Hope Alaska Senator Mark Begich does not find out about the U.S. map painted on
the playground at George Mason Elementary School in Alexandria, Virginia. According to an article in the
Washington Post's Style section of January 22, the Senator's pet peeve is U.S.
maps that ignore or misplace his state. The George Mason map has Alaska, the
nation's largest state as measured by land mass, at about the size of South
Carolina and located just to the south of California.
At least Alaska fared
better than Hawaii, which is no longer in the Pacific Ocean but has been
relocated to the Caribbean.
In defense of the educators at George Mason, perhaps their goal is not
a geography lesson but an attempt to illustrate a component of Quantum Physics
theory, that component being Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle. Still, it's a little disconcerting to think of all the Alexandria urchins who go forth thinking a state with humongous glaciers exists immediately south of California. Maybe they pass it off as just a Sarah Palin thing.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
MORE ON "POSITIVE RESPONSE"
More ED physicians and clinics seem to be guarantying, in radio advertisements, a "positive response" while in the doctor's office. The problem is that the guarantor is usually an earnest clinical-sounding male. Nothing against male ED docs and clinics, but such advertising falls a little flat, if you catch my drift.
A preferable advertisement would feature a sultry female voice, maybe from a Doctor or Nurse with a last name such as Svensen who invites you to call her "Brigitte." She would offer the guaranty thusly:
"I guaranty you a [pause, then uttered with innuendo] positive response while in the office or your money will be refunded. And no one has asked for a refund in a long, long time."
Wouldn't such advertising be a bit more effective?
A preferable advertisement would feature a sultry female voice, maybe from a Doctor or Nurse with a last name such as Svensen who invites you to call her "Brigitte." She would offer the guaranty thusly:
"I guaranty you a [pause, then uttered with innuendo] positive response while in the office or your money will be refunded. And no one has asked for a refund in a long, long time."
Wouldn't such advertising be a bit more effective?
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