Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau for November 13, 2012

  1. Missing large
    lmchildress  about 12 years ago

    He beat Zonker in slackerdom!

     •  Reply
  2. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    Maybe he could even wear a Muppet suit and be Faculty Mascot!

     •  Reply
  3. 4 8 8 2
    Peabody-Martini  about 12 years ago

    There’s no life sweeter than that of a 34 year old college sophomore- Matthew McConaughey in character as David Wooderson on SNL.

     •  Reply
  4. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    “… he has to keep his grades up so no slacking.”

    No, down! At Walden slacking comes summa cum laude.

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    water_moon  about 12 years ago

    Oddly enough, when I went to college there was a guy who was 32-36 during my time but he only took a few classes a semster (all he could afford, I know he worked part time at least for some of the time I was there) Last I’d heard, he’d have enough credits to graduate a year after I did.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    hitman4cookies  about 12 years ago

    Wait til Zonker finds out about this!

     •  Reply
  7. Ellie 3 n
    trspence  about 12 years ago

    Awesome, whether he realizes it or not, Trudeau has created two absolutely perfect icons for today’s Democrats. The mooching slacker on a fully-funded, lifelong gravy-train, and the narcissistic faker with delusions of talent and relevance. The irony is almost too rich for words.

     •  Reply
  8. Putz
    gutodiascomics  about 12 years ago

    Nice!

     •  Reply
  9. Image
    Steve Duffy  about 12 years ago

    Good to see he has a secure future. That’s all anyone can ask for

     •  Reply
  10. Thumb dr strange
    LeoAutodidact  about 12 years ago

    Roger Zelazny created this over 35 years ago in his protagonist Fred in “Doorways in the Sand”;

    “Fred receives a generous stipend from his cryogenically-frozen uncle as long as he is a full-time student and has not received an academic degree, which he has put off for 13 years by changing majors repeatedly”

    (Thank you Wikipedia)

     •  Reply
  11. Guildford town clock cropped
    Astolat  about 12 years ago

    Plot is a bit earlier than that… Doctor in the House, a British book and film from the early 1950s, about medical students, had a character Richard Grimsdyke (played by Kenneth Moore), who received an annuity while training as a doctor, so he repeatedly failed his final exam to remain a student. IIRC (Wikipedia doesn’t say) the point was that he had to only just fail so that he could retake, and he makes a mistake and accidentally passes…

     •  Reply
  12. A service i need
    Kvasir42 Premium Member about 12 years ago

    I knew a guy like this at the University of Oklahoma. He just kept changing majors before he got enough credits to graduate. For all I know he could still be there and that was twenty years ago.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    bagbalm  about 12 years ago

    Given his student loans he can’t afford to be graduated.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    Bruce L2  about 12 years ago

    Tokyo, I guess you’re another republican that thinks higher education is elitist.

     •  Reply
  15. Strawberrycreekv7
    Tea_Pea  about 12 years ago

    I knew a guy like Zipper when I went to school, lo, these many years ago. Even looked like Zipper; except his beard was red.

     •  Reply
  16. Tor johnson
    William Bednar Premium Member about 12 years ago

    It’s all very simple. All Zonk has to do is sign up for a series of classes, fail all of them and then the next semester retake the same classes again, vowing to pass them but never actually pass them! Repeating the cycle over and over again. His GPA would be zero but I’m sure that Walden has no probation policy which would require Zonk to maintain a cumulative GPA above zero.

     •  Reply
  17. Cat7
    rockngolfer  about 12 years ago

    Those were the days.I remember Physics As A Liberal Art 101.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    ladamson1918  about 12 years ago

    I actually know somebody like this. He inherited enough money so he doesn’t have to work, so he went back to school and he’s spent his life getting degrees.

     •  Reply
  19. Comic
    Pipe Tobacco  about 12 years ago

    Walden must not have any graduate programs. A sadly sizable number of graduate students do just as he has done for decades. It was always a fear of mine as well when I was in grad school.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    dook  about 12 years ago

    On a more serious note, many students graduate with a college degree in a discipline with no hope of finding a suitable career and with an enormous debt. And, still, universities are raising tuition fees and students keep coming. In the meantime, there is a demand for tradespeople.

     •  Reply
  21. Pirate63
    Linguist  about 12 years ago

    I think that many of us secretly fantasized of having enough money, and no responsibilities, so that we could become “professional” students. Learning is a life-long process but , as we mature, we realize that the education comes from life experience, not just the university.

