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| Riot Breaks Out at Sociologists ConferenceSociologists met last week in Las Vegas for a three day conference on "The Changing Shapes of Social Orders." Tensions were already high due to a conflagration in the Pareto room, which some said were started by the anti-Marshalists. The final straw, however, came during the last panel of the conference, a discussion titled: "Henry VIII: Serial Killer or Reality TV Precursor?"During the panel, evidence was presented by both sides, turning what was intended to be a capstone debate on the ways in which society bends an understanding of events to fit its own world identity into a series of one-upsmanships. "Killerists" began with a document recovered from the King's Library, a collection of poetry Henry is said to have written for himself, which contained the following lines:
This was followed by a "Realityist" professor of hagiosociology at the University of Montana, Benedict Adso, producing a scrap of diary that a palace page kept, wherein he allegedly recorded conversations the king had with one of his many erstwhile wives:
When Killerist and professor of Macrobiosociology at the University of Vancouver, Michael Sladesly, pointed out that this was more of an air of "Game-Show" then a Reality Show, a fierce debate on semantics ensued, resulting, finally, in Adso pinning Sladesly to the conference room floor in a classic Oklahoma Slam to Fisherman's Suplex, which Las Vegas hasn’t seen since '98, when Hardcore Holly defeated Victoria "Twin Missiles" Sampras at the "Pitch a Bitch" middleweight qualifier. Unfortunately, Neil Overunder, the Nevada commissioner of off-license gambling, happened to be attendance, being a life-time amateur sociologist enthusiast. His demands—- that all who profited from betting on the Adso-Sladesly bout should document their winnings with the Nevada board and pay the appropriate taxes—- resulted in loudly vocalized rounds of dissent. Shouts of "ungraduated taxes are antithetical to Marxist socioeconomic theories!" were met with "Take it back to Jew-York, Chomskinarian!" Shoving matches evolved into fist fights, which quickly became a brawl, and the free-for-all spilled into the next room, where participants in a post-mortem on the oeuvre of director Elia Kazan where quick to join the fray. It was 30 minutes before riot police descended on the bloody and often hair-pieced crowd. Some 20 various professors and adjuncts were injured, with the most serious being a guest lecturer on "Sociomusicology and the Phenomena of Rap Culture," who is now recovering after having the notes for his speech removed from his rectum. No arrests were made. . | . | . | . | |