Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
- noladave
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Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Tulane is hiring. Take a look at their job listings - anything from postdoctorate fellow to trainers, to ticket sales, to just about ANYTHING, including a plumber.
So, why does this belong on the athletics board? It shows plenty of vacancies in the athletics deartment, which I hope are NEW positions, not replacing people that have decided to go elsewhere. Probably a mixture of both.
But it means that the department is GROWING, and why we need things like the 100 campaign...
http://www2.tulane.edu/jobs/
So, why does this belong on the athletics board? It shows plenty of vacancies in the athletics deartment, which I hope are NEW positions, not replacing people that have decided to go elsewhere. Probably a mixture of both.
But it means that the department is GROWING, and why we need things like the 100 campaign...
http://www2.tulane.edu/jobs/
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
And here is how you get the local baseball kid in free!! Doesn't Tulane give a free ride to employee's kids? this would be a no brainer.
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
They have a position that is geared to corporate sales (Glazer Club). No commissions. What you think the pay is or should be?
- TUPF
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
If in the private sector that should be close to 6 figures or more, commensurate with track record. Not sure how that converts in a university.tjtlja wrote:They have a position that is geared to corporate sales (Glazer Club). No commissions. What you think the pay is or should be?
Fan since 1974 living in Phelps seeing the upper bowl of Tulane Stadium
- TUPF
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Then that is strictly an entry level phone caller, not a rainmaker. Different skill set.tjtlja wrote:$35k
Sorry, too many years in corporate business development for me skewed me towards an account executive type person.
Fan since 1974 living in Phelps seeing the upper bowl of Tulane Stadium
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Yeah, about $17/hr.TUPF wrote:Then that is strictly an entry level phone caller, not a rainmaker. Different skill set.tjtlja wrote:$35k
Sorry, too many years in corporate business development for me skewed me towards an account executive type person.
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Most positions at a Tulane won’t pay much unless it’s an upper level type job. I’m always looking at job postings at Tulane with the goal of getting one before my kids reach college age. Problem is that most of the ones I’m interested in would often require a significant pay cut.
Tulane Greenbackers
"If you want to win you have to have good players." Vince Gibson
"If you want to win you have to have good players." Vince Gibson
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Guess they're figuring in all that money you'll save on tuition.waverider wrote:Most positions at a Tulane won’t pay much unless it’s an upper level type job. I’m always looking at job postings at Tulane with the goal of getting one before my kids reach college age. Problem is that most of the ones I’m interested in would often require a significant pay cut.
We deserve so much better
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Most jobs not executive/faculty level at universities seem to be either support or stepping stone i.e. low paid.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
- PeteRasche
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Well we have a ton of "studies" graduates who will be in living in cardboard boxes because they don't have marketable degrees so it will even outPeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
- gerryb323
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Local employers here desperately lack skilled labor (specifically aircraft fabrication). Of course, try to convince anyone to live in Wichita...
Wandering around somewhere in a matchup zone
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
I thought people built planes there so they could leavegerryb323 wrote:Local employers here desperately lack skilled labor (specifically aircraft fabrication). Of course, try to convince anyone to live in Wichita...
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
- Johnny Mac
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
probably the original intent... most probably found out after the fact you actually need skill to fly the planes, toowindywave wrote:I thought people built planes there so they could leavegerryb323 wrote:Local employers here desperately lack skilled labor (specifically aircraft fabrication). Of course, try to convince anyone to live in Wichita...
YOGWF - of all the Tulane fans in the world, we're the Tulaniest
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
- TUPF
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what happened in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Fan since 1974 living in Phelps seeing the upper bowl of Tulane Stadium
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
So the solution is to get rid of high paying graduates in exchange for ones who don't get a paycheck? You're not that dumb, revise your argument.TUPF wrote:Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what the in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Actually he is. He wants to blame locals. Tulane has always had a national student body. It used to have more locals than now but it was never dominated by locals. The problem is people who went to Tulane for 4 years and then moved back home and never sent a cent. They love to brag they partied hard in NOLA but they don't care about Tulane because it was their back up school. They walked around campus wearing the shirts of that school rather than Tulane.windywave wrote:So the solution is to get rid of high paying graduates in exchange for ones who don't get a paycheck? You're not that dumb, revise your argument.TUPF wrote:Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what the in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
We deserve so much better
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
You now have student's wearing Tulane gear but as you said they won't make any money so Tulane will still be far behind the schools they claim to be peers with.wavedom wrote:Actually he is. He wants to blame locals. Tulane has always had a national student body. It used to have more locals than now but it was never dominated by locals. The problem is people who went to Tulane for 4 years and then moved back home and never sent a cent. They love to brag they partied hard in NOLA but they don't care about Tulane because it was their back up school. They walked around campus wearing the shirts of that school rather than Tulane.windywave wrote:So the solution is to get rid of high paying graduates in exchange for ones who don't get a paycheck? You're not that dumb, revise your argument.TUPF wrote:Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what the in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
We deserve so much better
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
I'm pretty sure I disagree with every point you attempted tp make.wavedom wrote:Actually he is. He wants to blame locals. Tulane has always had a national student body. It used to have more locals than now but it was never dominated by locals. The problem is people who went to Tulane for 4 years and then moved back home and never sent a cent. They love to brag they partied hard in NOLA but they don't care about Tulane because it was their back up school. They walked around campus wearing the shirts of that school rather than Tulane.windywave wrote:So the solution is to get rid of high paying graduates in exchange for ones who don't get a paycheck? You're not that dumb, revise your argument.TUPF wrote:Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what the in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Like I care what a know nothing like you thinks. LOL.
