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Date Posted: 05/29/03 7:24pm
Author: Silicon Sam
Author Host/IP: 24.205.249.139
Subject: Re: Come on BMF...
In reply to: zzzza 's message, "Re: Come on BMF..." on 05/14/03 11:32am

Cal Poly sophomore forward Mike Titchenal was recently named to the BIG WEST All-Academic team. His genes are pretty good too. His grandfather Bob Titchenal played on San Jose State's last undefeated football team, played in the NFL for the Washtington Redskins (among others), then returned to his alma matre as a veru successful head football coach. Mike came from Cardinal Newman High in Santa Rosa.

Here's the link to the All-Academic site. (copy and paste)

http://www.calpolymustangs.com/news/20012002/bwacademic.html





>Son is interested in computer science, politial
>science and law. My only concern about UCSB is that
>it has been described as a "party school" in some
>circles. I'm not sure this is what we are looking
>for. Bryan Whitehead is from the area, so UCSB is not
>out of the picture.

>
>I think UCSB's heaviest partying days were in the 80s.
>Since then it has levelled off a bit, although the
>small town of Isla Vista--where most students
>live--can get pretty wild. I think it may be a little
>tamer because of the increasingly elite level of
>students coming UCSB every year. Re: computer
>sci...I'm not as familiar as some with the program,
>but I know there would be real-world opportunities to
>learn/intern/make connections at the many tech
>companies that surround UCSB on "Silicon Beach."
>
>The bball program is very academically-oriented. I'm
>amazed at the students that Coach Williams brings
>in--most have numbers like your son. Chemistry is also
>extremely important to them. Anyway, I'd contact Coach
>W. if you want the complete picture.
>
>I was born and raised a Gaucho fan but ended up
>getting my degree at Poly. You can't go wrong at
>California Polytechnic. It's a great school filled
>with cool people in a great town (too small for
>some--I liked it though). The "learn by doing"
>philosophy may sound like lip-service, but it is taken
>seriously and makes for a *much* better experience
>than sitting/sleeping in lecture halls for four years.
>I think that and the fact that Poly's roots
>are...well..."polytechnic"...creates more of a
>blue-collar situation. There's no Ivory Tower in SLO.
>The professor's aren't as involved in research as
>other schools, which leaves them time to
>(...surprise...) teach.
>
>The competition for students is tough. I was in the
>College of Business and last Fall's average incoming
>frosh had a GPA of about 3.95 and some ridiculous SAT
>score. Most of the other colleges are the same and
>that goes to show the type of people your son would be
>working around and with. I believe the computer
>science program is pretty highly regarded (Colin?).
>
>Poly has a heavy undergrad focus, which was great from
>my point of view. It may not be beneficial if a
>student is looking to climb the academic ladder or is
>involved in heavy science though. I'm not sure how it
>would play out if a student is on a pre-law or pre-med
>track. Anyway, a nice fringe benefit to this is that
>TAs are rare. I transferred in basically as a junior
>and never had a class taught by anyone but a PhD.
>Perhaps that isn't the case for the lowest of the low
>GE stuff (like at UCSB...or UC Anywhere come to think
>of it).

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