Today is Monday. Week 4 of the class is now over. Monday
morning, until noon, is the grace period if you forgot to do any
of the assignments that were due on Friday/Saturday/Sunday. Week 5 will begin tomorrow - and those assignments are available now if you want to get started!
You really can call me Laura!
(repeat announcement) Some of you still seem to feel like you need to call me Professor
or Dr. or something like that. No need for that, really! (Plus, I
am just an instructor and not a professor, so I don't want to get in
trouble with the professor police, ha ha.) Anyway, since I'm on a
first-name basis with all of you, please do the same and just call
me Laura.
Storybook Coverpages. I'll be updating the list of Storybook websites for Myth-Folklore and Indian Epics
on Monday afternoon when people have finished turning in their
Week 4 coverpages. You can continue to experiment with your coverpage
design all semester long, of course! Starting tomorrow, Tuesday, for
the Week 5 Internet assignment you will be looking at and commenting
on each other's Storybooks via the class list. I'll have more to
say about that in tomorrow's announcements.
Storybook stack. As
always on Monday, I will have a HUGE bunch of assignments in the
Storybook stack that were turned in over the weekend or on Monday
morning. The first thing I will do on Monday morning when I get to
work is to update the list of items in the Storybook stack. You can
then check the contents of the stack
to make sure I received your assignment. I will be reading and
replying to the assignments in the order they were turned in. If you
turned in your assignment on Sunday or later, you may have to wait
a few days before you will get comments back from me.
Monday Events on Campus. The OU Symphony Orchestra will offer a concert at 8PM in the Sharp Concert Hall (time/location/details). Find out more about this and other events at the Campus Calendar online.
February 11: Frank Herbert. Today marks the anniversary of the death of the science fiction writer Frank Herbert who died in 1986. His novel, Dune,
published in 1965, is one of the most popular science fiction novels
ever written. Herbert himself wrote five sequels to the novel, with
further volumes added by Herbert's son, Brian Herbert, using notes left by his father at his death. Below is a cover for one of the paperback editions of Dune, showing one of the mighty sandworms!