Read posts about school

July 14

Free days are put to good use (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Mondays used to be the days that I had off for school. Now that I've finished my first year in college they're blissfully quiet. The great thing about this is that I now have loads of free time to spend around the house. So now I not only have enough time for all kinds of household chores, but also to prepare for the baby.

I woke up around 0730 this morning and I've been awfully productive since then. I'm loving this rhythm. ^_^

Posted in: day off , free days , household , school
July 7

On resumes, job descriptions and hiatuses (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Over the past few weeks I've been updating my resume, just to make sure it makes a good impression. I'd been using the same resume for three years now and have never changed much about the format, nor the layout. I guess I'd gotten so used to doing it this way, that in my eyes it was The Right Way(tm). Just to be sure, I asked the guys in the Ars Technica boardroom subforum for their opinions. Let's just say that I had a lot of work to do! ^_^;

In the version 3.x format of my resume I'd posted all of my technical skills at the jobs where they'd been used. Ie, Solaris was to be found with every client, Nagions was listed with client X and Tivoli was listed with client Y. And so forth. The job descriptions that came with each of these jobs were also rather bland.

With version 4.x I moved all the technical skills into a section of their own, thus removing clutter and making things more legible. I also changed the job descriptions in such a way that they didn't just list the basic/obvious stuff. Rather, each description would focus on some of the achievements I made at each client.

This prompted an interesting question from one of the Ars subscribers:

Your second period (top of second page) is exceptionally content free. Apparently you were in a lot of meetings with some other people. Compare this section to the next. It almost looks as if you took a demotion, or were on vacation.

In this case, LordFrith is comparing the work that I do at $CLIENT with the work at $PREVIOUS-CLIENT. He remarks that it seems that I'm doing much less ambitious work and wonders whether I was demoted; and rightly so!

Yes, the work I'm doing at $CLIENT is little more than basic systems administration. I go through our daily routine and don't have many "exciting" projects. This isn't a matter of demotion, but a matter of consulting (detachering in dutch): sometimes you get an exciting job and sometimes you just do normal, dull work.

So why did I stick with this unchallenging work? Why didn't I ask for a heavier project which'd shine on my resume? Because at the time I was still going to school :) For the past year I've held two full-time jobs (2x 30h a week) simultaneously: one during the day and one during the night. By staying with a client where the workload is light I've allowed myself the room I needed to work on my second BSc degree.

Anywho... I'm really happy with all the feedback given by the Ars folks. With their help, my resume's improved a lot.

Posted in: demotion , description , job , resume , school
June 24

That, as they say, was that (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

*sigh* That was it...

Today I had my last two exams of this school year and, barring any mishaps, I won't have to redo them. Meaning that now my college career is officially over... For now. *sniffle* I'll definitely miss it.

Ah... *stretch* I'll be back in a few years; no doubt about that. Now! Off to do some work around the house!

Posted in: college , exam , good bye , school , that was that
June 5

Yesterday wore me out (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Wow! Between yesterday's interviews and my allergies, I'm completely worn out. Stupid allergies D: The interviews went quite nicely though!

In the morning I paid a visit to the Via Nova College in Utrecht. They're quite modest in size (the current student body weighs in at around 450 and next year's will be around 600) and they're very progressive in their didactics. I had a great talk with one of their team leaders and we're going to try and find a position that would be suitable for me. We're also exploring the SOS (Samen op Scholen) project, which would offer me the opportunity to work and study at the same time. I'm really enthused about the Via Nova!

My chat with Remco Verhoef of Red Five was rather fruitful! He's going to compile a list of tasks that they've had for a long while and that they'd like to hand over to a freelance admin. This ought to give me a few interesting jobs to fill any holes I'll have in my income. Besides, it'll be nice to at least stay involved with IT a -little- bit.

Finally, my chat at the SG Maarsbergen was short but sweet. Unfortunately the person I was meeting had to cancel our interview, due to personal circumstances. He did have about fifteen minutes to show me around the school though. Seriously, this is the kind of school that I wanted to go to as a kid: all kinds of beautiful machinery that reeks of diesel, large kitchens and bakeries and a few nicely stocked workshops. I'd love to teach maths over there, but unfortunately all they can offer me are one or two internships. I'm not going to write them off though, simply because their school seems awesome :D

Posted in: allergies , interviewing , school , sleep , worn out
June 3

It's great to know one's work is appreciated (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Fuckin' A, man!
As the title of this post says: it's great to know that at least there's -someone- out there who appreciates the work you do :)

Case in point: I've been putting all my college term papers and summaries online and I've been keeping an extensive Wiki with class notes. From time to time a teacher or classmate will suggest that they've had some use for these sites, which is of course quite nice. But last night the aforementioned guidance counselor told me something that made me really happy ^_^

Next year she'll be teaching the second year's General didactics course. Because the course is currently given by one of our somewhat wishy-washy teachers, she was told that she'd have to hunt around and ask people for all the materials. I guess that most of the stuff was never really put to paper. Luckily Lisette knew about my site, found my summary and class notes and was done within a day. Her supervisor was perplexed! :D

So yeah, it's great to know that you're appreciated ^_^

Posted in: appreciation , school , summary , work
June 2

An exciting week up ahead! (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Little D, having a hard time sleeping. Courtesy of sinfest.net.
Man o man, is this week going to be exciting and busy! ^_^

For starters, tomorrow will be completely jam-packed! I'll start off with a morning at one of the schools I'm interviewing with, to get a taste of their atmosphere. After our very pleasant meeting two weeks ago, we wanted to make sure that I like the school well enough before getting down to real business.

I'll then head off to school, which lasts from 1200 until 2000, mixing three different courses with a small project that we're working on. After that I'll meet up with my ever-so lovely guidance counselor, to have a chat about my progress at school. She's been of great help to me this year and I think we can both be pleased with the progress I've made. :)

Tuesday, thursday and friday will be spent at the office, doing what we always do :) I'm working on a rather important project, which consists mostly of paperwork, to ensure the SOX compliancy of $CLIENT.

Wednesday will be a rather special day... I've taken the full day off from work (man, school is really cutting into my vacation hours!), to tackle no less than three interviews!

In the morning I'll visit a school here in Utrecht. They're pretty big on that New Learning thing and I'm quite interested to see how their school works. My classmate Badegul has told me a little about their school and they seem like a rather interesting lot! They're on the up-and-up when it comes to modern teaching methods.

Around lunch I'll pay a visit to Red Five in Woerden. They're the software developers and hosting company behind most of Ephorus' products. I spoke to Ephorus' director a few weeks ago and he set up a meeting for me at Red Five. Maybe I'll be able to provide some consulting on the side for these guys, while I'm working in education. Who knows? ^_^

Finally, in the late afternoon, I'll have a second job interview at a school in Maarsbergen. They only focus on the VMBO level of high school education, meaning that they're focused on getting kids ready for blue collar jobs and the service industry. Their school seems very nice, insofar that it's a bit small and everyone's acquainted. Also, their school's located in an old monastery in the middle of the woods. How cool is that?!

