Tuesday, December 29, 2009

TSA's New Security Guidelines Make Us All Safer

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On Dec. 25, 2009 (a date that was of apparent significance to a few billion people around the world), a Nigerian national, evidently trained in London by Al Qaeda operatives and who had travelled from Yemen, boarded Northwest Airlines Flight 253 in Amsterdam, set off a device over U.S. airspace while the plane was en route to Detroit, and was subdued by passengers and crew, who clearly had paid attention to the well-worded Homeland Security warnings on buses and subways about being alert to suspicious behavior.

As a result of this incident, the Transportation Security Administration ("TSA"), has worked with airline and law enforcement authorities, as well as federal, state, local, and international partners to put additional security measures in place to ensure aviation security remains robust. Passengers traveling domestically and internationally to and from U.S. destinations may notice additional screening measures, as follows:

1. Passengers traveling on international flights should plan to arrive at the airport at least 2 days prior to their scheduled departure time. Passengers should bring cots on wheels so that they can make slow, but steady progress sleep-wheeling themselves through the security lines.

2. No cots (with or without wheels) will be allowed through the security checkpoint. Passengers will have to surrender these items to the screeners.

3. Passengers unable to arrive at the airport at least 2 days prior to their scheduled departure time should plan to arrive at least 3 days prior to their scheduled departure time.

4. Passengers will no longer be allowed to tape explosives to their legs or stuff them in their underwear because of the lack of equipment or competent screeners at the Amsterdam airport to detect such items.

5. While passengers will still be allowed to bring liquids on board, each passenger will be limited to a quarter of an ounce of liquid or approximately one eyedropper-full per liquid. Additionally, the following liquids are now prohibited on all flights: vinegar, boiled-down bullion cubes, anything pumpkin-flavored, and the gel that gefilte fish floats in in glass jars.

6. Passengers will no longer be able to board aircraft wearing pants or shoes.

7. While on board the aircraft, passengers may not look to the right nor to the left, but must stare straight ahead for the duration of the flight.

8. Passengers must not speak. (Passengers may hum quietly to themselves, but not the theme from "Riverdance" or anything by Neil Diamond).

9. Only one out of 5 passengers (those seated in the aft [poop deck] section of the plane, will be allowed to use the lavatories. [These restrictions will not apply to First Class passengers, where one out of two will be allowed to use the lavatories].

10. No passenger will be permitted to remain in the lavatory longer than 3 minutes. Lavatory monitors will be stationed throughout the aircraft to enforce these rules. They will be easily identified by their uniforms of wife-beater t-shirts and 3-day growths of beard. At the 2 minute, 30 mark, the lavatory monitors will pound on the doors and shout: "Are you writing a novel in there?"

11. Airlines will still serve beverages on flight, but each passenger will be limited to an eye-dropper-size beverage. Moxie will no longer be permitted on trans-Atlantic flights (except for those originating in Maine).

12. Passengers will be limited to one carry-on item -- no exceptions. The carry-on item must fit securely inside the earlobe of a six-day old child. Items exceeding this size requirement will be routed to other destinations as far away from the passenger's final destination as is possible.

13. Use of electronic items on board, such as blenders, paper shredders, and hedge clippers, will not be allowed.

14. Passengers will no longer be able to recline in their seats, as doing so may interfere with their ability to stare straight ahead, which FAA directive goes into effect immediately.

15. No sleeping will be allowed on any flight. Consequently, passengers will no longer be able to use pillows or blankets on board. While seated, passengers must keep their hands folded neatly in their lap.

There will be some inconvenience as these measures are implemented. The TSA expects that the flying public understands that these rules are necessary to protect them and to safeguard their civil rights and liberties. The TSA and the Department of Homeland Security are confident that these new safeguards will prevent the types of incidents such as that which occurred on December 25, 2009. While that episode revealed an obvious crack in the system, it can never recur now that no one can bring saline solution on board an airplane (even if, as Homeland Security Director Janet Napolitano cleverly pointed out -- they are on a terrorism watch list, purchase a one-way ticket with cash and check no luggage). Moreover, the U.S. State Department has directed all embassy and consular staff around the world to transmit the news to Washington within 3 months of learning from a person's parents that their son is a Jihadist bent on wreaking as much havoc as possible.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Websites So Hot, You'll Need an Oven Mit

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Fresh Step Kitty Litter

http://www.freshstep.com/faq.php

Has an extensive FAQ section and a photo of a kitty looking guilty.

