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#81
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Lazarus Cooke" wrote in message om... In article , B J Conner wrote: Well that wasn't good, amusing or intellectual - now wonder people report you to your ISP Another drunk irishman with a rhyming dictionary, boring at best. This is the umpteenth piece of abuse from a roffian aimed at someone's nationality. Sadly, I think, all of it has come from Americans, aimed at other nationalities. Here in the U.S. you can tell a lot about the social standing of various ethnic, national, economic, religious and other groups by common reactions to stereotypes and, more particularly, humor based on stereotypes concerning the members of such groups. Swedes and Norwegians (remember Ole and Lena?) are the butt of a lot of jokes in Minnesota.....Finns in Michigan's upper peninsula.....etc. The Irish were an especially large immigrant group who dispersed more widely in the U.S. than most others. Interestingly, the odds are typically very good that persons telling such jokes include the butts among their ancestors. There are exceptions of course. When the common reaction to such humor among the population as a whole is disapproving it's a safe bet that the group in question has not yet "arrived" at social equality. Disparaging jokes about groups lumped together as "Arabic" are common these days. Regardless of the body of evidence suggesting that such are met with near universal approval, this is simply not so. Most of us are a lot more tolerant and thoughtful than the vocal minority make apparent. Every year at about this time, tens of millions of people in America.....a great many more than immigration records would support.....suddenly rediscover (if only for a few days) their Irish roots. The Irish suffered horrible discrimination due to prejudice here during the years of their great diaspora. Today, nobody much gives a ****. Meanwhile, most of those millions find St. Patrick's Day celebrations sufficient reason to go out and get drunk. Whatever. Anyway......Conner......hm......what the hell kinda name is that, anyway? Wolfgang pretzel bender to the stars. "I don't care who calls who a sonofabitch, but I won't stand for anyone calling someone an English sonofabitch or an American sonofabitch." (Ike) Lazarus -- Remover the rock from the email address It would be nother irish or soctch -irush, It doesn't matter unless your overly senstiive. An Irishman walking along the shore notices an old lamp lying among the rocks. He picks it up, rubs the dirt off of it and a genie comes out of the lamp. The genie tells the Irishman he will grant him three wishes. The Irishman says "Well first off, I'd like a bottle of Guiness that never goes dry". "Done" says the genie, and the Irishman is holding a bottle of Guiness. The Irishman promptly drinks it down and watches in delight as it magically fills back up. Again he drinks it down and watches it fill up. A third time he drinks it down, and by now the genie is becoming impatient. "So what do you want for your other two wishes"? askes the irritated genie. "Oh", replies the Irishman, "Just give me another two bottles like this one". IT must m |
#82
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Lat705" wrote in message ... She, surprised, responded that she had finished that in her freshman year. High School? It's been a lot of years since I read that anecdote. I can't be certain, but I don't think that question was answered. At any rate, I'd venture to guess that Mr. Einstein was more surprised and impressed by being in the presence of such a prodigy than either Myron or Ken would be. Possibly so, however I had heard it that Mr. Einstein stated that he studied Physics. In any case, a quick google search didn't verify it. In the version I read it was most definitely algebra. That is specifically why I remembered it and, I think, an important consideration in the point of the anecdote......the co-ed, the reader is left to suppose, was vapid, and Einstein was being wry. This works well with something as mundane and accessible to EVERYONE as algebra, but is a bit more abstruse when something as formidable (in the public eye) as physics is substituted. Not to put too fine a point on it, but I think your reaction and Ken's bear this out. Also present (perhaps....and however subtle) is the suggestion that the great man himself saw algebra as something worthy of a lifetime of study even by one so presumably well versed in the subject as he himself must surely have been.....a position probably shared by many professional mathemeticians if not, necessarily, by math teachers and free lance writers. Moreover, many thousands of high school and college freshmen (as well as your humble narrator) consider algebra to be as worthy and formidable as anything they wish to encounter, not excluding composition, physical education, civics, philosophy or logic. Meanwhile, in my 13 year career as a math teacher, I have only encountered two students astute enough to have completed Advanced Algebra in or before their freshman year (in high school), The Einstein story, as I read it, made no mention of what level of algebra either of the principals was working on. The reader is left to surmise that they weren't quite talking about the same critter......or that's the impression I came away with, anyway. and neither of them was particularly impressive. It has been my experience that teachers of mathematics more than any other subject tend to be confounded by the notion that students have not mastered the course material by the time they show up for the first session. A bit arrogant and pretentious was more like it. There's a lot of that going around, I hear. Wolfgang so, snake, how's about them lit courses? |
#83
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Everyone missed the obvious. 0%. If you have three socks, you don't have a pair. Uh, uh. I've got a male Hershey bar. Give me four dollars, a red sock, a ticket to Portland, a female Hershey bar, a green sock, another male Hershey bar, two more green socks, all the amputated letters in the state of Florida, a battle cry, a digital camera, and I've STILL got a male Hershey bar. Go further, and give me all the male Hershey bars in the world, and......SURPRISE!.....I've STILL got a male Hershey bar. Yeah, but theres that old 'inclusive, exclusive' defintion going on. Or are you proposing that two pairs of threes doesn't beat three of a kind, since its only two pairs.... --riverman (could be a bluff, though) |
