"Today, where we are as an organization is an extremely decentralized place where each one of these professors thinks of themselves as an individual business unit," Lassen said. "And I don't want us to be at the other extreme of that where we're one university and the only way that you get a new pen is to bring back your empty pen to the pen man. I don't want us to get to that."
Minnie Minutiae wrote: The article is dated 12/26/04. Hence the poster's name: "H.A. Morgue."
Yes, DT, but if we find it necessary to point out satire on this board to casual observers, it probably doesn't hurt to point out a detail such as this when the name of the poster might have gone unnoticed.
I see that the largest amount of set-aside money in the five colleges belongs to the CoEP($981,995), and COAL had the smallest overall budget of developmental funds of the five colleges ($370,568). Somehow that just doesn't seem right. How could that be?
It's because there are many fewer grants in that college, so there is little grant money recovered by the college or the grant writer's department. Wonder how much money the NEH Donne grant brought to the former Liberal Arts.
I see that the largest amount of set-aside money in the five colleges belongs to the CoEP($981,995), and COAL had the smallest overall budget of developmental funds of the five colleges ($370,568). Somehow that just doesn't seem right. How could that be?
Also, less spent and more saved for various projects that need to be done this year.