November 10, 2005

John Roberts to fulfill a year-old commitment to judge a moot court competition.

At Wake Forest University. Remember that the next time you feel like getting out of a commitment on the ground that you're very busy or something came up.

6 comments:

John Thacker said...

Reminds me (in a different way) of how local Chapel Hill Ben Folds Five upheld their agreement to play for free on the last day of classes when I was at Duke University, even though they had gotten nationally famous in the meantime between agreeing and playing.

Ruth Anne Adams said...

"Something suddenly came up" was the theme of a Brady Bunch episode eons ago. Greg gave Marsha that line to get out of an undesireable date. Whew! Good thing Roberts isn't the cad that Greg Brady was!

confirmation word: 'fgcue'
That's periliously close to something bad.

jeff said...

When I was in college, a new "General Science" (he was a Geology PhD) teacher took off for the entirety of dead week. Rather surprising - we finally got the story out of him the next year.

To white water raft the Grand Canyon there is a 10 year or so waiting list. When he'd signed up on it, he was at a school that was on the semester system - and would have been safely into summer vacation by our (quarter system) dead week.

Nobody was going to hold that one against him...

Ann Althouse said...

Jeff: I'd never heard the term "dead week" before.

Ruth Anne Adams said...

wildaboutharrie: every time I see your commenter name, I think "and Harry's wild about me.." Does Brady karma involves Joe Namath hitting Marsha in the nose with a football and Davy Jones taking her to the dance? They're all melding together in my old age.

N8: Can you score me some tickets? I'm right in town.

Kev said...

Sorry, I'm late to the party on this one.

"Jeff: I'd never heard the term "dead week" before."

Really? Is that because UW doesn't have one, or is it called something like "pre-final" week? (I know that there are many places that don't have a "dead week" per se, but rather a couple of "dead days.")

The whole week before final exams at some schools is dedicated strictly to review, and no new material is allowed to be introduced. At my alma mater, we took advantage of the full week to schedule all the various performance exams for the 1600+ music majors that we had, leaving finals week strictly for academic studies. It worked rather well, in my estimation.