Finally, finally, next weekend will be Snow's annual summer get-together. This year, the whole company will gather on Texel (one of the islands on the dutch coast) to have some fun in the sun and sand. A whole bunch of them are going skydiving, but I opted to take along my homework and to ride my bike around a little bit.

So! Busybusybusy! But I'm actually feeling quite well under all the stress! ^_^

Posted in: college , exciting , job hunt , school , work
April 29

A late weekend review, some whining (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

I don't remember much of the weekend. Saturday I really dug into the finances, and was pleased to see my Federal Return had already come in, so I paid a lot of bills that had backed up. I also straightened out my desk because I am *still* moving from my old den to my new, and it's caused some backup where stuff I can't categorize just ends up laying around.

Citibank bought my home loan. Dammit. I liked American Express PPH. I knw I have said this before, but when we first got the house, there was a problem where the bank accidentally split the house into two loans: a main one and a micropayment balloon loan. Those loans got bought and sold like four times in two years and it was hard to keep track of who to send the bills to for the current month. When we first refinanced, we consolidated it into PPH, and they had been our home loan ever since. When we had to get a second mortgage to fix the desk and parts of the roof, we went with... I forgot who we started with, but that was bought out by WAMU, and THAT was bought out by Wachovia. And when did I get that loan, 2006? Now I have to pay Citibank for my primary mortgage. I am not... all that happy with Citibank. I have had a bad past with them, although I haven't had much trouble with my current Citibank Credit card, which was once a different bank, I forget who. Even my local back, First Virgina, was bought out by BB&T;, and they replaced the decent staff they had with the typical minimum wage drones like every other bank.

There's like no concept of customer loyalty. These mego-conglomo-corporations treat us like a commodity, like how we'd treat cash that comes and goes from our wallet. You ever form an attachment to a $5 bill? No, and the banks don't know you from anything, either. And all your personal information gets sold to another company. No wonder identity theft is so rampant.

On Sunday, I went out with the Heare kids and [info]aksident to the DC national Zoo. I had a lot of fun, and I think they did, too, despite it never getting warm or the sun coming out. Poor [info]aksident was freezing her legs something awful in these shorts she had. There were many reasons I took them out to the zoo: exercise (for me), the company, talking with them.

Scarlet is still 9, and already she's got a Bohemian streak in her I wouldn't have suspected just a few years ago. Her clothing choices are very unique, for instance, and her outlook of "pink and pretty princess" has faded away. I found she likes comics, and while I don't really get into them, boy has she found a good contact to someone who can hook her up. :) I wonder if I can get her some Tintin? Hey, my fellow comic book nerds, is there like a Tintin-like comic or graphic novel that has a female protagonist you'd recommend that's not like, "The Bratz Dolls Break a Nail" or "Hello Kitty Bakes a Cake" or something?

CR was supposed to come with us, but he had an emergency operation on his toe, and has been bedridden until yesterday. He has now been sick too many days, and it's official: he is not graduating this year. I haven't really spoken about it in the LJ because there was still hope for a while, but because of the way they do English, he's not going to pass. The options are he goes to summer school to finish English, or repeats his senior year and graduates in 2009. Both have advantages and drawbacks, but in order for CR to stay on our health insurance, he has to be in school. There is NO way we can afford his medical bills if he doesn't have insurance. He either has to get a job and get his own insurance, or stay in school full time. We're pushing for him to repeat his senior year to buy some time, but the school is resisting this because it's only one class. We have a meeting Thursday because I want everyone on the same page before we make a decision.

We can't afford to pay for his college, short and simple. I never had illusions otherwise, but our family's finances are stretched very thin, and we don't have any liquid assets. Haven't I played this record before? [info]takayla is working 2 jobs, I have my job, and the bills keep piling up. Most of them are medical, because even with the insurance, we're spending several hundred a month on prescriptions and co-payments. Then there's gas prices because we both work very far away from home. The irony is our family is making more a year than we ever had, and I am still paying bills like I did in 1995, before I got my first tech job and I was making only $19k/year. A lot of stuff is leaning on our credit cards, so we're paying buttloads of interest, and the balances keeps climbing because, on average, we spend $200-300 a month over what we take in. And then there's the incidentals, like house repairs, unexpected costs like [info]anyarm changing her wedding from here to Vegas, plus whatever else is "oh, we have to pay $300 for this thing..." This is ludicrous. So if we can stretch another year, CR will be legally an adult in July, and he'll be available for better financial assistance. The current plan is an electrician trade school of some kind, so we're looking into that. The pressure is on me to try and get the money under control, or I estimate we'll have to sell the house and move out by the end of this year. Right now when the housing market is collapsing. My emergency plans are to cash in my 401k in October so we can afford to live for maybe another year, but I really, really, really don't want to do that for obvious reasons.

But it's not all hopeless. Don't give up on me yet, guys, and don't give me free loaves of bread and jars of discount Mormon peanut butter out of pity. There are some rays of sun through these storm clouds, many which I can't mention yet, so I hope some favors I have in the world of karma come back to me. Posted in: banks , cr , heares , house , kids , loans , school , zoo
April 10

Aw yea! More results for school (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach


As I wrote in one of the comments I got a 90% for our project about students with learning and personality disorders. That was awesome.

Well, today got even more awesome, because I just got my -second- 90%! /o/

Analysis 1 - Didactics (about the teaching of basic math) consisted of ten separate reports. They came back as five 90%'s, three 80%'s and two 70%'s.

I'm grinning from ear to ear here :D



Posted in: college , results , school
March 31

School is coming along nicely (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

The Wii game Educated Mama
I've been in college for over half a year now and I'm about 3/4s through the first year. I've been enjoying the heck out of school and I'm glad I decided to make the step to getting a second college degree. Just think, in less than two years I'll be teaching math to a bunch of teenagers ^_^

In the meantime I'm going to make the best out of my studies. I'm not claiming their easy by a long shot, as I've spent many a night studying until midnight. X_x The encouragement of my friends and family helps a lot though and I'm really happy that they're keeping me motivated :)

So... That's almost three semesters down and one to go. Why don't we take a look at the score so far?



Statistics 1 - Didactics = 80%
Statistics 1 - Math = 80%
Didactics 2 - Project = 80%
Didactics 2 - Test = 80%
Analysis 1 - Didactics = To be determined
Analysis 1 - Math = Pass by default
Identity Development 1 - Project = 70%
Identity Development 1 - Test = 80%
Student counseling 1 - Project = To be determined
(WER) Traineeship Prep 1 = To be determined
SLB (my own counseling) = To be determined 80%

Well hot damn! It seems I'm doing pretty well! I also expect to get between 70% and 80% on the three courses that still need to be scored, so that's good news too.