Glad ForceFlex® (garbage bags)

http://www.glad.com/trashbags/forceflex.php?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=glad+garbage+bags&utm_campaign=SEM-NonBrand

Printable $1.00 off coupon (one of the best in the industry) plus "Fun and Games" and a "Media Room."

Roto Rooter

http://www.rotorooter.com/

Testimonials, a newsletter, and so much more! You can choose "Jingle On" or "Jingle Off." When I'm watching my favorite shows, I choose "jingle off," but at other times, I really crank up the volume. I like to play it over and over. "Away go troubles down the drain!" Now available as a dance mix!

Dr. Scholl's® Freeze Away®

http://www.drscholls.com/drscholls/freezeawaygateway/index.jsp?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=wart%2Bremover&utm_campaign=treatments&gclid=CISNi6zR954CFZAN5Qod9mYjZw

The truth: Warts 'n all! (Contains an exciting video!). Look closely at the bottom of the page; here's the payoff: "The graphics depicted herein constitute trademarks of Schering Corporation." You'll never hear a line like that in a Bogart movie, that's for sure!

Ex-Lax

http://www.ex-lax.com/

Let the good times roll! Has an excellent legal disclaimer, a site map, and a guarantee. Sadly, not yet available en Español.

Tide: Find a Stain Solution

http://www.tide.com/en-US/stains/top-stains.jspx?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=stain%2Bremovers&utm_campaign=Category_(Stain)%2BStain%2BTypes%2B&gclid=CODnif3V954CFU1M5Qod1XNWLA

In a creative reworking of the "Ten Plagues" from the the Passover Haggadah, (the Tide® version -- not to be confused with the Maxwell House Coffee version), we learn all about not just blood, but also, sweat, ink, lipstick, dirt, ketchup, salsa, wax, fruit juice, and grass. Cattle disease, vermin, and boils are strangely absent, but, the time honored "poop" is there in all its splendor. Be sure to participate in the survey.

Lipitor

http://www.lipitor.com/about-lipitor/benefits.aspx?source=google&HBX_PK=s_lipitor&HBX_OU=50&o=23127370|166376222|0

In the dark days, before cholesterol was invented, there was a dearth of Internet singsong that reminded us: "Common side effects are diarrhea, upset stomach, muscle and joint pain, and changes in some blood tests." In the annals of artery-flushing, this was one of the first, and it's still among the best. The site includes the random: LPU01292L1 in the bottom right of the home page. It is believed that no other site contains this mysterious combination.

d-Con

http://www.d-conproducts.com/diagnose.html

Talk about Rodents 101! Here, you'll learn all about droppings, footprints, gnawing, rubmarks, unusual pet activity, sounds, and burrows or nests. If the silhouettes of rat shit don't set you up for a pleasant night's sleep, the sounds of mice chewing through the wiring in the walls probably will.

Arm and Hammer

http://www.armhammer.com/

The best thing about this site is the animation of food rotting in the refrigerator replete with rising smell vapors. That's right, you can simultaneously smell AND see the decomposition. Why wasn't this mentioned in "An Inconvenient Truth"? Probably an oversight. Please be sure to visit A&H's User Agreement. And tell 'em I sent you.

The CBO (The Congressional Budget Office)

http://www.cbo.gov/

Who doesn't get all hot and bothered by a dynamic bar graph? But wait, there's more: With features like: "Percentage of Estates That Have Been Taxable, 1943 to 2006," "Correction Regarding the Longer-Term Effects of the Manager's Amendment to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act," and "An Analysis of the President's Budgetary Proposals for Fiscal Year 2010," you'll never troll the Web for porn again.

524 CMR: Board of Elevator Regulations

http://www.lawlib.state.ma.us/source/mass/cmr/524cmr.html

Nothing will make you long for the Website of the Congressional Budget Office quite like this subdivision of the Code of Massachusetts Regulations. Protective eyeware recommended. Although the CMRs do have a search facility, no amount of finagling will return the result: Lady Gaga.

The Broken Door Stop Blog

http://www.thebrokendoorstopblogspot.biz

Still under construction, but looking forward to the competition. Bring it on.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

MOST NOTABLE MOMENTS OF THE LAST TEN MINUTES

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Year-end reviews are hackneyed. Thus, a somewhat less ambitious look back:

9:45 P.M.: The Anti-Defamation League telephones for its annual shakedown. I wouldn't have answered the phone, but they bypass my usual screening methods by using a fake caller I.D. The fundraiser laughs off my outrage by guilt-tripping me into a commitment for $180. "Don't worry, we're not going to let you off the hook and we'll always know how to find you," she threatens.

