Go to Post What have we learned? Cannons are awesome :rolleyes: - DominickC [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > FIRST > General Forum
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Reply
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 12 votes, 5.00 average. Display Modes
  #16   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 02:51
dtengineering's Avatar
dtengineering dtengineering is offline
Teaching Teachers to Teach Tech
AKA: Jason Brett
no team (British Columbia FRC teams)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2004
Location: Vancouver, BC
Posts: 1,825
dtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond reputedtengineering has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

FIRST does spend a lot of time playing up the math, science and academic parts of the competition at the cost of the skills side of things.

But you know, it wouldn't hurt to drop a note to Dean explaining how his comments were heard by your sponsors and mentors.

It may well be that Dean's understanding of "manual labour" is quite different from that of your colleagues. Personally, I would refer to the work of tradespeople as "skilled labour" as opposed to "manual labour". I see manual labour as being paid for how much you sweat... and while there is no doubt that many tradespeople often get dirty and sweaty in the course of their job... they are being paid for what they know. Thats why there is a four year apprenticeship, and why master craftspeople... and general contractors... are worth one heck of a lot more than they were as teenagers. It's not because they have a stronger back... it's because they KNOW more.

And don't even get me started about how much you need to know to be a successful farmer! Heck... just ask any farmer. They are mechanics, accountants, economists, meterologists, biologists and more all rolled into one. Yep, they do some manual labour, but they also punch in GPS coordinates into the autopilot in the air conditioned cab of their tractor, too.

But don't take it from me... write Dean and ask him what he meant.

Jason
Reply With Quote
  #17   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 07:27
GaryVoshol's Avatar
GaryVoshol GaryVoshol is offline
Cogito ergo arbitro
no team
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Royal Oak, MI
Posts: 5,721
GaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond reputeGaryVoshol has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

I was thinking for a long time how to respond to this thread. But Jason and Georgie's Dad said it much better than I could. Repped. (Sorry, Jason, "You must spread ...")

I definitely would let FIRST know how Dean's remarks were heard. They need to know if the message they want to send is being received correctly or not.
__________________
(since 2004)
Reply With Quote
  #18   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 07:42
gvarndell's Avatar
gvarndell gvarndell is offline
Software Engineer
AKA: Addi's and Georgie's Dad
FRC #1629 (GaCo)
Team Role: Parent
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Grantsville, Maryland
Posts: 350
gvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by EricVanWyk View Post
I had a few mentors who point blank said "Saturday was fantastic, until Dean ruined it with his speech."
But don't they say that every year -- no matter what words Dean chooses?
__________________
Robots never, ever, ever, ever break -- The Robot Repairman (Backyardigans)
Reply With Quote
  #19   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 08:47
pfreivald's Avatar
pfreivald pfreivald is offline
Registered User
AKA: Patrick Freivald
FRC #1551 (The Grapes of Wrath)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Rookie Year: 2001
Location: Naples, NY
Posts: 2,295
pfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond reputepfreivald has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
Yes, his place in society should be valued -- by society -- and I believe it is.
But if nobody is willing to pay him to do what he loves doing, is it honestly inaccurate (much less offensive) to say that what he does is valueless?
The conditional statement as presented is of course rhetorical, but the "if" part of the sentence doesn't apply to any of my mentors.

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
The real problem here is not with Dean's words but with the effect those words had on certain people.
Why can't it be both?

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
But I don't believe he was referring to brick-layers, or plumbers, or HVAC mechanics, or skilled carpenters when he said 'manual laborers'.
I don't see how that's relevant. From the ladies in the VIP elevators who were pushing buttons for him, to the servers getting him food and busing his table, to all those gentlemen expertly moving/shipping/moving-again all of those robot crates, FIRST itself runs on the backs of unskilled, menial, manual labor.

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
You have a selling job ahead of you and, as hard as it may be to accept, I'm trying to help you.
It's not difficult to accept at all.

I'm certain that Dean didn't get up in front of a group of enthusiastic students, mentors, and sponsors with the intent of offending them. However, having taken a step back and given it some time, I couldn't and still can't figure out what else he could have meant besides "students, don't be like those people" -- and I can't imagine how "those people" wouldn't be offended by such a remark.