Now, next semester we're up for Geometry 1 (didactics and math) and History of Math 2. Sounds like a fun semester!

Posted in: college , nice , results , school , study
October 26

SKATER DATER (1965 Skateboard movie) (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))




I recall this film being shown to me in elementary school in the 1970s. Right down to the Dolores Umbridge type woman who scattered pebbles to trip them up.

Man, skating barefoot does look like a better idea. Until you hit the pavement, I guess. Heh. Posted in: childhood , movie , school , sk8ter , skater
October 8

Time Machine: My 20th Reunion (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

I think 10 years ago, I would have said I wouldn't go to no crummy reunion of a school I didn't like. I didn't like McLean very much, as indicated by like a dozen posts in this blog (which according to Kevin P, I should outright lie and brag is the best in the world, HAH!). But then when reunion after reunion got canceled, I felt bad, like somehow the underdog was losing. So when when a classmate contacted me and said McLean was trying for the 20th, I was all over that.

And I am glad.

Before, I was a little nervous. Would I be bored? Would more than one or two people speak to me? Would the people who bullied me still be jerks (although, really, they stopped bullying me after 10th grade)? What would I say to the vast majority of people who showed up that were nothing more than faces attached to names in the hallways and classrooms?

You end up saying, "Wow, it's been 20 years!" and "It's been a long time, man," which to school reunions, is the equivalent of, "Have a nice summer" signed in yearbooks.

Overall, though, I give the experience a B or B+. Not an A for various silly reasons, but I am really glad I went. And [info]takayla and I looked DAMN good. She was wearing this black sparkly number, and as beautiful as always, while I wore a black dress shirt, black slacks, and a silver abstract tie. And my magic shoes! The hotel had previous hosted Katsucon and several FanTek cons over the years, so it was funny to see that my reunion was held in the former Katsucon video gaming room. They got rid of the smell and everything! :)

The best thing for me was bringing [info]takayla, and I am deeply grateful how she put up with being bored. I just wanted her there.

Seeing [info]shuttergal in person after not physically seeing her for 20 years was awesome. The hat! The awesome hat! We spoke of a mutual friend, Meredith, and I hope Meredith responds to my e-mail because she's going through a dark patch and I'd like to help. We spoke of Voodoo Donuts in Portland and how awesome it would be if they made cupcakes. Maybe I should start a company here like that. Put it near College Park.

Speaking of childhood friends, Mary-Ann P was GREAT to talk to. Why the hell don't I speak to this girl more often? Alison B was also great to talk to. I had to chase her down, but she's still got the kind, sweet face I remember. Ann Y, who lived a block away from me, was a great surprise to speak with, and I am so glad I got to say hi and see she's doing well. Kit C, the "not commercial airline pilot" I had been led to believe for many years, and her husband were positively awesome. Courtney M, it was great to meet a woman who fights fires, I am totally going to tell my friend [info]fadedblackrose about it (see, I like firefighters because I have this sick thrill that someone would willingly rush INTO a fire for noble causes), and I hope we still chat over Internet once in a while.

That also reminds me of the uneven ratio of people who went to Lewinsville Elementary School (closed 2 years after we left) that made it to the reunion. Only a handful of us that went to LES graduated MHS because it spanned a re-election congressional term and a presidential term, which always meant in my area a wave of people moving in and new people filling their homes. I think like only 20-30 of us did, and probably about a dozen of them were at the reunion. Jessica B, Mary C, Mary Ann, Mike E, Lisa N, Ann, [info]shuttergal, Holly L, Kit, Courtney, and probably a few more I forgot.

Knock my ass over with a feather, I had planned (in my head) for the next highlight but thought it would have been much more likely no one said anything to anyone about it: Tray T, the guy who busted my neck, apologized to me. I can't imagine what guts that took. He just came right up to me in the buffet line, sincerely shook my hand and arm, and apologized in a manner that suggested it had been bothering him for 20 years. I forgot his actual words, but it was more of a general, "If there was anything I ever did to you back then, I am so so sorry..." I, of course, awkwardly accepted his apology, not because I didn't want it, but I wanted to say the right thing so there'd be closure I am sure he was looking for. I told him it meant a lot to me, but I had moved past it, but thank you. Because, really, Trey was nothing more than a catalyst that started a whole "this is why my life is fucked up!" journey back then. It could have been anyone that had hurt me bad enough to be hospitalized, even a random drunk driver, and the story would been the same. But what his apology did was remove the thread of malice that used to exist ("NERD!") and turned it into an accident. After all, he was like 15. We all did a lot of dumb shit at 15. So, yeah, Trey, totally forgiven. And I am happy to see someone who takes the time to make amends.

There were also a few of my former bullies. Most avoided eye contact, but I waved anyway. One sat at my table. "What's the WORD?" he asked. "Anime is the future!" I said, only because I had just spoken with Tor S.

Tor, who lived like 3 houses from me and had a half brother who played the drums so loud that they put soundproof plastic on his bedroom windows after the neighbors complained, I always though of as having the most Scandinavian name I had ever heard. He's a social studies teacher (the best part) at Oakton High School, and head of their anime club. And had heard of me, through his students which was like a criss-crossing of worlds that disoriented me for a bit. Tor also owns a paintball park, which I have to mention because that's too cool not to. But he said, "I know this guy, I went to school with him!" His students are like "no way!" Oakton High? It's true. He did. Mr. Strom lived close to me. We even hung out once in a while! Tor wants me to speak to his kids, I don't know what to say? "Don't do drugs, stay in school, drink your milk?" I'll think of something...

Stacy S, my partner in crime of the McLean School Sci Fi and Fantasy Club (MHS3F2C) has completely lost her geek factor. Man! I am SO totally putting up scans of the newsletter now! :)

Fred V, former gaming buddy and friends with [info]stevonwolf was a welcome surprise of "people I was good friends with and never spoke to again after high school." Steve, he told me YOU gave Nicole P the Timex Sinclair, which he gave me, and later I gave to an astrophysics friend of mine who needed a ZX80 board for a project at NASA. I wonder if you ever knew that... that board ended up working for their Solar Labs!

Jen D! Aw man, I was glad she came, even though we hung out at [info]stodgycat's parties and had totally caught up ages ago. We spoke about AOL, which is how we dragged Mary C into our table.

