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VandalPride97

Restoring order from chaos...

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10 hours ago, rebelcuff said:

VP is a good dude. His only downfall is he was in a frat which is pretty lame.😁

Thanks.  I like your style - I would only haze the shit out of you a little bit.

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4 hours ago, bluerules009 said:

That is hilarious you think someone with an accounting degree has the potential to be a great educator!  What did he innovate?  A different type of paper to push up to the real decision makers in business.  HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!

Thanks for the hot take from the knuckle dragging crowd.  American Lawyer magazine recognized him as one of the Top 50 Innovators of the Last 50 Years.  That's quite an accomplishment.

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Congrats to Idaho, hope he turns out to be a good leader for you guys.

I hope Boise State’s search is failed again. The lineup is pathetic.

We are actually taking advantage of only having an Interim President and getting a lot of systemic changes implemented that would undoubtedly been scrapped or best-case “re-evaluated” had we hired last time.

lamb-with-human-face-150331-670.jpg?itok

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2 hours ago, RogueStout said:

Congrats to Idaho, hope he turns out to be a good leader for you guys.

I hope Boise State’s search is failed again. The lineup is pathetic.

We are actually taking advantage of only having an Interim President and getting a lot of systemic changes implemented that would undoubtedly been scrapped or best-case “re-evaluated” had we hired last time.

OK, I give up.  Explain your avatar.  Is that an ass, a bike seat or something else?

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56 minutes ago, VandalPride97 said:

OK, I give up.  Explain your avatar.  Is that an ass, a bike seat or something else?

I think it is a donkey doll someone made that they stitched "BJC" on.

I logged in one time and my old school K.C. Adams icon was gone so I just search for BJC and grabbed the first thing I saw.

lamb-with-human-face-150331-670.jpg?itok

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11 hours ago, VandalPride97 said:

Thanks for the hot take from the knuckle dragging crowd.  American Lawyer magazine recognized him as one of the Top 50 Innovators of the Last 50 Years.  That's quite an accomplishment.

Wow, a whole bunch of people without an education called him an innovator!  HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!

That's like getting an award for brilliance from a bunch of banana slugs.  HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! 

 

This is innovation and like everything else in this world that pushes progress forward and improves our lives.  Lawyers are not involved in any other way than making it harder because of their ignorance and lack of education.

https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-us-canada-44015082/nasa-s-insight-rocket-takes-off-for-mars

 

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On 4/12/2019 at 1:15 PM, RogueStout said:

I think it is a donkey doll someone made that they stitched "BJC" on.

I logged in one time and my old school K.C. Adams icon was gone so I just search for BJC and grabbed the first thing I saw.

I thought it was orange puffy paint on a blue saddle designed for wimminz.  I stand corrected.

 

 

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On 4/11/2019 at 7:36 PM, bsu_alum9 said:

A dude on BroncoCountry thinks she is the favorite due to her executive experience at UCSC.

ISBOE has more board members from BYU than BSU - I could see the Vandals on there choosing her out of spite.

Her claiming to be a social justice warrior in her official bio though? I don’t think that would be a good fit in the State of Idaho.

https://twitter.com/chaddcripe/status/1120772332195160064?s=21

 

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42 minutes ago, 307dude said:

From the Idaho State Journal: 

 

 

Quote

 

The Idaho State Board of Education has named Dr. Marlene Tromp the seventh president of Boise State University.

Tromp is a first-generation college graduate from Wyoming who has been a campus leader at the public higher education system widely considered the best in the country, as well as the public university widely considered the most innovative in the country. She officially begins at Boise State on July 1.

“It will be an exciting new chapter for me to come to Boise State. I will be proud to lead the dedicated faculty and staff as they serve the students and Idaho, and to advance the transformative work of the institution,” Tromp said. “A pioneering university that has already made phenomenal advances, Boise State will have an extraordinary impact on our rapidly growing city and state. The future holds great promise for Boise State, its affiliates and the community it serves.”