9:46 P.M.: During the time I am distracted by my Herculean efforts to get the A.D.L. off the phone, a pot of chicken soup boils over and short circuits a burner on the stove.

9:47 P.M.: The smoke alarm goes off.

9:49 P.M.: Jamming a burnt chicken bone down the garbage disposal turns out to be a-less-than-optimal method of disposing of it.

9:50 P.M.: Despite 4 cans of food piled up in his dish, the cat won't shut up. I put him out.

9:51 P.M.: The smoke alarm is still going off. In search of a hammer, I pull a drawer all the way out and it crashes to the floor revealing a long-lost and highly-treasured Chinese/Lichtensteinian (but mostly Chinese) take-out menu, and also the hammer. Cutting corners by throwing the hammer at the smoke detector instead of standing on a chair to reach it has a predictable result, but I'm pretty a sure a competent person can repair the dent in the ceiling. The vase, however is a goner.

9:52 P.M.: The cat, who obviously never really wanted to go out, is on the patio peering in with his face pressed pathetically against the sliding glass door. I can't hear him, but I can see his silent desperate meows; he is crying frantically, demanding to be readmitted. I open the door and he starts to enter, but is stunned by the piercing shriek of the smoke alarm. He pauses on the threshhold unable to make up his mind. Because it is freezing, I demand that he make a decision, which he refuses to do, so I nudge him with my foot. Naturally, he isn't quick enough, and I close the door on his tail.

9:53 P.M.: The phone rings. It's the Policeman's Benevolent Association reminding me that the pledge I made 9 months ago remains unfunded. So taken aback by the insulting tone of the recorded message, I almost don't notice that the Policeman's Benevolent Association has also resorted to using a fake caller I.D. The cat breaks free.

9:54 P.M.: I realize that the pounding on the front door and the annoying voice that has been ringing in my ears for the past 5 minutes is not, in fact, a daydream, but is an actual Greenpeace indentured servant hollering about global warming. I squint through the peephole waiting for him to give up. As he turns to leave, he slips on the ice on the front walk, which reminds me that it would have been preferable not to allow the home owner's policy to lapse.

9:55 P.M. The power fails and all the lights go out. As Chet Baker so artfully reminds us to do, I look for the silver lining and find it in the discovery that the smoke alarm has, at long last, stopped going off.

Monday, December 21, 2009

The War on Santeria

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Political Correctness? You be the judge. Here are the facts: American retailers increasingly default to the bland and meaningless "Happy Holidays." Why? They don't care about us.

Don't believe it? Try this little experiment. Go to Sears and buy a snowblower. And while they're gift-wrapping it, the first thing they'll say is: "You know, most people don't get snowblowers gift-wrapped because they're too huge and it's incredibly impractical and a waste of paper and kind of taking advantage of our free gift wrap policy." And the second thing they'll say is: "Thank you for shopping at Sears" [After you pay-- not before!]. And the third thing they'll say is: "Happy Holidays." That's it.

Not: "You're the man babalorisha." Not: "You go, you priest of Ifá." Not: "Have a very pleasant Lukumi ritual." None of these. Just "Happy Holidays."

But it's not just Sears. Take Wal-Mart, for example. Go there and buy some rifles and some bullets, and a few hatchets and hunting knives and something to club seals with and a Jonas Brothers CD, and while you're at the checkout counter, after they say: "Having a little party? Ha, ha, ha." They'll say "Thank you for shopping at Wal-Mart and Happy Holidays," but not: "Thank you for shopping at Wal-Mart, and may you be like the diviners of the Orishas." God forbid!

Or if that doesn't convince you, go to Jos. A Bank and buy one suit and a SECOND ONE FOR HALF PRICE! (Results reproduced at Gentleman's Warehouse proving their scientific validity). And after they say: "The sales price doesn't include alterations which are $75 extra, and it doesn't include these cuff links, which are the only things that go with it ($65), and it doesn't include these suspenders ($25), and it doesn't include these fake Brooks Brothers shopping bags which we sell so that your friends don't think you're so cheap that you get all your suits at Jos. A Bank," they will be certain to say: "Happy Holidays." Try getting them to say: "Go in peace, Father Who Knows the Secrets." But don't hold your breath or you will die.

