oooh me first
Full Time Student by day, org trawler by weekend and night
what about the rest of you??
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oooh me first
Full Time Student by day, org trawler by weekend and night
what about the rest of you??
Uni Bum. Oh yeh! :2thumbsup:
law student.. sucks.
School Student by day,
Crime fighter by night?
Evil_Maniac From Mars
Profession by Day? Creator of dastardly schemes
Profession by Night? Thwarting evil and contradictions
None. And I intend to keep it that way.
.
:computer: Full time unemployed gamer & reader. :book2:
:drummer: Occasionally musician, translator, something else. ~:handball:
.
Student, lover and Haidong Gumdo instructor.
Construction. Specifically concrete (house foundations, driveways, sidewalks, etc.) I work with my father :(
I write for anyone who will give me money. Of late, that has meant scripting corporate rah-rah videos for drug companies. Sometimes it means articles for magazines. Sometimes it means books. If involves typing and getting paid, I'm all for it, since that allows me to spend no time commuting and more time watching my little lemurs grow up.
McDonalds slave and truck cleaning.
Lots of $$$ for doing very little work.
Student now and student for next 5 or so years, hopefully.
I'm studying web design a bit so I can get an assistant job to one of my buddies who needs help with a massive workload from his boss, it'll pay $10 per hour, so I won't be complaining.
Full time student.
Also sweep the play yard for a church and a day care program on Saturdays for 25$ per sweep.
I work in Office Administration or, putting it less poshly, I'm a typist.
~:)
Law student
History student.
Slave to wife, vassal to children, martyr to fate, and servant to a cruel and spiteful God.
Haha, nicely put together. :yes:Quote:
Originally Posted by Beirut
Telecoms consultant here. Yeah, yeah corporate sellout blah blah. Looking for a postgrad program that would take me on.
History student, full-time. Earn money via psychology tests and odd-jobs. Also coach, which takes up a heckuva a lot of time.
IT operator in the oil business.
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
I did residential construction with my old man when I was young too, saving money for college. Spent no few hours busting form boards off of foundations. It gets better Ichigo (But I still have back problems)! :2thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by Ichigo
Writer, stay at home father, and all around slacker as the wife would say.
:egypt:
It's tiring and hot most of the time, but I'd rather work outside and for him rather than some fast food joint.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ramses II CP
Studying. Among the subjects that I chose is: physics, chemistry and "advanced" maths. :2thumbsup:
SUUUPPPERRMMMAAANNNNN
I bring justice to all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RoadKill
Ahh i wondered when you would show up, my cats stuck up a tree!!!!
Perhaps i should elaborate, I am a High School Student by day,KerbOrg Crawler by night
Omanes being a typist? With his impeccable spelling, its about right.
Husar, thats my dream job *sarcasm if not evident is inserted here*
2 months of grapichs designer background.
With my Business Admin. Bachelor's Degree, levle of English and PC knwoledge, I'm looking into being a SAP consultant.
I may end up as a translator, export-import assistant etc. though. Harg.
But I'll have a band for whom I'll be singing one day before I die. I'll be doing that. :singer:
By Day: Father of Twin Girls (really a full time job)
By Night: Working on my B.A. in Corporate Law and Finances (one year to go w00t)
And I don't have a "real job", I was set up well by my father.
:shame: I feel like a loser sometimes.
... damn i wish i was a loser, teaching is hard.Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
I'm an accounting student with a part time job working as a student manager in a local university employment office.
Where are our two law students attending? I plan on going to law school after undergraduate.
parasite
So many students ... dang, but you kids know how to make a Lemur feel old ...
Full time student :2thumbsup:
That said, I am looking for some casual work. I need clubbing money dangit!
software engineer.
producing software....one bug at a time :laugh4:
Part time student, part time bum.
looking to become part time student, part time production operator.
You're doing this on purpose, don't you ? :stare:Quote:
Originally Posted by Sigurd Fafnesbane
Orgahn player.