Mary C, the "famous" Mary C, not only showed up, but was incredibly sociable to everyone (and why not, she was that way in school). She sat with me for a while, and we spoke about her job at AOL, how AOL had changed for her. "I didn't know you worked for AOL until I looked you up on Wikipedia tonight," I admitted. "I'm on Wikipedia?" she asked, a bit amused. I wanted to say DUH! but she added, "I try not to Google myself." Heh. If I was in public eye in a controversial political climate, yeah, I wouldn't either. So sweet and very down to earth, same old Mary. I'd like to say, "Oh we totally hung out in school," but we didn't at all. But being from Lewinsville, we all sort of... hung out a lot at the reunion. Again, we should totally have a Lewinsville reunion. If only I was that organized... but again, it was awesome to speak to Mary. I didn't think she'd come, what with secret service detail and all, but she said, "he's around here somewhere..." while looking around the room for him. Probably one of the catering, I thought, because that's SOOO what Hollywood would have done. Hee. Now I am going to have a debriefing... :-P

She reminded me, among the kids of senators, congresspeople, and high profile people, that secret service WAS part of some of our lives. I had forgotten that. I used to live next to a senator and his kids, and sometimes dealt with the infamous van across the street (Ford Aerostar, white stripe, the CIA had a fleet of those, and I am sure leased them out) and guys in suits you don't talk to at parties because he's "doing his job right now."

Some people looked tremendously different. Some people looked eerily the same. Most were a mix. A few people hadn't changed, but for most, that was a good thing.

While the reason I went turned out better than I expected, and I had a great time, the third-party committee (Blue Isle Entertainment) hired to do the reunion were a little rough around the edges. When we came to the table, we were asked angrily "is the Potomac Valley reunion, or the McLean one?" The hotel had booked us with another reunion on the other side of the third floor. Then we got the "Memories Book" which was little more than a cheesy Kinko-bound book with a smattering of what people were up to now, outdated addresses, and a LOT of misspellings (and I noticed this, me, the KING of misspellings). Not just names, which was the bulk of it, but kerning and uses of "with" and "which" which I know personally is because of spell checkers. "Write your name on it," we were told. "People will steal it if you don't." Classy. What's the worst "typo" was revealed at this announcement at the end of the night:

"There's a big error in the book. John Smith is NOT deceased!" There was a cheer, and a lot of people around John Smith hugged and congratulated him. Haw. Rumors of his death were greatly exaggerated, apparently. :)

The function room was also not conducive for so many people. Someone I know who was mildly claustrophobic was having issues. I had to shout most of the night to be heard across a table, and god love all of you who came, but I have a hereditary hearing loss, and I couldn't hear most of you about half the time. The cash bar was horrendously expensive, and while I know about hotel corkage fees from conventions I help run, $4 for a small 8oz glass of Pepsi is ridiculous. Mixed drinks and beer were also over $8. Really? $8 for a bottle of American beer?

One thing about reunions I would recommend is have a pre-rehearsed speech about the following, because you will have to say it over and over all night:
- Summary of your last 20 years in no more than 3-4 sentences, including college, and any jobs you had for a long time (or, "I works various tech companies for a few years, and now I am at...") If your job is industry specific, like an ISP, over-simplify it, because the guy who got a PhD in paleontology might not know what "frame relay over dark fiber" means any more than you would know who "Dr. Badamgarov from the Paleontological Institute in Ulaanbaater" is. No one is stupid, we just know different things that's all.
- Summary of your spouse and children.
- Where you live now and why.
- Answer of anything you were famous for back then, either an ex-boyfriend everyone expected you to marry, of "do you still wear funny hats?"
- Anything that you did that stands out, like "You're a writer? What did you write?" or "What is an anime convention?"

Note to self: making fun of Senator Ted Stevens and "tangled up tubes" is NOT funny to those who no nothing about the Internet or watches the news. Or whose parents are friends with him. Oops. Also, do NOT eat carrots. You will spit bits of it on people while talking. Sorry, guys... I should have also bought breath mints.

But otherwise? Yeah, I had a great time. For those of you who read this, I am so glad to have seen most of you. Sorry if I forgot who you were; I saw a few people I didn't remember wandering around alone... because I don't think anyone else remembered them, either. I wanted to talk to these people, but I had such limited time keeping up.

I only took a few pictures. I hope to have them up when I find my camera cable... Posted in: mclean , reunion , school
October 4

What's wrong with CR (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

The current theory by the pulmonologist , based on symptoms and scans, is that he is violently allergic to formaldehyde. I told him not to drink the stuff, but kids these days... and pressure treated lumber is very resistant to bugs, too. Okay, seriously, he was exposed to it at school in his new anatomy and physiology class. It was necessary for his vet tech certification, and now we're at a loss because, well, you can't be in any medical profession without formaldehyde.

CR has decided through all this he wants to be a chef. I think there was always this narrowing down of what he would be capable of in the veterinary field with his asthma. I mean, at our vet's office, two people have asthma, and one of them has like 10 cats and 5 dogs in her house (one of the "calamities" one usually faces working in a vet's office is ending up with a lot of spare animals, ask [info]anyarm). While CR excelled at his chosen profession, it looked like he would never get higher than a vet tech, which depressed him a little. This was sort of the final blow.

On top of all this, they think he got a raging sinus infection during his downtime, which may have led to sleep apnea, and possible acid reflux (which is a genetic issue on his mother's side). So he's on more meds, and will get a cat scan or MRI (I forget which) to check his sinuses because if he has the kind that they think he has, it requires a 45-90 day treatment of various stages of antibiotics. Makes me wonder if he needs a neti pot.

Anyway, that's the story so far. He went back to school again today, after being absent about 17 days out of 20. His school is trying to get him accommodated, and I want to thank Chantilly High for not being bastards about this whole thing. There are some people working there who have really been helpful, and while there are still some bureaucratic snags, we hope to have them resolved by the end of the second quarter so he can graduate in 2008. Posted in: asthma , cr , medicine , school , sick
September 3

Well, today's the first day of school! (Kilala.nl (Cailin Coilleach)) by Cailin Coilleach

Wow! Today's the first day of school and it already feels rather different! I went to bed around 2130, read for an hour, then slept like a brick. And I woke around 0700, instead of the usual 0600 on workdays. This actually feels rather nice! Combine that with yesterday and I'm feeling rather relaxed!

You see, yesterday I was feeling really worked up because I hadn't studied yet, nor done any of my maths revision like I said I would. Too much time had gone into this site's redesign and after that I was just too busy socially. Of course, getting worked up in this case was counter productive: how much could I do in just a few hours?

So instead I decided to follow the sage advice of my wiffums and some of my friends: I relaxed. After taking Marli to work I went back to bed, read a lot, slept a bit and chomped away half a tube of Pringles. So yea, it may have been a "horrible" evening, but IMHO it was "great".

I'm sorry that I had to blow of Peter's invitation for a walk though. He was reaching out to me, but I didn't go. I'll go and visit them this week...

