Ticket #5805 (new)

Opened 13 days ago

BONUS: $50 FEDEX Gift Card Opportunity

Reported by: "FedEx Shopper Feedback" <FedExOpinionRequested@…> Owned by:
Priority: normal Milestone: 2.11
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BONUS: $50 FEDEX Gift Card Opportunity

http://healdies.us/mN_QnObnVNkCVSviy-4Ea8EwsNzKrBeIrPb-oEI2MVJp_Fs

http://healdies.us/U_CiuY2mpPa99u3i3YBCicSujh1sRpVhS2rNdUVlnbw93YCr8A

wing counterculture) would eventually clash and Jobs began to lose interest in the class.[page needed]

He underwent a change during mid-1970: "I got stoned for the first time; I discovered Shakespeare, Dylan Thomas, and all that classic stuff. I read Moby Dick and went back as a junior taking creative writing classes."[page needed] Jobs also later noted to his official biographer that "I started to listen to music a whole lot, and I started to read more outside of just science and technology—Shakespeare, Plato. I loved King Lear ... when I was a senior I had this phenomenal AP English class. The teacher was this guy who looked like Ernest Hemingway. He took a bunch of us snowshoeing in Yosemite." During his last two years at Homestead High, Jobs developed two different interests: electronics and literature. These dual interests were particularly reflected during Jobs's senior year as his best friends were Wozniak and his first girlfriend, the artistic Homestead junior Chrisann Brennan.[citation needed]

In 1971 after Wozniak began attending University of California, Berkeley, Jobs would visit him there a few times a week. This experience led him to study in nearby Stanford University's student union. Jobs also decided that rather than join the electronics club, he would put on light shows with a friend for Homestead's avant-garde Jazz program. He was described by a Homestead classmate as "kind of a brain and kind of a hippie ... but he never fit into either group. He was smart enough to be a nerd, but wasn't nerdy. And he was too intellectual for the hippies, who just wanted to get wasted all the time. He was kind of an outsider. In high school everything revolved around what group you were in, and if you weren't in a carefully defined group, you weren't anybody. He was an individual, in a world where individuality was suspect." By his senior year in late 1971, he was taking freshman English class at Stanford and working on a Homest

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