Good luck, Dave!

It's the end of our semester, and there's another transition here: one of our colleagues, Dave Hoppe, is retiring, to our regret but to his happy progress. We all got together for a retirement dinner yesterday, so here's the happy crew, the entire UMM biology discipline.

i-79f21871ee740af2c07b6244f22e9167-biologists.jpg
From left to right: Chris Cole, Tracey Anderson, Margaret Kuchenreuther, Dave Hoppe, PZ Myers, Timna Wyckoff, Pete Wyckoff, Van Gooch

We hope Dave can still drag himself away from his lakefront home to say hello to us all now and then!

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This is the crew I would like to chill with!

By Peter Vaht (not verified) on 16 May 2008 #permalink

What? No blood dripping from your fangs? I thought you biology types were bad-ass baby giraffe eaters....

By Monsignor Henry Clay (not verified) on 16 May 2008 #permalink

Statistically, what are the odds that all 8 of them would be wearing glasses?

How does Dave look so young and manage to retire? I am so jealous!

By Geoff Lake (not verified) on 16 May 2008 #permalink

#3

Statistically, what are the odds that all 8 of them would be wearing glasses?

Posted by: Marshall | May 16, 2008 7:56 PM

Fairly high, I would guess. We scholarly types do tend to wear our eyes out... And lack the fashion consciousness to hide it with contacts. ;)

Now that you have an opening in your department, watch out for stealth ID types coming in for interviews. What a coup it would be for them to infiltrate the 'bastion of atheism'.

That's some weird wallpaper.

"Retirement party?" Nonsense! Old professors don't retire, they just go emeritus.

please disregard #9, its nonsensical.

You have eight full-time faculty in the bio department at Morris? What, does bio double as the crop sciences department? If not, I'm somewhat impressed. (Now if you were down in a real metropolis like Mankato, that'd be different.) Where do most of your majors envision themselves going/doing with a bio major?

One word, Dave: Blog.

Raise wolverines, adopt a pond, collect pine cones from all over the world, become the online expert on great blue herons.

But then TELL us about it.

The world could use the thoughtful input of a retired biology professor.

As PZ can tell you, it's loads of fun, completely non-controversial, and dead easy.

completely non-controversial

LOL

yeah.

OTOH, everyone needs something to keep their blood pressure up.

I thank God for blessing me with great kids, and UMM for educating them!!! The bio depart. is awesome!!!!. This is one VERY happy parent!!!

By mudderbadger (not verified) on 16 May 2008 #permalink

Helluva note to see one's little brother retire. Makes one feel old. :(

Say "Hi" to whatsername for me, Dave.

anonannoyer... seek help. I mean that sincerely. You're obsessing. I'm not criticizing, I've been there.

to see how the entire atheist movement has been annihilated

can I play?

WATERLOOOO!!!!!

My uncle retired from teaching recently. Actually, he still teaches and organises events and stuff. He probably should have retired to teaching - he was at loose ends there for a while until he got involved again.

Personally, the idea of retirement scares the carp out of me. I'd hate to have a job so bad that I'd want to retire from it, but if that were the case then it would also have to have been the case that I'd wasted a substantial portion of my life on it. If, on the other hand, that weren't the case, then I wouldn't want to retire to begin with, which makes the thought of mandatory retirement (a completely archaic concept, in my opinion) sound a lot like being discarded from my own life.

Glad this is all still well far off for me, in either case. Maybe I'll be sick of things in a few decades.

# 5

..but haven't you got intelligently designed eyeballs like us non-glasses wearing people? I mean we all know Darwin said the eyeball was too complex to have evolved.

On another note, anyone want to take a stab at what the collective IQ of the folk in that photo is.? It makes my brain hurt just trying to think about it.

By Bride of Shrek (not verified) on 16 May 2008 #permalink

And two of the eight eye-glass wearers are wearing true eye-glasses, the nice old big ones, the anti-granny glasses, the ones where your peripheral vision is not cramped. 2 out eight is better than nothing I suppose. But I expected less fashion slavishness from the science crowd.

JM, whatever is the basis of your job, i.e., the intellectual hook, there is no reason why that hook can't still not be applied in some way after 'retirement.' I abhor the word retirement, and I think it is mainly used to denote that you will get some kind of pension income, not that you retire from your passions and your connection to the bigger world.

"to his happy progress." Well said, PZ!

My congrats go out to Dave. I am an alumn of U or Mn,Morris, Geology 1979. I was a bio major for most of those years, and worked for Ellen Ordway on her Prairie Project 76 -79, as well as TA'd in the bio dept, until I changed over to Geology. I took Vertebrate Zoology from Dave. Those were the good old Days. Makes me feel sorta old. I feel lucky to have gotten such a great undergraduate education from such a nice, fun, excellent school.

By chuckgoecke (not verified) on 17 May 2008 #permalink

And two of the eight eye-glass wearers are wearing true eye-glasses, the nice old big ones, the anti-granny glasses, the ones where your peripheral vision is not cramped. 2 out eight is better than nothing I suppose. But I expected less fashion slavishness from the science crowd.

The fashion slavishness lies elsewhere: in the supply.

I always take only the biggest glasses that are available, so I don't constantly see the edges -- and for the last 10 or 15 years nearly all have still been too small, even the ones that were twice as big as average. Glasses that aren't fashionable are simply not produced, no matter how searingly stupid that fashion is.

It's too late at night for my blood pressure to rise...

By David Marjanović, OM (not verified) on 17 May 2008 #permalink

That can't possibly be a workable tribe! :P

David
I had the same problem with a patient of mine when I used to be a nurse in an aged care home. He needed bigger frames as his peripheral vision was crap at the best of times and he was always walking into things. I was unable to source any until, one day checking out an op shop ( not sure what you call them- umm donation shops, Goodwill that sort of place), I found heaps. It would seem as fashions change people chuck their glasses out along with their old clothes and most end up in these second hand stores. I picked up a a couple of pairs,had some lenses reground at the correct prescription for them and , walla, new glasses for the old dude that he could actually see out of. Just a suggestion but worth checking out if you're really desperate to get the bigger frames.

By Bride of Shrek (not verified) on 17 May 2008 #permalink

op shop ( not sure what you call them- umm donation shops, Goodwill that sort of place)

thrift shops.

I'll be back for some Aussie-US translations soon, I'm sure...

since we're talking about glasses...

I bought my last 2 sets from these guys:

http://zennioptical.com/cart/home.php

If you're like me and lose your damn glasses all the time, or get them all rusty from exposure to salt water out on boats, or drop them in the water...

I found the quality of these guys to be pretty good for the price; and the price is sure as hell right.

there's a good selection of wrap-around styles (way better for sun), and the "big lens" classic styles.

It's slow to get them, but I think it's worth it.

gees, it's late.

two corrections to the above:

frameless rimless

54x4541mm (extra large lens)

still is pretty big.