I retired at the age of 41 from being a software engineer (used to be called programmer/analyst). I was and still am a stay at home dad but in the past six months I've started earning a few (very few) bucks via concert photography.
Just doing some recruiting...Quote:
Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
WHAT!! you want to work with SAP too? :dizzy2:
:laugh4:
Seeing Statoil flying around here.....
Energy Markets analyst for energy services & renewables.....
You do know their rap song, yes?Quote:
Originally Posted by Sigurd Fafnesbane
Professional geek (software).
I'm a government attorney, but I want to be a writer/teacher at some point.
Nice to see several other legal-oriented people out there. To the law students I have one piece of advice: work your butt off when it comes time to take the Bar. It's a major pain and you do NOT want to take it a second time.
Nice!! Had to send the link to my workmates. They loved it.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lemur
Oh and LEN... You asked me one time what SAP stands for.
Systeme, Anwendungen, Produkte in der Datenverarbeitung
Yes, it was some German bunch of words but I wasn't able to remember. Anyhow. I'm still up for the job.Quote:
Originally Posted by Sigurd Fafnesbane
Teach me or I'll be kidnapping both of your daughters and according to Islamic rules, make them marry my 7-year-old brother, who will be eventually wandering around in burkas, looking for 2 more to form the Muslim voltran.
:stare:
Currently an unemployed bum. :juggle2:
....And an award to you for giving me the oddest/funniest mental image so far this month. :laugh4:Quote:
Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
I'm a salesman - I've sold luxury watches in the past for Tourneau, I've sold boutique clothing for Club Monaco and I am currently selling supplements and sweetener made from Luo Han Guo for a manufacturer called Newayceutical. Pays well, but isn't much fun.
I have my B.A. in History, but I don't like writing papers even though I am good at them, so a masters is out for the moment. I was thinking of law school a bit later on.
I am looking to stop being a salesman and get a job in Federal law enforcement, namely the United States Customs
UCLA three years attending, one year (and now another one upcoming) on the nets.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ice
I am unemployed so I am working as a full time intern and doing statistical social-psychological research and writing papers. In Turkey it does not matter whether you have skills or not. You have to have contacts... Let's face it, I am unemployed.
Full time student (last year of high school), with the occasional low pay job :book:
:balloon2:
I'm a professional nitpicker :grin:
I am a land surveyor with a slight specialsation in construction setout.
That slight bit being that I often have to get up early to head to some site and tell them where to put their concrete and steel.
Otherwise I am trekking the hills to find new places to put houses on.
(unless it is raining - which it is now) :juggle2:
You clean slaves?Quote:
Originally Posted by Mikeus Caesar
I am a Professional Procrastinator:wink3:Quote:
Originally Posted by Andres
No pay or benefits but lots of misplaced time.
Damn...Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
Damn...
Damn...
UCLA... law school? I can only hope to get into that.
TinCow, I have no illusions on the difficulty of law school/the bar.
I'm also going to most likely get a masters in accounting (one year) if Penn State decides to offer one i time before I graduate. I need the extra year for the CPA (Certified Public Accountant) exam.
Much misery lies ahead for me :whip:, but hopefully it will be worth it.
I'm an undergraduate student, just about to get my BA in history.
I work part time in the campus writing center, helping other students work on their writing skills, and part time at a school for children with autism, helping autistic preschoolers learn to focus, interact, and communicate. It can be exhausting (and I don't think I could take a career at it), but the kids are adorable.
After graduation I plan to take a year off school to save up while researching and applying to grad schools (not to mention getting used to married life), and then I'm aiming for a doctorate in linguistics, and hopefully a teaching career.
Ajax
UCLA... Law... Yes! :wall:Quote:
Originally Posted by Ice
Pushing a Liberal Agenda against MegaCorps. UCLA Corporate Lawyers make Fat CEO's want to crap their pants...