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
But don't they say that every year -- no matter what words Dean chooses?
I could have started the thread with a quip about speech length (at 27 minutes of Dean-only time, it was a record for brevity, and should have been a third of that), but I wanted people to take this seriously.

As for letting Dean know how his remarks were received, that letter is already in the works.
__________________
Patrick Freivald -- Mentor
Team 1551
"The Grapes of Wrath"
Bausch & Lomb, PTC Corporation, and Naples High School

I write books, too!
Reply With Quote
  #20   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 09:37
gvarndell's Avatar
gvarndell gvarndell is offline
Software Engineer
AKA: Addi's and Georgie's Dad
FRC #1629 (GaCo)
Team Role: Parent
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Grantsville, Maryland
Posts: 350
gvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by pfreivald View Post
It's not difficult to accept at all.
I apologize for assuming that you wouldn't. That was presumptuous.
You do make this into a dilemma.
How does one urge young people to better themselves without implying better than what?
I hope you are able to keep your sponsors and mentors.
__________________
Robots never, ever, ever, ever break -- The Robot Repairman (Backyardigans)
Reply With Quote
  #21   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 09:44
MooreteP's Avatar
MooreteP MooreteP is offline
Zen Archer
AKA: Senor Mas
FRC #0571 (Team Paragon)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Rookie Year: 1998
Location: Windsor CT
Posts: 807
MooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond reputeMooreteP has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Landscaper, Car Washer, Corn-Detasseler, Dishwasher/Busboy/Waiter, Bagger/Sacker/Restocker/Butcher-Shop Cleaner, Drugstore worker, Draughtsman before CAD, Inspection (NDE) Engineer Intern, Reactor Engineer, Bureaucrat, Physics Teacher, Robotics Mentor.

I can't add too much new to this thread. Wayne TenBrink said it best.
I still use all of these skills season-to season, at home, work, and play.

In my current avocation as a physics teacher, I engineer minds, which is harder than I expected as machines are far more predictable and easier to dissect.
Four times a year we assign physics projects that have a tendency to invert the class hierarchy. Those that can invent, but may not be great test-takers, shine. Those that excel at tests, find themselves in unfamiliar territory. Both benefit from the experience. (In creating these projects, I get to be my own GDC, designing for a diversity of outcomes, with the usual experience of learning what mistakes I made in designing a challenge.)

My idea here is that no one gets paid to take a test.

I still landscape, serve dinner, wash dishes and cars, bag my own groceries, draw, inspect students work, pay bureaucrats, and fix stuff.

I don't believe that Dean meant to offend those with exceptional mechanical skills who create inventions from raw materials, but he did.

Cut him some slack. He has done so much to focus our interests and energies on something that exercises our intelligence and skills to be more creative.
Our world is better for this.
Reply With Quote
  #22   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 09:52
thefro526's Avatar
thefro526 thefro526 is offline
Mentor for Hire.
AKA: Dustin Benedict
no team (EWCP, MAR, FRC 708)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Rookie Year: 2005
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 2,599
thefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond reputethefro526 has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to thefro526 Send a message via MSN to thefro526
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

When Dean made this comment during his speech, I actually perked up a bit, and began to listen more attentively. I was a bit offended personally, but I think I was more upset because of how the students on our team may have taken it.

816 is composed of Students from a Vocational Technical School, and while many of them will go onto college, nearly as many of them won't. Most of them are taught a trade in their Career Major that is capable of supporting themselves and their families for the rest of there life, and for someone to tell them that "no one wants to be a manual laborer" is kind of like a kick in the face. Luckily no one (to my knowledge) was upset by this comment, so I can't be too upset either.
__________________
-Dustin Benedict
2005-2012 - Student & Mentor FRC 816
2012-2014 - Technical Mentor, 2014 Drive Coach FRC 341
Current - Mentor FRC 2729, FRC 708
Reply With Quote
  #23   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:06
ebarker's Avatar
ebarker ebarker is offline
Registered User
AKA: Ed Barker
FRC #1311 (Kell Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Kennesaw GA
Posts: 1,437
ebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond reputeebarker has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Hey, Don R. - It's time to jump in and do one of those "class-action letters" to Dean via FIRST.

Needing some damage control !!! This is not a light matter as a lot of funding comes into the FIRST system for workforce development.

