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#81
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On 24 Jan 2005 07:28:13 GMT, Jon Crowcroft wrote:
I didnt realize Imperial didnt have a reading week. They do have _less_ lectures Fewer. Come on, you're an academic! ![]() -- Cliff Laine, The Old Lard Factory, Lancaster http://www.loobynet.com * remove any trace of rudeness before you reply * --------------------------------------------------------- Best Eurovision Song Title So Far: "Vsichki Drehi Mi Prechat" - All Clothes are an Obstacle to Me (Bulgaria) |
#82
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On Mon, 24 Jan 2005, loobyloo wrote:
On 24 Jan 2005 07:28:13 GMT, Jon Crowcroft wrote: I didnt realize Imperial didnt have a reading week. They do have _less_ lectures Fewer. Oh, i don't know - there are so many of the bloody things, 'lectures' must count as a mass noun by now! tom -- The MAtrix had evarything in it: guns, a juimping off teh walls, flying guns, a bullet tiem, evil computar machenes, numbers that flew, flying gun bullets in slowar motian, juimping into a gun, dead police men, computar hackeing, Kevin Mitnick, oven trailers, a old womans kitchen, stairs, mature women in clotheing, head spark plugs, mechaanical squids, Japaneseses assasins, tiem traval, volcanos, a monstar, slow time at fastar speed, magic, wizzards, some dirty place, Kung Few, fighting, a lot of mess explodsians EVARYWHERE, and just about anything else yuo can names! |
#83
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On Mon, 24 Jan 2005, Colin Rosenstiel wrote:
In article , (Meldrew of Meldreth) wrote: Do they know how to punt properly in Oxford anyway? Oh yes, we do. Although we're not nearly as good at going backwards as you are in Cambridge. tom -- The MAtrix had evarything in it: guns, a juimping off teh walls, flying guns, a bullet tiem, evil computar machenes, numbers that flew, flying gun bullets in slowar motian, juimping into a gun, dead police men, computar hackeing, Kevin Mitnick, oven trailers, a old womans kitchen, stairs, mature women in clotheing, head spark plugs, mechaanical squids, Japaneseses assasins, tiem traval, volcanos, a monstar, slow time at fastar speed, magic, wizzards, some dirty place, Kung Few, fighting, a lot of mess explodsians EVARYWHERE, and just about anything else yuo can names! |
#84
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In article , Paul Weaver
writes Vague memory says I paid 80 pounds a term for a bedsit at Trinity, and I was a few years after you. Grants were something like 1400 for the year So, no fees There were fees, but they were included in the grant payment system and were therefore normally ignored. The 1400 was net of fees, and was the maximum if your parents were poor. IIRC, the minimum was 300 - your parents were expected to fill the gap, and you were in difficulty if they didn't. and twice the grant, Twice what grant? and you didn't have to pay it back Correct - that's what the word "grant" means. The governments of the previous decades had come to this strange conclusion that having graduates was good for the country. Of course, we didn't have every piddling little school for over-18s calling itself a "University". Then soon as you got into government you decided the rest of us wouldn't have that. Excuse me? I am not and never have been a part of government. And of course in 0 years time we'll have to pay for your pension too. And that makes even less sense. *I'm* paying for my pension - a significant proportion of my salary goes that way. And I don't get it for a couple of decades. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#85
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Clive D. W. Feather wrote to uk.transport.london on Mon, 24 Jan 2005:
Correct - that's what the word "grant" means. The governments of the previous decades had come to this strange conclusion that having graduates was good for the country. Of course, we didn't have every piddling little school for over-18s calling itself a "University". But we *did* have the concept of free, universal education, which has now been lost. I suppose it will be nursery schools and classes next, then sixth forms..... until finally all education has to be paid for out of one's pocket, as well as through taxation. -- "Mrs Redboots" http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/ Website updated 23 January 2005 with new photos |
#86
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In article , Mrs Redboots
writes But we *did* have the concept of free, universal education, which has now been lost. I suppose it will be nursery schools and classes next, then sixth forms..... until finally all education has to be paid for out of one's pocket, as well as through taxation. Oddly enough, there's much more money in state subsidised nursery care than ten years ago. All 4 year olds are equally deserving. At the risk of sounding a bit meldrew-ish I'm not sure 50% of teenagers are equally deserving of a "university" education. But it does wonders for the unemployment statistics. Which is the main driver. -- "now, the thing you type on and the window you stare out of are the same thing" |
#87
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#88
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In message , at
19:25:00 on Tue, 25 Jan 2005, Colin Rosenstiel remarked: If your parents were better off you got a "reduced fees grant" meaning that you got no maintenance and paid something towards your fees. If your parents were even better off you got a minimum grant (UKP50 in my day) only and paid all your fees. And my recollection is that that for every extra pound the parent earned, more than a pound was deducted from the grant. A poverty trap by definition. -- Roland Perry |
#89
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In article ,
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 19:25:00 on Tue, 25 Jan 2005, Colin Rosenstiel remarked: If your parents were better off you got a "reduced fees grant" meaning that you got no maintenance and paid something towards your fees. If your parents were even better off you got a minimum grant (UKP50 in my day) only and paid all your fees. And my recollection is that that for every extra pound the parent earned, more than a pound was deducted from the grant. A poverty trap by definition. Or the student. My TOTAL gap year's income (after tax) was deducted from my next year's grant AND FEES - though I now believe that I should have got a solicitor to challenge the latter. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#90
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Meldrew of Meldreth wrote:
writes But we *did* have the concept of free, universal education, which has now been lost. I suppose it will be nursery schools and classes next, then sixth forms..... until finally all education has to be paid for out of one's pocket, as well as through taxation. Oddly enough, there's much more money in state subsidised nursery care than ten years ago. All 4 year olds are equally deserving. At the risk of sounding a bit meldrew-ish I'm not sure 50% of teenagers are equally deserving of a "university" education. I'd probably dispute that if I knew what you meant by "deserving"! But it does wonders for the unemployment statistics. Which is the main driver. Just think how many more wonders they could do by replacing the current system with the Australian system, so that not only rich people can afford to go to university... |
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