We deserve so much better
- TUPF
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Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
I respectfully disagree, at least in my case. I chose Tulane over an appointment to the Naval Academy, Duke and Cornell. I had full scholarships both academic and NROTC to all but felt Tulane was the right place for my wild streak. I was the first in my family to go to college and One of the proudest moments of my life was receiving my Phi Beta Kappa key from President Sheldon Hackney. I have donated to Tulane every year since 1978 to both the academic side and the athletic side of Tulane. It is my duty for putting me in a great position for the rest of my life. The Tulane outreach folks regularly get together with me in Philadelphia or when I return to campus to say thanks. I proudly wore only Tulane items while attending and ever since, both in the US and overseas. There were only a couple of Tulane nuclear submarine officers in my day but we were proud. Even found time to get away from the boat and attend away football games in places like Boston College while we were docked in the area. Tulane’s endowment is where it is for a variety of reasons and yes, part of the blame lies locally. Just like many other things in life, you are either part of the problem or part of the solution.wavedom wrote:Actually he is. He wants to blame locals. Tulane has always had a national student body. It used to have more locals than now but it was never dominated by locals. The problem is people who went to Tulane for 4 years and then moved back home and never sent a cent. They love to brag they partied hard in NOLA but they don't care about Tulane because it was their back up school. They walked around campus wearing the shirts of that school rather than Tulane.windywave wrote:So the solution is to get rid of high paying graduates in exchange for ones who don't get a paycheck? You're not that dumb, revise your argument.TUPF wrote:Sorry, but contrary to your narrative, Tulane’s endowment got into trouble long ago. Yes, when we had conventional engineering disciplines and a much greater percentage of New Orleans and Lousisana students. Some long for the good old days, but that era was when we fell behind our peer institutions in the 70s and onward, and then the time-value of investments sealed our also-ran status. So, yes, right now barring a mega sugar daddy we will always be playing catch up, but it’s not because of what the in the more recent years.windywave wrote:Thankfully we traded engineer alumni for volunteer alumni. No frick wonder we can't get the endowment up.double d wrote:PeteRasche wrote:Heh, want a job? Get into the construction field and move to the mid-South or Midwest. Every MEP firm is desperately hiring. Regional contractors around here are turning down large jobs because they can't staff them with project managers or even workers, and we (MEP consulting firms) are slammed because there are no available engineers and designers to hire. "They" have told us for years that the construction and engineering industries were going to face a massive shortage in the future because kids don't want to do this anymore, and "they" were right (which is part of why there's such a big push of STEM in schools, but unfortunately it's pushing kids into other science fields).
Frankly, I don't know how people are going to build anything a decade from now because there's not going to be anyone to design it.
Where I work operators ae pulling down $130k or more working a few hundred hours OT a year. Good instrument techs and millwrights are hard to find even paying $40 hr. Engineers out of college start around $65k and will take several years to make more than the operators. Our local high schools have strong technical programs for kids not wanting to go to college. There is no shortage of engineers down hee but most coming out of college now want to be the CEO and not do actual engineering. In 30 years it’s gone from seeing engineers that knew their plants to the current bunch that are more concerned with networks and social events.
Last edited by TUPF on Sun Jun 10, 2018 7:33 am, edited 2 times in total.
Fan since 1974 living in Phelps seeing the upper bowl of Tulane Stadium
Re: Want a job? Know someone that needs a job?
Two odd posts for you. Off your meds?wavedom wrote:Like I care what a know nothing like you thinks. LOL.
Using big words is not a personal attack
#cousins don't count
#cousins don't count