Being practical, and in regards to the original point of this thread, (that 
being, universities chasing multicultural enrolments), to be fair, it appears 
that universities must invest a greater share of enrolment fees into resources 
specifically catering for the most basic multicultural student need. That main 
need most often being translation services. And the main solution would 
currently be the supply and support of personal translation devices, paid for 
by their enrolment fees. There are many, many translation devices currently 
available, and over the last few  months, they appear to have ‘come-of-age’ in 
terms of practicality and immediate usefulness. For example, google 
“translation devices” and examine the IT recently arriving onto the world 
markets.

Tom writes,

> The "Golden Rule" will apply: "Those who have the gold, make the
> rules".. The serious side of this is that in an Internet connected world
> we need to be able to communicate.

https://thez7.com/best-translator-devices
https://spacemazing.com/best-language-translator-device
https://bestreviews.com/best-language-translation-devices
https://slator.com/features/here-are-some-translation-devices-consumers-are-actually-buying

Cheers,
Stephen

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