Tall tales of a crazy prof
“Does your mother have a black dress?”
No other professor would tell this story. No other professor would have this story.
But because he’s Dr. Rosy, he’d tell us how he as a teacher once dealt with a school bully.
This had to have happened in the mid-90s, in the first few weeks he taught 8th grade English in a high school somewhere in the Midwest.
He had come across an all-state athlete picking on some scrawny kid whose feet weren’t touching the ground. The lineman had the kid up by the collar.
Dr. Rosy — then Mr. Rosy, doctoral student — walked up to the bully and told him to put the kid down. The bully complied immediately.
The way Dr. Rosy tells it, the athlete was 6 feet 5 inches, with a solid 300 pounds of muscle — “This kid must have been pushing iron since the 3rd grade.”
A girl off to the side of the scene told the football player to just take care of Rosy already. Rosy wasn’t impressed.
“Could I borrow your cell phone?” he asked the girl. She declined.
“In that case, you call 911 and get an ambulance here,” he said. “Well, maybe two. This guy’s so big he won’t fit in one.”
Rosy was at least 43 years old and slightly shorter than the bully. A large-framed man even then, he would have been quite a bit smaller than the massive boy defiantly facing him.
“Does your mother have a black dress?” he asked. The bully didn’t understand, so Rosy repeated the question. “Does your mother have a black dress?”
Rosy must have feigned pondering to himself for a moment.
“Because she’ll need one in about four days,” he said. “That’s about when the state buries you.”
That’s about when the story ends with my class laughing hysterically, some laughing out of horror.
He never advocated using or threatening violence, of course, and made sure to say that.
“You have to improvise, overcome and adapt to these situations,” he told us.
That’s one way to look at it.
****
In other news: you’d think salvaging dignity would involve being smart about it; medicine waffles back on fish; and Bungie pulls a Pixar.
Related Content
A verified e-mail address is required to post a comment.
Views expressed in the comments section are not representative of The Collegian unless so specified. Comments must be approved by a moderator before they are published. Comments that are inflammatory, profane, libelous and/or posted under a false name may be removed at the discretion of The Collegian. Comments may be used in the print edition of the newspaper. Be sure to pick up next Friday's issue of The Collegian for featured comments.
6 Responses to Tall tales of a crazy prof
Leave a Reply
Connect with us »
Recent Posts »
- Year in Review: The Collegian sits down with President Welty
- Thrower McKee is a rare breed
- Sprinter perseveres through injuries
- Wrightful departure
- The “udder” truth about campus milk production
- Year in review: The Collegian sits down with President Welty
- What the future holds
- Student volunteer’s rough childhood fuels passion to give back
- Head Softball Coach Margie Wright announces retirement
- Shots fired in ‘Sin City’
- A final farewell: Seven seniors say goodbye
- Piercings represent independence and fashion for many











so did he ever bully anyone again??????? lol
so did he ever bully anyone again??????? lol
The Collegian Staff Writer
Heh. The related articles speak for themselves, I think.
The Collegian Staff Writer
Heh. The related articles speak for themselves, I think.
Cell phone? Must have been a cocaine dealer if the person in questioned owned a cell phone in the mid- 90′s.
Cell phone? Must have been a cocaine dealer if the person in questioned owned a cell phone in the mid- 90′s.