Ok, I'm sorry, but there's one thing you keep saying that keeps catching my eye and confusing me.
Uniforms? In college?
They can't possibly enforce something like that on a college campus! High school and below, sure, they may rule with an iron fist, but when you're shoveling out thousand of dollars each semester for classes, room and board, and loads of other expenses, they can't claim any right to dictate how you dress.
I've gone to classes where people have shown up in pajama pants and bunny slippers, for god's sake!
Pfft. Honestly.
No just in Schools and I did hear of it being enforced in some colleges and some private places. I never went to college after school apart from a year later. The educational system works differently in my place.
Hehheh...
http://www.bju.edu/p...pect/dress.html Not quite a uniform, yet, but dang. You should also check out the links on the side; general expectations, and residence hall life. And these pages don't cover half of the rules. And this is one of the most expensive colleges ever. Oh, silly BJU.
QUOTE
Men:
Morning Dress–dress shirt (no denim/chambray) with tie, dress or neat casual pants (no jeans, cargo, carpenter, or sloppy pants), dress or leather casual shoes; sweaters should show shirt collar and tie knot (no sweatshirts).
Afternoon Dress–collared shirt (no crew necks), neat casual pants, dress or casual shoes (no slides or sandals), socks above the ankle, sweatshirts or sweaters.
Sunday Dress–coat, tie, and dress shirt; dress shoes; dress or dressier casual pants.
Recreation and Work Dress–jeans, t-shirts, shorts at athletic facilities (not as spectators at sports events), sleeveless athletic shirts (indoor activities only), socks required (including at work).
Women:
Tops
* Tops must be long enough that the midriff is never exposed.
* Sleeves are required. (Sleeveless tops and dresses may be worn with a blouse, jacket, or sweater.)
* Necklines may come no lower than four fingers below the collarbone.
That sounds to me like a place for "Wear your tie is more important if you are a man".
Pay to go there to get discriminated. Policies and clothes instead of learning. They have a high opinion of themselves. "If you don't look pretty we'll throw you out!"
Annoys me the most that most of the pictures I find:
Men: Tie and uniform
Women: plain comfortable clothing
Common: All smiling.
To sum it up here on
Residents Hall LifeThey even allow storing guns but not fireworks and the above on that list?
So they class certain types of music, gore games and videos as offensive compared to bringing in a weapon that will be stored away?
I call that like living in a corrupt political prison.
This post has been edited by Deepsycher: 11 June 2007 - 02:59 PM