Honestly, I don't think I got anything at all out of this talk.
Wow, yeah, that sounds bizarre and kinda awful! I saw your post on FB and thought the title of the talk sounded pretty neat, but what a way to take the title and go crazy with it!
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Honestly, I don't think I got anything at all out of this talk.
Wow, yeah, that sounds bizarre and kinda awful! I saw your post on FB and thought the title of the talk sounded pretty neat, but what a way to take the title and go crazy with it!
The Irish and other waves of immigrants were often treated as subhuman. However, people often say this to argue that their people suffered too, so blacks and other minorities shouldn't get special treatment. The problem with this argument is that second generation Irish were fairly indistinguishable from other white Americans, while blacks couldn't escape their otherness.
The Irish and other waves of immigrants were often treated as subhuman. However, people often say this to argue that their people suffered too, so blacks and other minorities shouldn't get special treatment. The problem with this argument is that second generation Irish were fairly indistinguishable from other white Americans, while blacks couldn't escape their otherness.
YES. Exactly. Thanks, Ginger!
As a friend of mine once said during a discussion comparing gay rights to civil rights "When you walk into a room, no one knows you're gay unless you want them to. I am always black."
... must not make Marcus Bachman joke
I just skipped a few sessions on pedagogical methods for quantitative literacy so that I could go in the whirlpool instead. I think I made the right choice -- my hips feel a lot better, and I think that I'll now be able to sit through some of the later afternoon sessions. Before, I was in too much pain to stay sitting down for more than ten minutes or so.
When I'm sitting on a dining-type chair that's too high for my feet to be flat on the floor, the most comfortable way for me to sit without putting pressure on my hips or back is half-lotus. Pretty much any other way of sitting on a chair like that will leave me in a lot of pain. However, whenever I do this in public, several people will smile at me and say, "I wish I could sit like that." I smile back and nod, but I don't get it. Why do people want to sit like that? What's so appealing about it?
(If I'm barefoot, then I sit crosslegged, but that doesn't work too well when I've got my ankle brace on, because the brace gets in the way, so it's easier to just put the brace foot on top of the other knee.)
I often sit with one foot on my chair. I'm not sure why, it just feels comfortable. If I've been sitting for a while I switch feet.
Buffista Professors: If you saw a full color large size (8.5 X 11) text that would make a good supplemental (not main) text for a class you taught, would a $22 retail price make you reluctant to assign it? In short is $22 high for a college or university student to pay for supplemental text?
$22? That seems supercheap for a textbook.