Feb. 5th, 2003

asheris: (smile)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
In ancient Rome, it was compulsory for everyone to learn how to gamble and throw dice from a young age. The ancient Greek legal system made it a criminal offense to remain sober during the yearly festival of Dionysus. In this tradition, I'm issuing the following mandate: By order of cosmic law, you must enjoy sexual pleasure in abundance during the coming week. Two corollaries: Your quest for erotic joy must be free of compulsive behavior. You must use all your Libran ingenuity to carry out your assignment with a spirit of love, fun, and generosity.


Oh, great, hit me with a week when I may not get a chance to see The Guy at all...
asheris: (Default)
Some people need to get a clue. Ellen Goodman has a column about a biology professor who is being sued- for not writing a recommendation for a future medical student who doesn't believe in evolution. The former student is claiming that the professor was discriminating against him on the basis of religion.


Mind, the student never even asked for the recommendation- he dropped out of the prof's class early in the term when he found out that the three criteria for getting a recommendation for med school from that professor included getting an A in the class, being known reasonably well by the prof (not just a face in the class), and "truthfully and forthrightly affirm(ing) a scientific answer" to the question: "How do you think the human species originated?"

How utterly screwed up.

Recommendations aren't "owed" to you, and it's at the professor's discretion whether they'll write one. If a professor believes you should have a basic belief in scientific criteria in order for him to recommend you for med school, that's his right. (And perfectly reasonable, IMO.)

The guy drops out of the biology class, takes bio at another college (not even another section at the same school!) and gets a med school recommendation, then comes back to sue.

This doesn't sound like anyone I'd want as my doctor. I like doctors who believe in basic, proven scientific principles.

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