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Wake up, you rubes!!! It's GAMEDAY!!!

Eat SHitt SPitt.

The Backyard Brawl. For the 106th time.

WVU is going to win this game. Mountaineer Field is gonna be rockin' tonight!!!

Pound the rock. Run run run and then throw and run some more. All night.

D-line is gonna wreak havoc. Yeah, the secondary may get beat once (or twice...insert eye-roll) but overall, the Defense will play well.

Eat SHitt SPitt.

Short and sweet this morning.

Optimistic me - WVU wins 42-17.
Pessimistic me - WVU wins 31-24.
Realistic me - WVU wins 38-17.

Any way you look at it, I'll take it.

Eat SHitt SPitt.

Mountaineers roll.

LGM!!!

GOP lawmaker reveals bombshell evidence in Biden allegations

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Our great country has become the laughing stock of the world.

The left is amazing, they show a perfect template of “how to gaslight for dummies” If it wasn’t so sick, it would be laughable.

Everything is political, just like the charges against Trump. A dose of their own medicine. Let the games begin.
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Things to do and we win by 10+ IMHO

1. Control the O-line and pound the rock. Let CJ knock out some teeth and throw in some White and some RPA with Greene keeping a few.

2. Throw to the TE like Taylor at least 6-7 times and keep them from crowding the box/line.
This will loosen up the backfield and gain us big chunks of yardage. Taylor will also destroy some LB/DB.

3. Throw some long balls to also keep them honest. Hopefully the OL will provide Green with enough time and we connect on a few.

4. Keep pressure on sPitt QB and he will turn it over or at least make inaccurate passes

5. Hope to see more man-to-man, as I HATE the 10+ yard cushion we give the opponents WRs in zone coverage.

6. Stay away from the crazy overcomplicated trick plays - especially in short yardage.

7. Once we take the lead....DON'T let up on the gas pedal.

8. Sing Country Roads at the end!!!

RECRUITING UPDATE West Virginia hosting a basketball official visitor

Not new information here, but wanted to remind people.

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Santa Clarita (Cal.) Southern California Academy 2024 forward Naas Cunningham is expected to be on campus this weekend


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Also Charlottesville (Va.) St. Anne's-Belfield 2025 guard Chance Mallory is expected to be here on an unofficial visit.

Article on WVU budget cuts from WSJ

W.Va. PHOTO: DAVID BEARD/THE DOMINION-POST/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Gordon Gee thinks higher education is at a “crossroads.” If it takes the wrong turn, it will head over a demographic and financial cliff. To save West Virginia University, of which he is president, in February he announced significant cuts, including the elimination of 169 faculty positions and some 30 academic programs and departments that were either lacking enrollment or too expensive to maintain.
The plan went over poorly on campus. By a 797-100 vote, the faculty passed a resolution of no confidence in Mr. Gee, while students engaged in a steady stream of demonstrations. “STOP the Gee-llotine” read one sign. But Mr. Gee is undoubtedly correct to highlight the financial challenges his university faces. He may be the first college president to call for harsh financial measures, but he won’t be the last.
Colleges face a significant demographic challenge as the pool of future students begins to dwindle over the next several years. The annual number of U.S. births reached a generational peak in 2007 at 4.3 million, then declined to 3.9 million in 2012 and 3.6 million in 2021. Starting with the high school class of 2025, the pool of high school graduates is expected to decline by as much as 15% over a dozen years. Many colleges will have to cut programs and faculty as demand dries up.
The pandemic made matters worse. Many students decided that Zoom classes were a waste of time and money. A tight labor market made it more attractive to move directly into the workforce instead of spending thousands and incurring debt to earn a degree. Mr. Gee highlighted these factors, along with the rising cost of college and a “national narrative that questioned the value of college,” as reasons WVU would expect to see fewer applicants in coming years.
It is now obvious that state universities’ bloated academic budgets won’t survive the demographic challenges. Lawmakers are increasingly unlikely to appropriate taxpayer funds to cover the coming deficits—especially when a high percentage of students (54% at WVU) hail from out of state. In addition, nearly a quarter of the students at WVU are eligible for Pell Grants, and many more are “Promise Scholars” who get free tuition and board.
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WVU predicts a shortfall this year of $35 million, equivalent to about 3% of the school’s budget, with annual deficits slated to accumulate in coming years. Mr. Gee’s announced cuts will hit programs across the board, from undergraduate majors that don’t attract students to expensive doctoral programs with little market demand, to make more resources available for programs in high demand like engineering and business.
The number of humanities and social-sciences majors has been in decline for many decades, but colleges chose to maintain those departments either because they felt they were necessary for a strong general education or because the faculty had tenure and there was no way to get rid of them. But now it looks as though the dam has broken, and many schools will have little choice but to pare back those offerings. These programs will survive at colleges and universities with greater wealth or steadier enrollments, and will undoubtedly widen disparities between elite academic institutions and “have-nots” like WVU.
Mr. Gee also mentioned West Virginia’s land-grant status as a reason for his call for a dramatic change in academic direction. The Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890 established these institutions using the proceeds from the sale of federal land to fund schools that would focus on practical sciences like agriculture and engineering. Mr. Gee hopes to emphasize university programs that expand dental access to children in the state and offer more instruction to teachers on how to improve instruction in STEM fields.
He also noted the importance of “differentiation”—that is, devoting more resources to strong programs that attract more students, while cutting back weak ones.
Unfortunately, Mr. Gee didn’t propose serious cuts to administration. His proposal eliminated only one administrative position, and that was through retirement. Administrative bloat is ripe for cutting at West Virginia and elsewhere. Since 2010 per pupil spending on instruction at four-year public universities nationwide has declined 5% after inflation even as spending on administrative support dropped less than 1%.
But it will be hard to overcome the pressures to spend more on administration. Mr. Gee notes one of them: “The university has invested significantly in mental-health and safety resources over the past several years.” It has hired additional counselors and made sure they’re available 24 hours a day.
The administrators who oversee student life and “wellness” are now part of the core staff of universities, expected by students, as part of a school’s “wraparound services.” It will be hard for any college, no matter how dire its financial straits, to make reductions here. Are they more important than math professors? One would hope not. But students are the customers, and the customer is always right.
Mr. Piereson is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Ms. Riley is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Mass migrant releases begin in San Diego as border overwhelmed: 'You're free'

Just some more destructive, Democrat policy in the news, @Soaring Eagle 74, @moe and @bamaEER

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