Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 43030
Berkeley CSUA MOTD
 
WIKI | FAQ | Tech FAQ
http://csua.com/feed/
2025/05/25 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/25    

2006/5/12-15 [Academia/GradSchool] UID:43030 Activity:nil
5/11    http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/05/10/perpetual.student.ap
        I can't believe you can be an undergrad for 12 years. I guess
        he gets a lot of women or something.
        \_ How long was PSB a grad student? I think he has this guy beat.
           \_ I don't think PSB was ever a gradstudent?  Just an undergrad
              taking grad level courses?  How about it Partha?  BTW, did you
              ever graduate?  That isn't meant as a smear--you're probably
              better educated than I.  --PeterM
2025/05/25 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/25    

You may also be interested in these entries...
2013/4/30-5/18 [Academia/Berkeley, Academia/GradSchool] UID:54667 Activity:nil
4/30    Cal is a public Ivy League school!
        http://news.yahoo.com/consider-public-ivy-school-want-140739978.html
	...
Cache (1657 bytes)
www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/05/10/perpetual.student.ap -> www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/05/10/perpetual.student.ap/
WHITEWATER, Wisconsin (AP) -- Despite his 12 years as an undergraduate student, Johnny Lechner realized something was missing from his academic record: he'd never studied abroad. And so, the 29-year-old perpetual student who was expected to finally graduate from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater withdrew his application for graduation Monday, five days before commencement. "I realized that if I went one more year, I could study abroad," Lechner said. Lechner's extended academic career has made him a celebrity of sorts. His never-ending student life has been featured in newspapers and on network television shows, not to mention campus publications across the nation. By this spring he had completed 234 college credits, or about 100 more than needed to graduate, and was taking seven more. That qualified him for the "slacker tax," instituted this school year by the UW Board of Regents to help cover the state subsidy for students who stay long past the usual four or five years to earn an undergraduate degree. It calls for students who exceed 165 total credit hours or 30 more than their degree programs require -- whichever is higher -- to pay double tuition. Lechner said he didn't start out to be a long-term student, but it just developed once he realized how much fun he was having at college. Had he graduated, he would have earned a liberal studies degree in education, communications, theater, health and women's studies. Michelle Eigenberger, an editor at The Royal Purple, said Lechner may have achieved celebrity status, but most students are tired of it. "For the sanity of the rest of the campus, we want him to get out of here."