     •  Reply
  22. Newavatar
    ArtisticArtemis  about 12 years ago

    Hey, I was a perpetual student until I was about 28. If Fibromyalgia hadn’t cut my career short, I had planned on getting a Ph.D. Then who knows how many more degrees I might have acquired? =^_____^=

    I wanted to be a lifetime student, and always be taking classes and learning.

    Beats a 9-5 job!!! :P :P :P

     •  Reply
  23. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 12 years ago

    “There needs to be a version of math similar to “Physics for Non-Majors”.”

    Doing Math without the Math would be difficult to imagine, but a course in Logic would be useful for anybody.

     •  Reply
  24. Masked
    Rickapolis  about 12 years ago

    I don’t know, I think ‘The Eternal Student’ would be a good horror flick. Sitting in class forever. Sharpening pencils Downloading the latest study apps. Never ending exams. The sound of echoing footsteps in the hall. That sounds like hell to me.

     •  Reply
  25. Phil b r
    pbarnrob  about 12 years ago

    For a few years, I had tuition support at work, after my boss asked “What’ll you be doing in five years if you don’t?” Then I was deployed a couple months up to the observatory (troubleshooting the flight instrument at arms’ length) and blew out a class. Next job, I couldn’t afford the up-front costs, and the next, boss wanted me there for testing, not off at school. By now, CSULA is insisting people graduate and get out of the way, with ridiculous fees and doing the austerity death spiral. Depends on your goals, like many things, but I enjoyed (most of) my time there.

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    sfghosthunt  about 12 years ago

    Zip’s a maker – not a taker! He’ll be making unforgivable student loan payments, fees and penalties for-freekin-ever. Investment in a country’s future through affordable higher education happens only in advancing countries.

     •  Reply
  27. Bla   version 2
    FriscoLou  about 12 years ago

    Gawd, that sounds like me, after five years of 1 to 1 classes at the Apple Store I think it’s about time that I make up my username and password on my own. They ought to give me the Steve Jobs award.

     •  Reply
  28. V  9
    freeholder1  about 12 years ago

    Revered icon remains better than reviled neo-con.

     •  Reply
  29. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    Here’s a quote from “the Wiki”:

    “Streleski was in his 19th year pursuing his doctorate in the mathematics department.”

    At Stanford University, a few miles south of San Francisco on the Peninsula.

     •  Reply
  30. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    Which one? Zipper? Or Streleski?

     •  Reply
  31. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.” —Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell.

    They failed. But they remain obstinate. Just as they did in their belief that Romney was going to beat Obama.

    So, to answer your question, if they fail to learn from this history, they will remain stupidly obstinate in the face of such an economic miracle as you point out.

    IOW they will fail to make it “fit in to Obama destroying the economy”. The Tea Party has made them stupid beyond measure.

     •  Reply
  32. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    Here’s another stupid quote:

    “The purpose of the minority is to become the majority.”

    — House Rep. Pete Sessions, head of the National Republican Campaign Committee.

    Such obstinately stupid thinking helped Obama, Warren, and all the rest to boot their behinds behind the moon. Reason: the American electorate just isn’t that stupid. They (we) want Congress to GET SOMETHING DONE, not just block everything hoping for an election that boots Democrats’ behinds behind the moon.

     •  Reply
  33. Missing large
    38lowell  about 12 years ago

    Tokyo Tengu:You nailed it!!But, when they retire, where does the money come from?Medicade, I guess.

     •  Reply
  34. Cathy aack
    lindz.coop Premium Member about 12 years ago

    Lifelong learning is great. I got my Ph.D. at 50 and went back for another MSW. I just recently got my full license and work as a psychotherapist. I’ve worked almost all of the time I was in school and all my college fees are paid in full.

     •  Reply
  35. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    That’s similar to what they said about FDR. Do the logic.

     •  Reply
  36. Psn logo free.square triangle ex o
    DylanThomas3.14159  about 12 years ago

    It’s history.

     •  Reply
  37. Siberian tigers 22
    Hunter7  about 12 years ago

    Seems Zipper has found himself a secure, comfortable home.

     •  Reply
  38. Guildford town clock cropped
    Astolat  about 12 years ago

    As a European, I can assure you that Obama is still some way to the right of a European centre-right politician (we would never accept such a poor public health insurance system, nor a time-limit to the safety net for those out of work); and he is certainly nowhere near a Hollande-style French Euro-socialist model.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Doonesbury