Posted in: oh well , read , relaxation , school , sleep
August 17

Think of the children (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

I never really say that much, because that phrase has a bad connotation with people who use children as a way to push their agenda for pure white world sterlization. I have no agenda, but I do think that too many people sling around kids and teens like they weren't people, but formless clay to sculpt and mold. Case in point:

New Jersey Schools Enforcing majors on High School Freshmen. "This fall, freshmen at Dwight Morrow High School in Bergen County must declare a major that will determine what electives they take for four years and be noted on their diplomas..." This isn't just one rogue school, either. "Starting this month, Florida districts will require every ninth grader to major in one of more than 400 state-approved subjects, ranging from world cultures to fashion design to family and consumer sciences. South Carolina enacted a similar law last year, designating 16 career clusters, including architecture, government and agriculture. In Mississippi, a $5 million pilot program in 14 districts this fall will have ninth graders following one of seven career paths, like construction and manufacturing or science, technology, engineering and math."

I started high school in September of 1983 at 14 years old. I was a psychological mess, suicidal, and was told I'd be best suited as an architect because I was good at math and "a loner" (really, I took some "Job O" test that said that in 8th grade). If someone asked me what my major was going to be, I would have said, "I dunno..." I went from wanting to be a paleontologist to a vet to cryptozoologist up until they said I would be a terrible vet because I'd have to work with people. When I graduated, I was sure I was going to be an astrophysicist. I even took college courses and AP credits so I could skip all the "101 courses" in college and go straight into my major, hitting the ground running so to speak. And we all see what happened to that idea.

I have known people in their second year of college who had no idea what they wanted to be. I just spoke with someone who graduated in a major they hated because "I might as well finish it." She's not doing her major, either. So how the hell to they expect a bunch of 13-14 year olds do say what they want to do?

The irony to this post is my son wanted to be a vet since he was 10. He's taking a vocational track at his school to be a vet tech, and we're looking at getting into Virginia Tech, one of the best Vet schools on the East Coast. And yet... if he turned out not to be a vet, it wouldn't surprise me at all. I know a lot of people who went to college "knowing" they were going to have a major is Subject A, graduates with a major in Subject B, and then ends up doing a job unrelated to either one. Most of the systems administrators I have worked with did not have a computer science major, if any at all.

Man, when can kids be kids these days? What happened to natural learning through play? This reminds me of medieval apprenticeships more than anything else. Posted in: kids , major , school
August 2

Senior Pictures (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

So, today I took CR to get his senior pictures. We got a notice his sitting was scheduled for July 11th... on July 13th. But they sent a reseating invitation for today, which we got last week, so bully for us. We had to get up early in the morning, and while there weren't many people waiting, it took a very long time.

In my school, we had one seating. You showed up to school about the same time as we did today, and I was one of a few kids there. They made me take off my shirt, put on a half-suit, they snapped my picture, and that was that. Looking at my senior picture, I was glad they airbrushed out the acne. And I took it with my glasses on because I was proud to have glasses (and I still am).

But with this setup, it was all fancy. It took up two classrooms which had a folding wall put away to make one big area. They had THREE setups. One was casual. One was formal with a tuxedo dickie. And the final one was in purple cap and gown. The people working these sets were very ... I wish I had a word for this. Maybe only I can detect it. I have to give it a word.
Patroscent: adj. The act of treating younger people like brainless children with a generalized form of distance, smarminess, and shallow sympathy. Patroscent adults often use broad keywords, exaggerated movements, and stereotypes and apply them in conversation with teenagers and children as if to suggest mere words, candy, and shiny baubles distract them like monkeys. If this were applied to a fellow adult, it would be seen as patronizing and insulting, if not slightly mentally retarded.

It's a subtle thing. Like some wide-eyed sorority bimbo saying to a 12 year old, "You like football? All right! Grr! Football, right? Yeah! Uh huh! We like football! That's right. Okay!" It's the same approach used in the 1970s to describe how drug dealers would sell you "some marijuana, man... it makes you FLY real HIGH in the SKY! Outta sight! Records! Disco! Roller skates and Farrah Fawcett!"

That came off as a little mean, but I did think words like "arrogant" and "patronizing" were a little too strong. The patroscence was strong in this room. It wasn't just delivered to the guys, but to the girls, too. There were two girls who got their photos taken while we were there, and I actually heard one of the photographers say, "You look so pretty! Like a princess! Do you parents call you princess? Or 'hip hop' princess? Am I right? Yeah, that's cool!" I'd like to note the "hip hop princess" was as suburban modest as they come. She kept looking around like, "mommy says hip hop is not Christian!"

CR's came out okay, but the gown and tux had padded shoulders. Why on EARTH would you have a large sized suit WITH padded shoulders? He looked like a 1980s David Byrne. "Same as it ever was!" The senior picture for the yearbook we decided on with the tux makes him look sort of like a classical musician with the long hair. I'll post it later.

I have not been a fan of CR's long hair, and he knows it, but I choose my battles. I have to admit, I see a lot of kids with that same hair. I had long hair for two years to give it a try, and hated it by the end. Got everywhere. I don't know how girls stand it.

Anyway, it was a good experience. Those who know Eugene would smirk when I tell you that he was there, and ONLY because CR told him last night. "When did you think it was, Eugene?" he asked. "Huh. I dunno," Eugene replied with that sheepish grin that makes him popular with the ladies. Thank God we're there for him, sometimes. CR and I laughed a little at the procedure.

"Why do they take more than one picture? Why a casual, gown, AND tux?" he asked.

"In case you get in a car wreck and die," I suggested. "So they'll have something for the yearbook where you're not formal, because that's going to remind people of what you were buried in. It can't be cap and gown, you haven't graduated if you are dead, you probably flunked every class you didn't show up in after death. 'He doesn't deserve to graduate,' they'll say, 'he didn't show up on senior skip day, and death is no excuse. Senior skip day is NOT SCHOOL SANCTIONED!' Now, if you went on a killing spree, they put your photo up with the tux, because casual would see too personal, and the school does want its colors associated with the madman who slaughtered 20 campers, two cows, and took a shot at the president. It's like Jack's picture at the end of 'The Shining.' Everyone likes to think of their killer as formal. Now, the cap and gown is after you graduate, and do something heroic. 'Local boy does good: saves baby in stroller from runaway hot dog cart and circus rhino! See! The SOL's DO work!'"

There was a lot of giggling. Posted in: cr , eugene , photos , pictures , school
July 20

Stop treating children like idiots... seriously. (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

This doesn't surprise me: Food Dudes superheroes not winning children over.

Charlie, Tom, Raz and Rocco are superheroes on a mission to save the world from General Junk, whose evil plan is to destroy the world by stealing all its fruit and vegetables. Luckily, these "Food Dudes" have superpowers that spring into action whenever they eat their greens. In completing their mission, the Food Dudes also hope to save the lives of millions of real children who risk early death from cancer, heart disease and diabetes because they refuse to eat fruit and vegetables.

