
A Ed.gov press release announces "U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings and U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Dina Habib Powell will lead the first ever high-profile delegation of U.S. college and university presidents to Japan, Korea and China during International Education Week November 10-18, 2006.
The delegation includes:
The delegation to Asia includes the following:
* U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings
* Assistant Secretary of State Dina Habib Powell
* John B. Simpson, President, University at Buffalo, SUNY
* Henry T. Yang, Chancellor, University of California, Santa Barbara
* Bernard Machen, President, University of Florida
* Adam W. Herbert, President, Indiana University
* William Brody, President, Johns Hopkins University
* Karen A. Holbrook, President, Ohio State University
* Stephen M. Curtis, President, Community College of Philadelphia
* H. James Owen, President, Piedmont Community College
* Shirley Ann Jackson, President, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
* David W. Leebron, President, Rice University
* Philip W. Eaton, President, Seattle Pacific University
* Steadman Upham, President, University of Tulsa
what I want to know is who is footing the bill for this? Students and tuition costs? You bet.
So, if more students come to the US from these countries and pay the out-or-state, out-of-country fees, will that mean a discount for current students?
Show me.
What do you think?





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