Not convinced? OK. Go to Valvoline, and after they say: "the next time, you shouldn't drive your car for 13,000 miles on bald tires before you get the oil changed, because that's not good for it," and then after they say: "Do you have any coupons today? No? It's OK to throw out the coupons from Fortune Panda, but the Valvoline coupons are valuable," and then after they say: "Turn the wheel to the right. To the RIGHT! The RIGHT! THE RIGHT!!!Ok, back it up. Whoa! Stop. STOP! STOP! Can't you hear me? OK. Now come forward SLOWLY and turn it to the Right. NO, THAT'S THE LEFT! Ok. There you go. That's it. OK, you're good," and then after they say "Thank you for coming to Valvoline," they'll say Have a nice day and Happy Holidays." They'll never say: "Hope you receive Orunmila soon."

What's this all about? There's only one word for it: C-O-N-S-P-I-R-A-C-Y-T-H-E-O-R-Y-M-O-S-T-L-I-K-E-L-Y.

What's the solution? Fight back. The next time some store clerk wishes you "Happy Holidays," respond with: "Sure thing, Babalu." Atheists hate that.

[Note: No animals were harmed in the creation of this post].

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Breakthrough in the Treatment of ALDD

Roberta E. Illiot, M.D., chief resident of Neurosurgery at NYCCU Lasagna Medical Center, has presented results of the study entitled, "Group A Placebos Out-Perform Groups B, C and RS in Treatment of Adult Logic Deficiency Disorder." The study was designed to analyze the efficacy and safety of certain placebos in a large series of consecutive adults diagnosed with Type A Logic Deficiency Disorder (also known as "Common Sense Disorder").

Dr. Illiott and her colleagues at NYCCU Lasagna Medical Center conducted a retrospective review of 507 consecutive patients with Adult Logic Deficiency Disorder who ingested a total of 772,000 placebos between November 1997 and April 2009. Outcome analysis was performed on 436 patients from a Control Group (Group A), a test group (Group B), another test group (Group C) and a random sample (Group RS) who, thrice daily, ingested placebos composed chiefly of marzipan, M&Ms, and Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, and who had at least one year of follow-up since date of last ingestion. Duration of the Placebo Therapy ranged from one week to 11.35 years, with the patients who lasted for the entire 11.35 years either being incredibly slow to catch on, or (as Dr. Illiot speculates) having become "addicted" to one or two of the key ingredients in the placebo.

The results showed that a more than 50 percent reduction in logic deficiency occurred in 64.6 percent of patients, and 42.1 percent of patients experienced more than a 70 percent reduction in logic deficiency. 79 percent of patients who experienced more than a 70 percent reduction were 87 percent less likely to exhibit characteristics simpatico with 23 per cent of patients who had demonstrated a 73 per cent likelihood of recidivism (i.e., extra-curricular placebo ingestion) in 98 percent of documented cases. Patients who had exhibited a near total blockage of common sense had similar outcomes to those who did not have prior therapy. In a statistically significant number of patients (all), patients who demonstrated a reduction in logic deficiency through rigorous adherence to the placebo dosage exhibited a concomitant weight gain.

Across the board, patients in Group A had strikingly better results than patients in all other groups. This outcome varied 0 percent of the time, despite the fact that each patient received exactly the same placebo under identical conditions for the duration of the study. Dr. Illiot conceded that, in a study devoid of variables, there is no empirical value to segregating patients by group. She concluded, however, that an unintended benefit of the study was that it offered irrefutable proof that persons tapped for medical studies should, where possible, always opt to participate in Group "A."

"Our study, reviewing more than 700 consecutive Placebo Therapy case studies, further confirms the safety and efficacy of placebos for ALDD," said Dr. Illiot. "Patients evaluated in this study varied in age, common sense lapses and treatment histories. The vast majority of patients saw significant improvements in their decision-making ability. One notable exception, of course, was in connection with a common symptom of ALDD known as Line-Shifting Syndrome ("LSS"). Patients suffering ALDD usually exhibit symptoms of LSS at the supermarket or the EZ Pass/Fast Lane tollbooths. The results of LSS-induced decisions prove consistently to be disastrous. Medical science will probably never find a cure for LSS. Otherwise, Placebo Therapy continues to be an effective way to treat ALDD while possibly improving the quality-of-life for patients," said Dr. Illiot.

