Lansing State Journal<\/em><\/a> earlier this week, Koepke said that the announcement of a new head coach could be soon or “may not happen until April.”<\/p>\nThis makes my head hurt<\/h4>\n I’ve been straddling two camps of the academic world for 16 years now. In one camp, I teach college. I was raised to value education, to understand how an education can enrich one’s life and improve one’s personal economy over the course of a lifetime. I believe in what I do, and I’m grateful that my parents — my father born into poverty in northern Maine and my mother the daughter of a steelworker in eastern Pennsylvania — put me on this path almost from birth.<\/p>\n
In the other camp, of course, I cover NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey. Perhaps because I do value education, I can put into perspective much of that which is associated with college athletics that seems inequitable and counter to real learning. For every showboating, stupid, arrogant idiot who shames his (or her, but far more often his) school, family, and team with inappropriate or outright illegal behavior, there are hundreds of student-athletes whose participation in collegiate sports enhances rather than hinders their college education.<\/p>\n
I know, too, that funding for what happens in the classroom often comes from a different source than that which funds what happens on the court, track, field or ice. Still, I can’t help but feel a little unease about what’s unfolding in Pennsylvania this week.<\/p>\n
Yesterday, Gov. Tom Corbett revealed his budget for 2011-12, which cuts funding to Penn State University by $165.1 million — half of the institution’s current funding.<\/p>\n
Half.<\/p>\n
Penn State isn’t alone, of course. The University of Pittsburgh’s funding would drop from $167.9 million to $80.2 million. Temple University’s funding will drop from $172.7 million to $82.5 million.<\/p>\n
All of this is happening as Penn State is gearing up for Division I men’s ice hockey. Private donors will pony up as much as $100 million, when all is said and done, to make this happen.<\/p>\n
That is, the cost of making men’s ice hockey a reality at Penn State is about the same as the amount of money Corbett proposes to cut from the University of Pittsburgh’s or Temple’s budget.<\/p>\n
Yes, I get the difference in the funding. What I have a difficult time wrapping my brain around is the difference in values. I’m happy that Penn State is starting its hockey program, something that will heighten the profile of college hockey (albeit at the expense, I fear, of some of the coziness we love about our niche sport). I’m happy that the Nittany Lions have such generous friends.<\/p>\n
I guess I just wish that the academic side of Penn State — and the University of Pittsburgh, and Temple, and every other public institution of higher education in Pennsylvania that will be affected by drastic budget cuts — had friends that were just as generous.<\/p>\n
Funniest note of the year<\/h4>\n The week before the playoffs, the CCHA — in noting the league’s overall nonconference record this season — remarked that it’s 9-1-1 against “Independents.”<\/p>\n
My ballot<\/h4>\n Didn’t change from last week.<\/p>\n
1. Boston College \n2. North Dakota \n3. Yale \n4. Michigan \n5. Denver \n6. Union \n7. Notre Dame \n8. Merrimack \n9. Miami \n10. New Hampshire \n11. Nebraska-Omaha \n12. Minnesota-Duluth \n13. Western Michigan \n14. Maine \n15. Rensselaer \n16. Boston University \n17. Colorado College \n18. Minnesota \n19. St. Cloud State \n20. Wisconsin<\/p>\n
As always<\/h4>\n Friday, I’ll post a blog with picks for the second round of the CCHA playoffs — bound to be completely wrong.<\/p>\n
E-mail (paula.weston@uscho.com<\/a>), tweet ( @paulacweston<\/a>) or just vent in the forum below.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Three teams advanced from the first round of the CCHA playoffs last weekend. Congratulations to Alaska, Bowling Green and Lake Superior State. I was completely wrong in my predictions on the outcome of the first round, which surprises no one. That I picked as I did was as much a symptom of the real parity […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":122558,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
Lessons from the first round of the CCHA playoffs - College Hockey | USCHO.com<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n