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Teachers aren’t supposed to perform favorites, but it’s unfeasible for me to not think of HHS alumnus Eric Phillips as one of my all-time favorite students. We hit it off first based on a love of films, then music, then history and politics. Eric was one of the most naturally gifted speakers and leaders I’ve encountered and I continue to be impressed by all that he’s accomplished in his work.
Did you grow up in Hillsborough?
I spent my entire childhood in Hillsborough. I was born in the area, and didn’t leave Hillsborough until freshman year of college.
What did (or do) your parents do for a living?
My mom stayed home with me and my brother during our younger childhoods, but when we were both in grade university she started as a bookkeeper for a local landscaping business. She stayed with that company through retirement, eventually become the office manager and running most of the day-to-day business.
My dad was a statistician for Johnson and Johnson, working in consumer products research most of his career. When I was in college, the position was eliminated and he started helping my mom with the business, managing logistics and office technology.
They are both ret
In I found myself simultaneously unattached and on the academic job market for the first time. I was thirty, several years into graduate school and at work on a dissertation about nineteenth-century poetry and pleasure. Literary studies, my dissertation argued, was blighted at its core. It had forsaken pleasure, the very reason most people devote their lives to literature in the first place—and the likes of Shelley and Hopkins were apostles of an enlightened hedonism that promised a way out.
There was, of course, another blight on the profession. I entered graduate school in , at the start of the economic downturn. The story is a many-times-told one: the retreading of the American university into a for-profit institution that runs on adjunct and graduate student labor, and, looming behind it, the disinvestment in the animation of the mind by the American public. In , 75 percent of university faculty were tenure stream and 25 percent contingent; by the hour I sent in my first application, the two figures had flipped. In , the English academic market featured around twenty tenure-track job vacancies in my specialty area, each of which had between two hundred and three hundred candidates f
Gay dating in your 50s
By Andrew Georgiou, updated 3 months ago in Sex and dating / Dating and relationships
According to some, a gay male who has lived for half a century makes a reliable partner. After all, what hasn’t killed him, has perhaps made him stronger. But just how far can a good career, life exposure and grey pubic hair take an older same-sex attracted man these days in the complex digital internet dating scene?
“Gym fit guy into men who look after themselves. No oldies. Under 35 only.”
The year-old headless torso – who penned that strict criteria on his Scruff profile – isn’t alone in thinking that anyone over 40, let alone 50 is ‘old’.
Before you pass judgement however, take yourself endorse to your early 20s. You viewed your parents as old, so it’s reasonable that a juvenile person online today might consider a gay gentleman over 50 looking for love or lust as a relic.
But, to all of you gay men over 50 out there, don’t count yourselves out of the dating game yet! Let’s dive into the dating experience for a mature gay or bi+ man.
Should you control your age online?
Why not?! You have a lot to be proud of once you’ve reached your 50s. One thing Gym-Buns has overlooked, however, is that
—And I Worked at the Writer's Trade
national-book
A series of appreciations of both well-known writers, such as Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, and Conrad Aiken, and the unknown or forgotten. Cowley also recalls his experiences in Paris both during and after World War One, as well as his later career as an editor and writer for magazines and publishing houses.
…The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the Space Age
national-book
This highly acclaimed analyze approaches the space race as a problem in comparative public policy. Drawing on published literature, archival sources in both the United States and Europe, interviews with many of the key participants, and important declassified material, such as the National Security Council's first policy sheet on space,
A Civil Action
m-andrews
A Civil Behavior tells the story of the landmark Woburn lawsuit—one of the most tortuous and complex civil lawsuits in the history of American law. Eight Massachusetts families, whose children were stricken with cancer, sued two corporate giants, blaming them for carcinogens in the municipal water supply. Granted unpreced
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