ELITE EDUCATION
Attack on candidate was academic snobbery
To the academic snob who wrote the May 22 letter about the perceived denigration of those nobles who have attended prestigious Ivy League schools while himself denigrating our own Winona State University graduate and U.S. Senate candidate, Kurt Bills, I can only say this: It is this kind of thoughtless and misguided thinking that has too many high school students believing that if you are not accepted into a prestigious university, then why bother at all?
The myth that coming out of such schools guarantees you success in this world has been greatly overplayed.
To say that Winona State does not attract the same caliber of student as Harvard, Yale and Columbia is just plain false. There are many fine young and highly gifted students attending every school in this nation, and their choice for choosing their school can be a result of many factors.
To suggest that Bills is less of a success story than President Obama and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken, when he is in the classroom every day and on the front-lines of helping our children to succeed, is an offense to anyone who is not among the chosen for the "big league." Bills, a teacher, is in the classroom every day helping our children succeed.
Many of those students come from Minnesota and stay in the state, and most people would agree that this is a great place to live in part because of our well-educated population.
MARY MCINTOSH LINNIHAN, Minneapolis
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PREDATORY PRACTICES
Regulation can lock out those it seeks to protect
The May 21 commentary on lending to the poor, like most liberal arguments to increase regulations, forgets the consequences ("A war on poverty, indeed"). While it's true that interest on short-term loans is high, without those loans some people would be unable to make ends meet. It is unfortunate that anyone needs to use these loans, but they do.