Let's look at this realistically (from a small child's point of view):
- Candy, cookies, cakes, pies, and so on TASTE GOOD.
- Most vegetables and fruits, in comparison, DO NOT.
- Thus, seeing things like this make a conflict of interest. This conflict is never properly addressed.
- Since the film doesn't address the truth of the matter, kids quickly see these as lies.
- Since a LOT of parents lie to their kids, along with teachers, this just reinforces the fact.

I'd like to add that I also noticed that most of these heavy-handed moral stories are so preachy, their very nature makes them suspicious. They are delivered in the same tone a small child uses to convince a parent they are not lying when they are totally lying. Small children are completely aware of this form of deception, maybe more than most adults.

The story I always LOVE to tell involves my friend Neal in 4th grade. Neal was keen to guess a trick before anyone else. I attribute that to his parents. His father is the master of deadpan humor, quick to pull a joke on anyone. Anyone who grew up under his roof ended up a wise and skeptical person... maybe a bit cynical and sarcastic, too. Because of this, it was tough for another adult to fool him.

One day, our teacher Mrs. Scoggin came to us students, with a syrupy proposal:

"Hey, kids, how would YOU like a COMIC book, absolutely FREE, as a PRESENT?"

Sadly, the phrase was delivered in the same type of sugary and hushed tone that those cheesy "drug dealers" in those after school "Say No to Strangers with Candy" specials. Those from my generation remember those stereotypes: some white dude representing some "scary hippy," wearing a corduroy vest, bell bottoms with patches, and a wide floppy hat. Sometimes he had a scarf. They hid their shifty eyes with those oversized shades. I think it was the same actor for every damn film. This was not how drug dealers looked back then, if ever. But the people who made those films thought so, and so the teachers thought so. And in my own subconscious, anyone offering me anything with that tone of voice since then has (beneficially) raised alarms. I guess it didn't with other students, because they were going "Oh, oh, oh, yes, we want a free comic book!"

But not Neal.

He, too, smelt a rat, but he had far more guts than I did, and openly refused.

"Oh, but it's a comic book!" said the teacher, like Neal was refusing manna from God. "C'mon man, it's a *comic book*!" I recall one student saying, like Neal he was trying to snap Neal out of some evil trance, jeopardizing what was obviously an opportune lapse in teacher uncoolness. Neal refused again. Neal was under the opinion that it couldn't actually be a real, fun-to-read comic book; it was probably a thinly disguised workbook. He didn't say this, but this is what he was thinking, and refused to sign the paper.

When Neal refused again, I joined in. I said that we read above the comic book level, and cited I had been reading adult level novels for over two years now. I was quickly silenced with an angry look. The teacher wisely did not pursue this, but apparently ordered the books for us anyway. Weeks later, when Mrs. Scoggin passed them out and gave him one, Neal pointed out that he hadn't ordered one, and she casually said, "Oh, I ordered one for you." Mrs. Scoggin had given us a choice: whoever wanted one could sign the sheet. Why? That made no sense! If we signed, it meant we wanted a book, right? And he didn't, right? So the only logical course was not to sign, right? Neal just couldn't understand it. In his own words:
Now that's what pissed me off. Not that I had to work in the workbook -- if she had simply told us that we were going to have this workbook, I would have accepted it like any other assignment -- but the fact that the choice had all been a sham. If she was going to order one for everyone anyway, why give us a c choice? But I wasn't articulate enough to say that. Instead, I just said, "Aw, heck!" and got sent to the office. Dad got mad at me that night, and said the lesson I should learn was that when a teacher suggested doing something, very often it was not optional. But I still think that her offering the choice to us was either a poorly thought out plan, or an actual Machiavellian tactic to give us the illusion of choice. To give her the benefit of the doubt, I'll assume the former.
As you may have guessed by this point, it wasn't *really* a comic book, but a comic-book-esque thing done probably by the same artists for H.R. Puffinstuff. It was called "4-4-3-2 Mulligan Stew," and was a thinly veiled attempt to sweeten and dumb down the concept of nutrition for fourth graders.

"Oh, man, we were tricked!" clamored some kids. Yeah, you were. Beware of Teachers bearing comics, dumbass.

But Neal wasn't tricked. I wish there had been a better ending to this, but sadly, all of us, including Neal, had to do homework assignments on family nutrition that were about as fun as a visit to the dentist. I guess I would always remember Neal from this point on as not accepting crap, and being unconventional.

Posted in: childhood , children , neal , patronizing , school
June 19

punkwalrus @ 2007-06-19T20:33:00 (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

So, yesterday, I hung out with some of CR's friends. I am starting to feel my age. See, he brought me to school so I could see it. I kind of liked touring the hallways he knew and I didn't. Here are some thoughts about that day.

High Schools around here all smell the same. It's a slightly dusty, papery, floor-waxy smell. I immediately snapped back to McLean, and even got a little quiet at the memory.

I met up in the hallway with some of CR's anime club. One was dressed as Shirololi, aka "sweet Lolita," a kind of semi-Victorian pink dress and petticoat. Wow. Coming from AMA, I was used to it, but not in a high school hallway. Damn, why didn't I take a picture?

Some of CR's anime club friends are pretty cool. You have the hyper one, Sarah, who plays D&D.; I had met her before, when she was a "spaz" in Junior High Science Olympiad. Her parents are a physics teacher and a dad past retirement age. She's now an open lesbian, and still hyper. You have the Asian one, Jennifer, whose parents own the Chinese restaurant my family orders from. Typical of these kinds of social groups, she's the outcast of her traditional family. She even called herself a banana, a word I haven't heard since the 1980s when applied to an Asian person, and it was never a self-described one (even Copper detested that word). Ellen, the short one, reminded me of about half of fandom. A little quiet, awkward girl with glasses and braces. I see a government job in her future. These people would have SO been my friends 20 years ago. Hell, some of them still are, and I still cherish my oddball memories with them. And I slid right into the social group as the quiet awkward one who told jokes. It was the peak of my high school social life, the Junior/Senior years... before it all went bad.

We ended up meeting up with them after school by accident next to the pet store. But then, more than once, I was snapped back to reality with comments like, "I wish my parents were cool like your dad!" Oops, that's right... I am 38, not 17. I have a 16 year old. Rats. But it was also odd that they quickly found a familiar place to put me in their group. I didn't treat them like they were kids, they didn't really treat me like an adult, although they said I would prevent them from getting thrown out of Pet Smart for loitering because they were with an adult. Jennifer hugged me more than once. She's very... fannish. All of them were, but Jennifer called me "daddy" ("She does that to all our parents," said Sarah), and called a lot of her female friends her "wives." All creep factor aside, that wasn't totally out of place with my 20 year old memories. There was a friend of ours called "EBF Topper" who was a little similar.

Ellen didn't say much. I tried to draw her out, but while she didn't look unhappy, she didn't look like she was used to speaking.

