There was a student who was desirous of taking admission for the IIM study course. He was smart enogh to get through the written test, a GD and was to appear for the personal interview. Later, as the interview progressed, the interviewer found this boy to be bright since he could answer all the questions correctly. Ihe interviewer got impatient and decided to corner the boy "Tell me your choice," he said to the boy "Whats your choice? I shall either ask you ten easy questions or ONE real difficult. Think well before you make up your mind!" The boy thought for a while and said my choice is ONE real difficult question."
"Well, good luck to you ,you have made your own choice!" said the man on the opposite side. "Now tell me this. What comes first, Day or Night?"
The boy was jolted first but he waited for a while and said, "It's the DAY sir!"
"How?????????" the interviewer was smiling at last.
"I got you" he said to himself "Sorry sir, you promised me that you will not ask me a SECOND difficult question!" And the admission for the course was thus secured.
Talent is what you possess; Genius is what possesses you.
12 comments:
so lame
Actually this was quite interesting despite what anonymous might think. Only smart people learn from others anyways.
nope, it's lame and poorly written
I'm sorry, this sucks.
Badly written.
I agree with Ashkan. Good thinking on the part of the student.
While I appreciate the idea of the story, it was poorly written and in no way do I see a reason for having that many interrogative marks after "How". A single one would suffice.
Though, haha @ the punchline. Not really genius though, just clever.
"I agree with Ashkan. Good thinking on the part of the student."
well, i disagree.. since the interviewr could just say something like:
"Explain your answer."
The spelling and grammatical errors detract from the story.
if this was written by a drunken orangutan then its pretty decent writing
enough question marks?
While the concept is interesting, the complete butchering of the English language destroys all but the most redeeming features of the passage.
Post a Comment