I grew up in a tough labor intensive environment. I totally understand what that environment is like and the issues and how someone can get offended. I chose not to take offense but it can be tough for someone to pass on this.

I grew up farming. Now I'm an engineer.

I'm not sure I have the intestinal fortitude and smarts to be a farmer. It is way too hard.

Someone mentioned Mike Rowe. I have a recommendation to add to the "class-action letter" and I am perfectly serious about this. Dean needs to bring Mike Rowe onto the cast of characters at FIRST.

Since starting his show "Dirty Jobs" he has had an epiphany about the tough jobs in the world and has become advocate and promoter for those students that want to pursue the tough jobs that are out there.

For example, I for one am not willing to scrambling up the steel and concrete structures that these engineers design.

Ed
__________________
Ed Barker

Last edited by ebarker : 20-04-2010 at 10:10.
Reply With Quote
  #24   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:22
EricVanWyk EricVanWyk is offline
Registered User
no team
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Boston
Posts: 1,597
EricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond reputeEricVanWyk has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to EricVanWyk
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by gvarndell View Post
But don't they say that every year -- no matter what words Dean chooses?
Yes. The rest of the presentation gives a clear, energetic and consistent message.
Reply With Quote
  #25   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:32
gvarndell's Avatar
gvarndell gvarndell is offline
Software Engineer
AKA: Addi's and Georgie's Dad
FRC #1629 (GaCo)
Team Role: Parent
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Grantsville, Maryland
Posts: 350
gvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond reputegvarndell has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by gblake View Post
This topic is not a debate about the truth or fallacy of some statement, it is about something else.
OK, I've been waiting for somebody else to ask but nobody has.
I am not challenging you because I wouldn't know where to start if I wanted to.
Would you please explain what you think it's about?
__________________
Robots never, ever, ever, ever break -- The Robot Repairman (Backyardigans)
Reply With Quote
  #26   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:34
JaneYoung JaneYoung is offline
Onward through the fog.
no team
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: Austin, TX USA
Posts: 5,996
JaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond reputeJaneYoung has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

I've spent time in recent years, mentoring mentors who are pushing as hard as they can to cross the fine lined barrier of reality for their students, and move them towards their goals of broadening the scope of that reality by encouraging education, the pursuit of education, and the pursuit of dreams that can become reality - through education - when the real world is telling, showing, shoving down the throats of some of these students (and their parents), that education, the pursuit of education, and dreams becoming reality - are trivial and unimportant. We work together to find ways to make education real, valued, and to help students understand that mentors and teachers can be trusted in their knowledge and experience. The students must trust us enough to know they can board a plane to a distant event, leaving everything they know, and will come back with a broader understanding and awareness of their place in the world, in our society, and in the culture that we are helping to create.

These mentors and teachers are striving to help students take that step towards a high school diploma and move on towards submitting that college application - as first generation high school graduates and college students. They ask a lot. They push hard. They sweat. Many students in FIRST know and see what is called, manual labor. Many have respect for it because it is what feeds and clothes them.

Yes, what we are doing in FIRST is important regarding the science and technology side of things - but digging down deep, uncovering hidden talent, dreams, ideas, tenacity, intelligence, and opportunity - are just as important. Especially in the hearts of the mentors, teachers, and students that are moving the road blocks to the path that leads to discovering the value of education - through sheer guts and determination.

Come to Texas. I can introduce you to some incredible mentors, teachers, and students - who are grappling with this daily. Come to Texas and join us.

Jane
__________________
Excellence is contagious. ~ Andy Baker, President, AndyMark, Inc. and Woodie Flowers Award 2003

Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through experience of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, ambition inspired, and success achieved.
~ Helen Keller
(1880-1968)

Last edited by JaneYoung : 20-04-2010 at 10:52.
Reply With Quote
  #27   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:36
Andrew Schreiber Andrew Schreiber is offline
Data Nerd
FRC #0079
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Misplaced Michigander
Posts: 4,055
Andrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

One of the things that has always struck me about Dean is he seems to bite the hand that feeds him. On one hand he grovels and begs for support the other he makes snide remarks about them. Take for example politicians, he grovels and begs for support but in the same breath he bad mouths politics and says they aren't the solution. Now he is making remarks about the group of people he wants all of us to be like; hard working people. Shouldn't he be holding them up as an example? They are breaking their backs so that his vision can be realized. How are they any different than the field reset people? Are we going to be disparaging them next?

