![]() |
Odd News... November 2010
Quote:
As long as I sue him in NY, that is... |
Re: Odd News... November 2010
A feel-good story for you...
Quote:
|
Re: Odd News... November 2010
One of the early cases you study in torts class is one regarding the general legal rule that parents are liable for the torts of their children. The question of whether or not this 4 year old acted recklessly will be ultimately decided by the jurors of course. But, yes, these cases can and do go forward.
And, no, you can't go back a sue Billy Badboy for punching you in the nose in grade school -- tort cases are subject to a statute of limitations. So, quite literally, you are S.O.L. :p |
Re: Odd News... November 2010
Snot outta luck, TL? :D
In any case, here's another one: Quote:
If any IWer gets the job, please toss a couple of yen towards the IW coffers, wouldja? Ya don't want Choc headin' over there ta git some catnip... |
Re: Odd News... November 2010
Reported on Fox News...
Quote:
|
Re: Odd News... November 2010
Man Implants Camera in His Head
http://www.switched.com/2010/11/17/w...c3_lnk1|184808 Within the next few weeks, a man named Wafaa Bilal will undergo surgery on his head -- not to address any neurological malady or troublesome tumor, but to implant a small camera on the back of his noggin. Bilal, a new media artist and assistant professor at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, is going through the procedure as part of a project called 'The Third I.' For one year, the Iraqi professor's thumbnail-sized, implanted camera will capture images at one-minute intervals. These images will then be live-streamed to monitors at a new modern art museum in Qatar, which commissioned the project. According to the museum, known as Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, the work is intended to be "a comment on the inaccessibility of time, and the inability to capture memory and experience." Some, however, are worried that Bilal's constantly clicking camera may violate the privacy of those it captures. Bilal, who is currently teaching three courses this semester, initially intended to keep his camera on at all times -- even when he's in the classroom, or interacting with students during office hours. The proposal didn't sit too well with some of his colleagues. "Obviously, you don't want students to be under the burden of constant surveillance," says Fred Ritchin, associate chairman of the photography and imaging department at Tisch. "It's not a good teaching environment." Following lengthy discussions with NYU faculty, Bilal agreed to put a lens cap on the camera while on campus property, and informed all of his students of his new project. When he's not at work, though, Bilal's free to capture anything and everything around him -- which may, of course, give rise to even more awkward interpersonal dynamics. As Ritchin points out, "I guess anybody accepting a dinner invitation will have to realize that certain things will be going on." |
Re: Odd News... November 2010
..get one more in here,
2 Killed in Funeral Home Shooting http://www.aolnews.com/crime/article...c4_lnk2|187306 Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:25 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©2024 Ironworks Gaming & ©2024 The Great Escape Studios TM - All Rights Reserved