#84
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Everyone missed the obvious. 0%. If you have three socks, you don't have a pair. Uh, uh. I've got a male Hershey bar. Give me four dollars, a red sock, a ticket to Portland, a female Hershey bar, a green sock, another male Hershey bar, two more green socks, all the amputated letters in the state of Florida, a battle cry, a digital camera, and I've STILL got a male Hershey bar. Go further, and give me all the male Hershey bars in the world, and......SURPRISE!.....I've STILL got a male Hershey bar. Yeah, but theres that old 'inclusive, exclusive' defintion going on. Or are you proposing that two pairs of threes doesn't beat three of a kind, since its only two pairs.... --riverman (could be a bluff, though) Call. I got a pair of socks......and a sock. You? Wolfgang |
#85
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Nowadays how can you tell? How many people do you know with "Scot" as a
first name taht are not Scotish? Lou T Given names? Most likely all of them. -- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 Drowning flies to Dark Star http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
#86
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "riverman" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Lat705" wrote in message ... She, surprised, responded that she had finished that in her freshman year. High School? It's been a lot of years since I read that anecdote. I can't be certain, but I don't think that question was answered. At any rate, I'd venture to guess that Mr. Einstein was more surprised and impressed by being in the presence of such a prodigy than either Myron or Ken would be. Possibly so, however I had heard it that Mr. Einstein stated that he studied Physics. In any case, a quick google search didn't verify it. In the version I read it was most definitely algebra. That is specifically why I remembered it and, I think, an important consideration in the point of the anecdote......the co-ed, the reader is left to suppose, was vapid, and Einstein was being wry. This works well with something as mundane and accessible to EVERYONE as algebra, but is a bit more abstruse when something as formidable (in the public eye) as physics is substituted. Not to put too fine a point on it, but I think your reaction and Ken's bear this out. Also present (perhaps....and however subtle) is the suggestion that the great man himself saw algebra as something worthy of a lifetime of study even by one so presumably well versed in the subject as he himself must surely have been.....a position probably shared by many professional mathemeticians if not, necessarily, by math teachers and free lance writers. Moreover, many thousands of high school and college freshmen (as well as your humble narrator) consider algebra to be as worthy and formidable as anything they wish to encounter, not excluding composition, physical education, civics, philosophy or logic. Meanwhile, in my 13 year career as a math teacher, I have only encountered two students astute enough to have completed Advanced Algebra in or before their freshman year (in high school), The Einstein story, as I read it, made no mention of what level of algebra either of the principals was working on. The reader is left to surmise that they weren't quite talking about the same critter......or that's the impression I came away with, anyway. and neither of them was particularly impressive. It has been my experience that teachers of mathematics more than any other subject tend to be confounded by the notion that students have not mastered the course material by the time they show up for the first session. A bit arrogant and pretentious was more like it. There's a lot of that going around, I hear. Wolfgang so, snake, how's about them lit courses? i'm kickin their ass! "A"s on all my papers - special bibliography projects included ;-) Snake- thanks for askin |
#87
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i'm kickin their ass! "A"s on all my papers -
special bibliography projects included ;-) In the 70's and early 80's, if you were in a school that graded on the curve and you walked into a class that was full of asians, many folks would bail. The asians were kicking everyones butt (damn, doncha hate those folks with a work ethic?). Now a days, same curve but you have to watch out for those adults returning to school. They're not there to party, 'cause they know that their future depends on what they can learn. -- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply |
#88
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![]() Wolfgang wrote: Call. I got a pair of socks......and a sock. You? hmmm... knew i shoulda kept those socks. jeff |
#89
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Wolfgang:
Don't look now, Sparky, Sparky? Barney Google's horse or perhaps some radio operator from your Coast Guard days? Pretty much the only comic strips or books I ever gave much consideration to originated behind the green door in a place called "The Shack." That'd allow you one from each of six columns if you bring a Dragon Lady to dinner. you haven't got a clue Mr. Green, in the library, with the lead pipe. Were you, perhaps, looking for Mr. Goodbar? Nope, I prefer almonds. OK, since repetition can be instructive.......I'm going to assume that you had a point. Would you like to share it with the rest of us? No! This is a thread at least touching on things mathematical. Go figure! -- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 Drowning flies to Dark Star http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
#90
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![]() "slenon" wrote in message m... ...This is a thread at least touching on things mathematical... From the moment you stepped in through that door, I just KNEW we were going to have fun together! ![]() Wolfgang whew! |
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