On the other hand Dean is right. Not to insult manual laborers in any way but for a person who is able to do more manual labor is a waste. If for the formative years of his life Andy Baker was told, "Manual labor is all you can do" we might all be spending a lot more time building gearboxes. Imagine what we would have lost just because we didn't encourage those who can do to do.

In short, I don't know what to tell you. I can see both sides of this comment. Isn't the goal of FIRST to have people look up to engineers and scientists as role models? How can we do that without saying that these professions are somehow better than others. You cannot put someone on a pedestal as a role model without first saying that they are better than others, by saying that you are saying that others are somehow inferior.
__________________




.
Reply With Quote
  #28   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 10:53
Jack Jones Jack Jones is offline
Retired
no team
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 2003
Location: Waterford, MI
Posts: 964
Jack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond reputeJack Jones has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
In short, I don't know what to tell you. I can see both sides of this comment. Isn't the goal of FIRST to have people look up to engineers and scientists as role models? How can we do that without saying that these professions are somehow better than others. You cannot put someone on a pedestal as a role model without first saying that they are better than others, by saying that you are saying that others are somehow inferior.
I don't know about the rest of you, but I do this to give kids an opportunity that I never had. I do not do it because I want to be a hero or role model; and I do not do it in order to produce the next generation of elitist jerks!
__________________
This message is hidden because Jack Jones is on your ignore list.
Reply With Quote
  #29   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 11:00
Andrew Schreiber Andrew Schreiber is offline
Data Nerd
FRC #0079
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 2000
Location: Misplaced Michigander
Posts: 4,055
Andrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond reputeAndrew Schreiber has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jack Jones View Post
I don't know about the rest of you, but I do this to give kids an opportunity that I never had. I do not do it because I want to be a hero or role model; and I do not do it in order to produce the next generation of elitist jerks!
Quote:
"To transform our culture by creating a world where science and technology are celebrated and where young people dream of becoming science and technology leaders."

Dean Kamen, Founder
To me that reads as though engineers like yourself should be role models and people we look up to. I always looked up to the engineers when I was a student, heck, I still do. I've always felt that was what FIRST was about, connecting students with mentors who can serve to inspire and guide them along a path they might not otherwise have known. To do that you have to be a role model not just some bum off the street. You have to show the students that what you do is every bit as awesome as what their favorite athlete does.
__________________




.
Reply With Quote
  #30   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 20-04-2010, 11:24
Dale(294engr]'s Avatar
Dale(294engr] Dale(294engr] is offline
Mentor/Sponsor since '98
FRC #0294 (Beach Cities Robotics)
Team Role: Engineer
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Rookie Year: 1998
Location: Redondo Beach, CA
Posts: 92
Dale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of lightDale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of lightDale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of lightDale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of lightDale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of lightDale(294engr] is a glorious beacon of light
Re: Dean Kamen, Manual Laborers, and You

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne TenBrink View Post
Back when I was in college, I did a lot of manual labor for summer jobs. I once spent a week shoveling manure in the basement of a barn. With every swing of the pitchfork, I told myself "Once you get that degree, you'll never have to do this again."

Fast forward 30 years. I have a 30 acre hobby farm and raise a few cattle of my own. I get to spend plenty of quality time in the basement of the barn with a pitchfork. Now, I just smile and think "This sure beats sitting in a staff meeting."

Manual labor is a necessary and honorable thing, but I'm glad I don't have to get up and do it every day on somebody else's terms.

And for what its worth, some of the best practical experience a mechanical engineer can ever get comes from working on farm equipment.
Wayne... THANKS for putting this so succinctly in perspective.... I believe Dean will address this in a future release... clarifying his intended perspective.. or retract inadvertent faux pas...
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
pic: Dean Kamen, Fracois Castaing, and Me Q. Sheets Extra Discussion 2 03-11-2009 17:48
Dean Kamen and Speech Preperation Robert Thacker- General Forum 1 20-02-2008 22:59
Dean Simmons and the Kamen Brothers Arefin Bari Chit-Chat 12 28-11-2004 10:14
FIRST and Dean Kamen on TECHTV Cody_538 General Forum 11 27-07-2002 14:44


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:17.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi