
At 04:18 AM 12/17/95 -0500, you wrote:
Exactly. If Oklahoma University is private, it can establish and enforce policies that would be unconstitutional at public schools. Those policies become part of the contract and a student must abide by them, except when they are administered arbitrarily and capriciously. At a public universities, students probably would have more freedom to challenge this policy.
In looking at their homepage, it appears to be a state funded school. (There is not alot of background on the school history or affiliations on their homepage except for a note that it was founded by the territorial legislature a number of years before becoming a state..) | What is the Eye in the Food Pyramid? | alano@teleport.com | |"The moral PGP Diffie taught Zimmerman unites all| Disclaimer: | | mankind free in one-key-steganography-privacy!" | Ignore the man | |`finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key | behind the keyboard.| | http://www.teleport.com/~alano/ | <fnord> |