Everyone says I should study abroad. They say it's such a great opportunity. Well... I concur. Today I turned in my application for studying abroad in Granada, which is in Spain in case you didn't know. Specifically, it's in the south, about an hour away from the Mediterranean coast, and it's in the Sirerra Nevada. From all I can tell, it's a highly beautiful place. There are some things there: The Alhambra, which was a Moorish castle until the Moors stopped being allowed to have castles; some cathedrals that are also repurposed from Moorish buildings; and of course one can't ignore the Universidad de Granada, which is where I plan to take a class or two. I picked Granada out after asking a few people who'd studied abroad last semester - the two people who went there were pretty happy with it, whereas the guy who went to Madrid said it was alright but maybe if I wanted good academics and not just a vacation I should keep looking. My friend Dan, who incidentally looks like the Geico caveman, is going to Salamanca, where they've got the oldest university in Spain, but the adviser for the Spain programs said it's such a small city that he doesn't often recommend it. Dan's going because it has "enough linguistics courses to keep me happy," but Granada has some of those too. Also, Granada is Spanish for pomegranate. I think Granada is a good medium between small Salamanca and somewhat touristized Madrid. Though I'm sure neither of those would be bad either. So far I'm going to go spring 2010, but I think I may change that to fall 2009. It looks like it'll work better with my schedule. So, there's that.
-Press has suffered a disappointment in that our middleman miscommunicated with our printer, or something, and there was a death in the company I think, and so one of our books isn't coming out until next semester. But oh well, you know. our other two projects shoud be coming out on schedule, though. Had better be.
-Because I had to fill out my study abroad application this week, it was just awful: I not only had to meet with a bunch of people, but I also had to actually decide where I was going. So there were a couple nights when I didn't get but two or three hours of sleep. It was maddening. But now that week is over! And about time. I was getting pretty sick of it. All I have left to do now: the releases for Amenities and I Remain,; reading some stuff that I never got time to read during the semester; take two exams. And I have a whole week to do it. This is the kind of pace I'd like for the rest of the year, but up until now it's been about twice that if not more. I've had free time like twice since Thanksgiving.
-Oh, another thing is that my font is most probably going to be for sale before Christmas. I'll link to that as soon as it's up.
-I'm really looking forward to coming home for these four weeks of winter. It's going to be fun.
“What news! how much more important to know what that is which was never old!” —Thoreau
Friday, December 12, 2008
Friday, December 5, 2008
Just so you know
Finneytown still isn't a real school. I decide when I was home in October that I'd go to a football game, just to see the marching band. (Apparently they were having a great season.) Mr Canter had told me they'd be playing on Friday. So I biked all the way to Reading High School (up an enormous hill), only to find out that Reading's field is quite a ways away from its school. A random guy gave me directions, and so I biked back down the big giant hill, but on a different face - so steep it has ridges carved into it for traction. That was fun. So far all the mishappening has been Reading's fault.
-I got to the game and paid my $4 to get in. And the team was playing, but there were about three people in the stands for Finneytown. And none of them were for the band. I couldn't see them anywhere. I asked one of the three guys, "Is there such a thing as the Finneytown band at this game?" and he said it was senior night. So let's review:
•Mr Canter told me the band would be playing on a night that it wasn't.
•The football game drew a big home crowd from Reading, but the Finneytown crowd could've come over in a Mini Cooper.
•When I got there, the team was (predictably) losing by a lot.
•The cheerleaders were there, and their cheer went like this, with a * being a silent beat.
P.S. When I went there, the cheerleaders would put posters up before each game urging the Wildcats to defeat the other team, with various words used for "defeat". One of them was "twomp", as in "GO WILDCATS! TWOMP MADEIRA!" I feel bad that I just typed that.
-I got to the game and paid my $4 to get in. And the team was playing, but there were about three people in the stands for Finneytown. And none of them were for the band. I couldn't see them anywhere. I asked one of the three guys, "Is there such a thing as the Finneytown band at this game?" and he said it was senior night. So let's review:
•Mr Canter told me the band would be playing on a night that it wasn't.
