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Not an exercise, but it's the only intro to a prof I remember after 20 years: In freshman chem (in the late 90's): It was a big lecture hall with stadium seating and it was early afternoon so none of the students were 100% there.
Then this middle aged man comes jogging down the center walkway/steps with a bottle in his hand. He jogs up the the lab bench at the front of the room and pours the bottle (hydrogen peroxide in retrospect) into a large beaker and all of the sudden there was a 12+ ft column of foam shooting toward the ceiling - before most of the class even new the prof had arrived. Then he turned to us an said, "we'll learn why that happened in about 3 weeks."
He also ended every Friday lecture with a "Boom of the Week" in which he'd explode something (larger each week) in order to make sure we didn't skip Friday classes. Rumor has is it that, years before I got there, the last Friday's "Boom of Week" would involve taking the class to the river and dropping a large block of magnesium metal in the water. But the college of science had asked him to stop for fear of how it affected the fish.
What a fucking legend honestly. This is how you do college classes.
Can I please ask if there's any video of his online? I'd love to spend the rest of my day watching them!!
In those days filming it would have involved a camcorder. I'm not sure how long he taught there after I took his class in '97
Well that explains it.