Still, I wish CR would invite them over once in a while. I kind of miss those friends.

CR's chemistry teacher's name is really Mr. Garrison. He seemed scared I was going to beat him up because he gave CR a C. Right after we shook hands, he went on the defensive by making a comment that CR would have gotten a better grade had he shown up more often (CR was sick for about a week and a half this year). He didn't say this to me, he said it CR, who looked at me like, "What?"

I learned that a lot of other teachers mistrust SOL tests for the same reason I do. SOLs are "Standard Of Learning," a kind of grade for the school. They test how the students are progressing according to county standards, but then invalidate these tests by abruptly stopping all lessons, and taking a week to teach students how to take the tests, and then telling the kids if they fail, horrible things will happen to them.

I found out all the details of the Art Trip in March of 2008. I am going to be a chaperon, sorta. I get 10 kids, but I won't get them alone; I'll be paired with a teacher. In fact, I was told not to sweat it, that the teacher was the only one responsible, I'd be there to make the students more supervised. Heh heh.

Heh heh... a ha ha! HA HA HAHA!!! [lightning and thunder] THOSE FOOLS!!! AHAAHAA!!! Posted in: cr , friends , school
May 20

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

Commencement 1

It's been a little under a month since my last blog post. I've been busy this past month, mainly taking care of the transition between college and the real world. Instead of blogging I spent most of my time being anxious/preparing for graduation and securing a new place to live. I graduated on May 13th/14th and since then I've been finding a new place to live. I picked up the keys to my new place last Thursday and today I bought some furniture from a former California gubernatorial candidate.

In the past month, I've split my time online mostly between Craig's List and Desktop Tower Defense. Much like I used to wonder how college kids lived without Facebook, I wonder how the world survived without Craig's List. I think I will eventually do a couple of blog posts about my apartment hunting experience and the college-real world transition in general.

The small time I had between graduation-related activities, I worked on a redesign of this site. A stupid oversight on my part (I hadn't installed the widgets plugin) kept me from launching it earlier. I tried to keep it as simple as possible, but I realized that there's I know very little about the science of design (if that makes any sense). I've always been interested in user experience/user interaction, so if anyone can point me to good resources on the subject, it would be greatly appreciated.

Now that I've got this "I'm back" post out of the way, I'll go back to posting some real content (the 22 tabs I've got open in Firefox will certainly help).

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Posted in: design , me , penn , school
May 4

Yes, Twitter is stupid. (dan² (Vicious Crotch)) by dan

I find no redeeming qualities in Twitter. I’m not even interested enough to sign up: there’s nothing more to see than what’s already apparent from poking around on your own for 60 seconds. And I am 18. Gen-Y. A Millenial (admittedly, however, probably in the top 5% of this group as far as ‘net exposure [...] Posted in: geekish , music , rants , school
April 21

Oh yeah.! (dan² (Vicious Crotch)) by dan

I need to decide on college.. USF. (last edited 2007.05.04T0015-0400Z) Posted in: rants , school

When panic grips your body. (dan² (Vicious Crotch)) by dan

Well I finally swallowed rolling back to an older albeit media-library enabled version of a flac decoder for Winamp (as opposed to the official one that did not properly tell the audioscrobbler plugin about flacs). So sorta pretend my Last.fm has probably 100 some instances of most of the tracks off of Bright Eyes’ Cassadaga [...] Posted in: geekish , local music , music , school
March 21

Free NY Times Select for .edu's (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

Scott points out that the New York Times premium content, NYT Select, is free for current students and faculty. It only requires a .edu address, so alumni with lifetime addresses would likely fly under the radar. YMMV

And because it wouldn't be a 2007 blog post with a Twitter mention…

I've signed up but still haven't gone through the registration yet. Twittervision is too time-consuming for me to have enough time to even skim the New York Times.

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Posted in: education , free , news , school , traditional media
March 12

Oooh... dirt from my past... (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

The following is pretty petty. It has to do with someone I didn't like about 20 years ago. It's one of those guilty pleasures of seeing people you can't stand because they do bad things get justice for... well, continuing to do bad things.

So, in my high school, we had that principal named Muriel Price. He was like our Ed Koch (former mayor of New York who was famous for driving his limo around the city, leaning out the window, and asking random citizens, "How am I doing?"). Goofy, friendly, and I think some of the kids thought of him like a joke. He didn't take his job very seriously, and I couldn't really say anything negative about the guy. He got promoted in my sophomore year to Area II District Supervisor. His replacement was a woman named Elizabeth Lodal.

Now, before I begin, Ms. Lodal didn't do a damn thing to me personally (that I was aware of). My beef with her was her clueless leadership. She drove out teachers who cared, kept teachers who didn't, and I got to hear all sorts of things about her from the teaching staff whom I worked with; I was a student assistant for several teachers, office assistant, and generally hung out with many other teachers after school who found me easy to confide in which is why I still won't name names. If you were a teacher, either you liked her because you felt she brought law and order, or you hated her because you saw her as a shallow charlatan who got the job for reasons that eluded them. One major sticking point with a few teachers and many students was her former job was a kindergarten teacher, and while I can't seem to confirm this anywhere, I can state that my memories of her were pretty much like one you'd expect from a kindergarten teacher if they were suddenly put in charge of a high school.

There was the time some kids cut down the McLean High School sign at the Davidson Road entrance. That happened so much, they never put up a good sign for a long time. Well, she paid a lot of money to have a nice sign put there with some trees. And... they got cut down. Trees and all. She came over the PA system the next morning, and actually burst into tears over the incident. I was in English class when this happened, and i remember all the students looking at one another as if to say, "Is this REALLY happening?"

Nobody attended pep rallies. Well, maybe a handful of people did, and god bless them for trying. But this wouldn't do for Ms. Lodal. Oh no! So she made them mandatory! It was like right out of a bad Nickelodeon sitcom. She couldn't force kids to stay after school, so she'd hold them in the middle of the day, interrupting class for 3 long hours in a crowded Gym. In my senior year, a few mild riots broke out. There was that one day when people just got up and left, and I'll never forget the pathetic handful of teachers trying to keep us from leaving. Like 5 against a few thousand, grabbing students' clothing in vain. "No no, young man, you come back-- HEY! You too, you get back to those bleachers and cheer-- and where do YOU think you're going?"

Because "some parent complained," our mascot, the Highlander, was replaced with a Scottish terrier mascot, which looked like a big furry hippo suit. This was almost a decade before Braveheart came out, you understand. "A man in a dress might confuse the students," some morally righteous busybody said. Not that I liked the mascot, but how much treat does a small yappy dog have? "GO GET THEM SCOTTY! PEE ON THEIR LEGS! DIG UP THEIR FLOWER GARDEN! YEEEAAAAHHHH!!!"... nnno.