•The football game drew a big home crowd from Reading, but the Finneytown crowd could've come over in a Mini Cooper.
•When I got there, the team was (predictably) losing by a lot.
•The cheerleaders were there, and their cheer went like this, with a * being a silent beat.
Let's * get * a little bit rowdy!Yep, they rhymed "rowdy" with "rowdy". Still not a real school. At least Reading gave me my $4 back.
Wildcats are * * rowdy!
P.S. When I went there, the cheerleaders would put posters up before each game urging the Wildcats to defeat the other team, with various words used for "defeat". One of them was "twomp", as in "GO WILDCATS! TWOMP MADEIRA!" I feel bad that I just typed that.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Happy Thanksgiving!
Work piled up and kept me from blogging. Here's what some of it was:
I've been working a lot with the three projects we're doing this semester in Press. The first one is arranged and sent off to the printer: Gawain ng Diyos (God's Work), a collection of photography from the Philippines by Lawrence Sumulong, a student here and a superb photographer. The book looks very handsome and we've all been pleased with it, and we're getting proofs back on Wednesday. Another one is Amenities by Molly McArdle, a collection of short stories revolving around the Clifton Terrace projects in Washington, DC. Those are three buildings of public housing, one of which has now been gentrified and fenced off; the stories are wonderful. That one is going to go to the printer sometime this week. And the other one is a stationery collection designed by Rachel Walberg, meant to revive the lost art of paper correspondence; it's called I Remain,. And I'll bring copies home of all of them, so you can see the fruits of our labors.
-Other than that, I've been doing basically nonstop schoolwork. The plus side is that the week before Thanksgiving break seems to have basically been my Hell Week, and now the last two weeks of my semester (plus finals week) look to be pretty calm as far as schoolwork goes. So I'll be able to actually do things that I want to do, as opposed to things I'm required to do.
-So, I came home for Thanksgiving, and it was just wonderful. Heck, even the actual coming home was pretty nice, because I drove home three girls and we had a fun time the whole way. Before we even got out of town, we had had the epiphany that "A bald giraffe can give itself a hickey". I believe we also sang a lot. When we finally got to Cincinnati (less one girl, who left in Indianapolis), we met up with the remaining girls' ride in Graeter's, which was excellent because it's been probably way too long since I had Graeter's ice cream. And then I came home and played Mom at Scrabble - it's what we do.
-On Thanksgiving we went to Grandma & Grandpa's. So, I got to see the new Sierra. Dave, who has a daughter named Sierra, is getting married to a woman who has a daughter named Sierra. At first they used "Sierra 1" and "Sierra 2", but now they're making it more fair by using their middle names... which both start with G: Sierra Gwyneth and Sierra Grace. It's going to be confusing for a while, I'm pretty sure. I played in leaves with Sierra Grace (the new one). What? You're saying you don't still love to play in leaves? Liar. They had to leave partway through the day for a variety of other Thanksgiving celebrations. So then it was Dan & Tracy and Grandma & Grandpa and Mom and Micah and me. (Dad was off hunting deer in West Virginia. Wish I could've gone, but not enough time.) Dan and I played an unending game of War, which we called the Hundred Years' War. And then we sped it up by playing lines of cards against each other instead of single cards, so we called it Nuclear War. And Tracy said she could just imagine my blog post where I said: "Dan and I played War, and he was goofy." Well, he was. And then we had the Annual Thanksgiving Pool Tournament, which I lost resoundingly because Micah managed to win on a random chance (using what Dan called the John Neeb system of pool, after a friend of his - hitting everything real hard and hoping something good happened), and then in the losers' bracket I hooked the 9 ball into the wrong pocket and lost against Mom. It was the worst pool tournament ever, but I still have the Annual Christmas Pool Tournament to look forward to. We had lots and lots of food, all of it delicious. I stand by my statement that Grandma & Grandpa's house is my very favorite place to eat in the world. After dinner we all sat and talked a lot, and I ate some pumpkin pie. And a black cow. I ate too much as judged by how much I'd eat on a normal day, but for Thanksgiving I ate just enough. Ah, I love Thanksgiving.
