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A Short(s) Story: Professor James Hartley's Unique Approach to Winter Dress

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January 24, 2003

A Short(s) Story: Professor James Hartley's Unique Approach to Winter Dress


Photo: Fred LeBlanc

Associate Professor of Economics James Hartley

Although his focus in the classroom is on economic terms such as forecasting and aggregate demand curves, such concepts literally go out the window when it comes to the way Associate Professor of Economics James Hartley dresses in winter. There is one economic condition that comes to mind when you see Hartley trudging through deep snow on campus: "monopoly," since he seems to have cornered the market when it comes to wearing his favorite article of clothing during the chilly season. The long and the short of it is that the professor sees no reason to let subzero temperatures, snow, and ice keep him from wearing clothing in which he feels relaxed—even though his garb of choice happens to be shorts.

When interviewed for this article on a cold winter day in January, Hartley was sporting a pair of classic (in summer anyway) khaki shorts and sneakers, charging through snowdrifts with nary a shiver. "I just don't like wearing long pants very much; shorts are much more comfortable," he says. "I also don't like having to think about what to wear so I have a really simple rule for getting dressed. If I have to lecture during the day, I wear long pants; if I don't, I wear shorts." Hartley also doesn't like wearing shoes, but Jack Frost has forced him to make concessions. "It is hard to walk on snow and ice without shoes; you tend to slip a lot (I rediscover this every winter)—so, I tend to wear shoes outside during the winter—but I skip the shoes too when the ground thaws out."

Hartley's ability to withstand cold seems all the more unusual for his having spent his formative years in a relatively warm climate. He didn't even see snow until he was in junior high school. How long has he been exposing his bare legs to frigid temperatures? Hartley doesn't quite know. Perhaps it's all a blur, or at least a brr. "I can't remember exactly when I realized I didn't have to wear long pants," he says. "I grew up in California, and it stays relatively warm there year round. When I got the job here, everybody told me that I would have to stop wearing shorts in the winter now that I was moving to a place with real winters; they were (rather obviously) wrong."
 

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