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Be careful when you send those e-mails

Nov 14th, 2007, 05:50 pm

My friend Dan, an American studying in Buenos Aires, accidentally sent this e-mail yesterday to our public policy teaching assistant, who teaches the discussion section of the course:

Hey,

Ok, so I’m guessing we’re presenting on Thursday, so we need to get prepared. I***** hasn’t replied to my e-mail where I asked her when we’re presenting (I’ve sent her a total of three e-mails this semester, and she has yet to answer one). Can you e-mail her to confirm?

The Huntington reading is 38 pages long. I suggest we split it up into two parts: I’ll do 92-111, and you do 111-30 (or vice-versa, if you want). Both of us should definitely read everything, but this is just that so one of us can focus on a particular section.

Let’s meet Wednesday afternoon to get everything together. Does that work for you?

- Hasan

PS - Ugh, and we have that project. We definitely have to get started next weekend. Can you e-mail and ask her if our topic is okay and if we can write the paper in English? Explain to her that all the sources are in English and that we’re really busy and writing in English would be much easier for us. I would write to her, but she never responds.

He did what I asked and e-mailed the teacher with my questions. The thing is, he replied to my e-mail to contact her while BCCing it to me and forgot to delete what I said! Crap. You know how when you reply to e-mails it shows the past messages? We don’t know if she saw my comments about how she never responds to my e-mails and my lack of desire to do the project (”Ugh, and we have that project”). Maybe we’ll find out tomorrow in class.

The teacher responded to Dan’s e-mail in less than twenty minutes (and why did she not answer mine, even though I sent it six days ago?) and answered our questions: yes, we are presenting the Samuel P. Huntington reading tomorrow, and yes, we can write our paper in English. However, she CCed the e-mail to the twenty-four people in the class (wait, I thought there were only twenty—maybe the others dropped but still remain on the mailing list), which means everyone could have read it. And everyone, including the teacher, knows English, so they surely have the ability to read my words.

Oh well. Dan, the other two Americans in our class, and I had a good laugh over the fiasco over lunch today. It could be worse. All I said was that the teacher never responds to my e-mails. Nothing bad. At least I didn’t call her a bitch or anything.

We couldn’t figure out why she responded to our e-mail by sending it to the entire class when it doesn’t pertain to them. We theorized that she wanted to prove to everyone that she does indeed respond to e-mails.

Posted in Argentina, Life, Good Times, Hilarious | Comment

Comments

2007-11-14 21:58:12
Dan

My bad… completely.

2007-11-14 22:47:05
Hasan

It’s okay. All this is pretty entertaining in hindsight.

2007-11-15 02:06:55
amber

Duuuuuuude,
relax, I don’t think you did anything wrong. In fact, pointing out that she never replied to your emails might have been good. She’ll start replying from now on!
I think its just the worry that the TA saw your more informal side, and thats ok!
-amber

2007-11-15 14:03:20
Evil Dan

HAHA THIS IS WHAT YOU GET MWHAHAHAHAHA

2007-11-15 21:23:49
Sarah

I do it at least once every semester.

2007-11-16 04:55:26
Aina

Wow…

Nice job Hasan; I’ll be very cautious when it comes to emailing you. =P

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