Monthly Archives: December 2011

How Much is a Finger Worth?

How much a finger is worth depends, of course, on whether the finger is yours or mine. To me it’s priceless. To you, if you make table saws, it’s worth whatever the insurance companies, courts, and juries decide your liability … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Slavery by Another Name

From the time of the Civil War until almost the beginning of World War II, long after slavery had been abolished in our country, thousands of black men, perhaps as many as 200,000 altogether over the years, were routinely arrested … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Can you argue about what day it is?

Samoa’s recent decision to jump across the International Dateline reminds us that man, not nature, makes these rules about what day and time it is. In an effort to do more business with Australia and New Zealand, Samoa decided that … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Assignment: Preview Survey

That professors can require their students to complete assignments even before class begins is not well known. But now you know! 🙂 Please follow the link to a preview survey that will tell me a bit about your goals and … Continue reading

Posted in Assignments, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Room Change Very Important

Hello, Comp 2 Students. More specifically, Hello: Marty Bell Nana Cao Tabitha Corrao Jalen Gibson Jonathan Gonzoph Dale Hamstra Ally Hodgson Cassie Hoffman Evan Horner Edward Jahn Brett Lang David Lebron Aime Lonsdorf Joe Mleczko Jonathan Otero Ashley Petit de … Continue reading

Posted in Professor Posts | 4 Comments

Not Quite the Spirit of the Season

Greek Orthodox and Armenian priests and monks came to blows during preparations for Orthodox Christmas celebrations at Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity. Scuffles break out often at the church where Christians believe Jesus was born, when rival groups of clerics … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, Professor Posts | Leave a comment