Bleacher Report

#26
#26
Realistically, how many of our players could start for the teams that have absolutely hand our asses to us (?).
 
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#29
#29
Did they even have calculus in 1972? I kid because I care.
Believe it or not!! My first class at U.T. as a Freshman was Calculus, on the third floor of Ayres Hall on top of the Hill. It was 4 days a week at 7:50 A.M. I walked there from Reese Hall, on the other end of campus. There was no flyover from the Library to the Hill back then. There wasn't even a library there. We had to walk down to the bottom, and all the way to the top of the Hill.

After 2 years of Calculus, Differential Equations, Cobol, Fortran, and a Math Theory course(whatever that is), I changed my major from Math to Economics. Seriously, I went through most of my second year of Calculus by not going to class, and showing up for the tests. I couldn't do that with English , Botany, Spanish, or much else, but I was able to look at the sample problems in the Calculus textbook the night before the test, figure out how to work them, and pass the tests without going to class. I got burned out on Math after a couple of years. Economics was my salvation.
 
#30
#30
And you posted how we were going to beat Mizzou. You have a big heart.

It sure didn't go the way I thought it could. I tried to "speak it into existence" and I failed. (If I had been sure we were going to win I would've made a thread like USCe )
 
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#31
#31
Calculus was first found around the 17th century...so likely, yes, they did by 1972.

It was joke, I knew that prolly by 1972 a calculus class prolly had been created by a university somewhere. Someone needs me to state sarcasm when I use it. *I'm using sarcasm right now. I'm in no way being serious or being mean to you. I'm just playing.
 
#36
#36
For those trashing it, take a second to actually read it. It is rare but this bleacher report article was really good and absolutely true.
 

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