"Dr. Illiott's study reaffirms the safety, efficacy and quality-of-life benefits of  Placebo therapy for ALDD," said Gim E. Moore, president and CEO of Tasty Placebos, LLC (which contributed the placebos to the study). "Worldwide, more than 95,000,000 patients with ALDD have received our placebos, and a significant majority of these patients are consistently opting to continue treatment, which is evidenced by an initial reingestion rate of 98 percent, practically outpacing our ability to keep up with demand. These findings further establish Placebo Therapy as the best option for patients with ALDD who are not candidates for any other type of therapy or who have refused to cooperate with other therapies, such as those approved by insurance companies and the FDA."

Tasty Placebos, LLC provided 100% of the funding for the Placebo Therapy Study, peer reviewed it, and published the findings in major medical journals.

About Tasty Placebos, LLC and Placebo Therapy(®)

Tasty Placebos, LLC (Nasdaq: TPYUMYUM-x) is a medical placebo company with core expertise in M.D. neuromanipulation. The company developed and markets the Placebo Therapy System, which is kid-tested and mother-approved for the treatments of ALDD and treatment-resistant LSS. The Placebo Therapy System delivers a pleasant sensation to the anterior dorsum and into the oropharynx by way of the soft palate, upper esophagus and epiglottis.

Tasty Placebos, LLC markets the Placebo Therapy System in selected vending machines worldwide.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Selamat Hari Jadi, Abang

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Once upon a time (in 1969 to be precise), before many of you were born, my older brother was on his way between Syracuse (the one in New York, not the the Greek one on Sicily) and Kuala Lumpur (where my family was living at the time). Mapquest hadn't been invented yet, so he took a wrong turn and ended up in Nepal for a spell. While he was there, he purchased little trinkets for his brothers and sisters (of whom I was one, and still am!) and a little something for himself (Little prayer flags? A Sherpa's cloak? I don't-know-what little pastries? I'm not going to speculate that it was ganja -- I don't even know what ganja is -- or how to spell it -- or what it does -- or anything like that).

For me, he purchased a thin, lightweight little brass calendar. It was made of brass because it had a little wheel with a tiny handle welded onto the front constructed with little cut-outs or windows that the user could turn to advance the names of the months, which were actually hand-painted on the stationary part of the calendar that attached to the back of the wheel. When the wheel moved to a new month, the correct date appeared in the window. And it had a thin little pole in the back that acted as a stand so that the calendar could rest on top of a flat horizontal surface, such as a desk (hence the name: "brass desk calendar which rests upon a flat horizontal surface, such as a desk").

But this was no ordinary calendar. For not only could the user advance the names of the months by turning the wheel, but also the years, because the enumeration of the years -- 40 of them -- were also painted on the stationary part behind the wheel. In this way, the user could have a calendar that lasted from the beginning of 1969 to the end of 2009 in the Gregorian System. And those Nepalese were so ingenious that they calculated the placement of the hand-painted months and years and the alignment of the windows such that the calendar was always accurate -- even in leap years. (Certain months were painted in red for leap years. Can you guess which ones?)

As a lad of 10 (which was my approximate age upon receipt of the calendar), I couldn't conceive of a swath of time as vast as 40 years. Mostly, my concept of time was measured by the distance between meals (and come to think of it, still is). I certainly couldn't believe that anything I would ever own could ever have a use for a span that was four times my then age. The farthest into the future I could see at that time was almost unimaginable age of 20, when I would be a world-famous bell bottom-adorned hippie. Moreover, I couldn't fathom being able to hold on to something for 40 years, let alone 1.

And yet, I held on to it -- through Woodstock and the first Moon landing, the White Album, Watergate, the end of the War in Vietnam, Jaws, the U.S. Bicentennial, the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, my ever-so-brief stint as a world-famous hippie, the Iranian Revolution, E.T., the fast-paced but kinda fun invasion of Grenada, marriage, two children, enough nieces and nephews to form a political party, or at the very least -- a minyan, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the liberation and election of Nelson Mandela, the fall and rise of Times Square, Operation Desert Storm, Schindler's List, the Y2K hoax, the Euro, (my being recognized as the 1 millionth visitor to any number of websites -- amazing!), the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Operation Enduring Freedom, Riverdance, the improbable Red Sox World Series victories, the supplanting of insta-messaging by texting, the elimination of the possessive apostrophe from most American forms of written English, Aung San Suu Kyi's Nobel peace prize and house arrest, the Sopranos, the Wire, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Mad Men, Rocky VI, Star Wars XVI, same-sex marriage, same-sex divorce, the death of Julia Child, a sighting of J.D. Salinger, the retirement of Castro, the appointment of Castro, the election of Barack Obama, the demise of The Guiding Light, Leonard Cohen's next-to-last World Tour concert (sort of), the elevation of China to the position of World's largest emitter of greenhouse gasses, the Iranian Revolution, and the revision of the Facebook privacy policy.

