Hey!
Thanks for the Karma, although I am afraid I have yet to look up how that works. Heck, I have not even checked how to start downloading from here.
Sorry, but I don't know Bruce Campbell at all. I looked him up on Wikipedia, and the only Campbell films I have ever seen are
Spider-Man 1 and 2, neither of which casts him in a memorable role.
Legion...
Legion downloads!!!???!!!???!!!???!!! Where me get???
The first time I read a Legion comic, I hated it. (It was one of the few bad early
Superboy/Legions... The one that startes with Superboy and Timber Wolf playing chess.) About a year later I read a really good
Superboy/Legion at a friend's house and was hooked. There is just no other comic like it, in my opinion.
I have all of their appearances from 1958 through the early 90s, something that took many years for me to assemble. From the mid-60s on, all the books are in fine or better condition. Before that... Well, they are what I could afford.
Adventure 247 is only in fair condition and is missing the first page, but I bought a cheap reprint and removed its first page so my copy would be 'complete' (in a manner of speaking). I have every issue of the Legion mother books from the early 90s to 2004, but not all guest appearances. In 2004 I stopped reading the Legion, as I had not been enjoying it for a while.
Teaching...
Although I started my life as a New York City public junior high school teacher and lived to tell about it...
I have taught university-level ESL (English as a Second Language) since 1994. Because I include creativity and as much student participation/as many learning games as possible, I am allowed to teach graduate courses (ESL students in many disciplines who already speak English well but need to bring up their level quickly) and speech (grad and undergrad) in addition to standard ESL undergrad courses.
This semester I created a creative writing class for intermediate-level undergrads, something that is supposed to be impossible because of their level. We're having a fun time with poetry, short fiction, short autobiographical pieces, and short expository pieces--no thesis statements or topic sentences allowed. There are fourteen students in this class: one Taiwanese, two Japanese, one Spaniard, one Italian, and nine Koreans. Most are in the typical undergraduate age range, but there are also two students in their late twenties/early thirties and one senior citizen who is himself a retired professor of photography. It took a while for them to get used to the idea of photocopying their work for the class, sitting in a circle, listening to an author read his or her work aloud, and then commenting on it without prompts from me; all that goes against many of my students' cultural training. (Don't even get me started on getting them to call me by my first name...) Now, however, they look forward to classes when we form a circle instead of reading, say, Maya Angelou or Amy Tan.