the late 1800s - I’m in favor of the existence of a Jewish state but I’m not that emotionally attached to their politics. I just don’t see why we

Jewish convert here (and not because I married a Jew): There are Jews who are not Zionists. I didn’t find this shocking. Some horrendous things have been done in the name of Israel, including the assisination of Yitzhak Rabin. So why the fear? I am not being critical. I am genuinly trying to engage in a discussion.

The sooner Americans wise up and realize that their own interests don’t align with Israel’s on every single issue - and may even be antagonistic on some issues (like the Iran nuclear deal) - the better off you will be. How many Americans for instance know that Israel is one of the three most hostile countries (next to