If Dan & Terry have saved just one life its been worth it - they have done
so much more they have started an initiative that has helped gay kids see
beyond the pain
I absolutely agree with the actions of Oberlins's president. These
protestors had better wake up and realize that if they want to sacrifice
their studies and college education to protest then the choice is their
own. Why should students who showed up in the class, studied hard and made
a good grade suffer because their fellow student wanted to march for black
thug criminal like Mike Brown. Take you F failing grade and learn from your
decisions
If they really believed in any of it, they would be prepared to sacrifice,
and that includes their grades.
All this shows is how incredibly infantile they are. They don't want to
ever have to face unpleasant consequences, ever. They are little , spoiled,
pampered children.
Harvard and Georgetown laws schools? This country can't be that far from
the bottom, because it certainly has sunk a long goddam way.
These are students from the great Oberlin College? Are they that fucking
stupid? Skip class to raise hell and expect a passing grade? Wow, I guess
the spirit of entitlement is rampant here! Well, look at it's history. What
would you expect?
More-me-now. These 'children' are just showing how worthless they really
are to society by focusing only on the responsibilities that they feel are
most important.
Selfishness on top of ignorance = failing grade in life
Hey, my dog ate my homework. No really he did. And I spent all night on it
. I would have gotten a "A" if you saw it. But I'll take a "C" instead
Dave Brubeck Quartet Live At Oberlin College 1953 ~ How High The Moon
Recorded: Live Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio March 2, 1953 Personnel: Dave Brubeck - Piano Paul Desmond - Alto Saxophone Ron Crotty - Bass Lloyd Davis ...
Brubeck's dense chord structuring around and before 6:00 until about 7:40 to
me sound evocative of the dense but wonderfully rich piano compositions of
Rachmaninoff, who had only passed on about a decade before this recording.
Maybe this is common knowledge among musicologists. Any music scholars out
there care to comment?