I may not agree with all his positions but he was at least a good dude and not a slimy crook
I miss Ron Paul and real conservatives
I played so much unreal tournament on my Pentium 4 while listening to them
isn’t that just pie with extra steps
damn there are so many great references in that movie b
charge they phone twerk eat hot chip lie
I was also on Verizon forever since I could always smugly claim more bars than my poor friends
now that I’m kicked off my family plan and I actually have to pay for it and daycare and a mortgage I switched to mint and it works better than my wife’s Verizon
One day Shizuo Kakutani . . . was teaching a class at Yale. He wrote down a lemma on the blackboard and announced that the proof was obvious. One student timidly raised his hand and said that it wasn’t obvious to him. Could Kakutani explain? After several moments’ thought, Kakutani realized that he could not himself prove the lemma. He apologized, and said that he would report back at their next class meeting.
After class, Kakutani went straight to his office. He labored for quite a time and found that he could not prove the pesky lemma. He skipped lunch and went to the library to track down the lemma. After much work, he finally found the original paper. The lemma was stated clearly and succinctly. For the proof, the author had written, “Exercise for the reader.” The author of this 1941 paper was Kakutani.