Notorious T.O.D. said:
Yes, here in NC we have an over 7 percent unemployment rate and banks in extreme financial distress and UNC just announced a 6.8 or so percent increase in tuition. And the grants and scholarships are just not there for most students theses days. To me the attitude of the schools is just "the student and or his parents can just borrow the money to pay".
Another case of the government getting too involved in the university systems and the costs just keep going up and up...and will the jobs be there when the students graduate anyway....?
All the new schools they build down here all have lighted football and baseball fields and tons of student parking places at probably a grand per space, but they don't have enough money for books for all the kids in the classes....
Best,
Notorious
It appears that some state's educators are starting to hear our message. Tuition for son's last semester (3 years ago) at University of Akron, one of Ohio's state run universities cost more than the entire tuition from that same university for my law degree!! But Pennsylvania this week announced they are reducing tuition at several of their state run universities, and eliminating the cost differential (preference) favoring students who are residents of their state. The net effect is that Ohio students heading to college now have more options at lower, or at least no higher cost, than universities in their home states.
Some studies have concluded the prinicpal reason for the rapid and rampant rise in college education costs is the availability of all the public funding that was supposed to make college more affordable for all.
I went to a Woodcraft store today on the SE side of Cleveland. To my pleasant surprise, I noted their pricing on nearly all species of woods, both domestic and imported, were lower than what I had been seeing earlier this year. 4/4 padauk, purpleheart, mahogany, curly maple were all available in the range of $6 to $7 per BF, for S3S or S4S stock which was essentially clear throughout.
While there I saw the new DeWalt plunge saw, and confirmed it will work with Festool's guide rails, and that DeWalt's "Quick clamps" and right angle and adjustable mitre accessories fit Festool's guide rails. I ordered a pair of the clamps and one of the fixed 90 degree "t-square" accessories so I can cross-cut sheet goods without the MFT.
Dave R.