In just a short while, the calendar will be retired as 2009 comes to a close. And so, Dear Brother, I will hazard a guess that that stash of Nepalese Ganja you purchased 40 long years ago has gotten mighty slim. It's time for you to replenish it by taking another trip to Nepal (not on Eastern or TWA or BOAC or Pan Am, mind you -- for, though the calendar and we are still here, they are not).

And while you're there, would you be so kind as to pick me up another brass desk calendar? One good for another 40 or 50 years or so should do the trick.

Thanks. And Happy Birthday.

P.S. What's for dinner?

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Karl Marx's Third Grade Report Card

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Report of Scholastic Record for Year Ending 1824

Grade 3

Trier Public Elementary School

Trier, Kingdom of Prussia

Student: Marx, Karl

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Social Studies: (Mr. Engels)

Teacher Comments:

Karl is a bright little boy who plunges into the subject with gusto and enthusiasm. He is extremely verbose, however, and when asked to give a book report about the Queen of Prussia, instead of making a diorama out of a shoebox like the rest of his classmates, launched into a didactic harangue about how asinine and stupid the bourgeoisie are and how much he wants to hang them by their thumbs and kick them. He is a little disturbed and hypersensitive about ownership. Once, when it came time to clean the slate board erasers, he organized a general strike of the other third graders until the school janitor agreed to open the windows to let a little oxygen into the room (his chief "demand"), and the students were allowed to each claim a pro rata stake in the chalk. For this, he was idolized by some of the more dim-witted boys, which Karl used to maximum advantage in regards seating arrangements and sharing of lunchbox items. Karl is particularly adept at sharing the lunchbox items of others.

Grade: B-


Citizenship: (Mr. Hegel)

Teacher Comments:

Karl is hopelessly lost and is easily distracted by his neighbors in class. He seems bored and listless. I saw no evidence that he grasped the material. I fear he is doomed to repeat it.


Grade: D-


Science: (Mr. Nietzsche)

Teacher Comments:

Karl is a curious young man with prodigious powers of observation. His occasional exuberance is grating, however, and he needs to concentrate on his limitations, discard the mythology of "goodness" that the other teachers sometimes stuff into his head, and accept the random cruelty of the natural order. Then he will make quite a talented young scientist, his deeply flawed demonstration about the sexual habits of chiggers notwithstanding.


Grade: C+


Mathematics: (Mr. Einstein)

Teacher Comments:

Karl has an almost robotic knack for adding two and two and arriving at a sum of five. Although he tackles certain problems with aplomb, including those involving sets and subsets by counting, comparing, ordering, and so on, he is something of a dunce at simple arithmetic. Whilst even at this formative age he has claimed an interest in one day working as a bank teller or as an economist, God help us all should that ever come to pass. I recommend that he consider the Prussian People's Vocational School. One day, I am certain, he will make a very fine bicycle mechanic.


Grade: D



German Language and Literature: (Mr. Goethe)

Master Marx has a passable command of German grammar and syntax. He tends to write in impossibly long run-on sentences, but, then again, so does everybody in Germany.

Grade: B+


Music: (Mr. Bach)

Master Marx is tone deaf, cannot carry a tune, has no sense of melody, harmony, rhythm, or syncopation, cannot read a note to save his life, and cannot name a single composer, German or otherwise. Other than that, he is a brilliant student.

Grade: F

Physical Fitness: (Mr. Wagner)

Master Marx is sickly and pale and somewhat girlish in his approach to boxing -- which does not bode well for his future as a German Übermensch, a graduation requirement of the State curriculum. The scent of pickled herring and chopped liver is often on his breath and herein lies the problem; he is obviously not getting a sufficient German diet of sauerbraten and bratwurst at home. He has little stamina and is almost always picked last for dodge ball. Next term, I plan to toughen him up by taking him to the gym, putting on boxing gloves, and punching him in the head until he is impervious to pain. This will make a man out of him and will also keep the boxing gloves finely honed.

Grade: C

Checklist

Works and plays well with others Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Prepared: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Punctual: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Respectful of Others: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Respectful of School Property: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Ability to Solve problems: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Participates: Yes/No/Needs Improvement
Appropriately Groomed: Yes/No/Needs Improvement


Overall Grade: D+

Recommended for Advancement to Next Level: Y/N