When I was kid, I loved to ask my minister questions about things that, to my young mind, made no sense when I read them in the Bible or more likely heard them in Sunday school. His answers were always rather bland and not a little aloof since, after all, he was the pastor and I was just a kid…
I was not aware…
The Wikipedia Game
Both people go to Wikipedia and start in the same spot. Then someone calls out a word or term or person, like “Bob Dylan,” and they race to see who can get there first. The rule is you can’t type anything; you can only click on links. And you can’t go backwards.
Teen grad studying law till he can start med school
Chriag Shah breezed through his studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago in just a year and a half. And he got a 3.9 GPA on barely an hour a day of studying. The 19-year-old explained that college mostly seemed like a “review” from his days at Barrington High School, where he took so many advanced courses, he was able to start as a junior at UIC.
“I just had a lot of free time,” said Shah, who is jokingly referred to as “the brainiac” by friends. “I’d do different activities every day, spend a lot of time at the beach.”
Shah, a biology major, had been accepted at UIC’s advanced seven-year medical program when he first enrolled in college.
But because students in the rigorous track are required to wait at least three years before starting, Shah has to wait. So he’s keeping himself busy hanging out with pals, playing sports, attending rock concerts, and dancing the traditional Indian garba dance of his parents’ homeland.
And then there’s law school at John Marshall, where he’s a first-year student.
“At first, it was really intimidating because I was meeting people in my class who were 30, married or had kids,” Shah said. “But you get over it because you realize that you’re all in the same boat learning the same things.”
The teenager still wants to pursue a career in medicine, but he figures with a law degree, he’ll also be an expert in health and malpractice law.