-We went home. The next day, I hooked up with two of my high school friends, Aaron and Keith, and we went out on an excursion together. We went to Borders, because it's chess night on Fridays, but there were no boards free and we decided it was kinda boring, so instead we went to a pool hall that Keith knew of. And that was fun. Keith was on point with his random stuff.
Keith: Gimme five! (Aaron does) Down low. (Aaron does) In the creek.
Aaron: No, I'm not gonna do it... it's gonna end up with me getting hurt.
Keith: "You're a geek."
Shortly after that
Keith: Gimme five! (Aaron does) Down low. (Aaron does) In the ditch. (Aaron does) Pick up sticks.
Aaron: That doesn't make any sense, nor does it rhyme!
Keith: That's what your mom said after she gave birth to you!
(We all laugh hysterically)
Aaron: You've got me there.
A little later, he said of all the crazy stuff: "I guess that's what you get for smoking poison sumac." We played pool, but mainly we traded stories and quips and stuff. It was beautiful. And it was also profitable, because Keith knows lots of employers: "I can find anyone a job. I can get this economy back on track." Aaron has been out of work, so Friday was great for him, and Keith has promised to help me find a job for summer break too. No more bein' poor and lazin' around!
-So all in all I had a superb break. Then I drove back yesterday. Two inches of snow were forecast for Iowa. Well, when I got within a dozen miles or so of college, the snow had gotten the better of the traffic. I shifted down to fourth... then third... then second... and then spent about a half hour in first gear, creeping up a hill for a lot of the time. I was right behind a heavy equipment carrier truck, with nothing on it, but I worried from time to time that it might start backsliding. While I was still in second, I was following it just a tad too close, and then it braked, and I had to brake too, and I damn near skidded off the road, and all my passengers were in a panic, but I recovered and gave the truck a much wider berth from then on. That road was slick. Before the traffic jam, we were on track to make it before dinner closed at 7:00; after we got through all that, we arrived at around 8:30. "I'm really glad I didn't kill us all!" I said to the girls as they got out. I feel like I've matured a lot as a driver because of that drive. And maybe taken a few months off my lifespan due to nerves.
I've been working a lot with the three projects we're doing this semester in Press. The first one is arranged and sent off to the printer: Gawain ng Diyos (God's Work), a collection of photography from the Philippines by Lawrence Sumulong, a student here and a superb photographer. The book looks very handsome and we've all been pleased with it, and we're getting proofs back on Wednesday. Another one is Amenities by Molly McArdle, a collection of short stories revolving around the Clifton Terrace projects in Washington, DC. Those are three buildings of public housing, one of which has now been gentrified and fenced off; the stories are wonderful. That one is going to go to the printer sometime this week. And the other one is a stationery collection designed by Rachel Walberg, meant to revive the lost art of paper correspondence; it's called I Remain,. And I'll bring copies home of all of them, so you can see the fruits of our labors.
-Other than that, I've been doing basically nonstop schoolwork. The plus side is that the week before Thanksgiving break seems to have basically been my Hell Week, and now the last two weeks of my semester (plus finals week) look to be pretty calm as far as schoolwork goes. So I'll be able to actually do things that I want to do, as opposed to things I'm required to do.
-So, I came home for Thanksgiving, and it was just wonderful. Heck, even the actual coming home was pretty nice, because I drove home three girls and we had a fun time the whole way. Before we even got out of town, we had had the epiphany that "A bald giraffe can give itself a hickey". I believe we also sang a lot. When we finally got to Cincinnati (less one girl, who left in Indianapolis), we met up with the remaining girls' ride in Graeter's, which was excellent because it's been probably way too long since I had Graeter's ice cream. And then I came home and played Mom at Scrabble - it's what we do.
