Great Moments in Campus Signage

It’s that time of year when student groups try to get new members to sign up, leading to all manner of interesting signs around campus. One of my favorites:

Published
Categorized as Pictures

No God Left Behind

Over at Inside Higher Ed, William Durden resorts to satire in response to the Spellings commission report: In the nation’s current zeal to account for all transfer of teaching and insight through quantitative, standardized testing, perhaps we should advance quantitative measurement into other areas of human meaning and definition. Why leave work undone? I suggest,… Continue reading No God Left Behind

Blogger SAT Challenge Revealed!

So, the Blogger SAT Challenge has officially run its course, and Dave has posted the question to Cognitive Daily. I’ll reproduce it below the fold, and make some general comments. What were the results like? We had 500 people at least look at the survey question, and Dave gives the breakdown: The survey required participants… Continue reading Blogger SAT Challenge Revealed!

Published
Categorized as Blogs

Baghdad Update: Rust and Paint

Senior Middle East Correspondant Paul Schemm checks in with another email update from Baghdad, this time describing a visit to a tank graveyard. ———————– It was a graveyard. That was the only way to describe it. The place where old war machines came to die. Row upon row of massive sand-colored metal tanks, their huge… Continue reading Baghdad Update: Rust and Paint

Published
Categorized as War

Free the Tripoli Six

Five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor are currently facing execution in Libya, charged with deliberately infrecting some 400 children with AIDS. An independent scientific study of the matter found that most of the children were infected well before the “Tripoli Six” even entered the country, but the study was dismissed by the court. The… Continue reading Free the Tripoli Six

Published
Categorized as In the News

Chris Mooney, The Republican War on Science

Back in May, the DAMOP keynote address was delivered by a DoE program officer who basically chided scientists for being politically active, in a “you have only yourselves to blame if your funding gets cut” sort of way. Obviously, she hasn’t read The Republican War on Science, or she’d understand why 48 Nobel laureates publically… Continue reading Chris Mooney, The Republican War on Science