TinCow I Do Realize the Bar Exam is quite difficult to pass, One of my Professors makes us do a section of the Bar as a Semester Final. If You pass it you go on, if not... you do the Semester all over again. Thankfully, I've passed em' all with flying colors so far. :2thumbsup:
I wouldn't say it's hard, so much as tedious. You just have to study really, really hard. If you do, you'll pass. If you don't, you'll probably fail. Every single person I know who failed just didn't study enough. If you make Bar study your job for 2-3 months before the exam, you'll be fine.Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
The main problem is that it takes so dang long to study for it that if you have to do it a second time, it'll butcher your life, especially if you have to work while studying. Far, far easier to get it right the first time, no matter how much it may ruin your social life at the time. Also, for the record, the Bar exam is just a hazing ritual used by the legal system. It is entirely useless for real legal practice.
Don't get me started on annual bar fees.
Ill make sure to increase the amount of time Im on MSN to translate weird words for you :laugh4:Quote:
Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
I'm learning so much about people here, I always imagined Omanes to be the Head of Coca-Cola or something :laugh4:
Video Store worker myself. Blockbuster :beam:
Hubba-wha ? Perf ! Paddycake, paddycakes, Baker's Man !Quote:
Originally Posted by pevergreen
So many Law Students. :dizzy2:
Just a humble B. Bus / B. IT student. :beam:
Working as a software engineer after doing my masters in electrical engineering :wall: hoping to join a MBA program sometime soon :juggle2:
Seeing as everyone else is saying what they are studying (Or did study) I shall say that I am a first year University student studying Ancient History (planning to major in it) and Latin (Still undecided on if I will major in it). I would like to do Post-grad, perhaps a PhD.
Telephony Engineer
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Foolish Horseman
Same As you Horseman :egypt:
Student most of the time, Mover part time and Mc D's register the remainder of my time. about 4 hours of sleep per night man I love my life, can't wait till work actually starts!....
I go to school in a factory like school in crestile ohio that leaks and is worthless by day. And by night i play mtw and hang out with all your families!!!!! lol jk o course :evilgrin:
I run our ecommerce website, and basically handle all the IT stuff.
However seeing as it's a family business (mine), I spend more time at work than I do at home ~:rolleyes:
Full-time student (Civil Engineering), also work in a department store casually still get about 20 hours a week though. The rest of my time is taken up by Football, Squash, Eating, more football, RTW, more football, and sometimes if I'm lucky sleep! Lol.
I'm a law student too...
:no: not really.
Proffesional Spender of Money.
And student.
Forest Manager, in charge of 5000 acres of communauty-owned forest. Ruling every aspect of human activity within my range.
Hmmmm. Interesting.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tristuskhan
If you care to go into detail, I'd be delighted to listen. :sunny:
In spite of myself, I'm actually very interested!
Please do go on.
OK, here we go, the job is quite complex...
I'm employed by the French National Forestry Office. After beeing lumberjack for five years and beeing wounded badly, I was able to graduate an advanced level in forestry and could enter the ONF (5th out of 812 candidates, a bit proud of it).
I'm theorically in charge of the forests belonging to 12 different communauties (small villages under 50 souls for most), a total 3000 acres. Since our numbers are severely depleted I must take care of 2000 more acres belonging to three more communauties.
I have two kinds of forests: beech, marple, and ash-based on the (steep) slopes over the river Doubs, and more or less flat oak and wild cherry stands.
Plantations occur for less than 10%, dying spruce and healthy firs, a few Douglas and larchs too.
We practice natural regeneration whenever we can, the soils are rich.
So my job is: selecting the trees that should be fell on clearings or regeneration cuts, selling them (standing or felled, it depends of the wood's quality), supervising the lumberjack's work and make sure the communauties use enough of the sale's money for sylvicultural or infrastructure works I program.
I have to manage hunting too, in order to keep balance between vegetation and livehood (no natural predators for deers and boars, that's a problem), I have to convince the communauties that a dry standing oak is not a source of firewood but a fantastic environment for an incredible amount of endangered species!
