My daughter is BS and MS in Accounting from UF/CPA and her fiance has his BSME from UF and working on MS in Aerospace Engineering from Johns Hopkins. They are each 4 years out of college with good jobs and collectively make $240,000. Lot more than I was making. Seems like they are having a harder time getting by with the cost of rent, expenses, … than I did at their age. I remember my grandfather had a beach house/2nd home not making much. Seems like the cost of housing, cars, home/car/medical insurance, and college have outpaced earnings making it difficult for young adults to find their way.
BSME ‘94 here! I too, did a 2 year stint at a CC and got kicked in the mouth my first semester at UF. Turned it around and got it done. Dr Gater was the best with his “No Communication” take home tests.
I took Thermo 1 with Gater annd thankfully he went on sabbatical to write a book so got Thermo 2 with a diff prof. Back to Thermo 1, I always remember Gater’s first day intro. At the end, he went into a diatribe about how the class was difficult but not to do anything drastic if we didn’t pass it. I’m like ‘wtf’ and after class, overheard some people talking that a student needed to pass that class to graduate and had committed suicide when he didn’t pass it the third time. Oof
Gater was a fun prof. Glad he was still around almost 20 years after I graduated. He was young though so no real surprise
Thermo was Dr. Richard K Irey — ME360 and ME361 (quarters back then). He was writing a textbook so all our notes were on 8x10 pages typed on one side that we had to keep in 3-ring binders. Insane volume of paper and binders. First day of class his grad student wheels in a cart and each desk got about an 8” high pile of notes dropped on it and he said something like ‘this is your first month’s worth of notes.’ The next day of class half the students were gone. For me Gater was Fluid Mechanics — ME450 I think I recall
That’s funny. Dr Gater was writing his own Thermo book and we had to buy it at University Copy Center. Just a modernized version of your binders.
Good grief. I guess Civil Engineering wasn’t that student’s 2nd choice. I forgot about his sabbatical! I had Dr Gaiter for T1!! How about that naming convention?? Dr Gater was T2 and T3. I still have his take home tests. Fun times. I think I was treated for GERD around about that time.
I went back tto school in my early 30's to be an engineer . After cal 2 , i decided i didnt want any more education . That, and the part where i have to live wherever to chase money.
I recall the kid was either an EE or ChemE. Apparently jumped to his death. No idea if that was real or not, just what I heard.
I was a senior in 1967. Got married in May that year. Got accepted to law school. Went to the draft board. They were unimpressed, and I was off to Officer Candidate School. We had 2 boys while I served. I reapplied to law school from Okinawa. Got accepted again and lived in a trailer in Melrose. Went 9 straight quarters and graduated in 1973. Got an offer for $16,000.00 and took it. Stlll married after 58 years. The rest is history. Hoping one of our grandsons will be a 3rd generation Gator A Florida man needs no introduction. Go Gators!