The author needs to give credit to the Boneyard for the flight info. There is no way someone posts the flight info here on the boneyard and Meghan (the author) just happens to think of that herself. Unless of course Meghan is the one who posted it here. Hmm....?
The author needs to give credit to the Boneyard for the flight info. There is no way someone posts the flight info here on the boneyard and Meghan (the author) just happens to think of that herself. Unless of course Meghan is the one who posted it here. Hmm....?
Interest of full disclosure, Russ Steinberg (also of ADB) sent the flight info to both of us. I posted it on here, and Meghan (my sister) wrote the piece. Nobody is plagiarizing here.
It wouldn't be plagiary regardless. FWIW, I love ADB!Interest of full disclosure, Russ Steinberg (also of ADB) sent the flight info to both of us. I posted it on here, and Meghan (my sister) wrote the piece. Nobody is plagiarizing here.
Whaaaaaaaat@CallMeBruce he's one of the writers for ADB.
Hopefully our low key / under the radar approach is the correct one.
I am not sure that it is but only time will tell.
http://newsok.com/how-david-boren-f...rss&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
On potential expansion targets: “We’re all talking with each other. We’ve agreed not to speculate about any one school or another school that might get in. But we have some good choices. We’ve all agreed to be very confidential about schools. We don’t want to let some school get a lot of publicity and they’re ‘oh, they’re about to get in the Big 12,’ and maybe they don’t get in. We don’t want to have any of that. So we’re trying to keep that all in-house.”
Its best for Uconn to keep quiet…
Sec. 1-210. (Formerly Sec. 1-19). Access to public records. Exempt records.One thing that the article did not say, but is absolutely true, is that the receiving of a major conference invite and subsequent acceptance is basically a formality. It's the public unveiling. The culmination of an executed contract.
There might be months or years of negotiations and preliminary drafts leading up to said execution. Though there is some legalese to wade through in the FOIA, a case can certainly be made for draft contracts and negotiations thereof to be exempt from FOI requests prior to execution.
I kinda have the same reaction to this that I had to the Benedict interview - what exactly is new here?
The article really doesn't say anything that should cause anyone to have any reaction whatsoever.
I kinda have the same reaction to this that I had to the Benedict interview - what exactly is new here?
The article really doesn't say anything that should cause anyone to have any reaction whatsoever.
And yet, so many have reacted that it's one of our highest-traffic days ever, despite some websites trying to block traffic to us.
Isn't your response to the article, a reaction?
Just sayin'
I'm glad you're getting traffic and I'm not sure why people would block you.
But unless I'm missing something, I don't see what's breaking any ground.