Fueling up for NFL RedZone. (Won’t eat again until ~ 9pm… so it’s gotta be substantial… and salty for, ahem, water retention.) #nobreakspic.twitter.com/RcnQiRkref
I don't want to weigh in on the BDS stuff but there is something I like to say. When I was in law school, I thought the proliferation of student organizations was ridiculous. You have a bunch of type A resume stuffers running around creating all of these low-value organizations that they think future employers would care about. I suspected it was all a waste of time for the law students and that the only beneficiaries for the fringe journals was providing an opportunity for law professors to publish their "research" that no one cared about.
After spending much of my career at big law firms, I can't say anything I believed during law school really changed. I frequently served on recruiting committees and there isn't a single time when I heard a fellow lawyer point to any of these things as interesting or important, with the exception of the main law review journal (and even then only litigators cared).
In a related point, law professors really aren't qualified in the same way most undergrad professors/researchers are. Law profs quite commonly graduated top of their class from a top law school and then worked for a few years at a law firm before becoming a professor. Contrast that with undergrad and grad professors with PhDs, postdocs and real research to qualify them for their positions. Because law profs have to pretend their research matters, they need to get things published in "official" journals of which there are an untold number, staffed by kids who believe that their work will help them get a job but really just serves them up as cannon fodder for cosplaying lawyer profs.
Anyway, reading the list of "student organizations" in the article brought all of this back to me. There are over 100 of these organizations in a school of around 1k students. Ridiculous.
I don't want to weigh in on the BDS stuff but there is something I like to say. When I was in law school, I thought the proliferation of student organizations was ridiculous. You have a bunch of type A resume stuffers running around creating all of these low-value organizations that they think future employers would care about. I suspected it was all a waste of time for the law students and that the only beneficiaries for the fringe journals was providing an opportunity for law professors to publish their "research" that no one cared about.
After spending much of my career at big law firms, I can't say anything I believed during law school really changed. I frequently served on recruiting committees and there isn't a single time when I heard a fellow lawyer point to any of these things as interesting or important, with the exception of the main law review journal (and even then only litigators cared).
In a related point, law professors really aren't qualified in the same way most undergrad professors/researchers are. Law profs quite commonly graduated top of their class from a top law school and then worked for a few years at a law firm before becoming a professor. Contrast that with undergrad and grad professors with PhDs, postdocs and real research to qualify them for their positions. Because law profs have to pretend their research matters, they need to get things published in "official" journals of which there are an untold number, staffed by kids who believe that their work will help them get a job but really just serves them up as cannon fodder for cosplaying lawyer profs.
Anyway, reading the list of "student organizations" in the article brought all of this back to me. There are over 100 of these organizations in a school of around 1k students. Ridiculous.
I can't speak to the Legal profession as I'm not a lawyer, but I can attest something similar in my industry. College extra-curriculars are a giant lie. If I'm looking for a new employee out of college, I want someone with communication skills, smart/willing to learn, gets their work done and I get along with. The extracurriculars and GPA don't matter to me at all.
THIS IS THE FUTURE THE NRA WANTS: A Florida father and his 15-year-old son shot at a woman who they believed was trying to break into their home. In fact, she was being “a Good Samaritan” and dropping off medicine mistakenly delivered to her home. #flapolhttps://t.co/yqVhddQX7G
“My husband’s favorite is In-N-Out,” says Meghan Markle. “There’s one at the halfway point between L.A. and our neck of the woods. It’s really fun to go through the drive-thru and surprise them. They know our order.” https://t.co/YDDQTTwgg9pic.twitter.com/xLADaMFqqU
Christian Secor, who stormed into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 and led a campus group at UCLA with white supremacist ties, was sentenced to 42 months in prison instead of the the nearly five-year sentence requested by prosecutors. https://t.co/h709S7pfYt
Comedians Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle plan to co-headline a show at the Chase Center on Dec. 11. Pre-sale begins at 10am today with the access code "PUMPKIN Axios SF
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Larry Kudlow on Fox Business 9/23/22: "The new British prime minister, Liz Truss, has laid out a terrific supply-side economic growth plan which looks a lot like the basic thrust of Kevin McCarthy's Commitment to America plan.” pic.twitter.com/SlW349niNx
Stanford is hosting an Academic Freedom Conference next month. My request to attend has been denied: "We are not inviting the media to our conference in order to foment a more open discussion."https://t.co/Dv39lSp4mPpic.twitter.com/IstLSdMKRF
Steve Sviggum, University of Minnesota Board of Regents member and former GOP Speaker of the MN House, is under fire for asking if the U of M Morris campus has become "too diverse."
"I'm on thin ice, I understand. At 72 years old, I say things ... It gives you a little freedom." pic.twitter.com/ahR1pvXxfY
A domestic abuse survivor who won a landmark Supreme Court case this summer saying she didn't have to return her son to his allegedly abusive father was found dead in her home this week. @kylietcheung reports: https://t.co/vViqouYh6g
An earlier tweet from @AP_Planner misstating the age of Vice President Kamala Harris has been deleted. She turned 58 on her birthday yesterday, not 48 as previously stated.
"Out of the blue and into the black You pay for this, but they give you that And once you're gone, you can't come back When you're out of the blue and into the black."
-Neil Young
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That was also one of my favorite Neil albums. I don't know if you saw the solo tour of Computer Age, but I thought it was one of the most amazing performances I had ever seen. Cow Palace. CSNY. What an incredible assembly of musicians and writers. Stills & Young especially IMHO
That was also one of my favorite Neil albums. I don't know if you saw the solo tour of Computer Age, but I thought it was one of the most amazing performances I had ever seen. Cow Palace. CSNY. What an incredible assembly of musicians and writers. Stills & Young especially IMHO
It didn't get any more fun than being young, drunk and stoned at Winterland in the early 1970's and hearing Neil playing Cinnamon Girl on his Gibson Flying V as loud as he could. I saw him there many times.
My buddy took this picture of him at the Day on the Green in Oakland in July, 1974 that I attended.
*I remember being very disappointed he cut his hair so short. It seemed like a crew cut at the time.
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March 27: Will Smith slaps Chris Rock at the Oscars. Many called it the ugliest moment in Oscar history. But within the next week, there were tweets and articles about how, actually, the ugliest moment in Oscar history was in 1973 when Native American activist Sacheen Littlefeather accepted the Oscar on Marlon Brando's behalf and was booed and John Wayne had to be restrained by six security guards.
August 15: The Academy announced it has apologized to Sacheen Littlefeather (actually apologized to her in June) for the 1973 incident and also announced they would have an evening with her.
Movie Academy Apologizes To Sacheen Littlefeather Over 1973 Oscars – Read The Letter https://t.co/28O5L52gzV
September 17: The Academy hosts "An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeather" where she repeats the John Wayne thing (to be fair to her, it seems like she always couches it in saying she was told about it).
October 2: Sacheen Littlefeather dies at age 75.
Sacheen Littlefeather Dies: Native American Actress Who Declined Marlon Brando’s Oscar Was 75 https://t.co/jwoic70rTo
Stanford is hosting an Academic Freedom Conference next month. My request to attend has been denied: "We are not inviting the media to our conference in order to foment a more open discussion."https://t.co/Dv39lSp4mPpic.twitter.com/IstLSdMKRF