yorkshirehornet
Well-Known Member
This is a particular phenomenon that has been identified and named in a country due to the pressure to succeedReading the news on your way to work?
This is a particular phenomenon that has been identified and named in a country due to the pressure to succeedReading the news on your way to work?
Yes you got it..... and the photo became a widely distributed example of the folly of seeking success
Yes you got it..... and the photo became a widely distributed example of the folly of seeking success
It was really about the human jungle/rat race/hamster wheel life in china has become for young people.........and how some are revolting against it... mainly materialismWhy is seeking success a folly, you should always strife to be the best you can
It was really about the human jungle/rat race/hamster wheel life in china has become for young people.........and how some are revolting against it... mainly materialism
May store up problems for the future in China... many less opportunities and they have muzzled their young people from dissent with the incentives of materialism.....That is the problem when you have a dictatorship
At least in the west you have a chance to makes changes every four or five years, providing of course the opposition has anything to offer
No. The university in question was Georgia Institute of Technology - and, dare I say it, the listings were famously 'questionable'.somebody Howard??
No - when I said that "the listings were famously questionable", it was because the guy never existed. He's an example of what's known as a fictitious entry.I would guess that this was someone not known primarily as a sportsman - was it a former president, such as Jimmy Carter ?
Is he some sort of cartoon or literary characterNo - when I said that "the listings were famously questionable", it was because the guy never existed. He's an example of what's known as a fictitious entry.
That's him. Over to you Yorkie.George P. Burdell ?
George P. Burdell is a fictitious student officially enrolled at Georgia Tech in 1927 as a practical joke. Since then, he has supposedly received all undergraduate degrees offered by Georgia Tech, served in the military, gotten married, and served on Mad magazine's Board of Directors, among other accomplishments. Burdell at one point led the online poll for Time's 2001 Person of the Year award.[1] He has evolved into an important and notorious campus tradition; all Georgia Tech students learn about him at orientation.[2]