I've had the same question for the past 14 years. My neighbor Rose married
Richard Tulip.   I wondered if their children should be considered hybrids.

Gary J. Klatsky, Ph. D.
Director, Human Computer Interaction M.A. Program

Department of Psychology                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Oswego State University (SUNY)       http://www.oswego.edu/~klatsky
7060 State Hwy 104W                      Voice: (315) 312-3474
Oswego, NY 13126                           Fax:   (315) 312-6330

-----Original Message-----
From: FRANTZ, SUE [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 6:21 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: Names -- funny incident

I had a particularly amusing incident today in class.

We've started a new quarter, so we were doing student intros.

One young woman said her name was Erin, and two others chimed in that
they were also named Erin (same spelling).  Of course it isn't that
unusual to have 2 or 3 students with the same first name.  Chris.
Ashley.  Melissa.  James.  Or in this case, Erin.

When named the same, I go by the last initial.  The first Erin said she
was Erin E.  The second Erin said she was Erin D.  And, sure enough, the
third Erin said she was Erin C.

In light on the recent discussion on names, this is the same class with
a student whose last name is Academia.

In my earlier class, I have Robyn Bird.  On the plus side her parents
didn't name her that -- she married into it.  So, was she more attracted
to Mr. Bird because her name was Robyn?  =)

--
Sue Frantz          Highline Community College
Psychology          Des Moines, WA
206.878.3710 x3404  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://flightline.highline.edu/sfrantz/

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