Anonymous wrote:Best T-shirt was “Score some for me Bucky” with Bucky looking very stoned and holding a bottle in one hand and a joint in the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband is from the East Coast and received his undergrad degree in real estate from the UW-Madison Business School. He is now the CEO of a large health care real estate company. He is not a real estate agent, he is a real estate investor and developer. The Business School at Wisconsin is very good and grads are highly employable.
All the real estate agents I know from high school were the dumb girls at my private day school who went to middling SLACs and were art history majors.
Anonymous wrote:My husband is from the East Coast and received his undergrad degree in real estate from the UW-Madison Business School. He is now the CEO of a large health care real estate company. He is not a real estate agent, he is a real estate investor and developer. The Business School at Wisconsin is very good and grads are highly employable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at all private-sector related programs as one combined magnet (or anti-magnet) for job placement and also grad/prof'l school placement. Then also look at the specialized programs, standing alone. No way does USC compare to Wisco; Wisco is better by essentially any measure except the weather.
not Wisco.
Locals say 'Sconsin
I went to Wisconsin and didn't say either. Go Bucky!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:F Em Bucky!
Damn straight!
I still have my t-shirt!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:F Em Bucky!
Damn straight!
Anonymous wrote:F Em Bucky!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at all private-sector related programs as one combined magnet (or anti-magnet) for job placement and also grad/prof'l school placement. Then also look at the specialized programs, standing alone. No way does USC compare to Wisco; Wisco is better by essentially any measure except the weather.
not Wisco.
Locals say 'Sconsin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would someone study real estate in college? The people I know who do it picked it up with little effort years after college. Just curious if your prospects are different if studying it in college (or MBA).
there's a difference ebtween 'studying' real estate after college to putter around being a broker and studying real estate at wharton and joining blackstone on one of their RE funds.
Anonymous wrote:Why would someone study real estate in college? The people I know who do it picked it up with little effort years after college. Just curious if your prospects are different if studying it in college (or MBA).