Scholarship table
He was interim when Costello was hired. He brought in the doofus from Ohio state after Costello was let go. He hired Braun.
Well. I am no math whiz, but two hires out of six doesn't sound like "most" to me.
Well I'm no reading expert, but I didn't say "most."
Opinion piece by Gary D'Amato stating that Jeter was hosed.http://www.jsonline.com/sports/panthers/jeter-didnt-deserve-ugly-ending-at-uwm-b99689757z1-372494571.htmlEssentially the AD has lost the program's biggest booster.Also mentions that boosters would have covered the CBI costs so the "budget cut" claims are a canard.
2 to 3 is too small unless your goal is to severely curtail enrollment statewide. If you are going to maintain enrollment reasonably at current levels, the only way you can do that is to build a crapload of new residence halls, classrooms, faculty offices, etc. at the selected campuses. Why do that when you have that infrastructure already existing across the state?That being said, if you went back in time to build the System from scratch, you would probably have about 6-8 campuses. 13 is too many and campuses like Superior and Parkside could reasonably be closed with their enrollments absorbed by the rest of the System.
My guess is that the real reason they didn't want the team to play in the CBI is that they had already made the decision to can him and a) they wanted to get a head start on finding his replacement, b) it would have been harder to fire him if they had done well in the tourney or c) both
There are many things I don't know about the UW system but while at Marquette I was a part of ASMU and attended some sort of student govt convocation. I recall a guy from UW Stout telling us that he was majoring in Welding Technology. There is a difference between could and should but either would be legitimate inflections in an era of declining resources.
If I have my facts straight, all of the "dash" schools in the UW system started out as junior colleges. The idea was that you went to those for two years and then transferred to Madison to get your bachelor's degree. I know that UWM was a 2-year school in the 50's, and I seem to remember that UW-Parkside was more of a community college when I was a student in the '80's. At some point they decided to convert most or all of them to 4-year schools. It looks to me like that was accomplished with varying degrees of success.
I didn't know the actual number of campuses - I am even more surprised that there are 13 - so I would agree that the system is too large by a half.Fixed cost leverage is a key metric for both GE and PepsiCo - I know this because I worked in Strat Planning for both. I guarantee that 13 cost centers offers incredible opportunity to reduce costs.There are many things I don't know about the UW system but while at Marquette I was a part of ASMU and attended some sort of student govt convocation. I recall a guy from UW Stout telling us that he was majoring in Welding Technology. There is a difference between could and should but either would be legitimate inflections in an era of declining resources.I have always maintained that the US would be better served with the European system of offering both a technical and academic track. Brits finish up O-Levels then commence an apprenticeship.In my main project around alt fuels it is apparent that there is a decreasing number of skilled industrial technicians. Because we are on the MSFT campus it is also clear that devs not only don't need a four year degree but wear the lack of one as a badge of honor.There is an emerging need for systematic technical training that doesn't work within the traditional American model. In the case of coders and devs a form of the British O-Levels and German Realschule would not only prepare kids for careers in Ones ad Zeros but would be something they would actually embrace.Walk around the MSFT campus and there are far more devs speaking Hindi, Russian, and Mandarin than there are speaking English.
Jester is a good man and class act. I was lucky to have worked him when he was on Deane's staff.
Not quite true.UW-Madison was a land grant University. UW-Green Bay and UW-Parkside were branches of UW-Madison that made up the original University of Wisconsin System. (Along with all of the current two year schools and the UW Extention.)All of the other UW schools (minus Stout) started as "normal schools" for teacher preparation. Back in the day, teachers didn't need bachelor's degrees but only a teaching certificate that took two or three years. In the 1920s, all of these normal schools changed to "teacher's colleges" because bachelor's degree were now required. By the 1950s these schools became "Wisconsin State Universities" and were their own stand alone System.UW-Stout was a private school that offered technical education. The State bought it and merged it into the Teachers Colleges sometime in the early 1900s. UWM was actually the merger of a few teacher prep schools but that's neither here nor there. Fun fact: UWM was in the conference that is now the WIAC and were known as the "Green Gulls" with colors green and white.In the early 1970s, the State merged the Wisconsin State System into the UW System.
Fun fact: UWM was in the conference that is now the WIAC and were known as the "Green Gulls" with colors green and white.
The Normals, was the first nickname.