Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
16 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
 

hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
1. Most private colleges in this city have changed in the past 20 years.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:14 PM
May 2017

People try their best to get to NY so they can get their foot in the door.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
2. Yeah, Fordham's really pushing that angle too. "New York is my campus. Fordham is my school.TM"
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:24 PM
May 2017

A lot of the private schools are scared shitless about Cuomo's tuition-free CUNY/SUNY.

They should, considering the obscene amount they charge for tuition. I don't remember Fordham ever being that expensive, even allowing for inflation. It used to be a good school for working class kids. I suppose it's still a good school - but for who?

 

hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
4. NYC is a city of the rich now.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:37 PM
May 2017

Bloomberg was not the savior people make him out to be and de Blasio is a joke. Chelsea and the West Village are now neighborhoods for the rich now.

I had a friend who's parents bought a townhouse for $15,000 in the 40's and she sold it a few years ago for 16 million.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
5. It's sickening.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:41 PM
May 2017

I grew up on East 67th St. on a block of rent-controlled walk-ups. The parking garage on that block now charges more than the monthly rent was. Hundreds of people lost their homes.

GP6971

(33,034 posts)
8. My grandparents lived on the Grand Concourse
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:51 PM
May 2017

a couple blocks from Yankee Stadium. My grandfather was the administrator of the Andrew Friedman retirement home in the 50s.

And I worked for the 7 Santini Brothers whose corporate office was on Jerome Avenue. Scary place in the late 70s.

 

hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
10. I imagine it must have been frightening to work there.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:54 PM
May 2017

Now it is a different place and now trendy. They are trying to do to the Bronx what they did to Brooklyn.

GP6971

(33,034 posts)
12. Sure appears so from what I've heard
Tue May 2, 2017, 10:11 PM
May 2017

I worked in the Maspeth facility at the time, but had to go to Jerome Ave about 2 times a month. One day I drove on the Cross Bronx Expressway going to Jerome Ave to drop something off. About a mile from the exit a car had pulled off and the driver was walking away from the vehicle. Went to Jerome Ave, double parked and dropped off the envelope and got right back on in no more than 10 minutes. The abandoned car had all the tires removed by then.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
9. Hipsters in Brownsville.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:54 PM
May 2017

I blame it all on the demolition of the Third Avenue El.

Once it came down, a half million working class people were pushed to Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx and the city was turned over to luxury developers and global investors. What housing was left became a post-collegiate playground.

GP6971

(33,034 posts)
3. Haven't been there for years
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:28 PM
May 2017

but dated someone from there in the late 60s. As with much of NY, I probably wouldn't recognize the place. Been away too long, but don't miss it at all.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
6. That's the time period I remember.
Tue May 2, 2017, 09:43 PM
May 2017

I went to Iona College and went there a few times for games. The student body was very much like Iona's except they came by subway. The campus was a hell of a lot prettier though.

Initech

(101,981 posts)
13. My brother did!
Tue May 2, 2017, 11:32 PM
May 2017

He liked it for the most part but he said New York City was crazy expensive in the long run compared to California.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
14. Did he leave California to go?
Wed May 3, 2017, 05:26 AM
May 2017

When I left high school a third of its students were from the Bronx and another half took the subway there from the other four boroughs. Now, only about 18% are from NYC. Now, between, tuition, fees, room and board, it's over a quarter million dollars over four years. That's not simply crazy expensive, it's criminally expensive. Still, its cost is second to NYU.

I'm glad your brother enjoyed it overall. We'll see if my daughter feels the same after spending a year in a triple dorm room and a two meal a day plan. I'm going to give her One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich as a graduation present.

Initech

(101,981 posts)
15. Yeah he went there for law school.
Wed May 3, 2017, 07:55 AM
May 2017

The overall experience he liked for the most part, but he didn't like the debt he was saddled with afterward, and the credit card debt he was strapped with, is one of those hidden coats they don't tell you about.

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
16. Ah, that's at Lincoln Center. Excellent law school.
Wed May 3, 2017, 08:17 AM
May 2017

Whoever scontrols the tuition debt crisis will control the government.

Latest Discussions»Region Forums»New York»Anybody gone to Fordham?