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Date: | Thu, 1 Oct 1998 11:54:44 -0500 |
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> The Gophers' men's hockey team, which begins practice this afternoon at
> Mariucci Arena, has 22 players who share 18 full scholarships. An
> in-state (residence) athletic tender at the University of Minnesota is
> worth $9,355 a year. A nonresident tender is worth $16,255 a year.
> Because the Gophers recruit and tender only Minnesota residents, savings
> to the athletic department is considerable. Do the math....
This is a vacuous argument ... I'm not really concerned about whether
there's only Minnesota players at UM - I don't care. As a member of the
math polic, I just simply am pointing out the flawed logic in this argument
... come up with a better one.
Minnesota isn't "SAVING" any money. It's all theoretical to begin with. It
doesn't cost the school any more money to have a non-resident attend the
school. They simply charge more (or charge in-state students less) as an
incentive for in-staters to attend.
If the hockey team gave a scholarship to a non-resident, the school would
not be losing ANY money whatsoever.
18 x 0 is still 0
i.e. 18 scholarships times $0, is still $0 no matter who you give the 18 to.
AW
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