Part of our occasional series, “Tales from Academia“, a vital service for our readers.

InsideHigherEd reports today

June 11
Not Our Best and Brightest?

The missteps in Iraq are well documented by now.

Library shelves could be lined with books that criticize the poorly constructed endgame, the insufficient troop levels and the disbanding of the Iraqi military. There have, however, been glimmers of promise that have gotten a share of ink as well. Among those success stories is the American University of Iraq, a Western-style institution in the war-torn country’s northern region that promises to “lead the transformation of Iraq into a liberal and democratic society.”

The university’s lofty aspirations, as espoused on its Web site, make the selection of its first chancellor all the more puzzling. Owen Cargol, who took the helm at AU-Iraq in 2007 and resigned in late April of this year, had a checkered past that could have been revealed to university organizers with a simple Google search. The sexual harassment scandal that brought down Cargol at Northern Arizona University in 2001 was well publicized, in all of its explicit detail, but apparently never came to the attention of the U.S. officials who trusted Cargol to help reshape the Middle East.

…Cargol’s 2001 resignation stemmed from allegations made by a Northern Arizona employee who alleged that Cargol, while naked in a locker room, grabbed the employee’s genitals, the Arizona Republic reported. In a subsequent e-mail to the employee, Cargol described himself as “a rub-your-belly, grab-your-balls, give-you-a-hug, slap-your-back, pull-your-dick, squeeze-your-hand, cheek-your-face, and pat-your-thigh kind of guy.

Postscript: Kevin Drum mentions Cargol in his Quote Of The Day in The Washington Monthly

Uh huh. You’ll be unsurprised to know that Cargol was considered an ideal choice by the Coalition Provisional Authority to become the first chancellor of the American University of Iraq last year. Via Henry Farrell.

Well, as I have written elsewhere, “shit shit shit shit shit.”

Is “Shit shit shit shit shit!” a grammatially correct sentence?

Krugman’s blog referred today (”Post Post post post post“) to

a grammatical but incomprehensible sentence:

Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.

Thanks to the web, you can easily learn both the explanation and the history.

The wiki entry is amusing. So what about “Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck”?

IMNSHO, “Shit shit shit shit shit!” is a grammatially correct sentence, but “Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck” cannot be. We can discuss this at beer:30!

Here is a good image for “Shit shit shit shit shit!” ( plenty more of these here) .

The image and the video are from Truth Through Action.org

Russian political press conferences are much more interesting than ours.

CBS aired - “erred” is probably th better verb - an interview with one of the henchmen responsible for our 7+ years of torture, rape of the environment, pillaging of the treasury, and trashing of the constitution.

I have a new name for this particular sphincter muscle: Antonin Smegma.

Steve Novick’s ads have been clever and smart. Here is another one.

This is very funny up to the 1:35 mark. After that, it is painfully dull. But it is a great lead-in.

Have a good time, and keep your eye on the devil!

This video loads VERY sssslllloooowwwwlllllyyyy, so I recommend that you turn off the sound in You-tube, load the movie in entirety, then replay it with sound. Otherwise you’ll be thinking “WTF?” a lot.

The “LUMINE” chain of shopping complexes are adding new stores to several Tokyo area locations.


Take a look at these additions to the “LUMINE-ESUTO” shopping mall in Shinjuku (one of the special wards that make up the core of Tokyo).


Oops.

“Big breasts win verdict for Japanese pin-up”

The bikini model… was cleared after a court decided she was too well-endowed to squeeze into a room through a hole…

I actually saw this on the news last night while I was at the gym. The cameramen kept panning down to her breasts during the interview.

I love this. It’s in Norwegian!