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Byline: Lisa Michals
Apr. 15--Ah, summer. School's nearly out, and for many students, summer means more time to pull in a paycheck and save up for that iPod, car or college education. For students working summer jobs, though, that means the drudgery of flipping burgers or manning a cash register, right? OK, that attitude is a problem already, according to Margaret Lobenstine, a life coach and author of "The Renaissance Soul: Life Design for People with Too Many Passions to Pick Just One." "The most important thing is rather than just viewing this as your summer job, you start out by thinking ... what are the things that you genuinely would like to move forward on? What are the interests, the skill developments, the passions that you genuinely would like to do more of?"…