mahicks wrote:GO NOLES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The FSU Super Ensemble is ALOT more than plagiarism....It's a proprietary product and is not public...Regardless of what your tax dollars pay for, the university is entitled to make a profit on what ever it feels like...Including your tax dollars.
To be honest.....Very little to NONE of your tax dollars go toward MOST Florida Colleges...Including FSU
600k went for this study and that took me less than 30 seconds to find, i suspect fsu is getting alot more than central florida but i will find that out tomorrow:
Taxpayers Fund Squirrel Sex Study
Created: 6/30/2005 6:30:51 PM
Updated: 7/1/2005 9:21:12 AM
Orlando, FL -- OK, we're not kidding here, but have you ever thought about the sex life of the African ground squirrel? That is what a University of Central Florida professor and several grad students are working on right now. So why should you care? Because they're using hundreds of thousands of tax dollars!
Squirrels: they're cute, they're furry, and they have caught the interest of University of Central Florida Professor, Dr. Jane Waterman. Waterman who is out of the country until August 1st, has traveled from her biology lab at UCF nearly halfway around the world to Africa to study the sex life of the African Ground Squirrel
M.J. Soileau, University of Central Florida Vice President of Research:
"That's how science advances, it's not by studying things we understand, it's things that are oddball things."
Clearly the squirrel project fits into the oddball thing, but the Vice President of Research at UCF, Dr. M.J. Soileau says it is good science.
M.J. Soileau, University of Central Florida Vice President of Research:
"One of the characteristics of this ground squirrel is that the males live together in a non-aggressive way even though they are competing for sexual favors of the female."
Now at this point you might be wondering how do you conduct a study into the sex life of squirrels. You could put on a lab coat, get a pen and paper and try to interview the squirrels, or you could do the more traditional route and apply for a federal grant, take grad students to Africa and study the squirrels over there.
That's exactly what Dr. Waterman did and you're paying for it. What's that costing you? $600,000.