I'd go look this post up in the cagbag if I wasn't lazy, but I'll comment here and if he sees it he sees it.
To the guy that wanted to know how Shipwreck juggled school and gaming, it's not that hard. I currently work 40-45 hours a week and go to school full time as a pre med student. The easiest way to do so is to take easy electives with the hard classes. For instance, I'll take Calculus, Organic Chemistry, Self and Values and Fundamentals of Speech next semester. First two are hard, the latter are easy. Throughout the week I hardly play anything, but on the weekends I'm free to do as I please. I do want to say that I enjoy gaming as well, but if your true aspirations are to become a doctor, then you may want to get your priorities in order. During med school, you won't be allowed to work, which is why I'm working full time and saving, now. Most (if not all) schools won't let you work, because what you are learning could be the difference in someone living or dying and if you don't think you can put down the controller for a few years, then you might want to consider another career path. I'm not saying you won't ever be able to play games during school, but think of it as paying it forward. No games now and in the future you'll be able to play more games, because you can retire earlier or even just work part time and make three times as much as alot of full time factory workers. Your path is hard, but it's not impossible. Don't stress out over it. It's just a ride. Managing your gaming/school will become easier as time progresses, but again make sure you're splitting your classes, because everything in more easily managed in small chunks.
P.S. - Also, if you're not in the medical field, now, then volunteer at a hospital. Most med schools won't even take an application seriously if they don't have at least 100+ hours of volunteer work or experience already. When the average acceptance rate to med school is around 8%, then anything to give you an edge will help tremendously.
Good Luck