Since 2017, Tromp has been the campus provost and executive vice chancellor at the University of California at Santa Cruz, ranked by U.S. News and World Report as the 26th best public university in the country. She is the chief academic and administrative officer for the campus, which serves more than 19,000 students and has received $680 million in research grants and contracts over the past five years.

“Dr. Tromp has held leadership roles at two of the West’s top universities and now she will become president of a third one,” said Dr. Linda Clark, Idaho State Board member and Boise State screening committee chair. “Boise State’s momentum has been building for years, and Dr. Tromp is the right person to continue that momentum and to build on it moving forward. It was clear in surveys after the candidates visited Boise State last month that Dr. Tromp was the campus community’s top pick. The board shares their enthusiasm about Boise State’s next president.”

Before joining the University of California system – broadly recognized as the premier public university system in the country – Tromp was the dean of Arizona State University’s New Interdisciplinary College of Arts and Sciences and the vice provost of the university’s West Campus. Arizona State and its leadership team have been at the forefront of expanding the notion of what a public university can and should be, consistently being ranked as the No. 1 university for innovation by higher education leaders surveyed each year by U.S. News and World Report.

Tromp was praised at Arizona State for overseeing new academic programs, including a new interdisciplinary forensics major and a cybersecurity initiative, and for creating mentoring programs for first-generation students. She also co-chaired a university-wide task force aimed at combating sexual assault. At the University of California Santa Cruz, she launched faculty development initiatives, new support programs for staff, and led the community in the creation of a new Strategic Academic Plan.

She grew up in Green River, Wyoming, a trona mining town along Interstate 80 that saw its population jump three-fold in the 1970s when nearby mines led an economic boom. Her father worked at one of the mines. Neither of her parents were college graduates, but they supported their two daughters’ college aspirations – especially when Tromp decided she was going to become a doctor. She earned scholarships to Creighton University, nearly 800 miles away in Omaha, Nebraska, but the financial challenges remained tangible.

“My dad worked a lot of overtime, and I worked several jobs to help pay the costs of my schooling,” Tromp said. “I understand what it’s like to be a first-generation college student.”

Though bound for medical school, she fell in love with Robert Browning’s poetry. Instead, she would go on to earn her bachelor’s degree in English, come home to Wyoming to complete a master’s degree and then study for her doctorate at the University of Florida. There, she wrote a dissertation on Victorian novels and the new laws being written on domestic violence.

Her revised dissertation became the first of several books and dozens of articles exploring gender, social justice and cultural issues in 19th century life and literature – a time close enough that contemporary society can understand the people who lived it and their motivations, but far enough away to have “critical distance,” as she noted in an interview she gave during her time as president of the North American Victorian Studies Association.

“If we can look critically at something that’s happening in the 19th century, it may help us read our own cultural moment a bit better,” she said, “and that is one very important reason to study history.”

 

Her work on the 19th century includes books on sensation fiction, spiritualism and seances, freak shows, economics and xenophobia. She has studied the Titanic disaster and has a new book underway on Victorian murder cases, the latter inspired in part by team-teaching she did with a forensic scientist at Arizona State.

Her father, who has since passed away, was not disappointed that she didn’t become a medical doctor and was extremely proud of her career as a professor. He loved learning as much as she does and was proud of her leadership in higher education.

“Completing a degree felt to me like an incredibly magical moment,” she said. “I remember standing in the auditorium with the students I was about to graduate with, and thinking, my life has just changed. My whole world has just changed. And that felt so thrilling to me. And when he saw me walk off that stage in my academic robe and my degree in hand, it was one of the few times I saw my dad choke up.”

Her experience will translate well to Boise State, where more than a third of all students are the first in their family to attend college.

Tromp is committed to supporting students and faculty, serving and advancing the state of Idaho, and helping the university foster research excellence to increase discovery for its students and the world.

View a video of Dr. Tromp at www.boisestate.edu.

 

 

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