-On Thanksgiving we went to Grandma & Grandpa's. So, I got to see the new Sierra. Dave, who has a daughter named Sierra, is getting married to a woman who has a daughter named Sierra. At first they used "Sierra 1" and "Sierra 2", but now they're making it more fair by using their middle names... which both start with G: Sierra Gwyneth and Sierra Grace. It's going to be confusing for a while, I'm pretty sure. I played in leaves with Sierra Grace (the new one). What? You're saying you don't still love to play in leaves? Liar. They had to leave partway through the day for a variety of other Thanksgiving celebrations. So then it was Dan & Tracy and Grandma & Grandpa and Mom and Micah and me. (Dad was off hunting deer in West Virginia. Wish I could've gone, but not enough time.) Dan and I played an unending game of War, which we called the Hundred Years' War. And then we sped it up by playing lines of cards against each other instead of single cards, so we called it Nuclear War. And Tracy said she could just imagine my blog post where I said: "Dan and I played War, and he was goofy." Well, he was. And then we had the Annual Thanksgiving Pool Tournament, which I lost resoundingly because Micah managed to win on a random chance (using what Dan called the John Neeb system of pool, after a friend of his - hitting everything real hard and hoping something good happened), and then in the losers' bracket I hooked the 9 ball into the wrong pocket and lost against Mom. It was the worst pool tournament ever, but I still have the Annual Christmas Pool Tournament to look forward to. We had lots and lots of food, all of it delicious. I stand by my statement that Grandma & Grandpa's house is my very favorite place to eat in the world. After dinner we all sat and talked a lot, and I ate some pumpkin pie. And a black cow. I ate too much as judged by how much I'd eat on a normal day, but for Thanksgiving I ate just enough. Ah, I love Thanksgiving.
-We went home. The next day, I hooked up with two of my high school friends, Aaron and Keith, and we went out on an excursion together. We went to Borders, because it's chess night on Fridays, but there were no boards free and we decided it was kinda boring, so instead we went to a pool hall that Keith knew of. And that was fun. Keith was on point with his random stuff.
Keith: Gimme five! (Aaron does) Down low. (Aaron does) In the creek.
Aaron: No, I'm not gonna do it... it's gonna end up with me getting hurt.
Keith: "You're a geek."
Shortly after that
Keith: Gimme five! (Aaron does) Down low. (Aaron does) In the ditch. (Aaron does) Pick up sticks.
Aaron: That doesn't make any sense, nor does it rhyme!
Keith: That's what your mom said after she gave birth to you!
(We all laugh hysterically)
Aaron: You've got me there.
A little later, he said of all the crazy stuff: "I guess that's what you get for smoking poison sumac." We played pool, but mainly we traded stories and quips and stuff. It was beautiful. And it was also profitable, because Keith knows lots of employers: "I can find anyone a job. I can get this economy back on track." Aaron has been out of work, so Friday was great for him, and Keith has promised to help me find a job for summer break too. No more bein' poor and lazin' around!
-So all in all I had a superb break. Then I drove back yesterday. Two inches of snow were forecast for Iowa. Well, when I got within a dozen miles or so of college, the snow had gotten the better of the traffic. I shifted down to fourth... then third... then second... and then spent about a half hour in first gear, creeping up a hill for a lot of the time. I was right behind a heavy equipment carrier truck, with nothing on it, but I worried from time to time that it might start backsliding. While I was still in second, I was following it just a tad too close, and then it braked, and I had to brake too, and I damn near skidded off the road, and all my passengers were in a panic, but I recovered and gave the truck a much wider berth from then on. That road was slick. Before the traffic jam, we were on track to make it before dinner closed at 7:00; after we got through all that, we arrived at around 8:30. "I'm really glad I didn't kill us all!" I said to the girls as they got out. I feel like I've matured a lot as a driver because of that drive. And maybe taken a few months off my lifespan due to nerves.
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