Sporting News: The 20 Smartest Athletes in Sports

I am just trying to say he's not the ideal Tech student athlete. Most Tech students are engineering and become engineers. Planning to go into law is a football-player thing to do. And something a lot of underachieving engineering students do. Nothing wrong with law--a few lawyers are fairly smart--but again it's not a path the model Tech student would choose. Call me elitist if you want; that's just how it is.

And the last nail in the weird, humorless, douche coffin has been set.
 
I wish him the best, but I am not sure that he could be an astronaut. First he would have to drop a good bit of weight to qualify. Also, a good number of military aviators studied engineering in college. The military puts great value in technical/science degrees.

I'm pretty sure I heard that GT has produced more astronauts than any other non-academy. Not certain on that though.
 
Don't see why you guys are so upset with my post. The model Tech student aspires to be an engineer, not a lawyer. That should be obvious--Tech is and has always been an ENGINEERING school.

I'm not saying that law is a less distinguished profession than engineering or that Bedford isn't a smart guy. I just think that a Tech student who wants to be anything other than a helluva engineer is not the quintessential Tech student. (Will someone back me up on this?)

I suppose that there are more than a few business/law types on this board, who probably never went to Tech, who get offended at some perceived slight against non-engineers.
 
I'm pretty sure I heard that GT has produced more astronauts than any other non-academy. Not certain on that though.

I heard that UGA has produced the most space cadets. :dunno:
 
The country would be a helluva lot better off if more engineers were involved in running it.
 
Don't see why you guys are so upset with my post. The model Tech student aspires to be an engineer, not a lawyer. That should be obvious--Tech is and has always been an ENGINEERING school.

I'm not saying that law is a less distinguished profession than engineering or that Bedford isn't a smart guy. I just think that a Tech student who wants to be anything other than a helluva engineer is not the quintessential Tech student. (Will someone back me up on this?)

I suppose that there are more than a few business/law types on this board, who probably never went to Tech, who get offended at some perceived slight against non-engineers.

So do you pull for the GT football team? How many engineering students are on the team again? I guess since they're not "quintessential Tech students" we should all find another team to pull for.
 
One of my brothers went to Tech and he is becoming a lawyer. Though, he did major in biology at Tech.
 
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So do you pull for the GT football team? How many engineering students are on the team again? I guess since they're not "quintessential Tech students" we should all find another team to pull for.

:pat:
 
If he can really put away one classic piece of literature a week on top of class and practice, that's damn impressive. We're not talking leisurely reading here.
 

:bs:

I think a good patent lawyer can still be a helluva engineer. Being an engineer as a profession does not necessarily make one a helluva engineer. For instance, my brother-in-law is a helluva engineer (much better than I), he however is a merchant mariner.
 
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Only a GT alum would look down on a student who aspires to be a lawyer. :laugher: :laugher: :laugher:
 
I am just trying to say he's not the ideal Tech student athlete. Most Tech students are engineering and become engineers. Planning to go into law is a football-player thing to do. And something a lot of underachieving engineering students do. Nothing wrong with law--a few lawyers are fairly smart--but again it's not a path the model Tech student would choose. Call me elitist if you want; that's just how it is.

This is what is wrong with much of the GT fanbase. SNOB. Does he have to be an engineer to be smart or worthy in your eyes?
 
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