MORRIS, MINN. — This was Thursday. The wind was howling across Minnesota's west-central prairie. Dips and rises in the land, most of the grain harvested, potholes of water that a few decades ago housed many times more ducks than is now the case.
You don't think college town when entering Morris, with its population of 5,200 and not a Target or Walmart in sight, but there it is:
The University of Minnesota Morris was opened in 1960 with a then-inviting sales pitch: a first-class liberal arts education at public-college prices.
Private liberal arts colleges charging big dollars are slumping in enrollment, and so is UM-Morris. The enrollment was capped at 1,800, originally; now, it's down to 1,020, and with no graduate programs on this campus.
The lifeblood here is the same as at many smaller private colleges: athletics. There are 19 sports teams here with 330 participants — more than 30% of the students.
On Saturday, at Big Cat Stadium, the Cougars will be hosting Northwestern (St. Paul) in the final game of the regular season. They are two unbeatens — 4-0 — in the six-team Upper Midwest Athletic Conference.
They are playing to receive the UMAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Division III football tournament and then expected to travel to the site of the West's No. 1 seed.
UMAC teams have an 0-11 record since gaining automatic-bid status in 2011, and they haven't exactly lost in nail-biters.