The trunks are sold, the branches are used by the locals for firewood.
That's probably the worst of my job:wall: People are kind but work like donkeys. Letting loose the hogs on the saplings and the soil's structure.:furious3: I've been kind since I just began the job but next year... 80 euros fine for the mad drivers.
That's a few aspects of the job, more to come if you want.
Wonderful. Thank you. Sounds like you have a real system in place. No unauthorized cutting and little if any waste.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tristuskhan
It seems like you/they take the forests seriously. Are the French as protective of the trees as the Germans? (I've heard you can't even look at a tree in Germany without a permit.) Here in Quebec, we are at the tail end of La Grande Massacre Arboreal. Maybe a few more years left, but after that I think we'll have little choice but to adopt very restrictive measures.
Which chainsaws do you use?
Ahem, too off-topic, but here we kill our trees to plant more soy. What a shame.
I was a Stihl afficionado when I was a lumberjack, but I used an Husqvarna to scratch my own leg. Both brands are good but I prefered the sound of Stihl (Husqvarnas whistle). Few professionnals also use Oregon, but it's uncommon.Quote:
Originally Posted by Beirut
We are protective of trees in France but we have much more dynamic sylvicultural models than Germany (harder clearings, that's the reason why we have fewer windfells). Apart of that we are very protective: forests are common wealth that must be managed on the long term. And when I say "long term", it means that we think and work for year 2100 at least. My girlfriend thinks I have a strange relation with Time. Ten years is a short term for me:yes:
More of the job: long term management plans. Forests are analized every twenty years and the harvest is planned (date, frequency and quantity). The clearing process is based on the idea that a good quality tree must be given room to grow as long as it produces valuable wood. So only the worst are felled in clearings, the best are kept to produce the next generations of saplings until the final regeneration cuts (trunks of mature oaks are sold an average 250 euros per cubic meter, sometimes more)
Safety Manager for things that make a rather large bang.
The discourse between you gentlemen reminds me of a story I was once told to illustrate the idea of sustainability.
Some years ago, it was discovered that the great oak roof beams of New College, Oxford were beetly. (New College was founded in 1379, which often confuses visitors, but the explanation is a trifle distracting).
This discovery caused great consternation when reported to the College Board. Beetly beams have to be replaced, and swiftly, for such visible signs mean imminent collapse. Where on earth would they find oak of such quality and dimension? How on earth would they pay for such wood, if found? Did the college face a future with its mediaeval glory shored up by concrete joists?
A young Fellow rather cheekily suggested that since there was a "College Forester" on the rolls - bearing in mind that institutions of this age would have had many such ancient positions, usually held in honorarium by an equally ancient don - perhaps they should ask him for advice. Being bereft of other choices, the Board agreed and summoned the gentleman of the forest.
The Fellows questioned him closely, once he had recovered from the shock of being invited to the great hall. He and his staff were responsible for managing the tracts of wooded estate bequeathed to the College over centuries by alumni. (Most colleges have quite substantial estates across the kingdom, and Oxford is nearly a thousand years old with some rather influential and wealthy alumni).
The Forester was taken aback by the question. "Well sir," he growled in a low voice, "We was wonderin' when you would ask that."
It turned out that when the College was founded in 1379, a grove of oaks was planted on their first bequest of land. These oaks were destined to replace the beams of New College when they got beetly, because in those days they knew well that oak beams always get beetly.
This plan had been passed down from College Forester to College Forester for six hundred years. "You don't cut them oak trees. Them's for the roof of New College Hall!"
With relief, the College Board was able to order the felling of the oaks and the replacement of the beams. Wisely, acorns harvested from those oaks were planted again on the plot and entrusted to the care of new generations of Foresters, for the inevitable time when the oak beams of New College once again become beetly.
Now that, gentlemen, is sustainability - and the nobility of your profession.
:bow: