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Post by Deleted on Jan 7, 2014 21:10:36 GMT -1
Rainbow Room promotional coming up soon, along with new pop/Bollywood video launch for Munmeet Sandhu. Plus a fashion shoot for a Scottish broadsheet magazine this weekend, hot on the heels of shoot for Harris Tweed/VisitScotland. Horribly expensive 3rd Year Hons Psych text books paid for, YAY!
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Post by ozneil on Jan 8, 2014 19:14:30 GMT -1
Good for her
Didnt Cindy Crawford finance her Uni studies (chemical Engineering) by modelling
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Post by Deleted on Jan 8, 2014 21:02:02 GMT -1
The wean's personal hero, is Cindy Crawford, oddly enough.
Also true of Lily Cole, who subsidised her course at Oxford via her modelling work.
Loads of the girls and guys in wean's model agency are high grade students, financing their way through uni. They get the work because they behave professionally, understand how to take instruction and get the job done.
Like everything, you get ahead in any field by how you conduct yourself. That way lies longevity!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 13, 2014 19:00:47 GMT -1
That's Ms R in a Sunday mag today, giving it 'spring florals'... (Keeping the student loan at bay for a wee while longer! ..) She's starting to consider a PHD after her final year next year. I'm all furrit if that's what she chooses. Though... a cautionary tale, one friend is still supporting her eldest in his SEVENTH year at Glasgow...eeek!
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Post by notanimby on Apr 13, 2014 19:33:03 GMT -1
Dim Murphy MP managed se ven years and achieved fek all..............and look at him now, imagine if he had got something A friend of mine has a phd in organic chemistry, she's put it to good use by working in events management....... Tell the wean tae go as far as she wants, as a tax payer, I've no issue in edumacating folks to the best of their abilities
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Post by Deleted on Apr 13, 2014 19:52:11 GMT -1
(Must point out my friend is in NO WAY related to Jim Murphy ) I kinda think five consecutive years at Uni is about the cut-off point myself. Sure some kids make a mistake in their choice of course (as Ms Rolo's boyf did) and start over in something they're more suited to. Can be down to pressure from school or parents, as we'll all recognise. But recruiting recently, I had a couple of CVs from what I'd call 'perpetual students' who'd taken successive degrees over 7 to even 10 years. And a frequently recurring theme is that they've not 'worked' in any job throughout or volunteered, or interned whatever. I have found also, over time, such students have great expectations over rank and salary. Maybe just me... Possibly such students should seek a career in academia, not out in the wider world. Again, just my view. Pee ess: a lifelong friend of mine confessed to me on graduation in 1978 he'd rather be a landscape painter than a lawyer. He's now a Solicitor Advocate, a rather good one as it happens. But parental expectation and all that.......it can knock all the creativity out of a person, can't it?
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Post by ozneil on Apr 13, 2014 20:29:44 GMT -1
My grandson is completely financing his studies thru lecturing and tutoring as well as scholarships. I think he is destined for academia My Brother-in-law was a solicitor but since he retired he works part time in a charity bookshop and paints houses for old people who cant afford painters. He reckons its fun and very relaxing. I only took my degree because in was widely recognised throughout the world and gave me the opportunity to travel. It was never my passion only a means to an end.
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Post by bormes on Apr 14, 2014 6:42:23 GMT -1
These long term students often go into politics as Rolo says they expect high wages and to be of superior rank to normal working folk!!
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