Yon
Now that I've had all of this term's classes, I can tell you that I would still prefer playing guitar or pouring Elmer's glue on my fingers and letting it dry and peeling it off and holding it up to the moonlight and pretending it's spooky Transylvanian cobwebs.
The good news is that I only have three courses this term as opposed to four, and the classes are nicely spread out over the week rather than being all stacked together, giving me time in between to complete work. The bad news is that I have to actually attend the three courses:
Management of Human Resources (ORSC 672) addresses personnel management topics including the legal framework for personnel management and job analysis as the foundation of personnel management activities. It's taught by someone who got a Master's Degree at a Seminary, so it's like she's a nun or something. We need to watch our language.
Data Communications (IMGT 657) is taught by the same guy who taught Information Warfare last term, but we're pretty much covering the same material, only with more emphasis on Application Architectures, SMTP, IMAP, FTP, Telnet, Modulation, Analog Transmission of Digital Data, TCP/IP, SPX/IPX, and 802.11b. Stuff.
Macroeconomics and Public Policy (ECON 620) is about friggin economics.
What do you think, son?
The good news is that I only have three courses this term as opposed to four, and the classes are nicely spread out over the week rather than being all stacked together, giving me time in between to complete work. The bad news is that I have to actually attend the three courses:
Management of Human Resources (ORSC 672) addresses personnel management topics including the legal framework for personnel management and job analysis as the foundation of personnel management activities. It's taught by someone who got a Master's Degree at a Seminary, so it's like she's a nun or something. We need to watch our language.
Data Communications (IMGT 657) is taught by the same guy who taught Information Warfare last term, but we're pretty much covering the same material, only with more emphasis on Application Architectures, SMTP, IMAP, FTP, Telnet, Modulation, Analog Transmission of Digital Data, TCP/IP, SPX/IPX, and 802.11b. Stuff.
Macroeconomics and Public Policy (ECON 620) is about friggin economics.
What do you think, son?
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