It would have seem that the University of Pennsylvania made a grave mistake. Students attending a political science classe were wondering why their professor was late for class. Well according to the story from the Associated Press, the students were notified, by email, that there professor, Henry Teune, died months earlier, five months earlier to be exact. Let's remember also that this is an Ivy League school.
What a way to keep the memory of one of your deceased workers. They keep his class going believing that he can teach from beyond the grave. Even better, they don't tell his students that he is deceased in person, no they do it by email, it takes a lot of class to do that. That's keeping the memory alive.
I also was suprised when I walked into my History 101 class thinking that Professor Deceased was going to teach me my favorite subject. I soon learned through a tweet from the university that my professor was literally deceased and not named Deceased. The fact that they informed me through a tweet took a little of the shock away. I thought to myself what a way to remember a person. When I die I want people to learn about it through a tweet. It's the memorial of the twenty-first century.
So, was the University of Pennsylvania expecting Professor Teune, God rest his soul, to teach his class from beyond the beyond? To that I say NO WAY MEN.
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