A list of puns related to "Professorial"
So nabasa ko na may mga universities na naghihire ng faculty positions na purely teaching lang ang requirement. May ganito ba sa UP? So far kasi when I was undergrad puro may research load ang faculty na pinagtuturo at least in our institute.
https://preview.redd.it/m241hminfxx71.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=669f67aeca324d87481650106d90b5a7a4cc62ad
Perhaps you have always had a yearning for a much older man (I look in my 40s) and a very large age gap (18 to 35).
Perhaps you are intelligent, sweet and loving (not a brat), and creative or scientific, above the banalities of the Kardashians and pop culture.
Perhaps you adore dressing up for your man, wearing what he likes, simple to please him.
Perhaps you have very sexy legs and a slim-to-hourglass, more petite physique, and you also adore tight, short skirts and dresses with heels, just for him.
Perhaps you are naturally submissive, its being part of your nature, not something you are trying out.
Perhaps you desire a man who loves to train, mold and mentor. And who is also controlling and aggressive while being loving and rational. And I do love CNC :)
Then I should love to be enticed by you.
For the life of me I can't remember her name. But this was waaaaay back in the early 2000s on Houston Public Access (same channel I was introduced to uncut chopped and screwed videos). She had very long, curly brown hair and glasses. I'm legit trying to see if this was all a fever dream I had as a kid or if anyone else remembers her.
Edit: Her name was Melissa Scott
Why I paid exorbitant csu fees for horrible student debt that my BA won't cover is just awful.
Lately, I'm running into more requests for books to help bring those educated in Christian cults out of the darkness and into the light if what actually took place that really matters. The list that follows is probably way beyond what most want, but if one read a carefully selected tenth of it, they'd know as much or more than most people, Christianized or not. I'd start with an older edition of Richard Overy's big "map" book, and make sure to grind through Eric Hawbsbaum's, if one has really been locked in a cave.
Brief synopses of all these books can be found at this location.
Scott Anderson: Lawrence in Arabia: War, Deceit, Imperial Folly and the Making of the Modern Middle East, New York: Random House Anchor, 2013.
Karen Armstrong: A History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam; New York: MJF Books, 1993.
Jan Assman: Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism; Cambridge, MA: Harvard U. Press, 1998.
Jan Assman: The Price of Monotheism; Palo Alto, CA: Stanford U. Press, 2009.
Jean Bottero, et al.: Ancestor of the West : Writing, Reasoning, and Religion in Mesopotamia, Elam, and Greece; Chicago: U. Chicago Press, 2000.
Charles Darwin: The Descent of Man...; orig. pub. 1871, New York: Penguin Classics, 2004.
Sally Denton & Roger Morris: The Money and The Power: The Making of Las Vegas and itβs Hold on America; New York: Vintage Books. 2002.
Jared Diamond: Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies; New York: W. W. Norton, 1999.
T. J. English: Havana Nocturne: How the Mob Owned Cuba... and The Lost it to the Revolution; New York: MJF Books, 2008.
Bart D. Ehrman: The Triumph of Christianity: How a Forbidden Religion Swept the World; New York: Simon & Schuster, 2018.
Stuart Ewen: Captains of Consciousness: Advertising and the Social Roots of the Consumer Culture; orig. pub. 1976, New York: Basic Books, 2001.
Niall Ferguson: Colossus: The Rise and Fall of the American Empire; New York: Penguin, 2004.
Peter Frankopan: The Silk Roads: A New History of the World; New York: Vintage, 2017.
Neal Gabler: An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood; New York: Crown Books, 1988.
Gao Wenqien: Zhou Enlai: The Last Perfect Revolutionary, New York: Perseus Books, 2007.
Brian Gardner: The East India Company: A History; New York: Dorset Press, 1971.
Peter Gay: The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism; New York
... keep reading on reddit β‘22 M USA I just noticed that I stayed up all night by accident, but I'm on here.
Preference is VC but you can just PM me or PM me to get to know me before you voice chat with me.
I honestly have very few hobbies or opportunities, not by choice, but I consider myself a good conversationalist. I'm definitely nice. Oh, btw my profile might deceive yoi; I'm actually nice. Well, nicer than that D:.
My only conventional hobby is writing and I haven't been very much lately at all. But I am a very good writer in my opinion. The other thing I like to do is read books, but I don't really do that enough for it to be a hobby. I mean what do you want to know! :p
Aaaaaaaaaaaand that's about it. I would recommend you just send me a message. What is it going to hurt?
Also, this will probably a short-term relationship. I'm saying that out of consideration to you.
Could anyone share their experiences with certain professors or subjects if theyβve done research through the PA program?
Philosophy is my passion and Iβve wanted to be an educator or writer of some sort for a while. At some age I transitioned from wanting to do art to this. Now my question is will this create a conflict with my Marxist values? Will I become an appendage of the state apparatus? How can I maintain my passion to teach people ideas, critical thinking and to write my own philosophy without being subsumed by the will of the bourgeois state?
There's a post in my history that will give some greater idea of what I'm like. There's also plenty of time to get to know one-another going forward, so I'm just going to limit this to things that are going to be essential.
If you can check all these boxes, we're going to save one-another a lot of time. If you're not quite sure if you can and want to reach out I'm not going to run in the opposite direction or be rude, but it may be tough to overcome. I'm old enough and experienced enough to have a pretty fair idea of what I need, but not so old and experienced to be incapable of mistakes.
So if you've gotten through this list and think you could be that person and actual
... keep reading on reddit β‘So I have a 15 restricted section books to spend but need advice on what would be the best upgrade. Should I go for Sabbatical or Full Moon Hunter?
I have the pixie dodge and sparring specifics left as well but I am more focused the other two for assisting me further on the Knight Bus. Thanks in advance!
Because the weather has cooled down, and now I get to wear my gray tweed sweater over a dress shirt to teach in.
If this was an RPG I would have like, +30 stats going on right now.
Picture it. It's the mid 1990's and I'm doing research as part of my undergraduate degree. I'm also getting known as that guy who can fix computers, seeing as I seem to spend as much time messing with the departmental PCs as anything else.
On this particular day I'm sat in the break room, avoiding work like to most undergrads do when $Prof walks in. He's visibly sweating, beads of moisture dripping from his brow.
$Prof: I have an abstract to submit and it absolutley has to be there in the next hour or we won't get funding!
High stakes tech support. Bring it on. I'm lead to his office where he explains the problem.
$Prof: My computer is working but I cannot type anything. I've even tried rebooting the computer but it still doesn't work.
I watch as he reboots his PC, grabs his mouse and goes to the desktop (win95 so no login page), clicks on the Word icon and opens the document he's been working on. As he tries to type, sure enough nothing happens. I suspect he has followed this little ritual many times already this morning and is sticking this when demonstrating the problem to me.
I follow the keyboard cable as it snakes towards the back of the PC and sure enough it's unplugged. $Prof looks decidely sheepish and thanks me for saving his bacon with a pretty obvious fix. He's a smart guy and I think under normal circumstances he would have figured this out, but today the pressure was on.
Now, I'll bet a lot of you have already anticipated the punchline. But what puzzled me all these years was why the keyboard came to be unplugged in the first place. This was an 90s PC with an AT keyboard and this big ass DIN connectors don't simply fall out but themselves. To this day I suspect that a competitive colleague in the department had attempted to sabotage his submission. Maybe it's true, maybe it isn't but I doubt we will ever know the truth.
What are some red flags from teachers that shout "drop this class immediately?"
The best and top post was deleted and I will recreate it here: >"I don't have time to answer all of your questions." > >"Stop complaining about how hard the material is, you're all adults and can figure it out." > >"Don't ever complain about any of your professors until you do their evaluations at the end of the semester".... what? > >"I did the exam I'm about to give you and it only took me 10 minutes so it's easy." -First of all you're an expert in this field and the class average was a D.
At least I now know how to get people to drop my course. But in all seriousness, those first two complaints are interesting to see from a student's point of view. I sometimes (sometimes) have to tell students we need move on after I have been asked to restate the same concept a third time. That's what my office hours are for. I also have 36 other topics to cover this semester so they may have to read the book a little.
As for the second complaint, well...
Wondering if there's something like Grad Cafe but for jobs (in general or specifically academic jobs?)
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