
Fingers point at Fopros all the time. The fopros only one students so they can make money.
They want investors so that when they get more students, the investor, who, let's say produces notebook paper, will benefit from the growth of the school.
Is this a conflict of interest? You decide.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Stanford University paid more than $2 million in legal firms to a firm headed by...well, let me see, a graduate from Princeton. NO! The firm was headed by a Stanford trustee.
The school needs legal advice. Who they going to call? The trustees look at one another and one guy says, "I run a law firm." And his firm gets the money.
Is this a conflict of interest? Seems so to me.
What do you think?
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