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Uncredentialed Wonder | First Things:
There´s some other surprises in this article. Well worth reading.
He has authored over a dozen books, written a syndicated newspaper column and countless essays and articles covering a broad range of subjects—sports, politics, mobsters, union thugs, cultural touchstones, booze, and blades of grass—all of it written in a smart, literate voice of the casual sophisticate who takes his subject, but not himself, seriously. And in the summer of 2010, Pete Hamill finally received an honorary graduate’s diploma from Regis High School, a Jesuit-run prep school from which he dropped out 59 years earlier. “It was the last period when you could do that and still have a life,” Hamill told the New York Times. “Try getting a job on a newspaper now without the résumé.”
There´s some other surprises in this article. Well worth reading.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-02-05 02:13 pm (UTC)I don't regret any of it. I learned a great deal about people, about myself, and I kept reading. At my Catholic university the professor was amazed not because I could have tested out of their Western Civ class, but because I could clearly have tested out of it with the specific focus they had rather than just a generalist perspective. My lit teacher, was happy to let me into the Lit degree's capstone course despite none of the pre-req's because I obviously knew what I was talking about and ended up contributing more to the discussion than most of the Lit majors.
Bah, college is a series of hoops to jump through for the piece of paper. Education comes from engaging in subjects and learning. These two things are not always related...
(no subject)
Date: 2011-02-06 02:22 am (UTC)Completely agree with you about education. The things I am best known for, I daresay, have little to do with the things I studied in college.