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Impossible Final Exams

Instructions: Read each question carefully. Answer all
questions.
Time limit: 2 hours. Begin immediately.
Art: Given one eight-count box of crayons and three sheets
of notebook paper, recreate the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel. Skin tones should be true to life.
Biology: Create life. Estimate the differences in subsequent
human culture if this form of life had developed 500 million
years earlier, with special attention to its probable
effect on the English Parliamentary System circa 1750.
Prove your thesis.
Chemistry: You must identify a poison sample which you
will find at your lab table. All necessary equipment has
been provided. There are two beakers at your desk, one
of which holds the antidote. If the wrong substance is
used, it causes instant death. You may begin as soon as
the professor injects you with a sample of the poison.
(We feel this will give you an incentive to find the correct
answer.)

Civil Engineering: This is a practical test of your design
and building skills. With the boxes of toothpicks and
glue present, build a platform that will wupport your
weight when you and your platform are suspended over a
vat of nitric acid.
Computer Science: Write a fifth-generation computer language.
Using this language, write a computer program to finish
the rest of this exam for you.
Economics: Develop a realistic plan for refinancing the
national debt. Trace the possible effects of your plan
in the following areas: Cubism, the Donatist Controversy
and the Wave Theory of Light. Outline a method for preventing
these effects. Criticize this method from all possible
points of view. Point out the deficiencies in your point
of view, as demonstrated in your answer to the last question.
Electrical Engineering: You will be placed in a nuclear
reactor and given a partial copy of the electrical layout.
The electrical system has been tampered with. You have
seventeen minutes to find the problem and correct it before
the reactor melts down.

Engineering: The disassembled parts of a high-powered
rifle have been placed on your desk. You will also find
an instruction manual, printed in Swahili. In 10 minutes,
a hungry bengal tiger will be admitted to the room. Take
whatever action you feel necessary. Be prepared to justify
your decision.
Epistemology: Take a position for or against truth. Prove
the validity of your stand.
General Knowledge: Describe in detail. Be objective and
specific.
History: Describe the history of the Papacy from its origins
to the present day, concentrating especially, but not
exclusively, on its Europe, Asia, America and Africa.
Be brief, concise and specific.
Mathematics: Derive the Euler-Cauchy equations using only
a straightedge and compass. Discuss in detail the role
these equations had on mathematical analysis in Europe
during the 1800s.
Medicine: You have been provided with a razor blade, a
piece of gauze, and a bottle of scotch. Remove your appendix.
Do not suture until you work has been inspected. You have
fifteen minutes.
Metaphysics: Describe in detail the probably nature of
life after death. Test your hypothesis.

Music: Write a piano concerto. Orchestrate and perform
it with flute and drum. You will find a piano under your
seat.
Philosophy: Sketch the development of human thought. Estimate
its significance. Compare with the development of any
other kind of thought.
Physchology: Based on your knowledge of their works, evaluate
the emotional stability, degree of adjustment, and repressed
frustrations of each of the following: Alexander of Aphrodisis,
Rameses II, Hammuarabi. Support your evaluation with quotations
from each man's work, making appropriate references. It
is not necessary to translate.
Physics: Explain the nature of matter. Include in your
answer an evaluation of the impact of the development
of mathematics on science.
Political Science: There is a red telephone on the desk
beside you. Start World War III. Report at length on its
socio-political effects if any.
Public Speaking: 2500 riot-crazed aborigines are storming
the classroom. Calm them. You may use any ancient language
except Latin or Greek.
Religion: Perform a miracle. Creativity will be judged.

Sociology: Estimate the sociological problems which might
accompany the end of the world. Construct an experiment
to test your theory.
Extra Credit: Define the universe, and give three examples.
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