Kresse's website

For school stuff

Cell phone/smart phone/laptop in the classroom

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/22/us/22smartphones.html

Final Exam 5/9/09

DEBATE & ARGUMENT FINAL EXAM

I. Clash-Stasis

III. Toulmin, fields, warrants

IV. Affirmative case

V. Negative straight refutation

VI. Refutation

VIII. Burden of proof, rebuttal, presumption


SP 100 FINAL EXAM REVIEW
 
Communication model
ELM
Social judgment theory
Aristotle
Social Learning Theory
Tipping Point
Burke's Pentad
Fishbein & Ajzen
Self-persuasion
Semantic triangle
Perelman: Presence

The night the lights went out at Spaceland

Professor Kresse... now published in music analysis!
--CK

Louvin: The night the lights went out at Spaceland

by kevin on February 8, 2009

[Friend of Buzz Bands Doug Kresse was on hand at Spaceland on Saturday night and passed along this account:]

louvin1By Doug Kresse
Not even a power outage a half-hour into his set could sap the energy and heart from 81-year-old country music legend Charlie Louvin on Saturday night at Spaceland. With a backing cast of local musicians and guest turns from the likes of Lucinda Williams, Louvin carried on in the dimness of emergency lights and delivered a heartfelt set rich in the art of storytelling.

After sets by Frank Fairfield and local treasure Mike Stinson and his band (who would become Louvin’s backup band), Louvin took the stage in front of a packed house about 11:15 p.m. Plenty of fellow musicians populated the crowd, including Chris Isaak. With occasional turns from guest vocalists, Louvin sang a lot of his great gospel hits, and classics like “I Don’t Love You Anymore.”

Then, around 11:45, the lights flickered and everything went black inside the club. Emergency backup lights kicked on, and the Spaceland crew scrambled to keep the show on the road (somehow the sound system was not affected). Working with little light, Charlie and the band shifted to working without the reliance of the sheet music.  At one point, bassist Rob Douglas attempted to scan the sheet music, trying to get the chords down, but Louvin just told Douglas not to worry. He helped the bassist and Stinson along, and the set went on in conditions that may have rattled many musicians — but not these.

Later, Louvin welcomed Lucinda Williams on the stage to sing with him. But one of the things I’ll remember most were the stories Charlie told between songs.  He connected with the audience, recounting a life of great memories.  One was the time — long ago — that he and a band had just finished a long set, were packing up to go home, then saw some miners, just getting off their shift, who suggested it’d be wise to play some more. Louvin honored their request. He also told of the times when club patrons who talked during a set and disrupted it (not an uncommon occurrence in Eastside environs) were “carried out.” His anecdotes spanned several decades.

It’s clear Charlie Louvin has created a rich history of music — and added to it with Saturday’s show. In the midst of what to him was a minor inconvenience, he showed true class.


Article about Debate

Here's a great article about the current state of academic debate. 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122420084779742873.html

Email address

A bit of advice... I receive many emails from nondescript email addresses like "love2run@yahoo.com" etc and students forget to sign the email. I recommend that students open up a basic email account that is resume & teacher approved, like dougkresse@email.com. 

Here is the link to open up a Gmail account (tons of storage for all your papers):
https://www.google.com/accounts/NewAccount?service=mail&continue=http%3A%2F%2Fmail.google.com%2Fmail%2Fe-11-10eda4a1795e6218b2e11e7207b00c11-de041fde58e58eca9b44f3104b6a736114ee31c6&type=2

--DK

Fall 2008 Changes

In the most recent edition of my book, the Argument by Sign/ Cause & Effect section was not included. Here is the information Argument.Cause.doc

Additionally, my office phone number has changed to (714) 992-7360. My email is still dkresse@fullcoll.edu and probably the best way to reach me.

-DK

Hello!

Welcome to my website... this is a new thing for me. Any feedback (questions, comments, suggestions for improvement) can be sent directly to my school email address at dkresse@fullcoll.edu . Click on the links to the left to view the certain subjects.






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