Some of you know my best friend in high school was a girl named Kate. Kate was a modern gal who did not want to wear a dress to graduation night. She wanted to wear jeans, and thought it was very sexist that the dress code insisted she wear a white dress; something she did not won, and had no intention of owning. Her guidance counselor never seemed supportive of her. Mine was great, but hers always seemed to think that if Kate just wore contacts, and put on a little makeup, she'd be more attractive to boys and not "stir up trouble."

"So you're saying I need to get laid to shut up? Did your husband tell you that?" I think was her reply. Her mother certainly didn't approve of their attitude, and supported her daughter, which didn't help matters. So she got labeled "one of those" (something I got as well), and by our senior year, we pretty much could slip around the school anywhere. One day, Kate confronted Ms. Lodal at an art show our school had. Obviously, I am paraphrasing, but the confrontation went sort of like this:

Kate: Why do I have to wear a dress?
Lodal: Oh, I think you'd look adorable if you wore a dress!
Kate: [aghast] That's SEXIST!
Lodal: Come now... I know, deep down, you wish you could look pretty like the popular girls.
Kate: [angry] Wow! No, I don't!
Me: The school dress code has not required a girl to wear a dress since it was repealed in the late 1960s.
Lodal: [never ending smile] Well, aren't you well read?
Kate: You can't force me to wear a dress! How could you tell anyway, the cheap gown I was forced to buy goes past my feet!
Lodal: We'll be inspecting under that gown, young lady. If you're not wearing a white dress, then no graduation for you!
Me: I think that forcing her to wear a garment that exposes her legs and underpants to the elements is rather suspiciously sexist. Who will be doing the inspecting?
Lodal: The police.
Kate: The police?
Lodal: The police will be there. I am sure once you wear a dress, you'll feel pretty.

Then she left, convinced that La-la Land would erase any memory of the confrontation. Kate was livid for DAYS over this. I was particularly pissed off that knowing the student handbook labeled me as "well read" with a negative tone. Now it's 20 years later, and I would have told Kate, "Wear pants. If they lift up your skirt, hit their hands with a Chinese fan and scream, 'MASHER!'"

Oh, and while this will surprise nooooobody, the police did not inspect under anybody's gowns. I might have worn a dress (ooh! A hoop skirt with lots of crinoline!) and had her wear jeans, and say we got confused. Thank God I didn't have the ire then as I do know, or I think McLean might have been burned to the ground.

Bitch.

The best part was in my senior year, I wrote a letter detailing her lack of leadership, sexist comments, and other things I thought were wrong with her in 3 typed pages of momentary disgust and fury. I forgot about this letter. In 1990, three years later, I got a call from the county clerk's office. Apparently there was a hearing that was being sponsored by several parents, former teachers, and a few students. They had my letter on file and wanted me to testify. I was unable to show up to the hearings, but I did make a taped statement with a court official in my apartment. Now, sadly, they didn't ask me so much about my letter as things like, "Did you ever witness racist behavior? Did she ever ask you to lie about something in exchange for better grades? Did she ever ask you how many minority students were present in your classrooms, and were you ever asked to make false statement regarding test scores, behavior, or number of minorities in your school, classes, or test centers?" It seemed that she was on trial for falsifying records, making misleading statements, and just general leadership issues. Nothing really to do with what I had written about, and considering the questions, my complaints seemed petty. She was in serious trouble... or not. The trial was inconclusive, and she later retired with a quiet hoorah. They named the damn school library after her.

So, THAT was my beef with ol' glassy eyes. The fact that [info]anyarm dated her son once, and then was forever associated with him in Ms. Lodal's eyes didn't help much. In 1994 so, she tried to have "Lodal-palooza" to prevent kids from going to popular rock concerts at the time by having her own. According to [info]anyarm, "Nobody attended. She couldn't even get the school's rock bands to perform, so she had to hire one." This is how clueless she was.

Then she came out of retirement to be principal at TJ Tech, a magnet high school that opened in our area. And then I just found out, she was forced to retire, although she denies it, because she made public comments that Asian stundets are prone to cheating. Suddenly, the questions in that trial made sense. I thought it was just because she was doing a bad job, but they might have had some rap on her for minority bashing.

I'd say this was a fitting end, but they stuffed her in some job where she serves as a delegate on the Education Commission of the States, where she'll probably go on doing what she does... without much clue.

Thanks to Joe Tran, McLean High School graduate of 1988, who is looking for other MHS and TJ grads from that year. Contact me at my punkwalrus account on yahoo if you'd like to get in touch with him. Posted in: lodal , mclean , school
March 2

PayPerPost in Traditional Media - Ruckus and the DP Caught In Bed (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

Whatever little ethical integrity or journalistic standards the Daily Pennsylvanian still had left, it probably lost after a "guest editorial" ran this past week. The so-called editorial was basically an advertisement for the Ruckus Network, an online music subscription service that aims to compete with Napster, Rhapsody, et al by forming agreements with universities for campus-wide coverage instead of having to deal with pesky end users.

The editorial is "written" by Ruckus President and CEO Michael Bebel and tries to extol the benefits of using Ruckus over illegal services by running the RIAA line about how illegal downloading steals from the record industry ("According to industry observers, more than 25 million songs are illegally downloaded daily. This translates into roughly $4.5 billion worth of pirated music annually, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.") and how it can lead to getting sued ("Last year, the RIAA sent letters to 700 colleges nationwide, informing those students who ignore warnings and continue to engage in illegal downloading of music they will be sued.").

How do I know Ruckus paid to run this "editorial"? I don't. But why else run something like this? Surely the paper isn't starved for content; I haven't seen anything like this in the 3.5 years I've been reading the paper and there definitely hasn't been a shortage of news either (like what the University is doing about the string of assaults on campus?) Either it was a straight ad buy or there were promises of ad purchases or free iPods or something else fishy. I do think that running this type of ad under the guise of an editorial shows how morally bankrupt the editors of Daily Pennsylvanian are. This ad is a cut and paste/mail merge job. An almost identical piece was run in the Daily Princetonian on December 15th. And that was what I found from just searching for the last sentence of the article.

I've detailed why I don't like Ruckus when the Penn service was announced. Between this and the Brock Ruckus/Facebook incident that I just read about on the Wikipedia article, I like them even less. Only now I like the DP much less also.

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Posted in: advertising , college , drm , file sharing , internet , music , p2p , penn , piracy , school
February 2

I <3 IvyGate (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

I've been following IvyGate, a blog about the Ivy League, for a few months now and I absolutely love them. Not only is it relevant (though not for long :(), but the guys who write it are hilarious. Here's some choice quotes/links:

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Posted in: blogs , education , funny , penn , school
January 23

My First (Second?) Amazon Order (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

I'm jumping on this meme after seeing it on TUAW blogger (and fellow Philly blogger) Scott McNulty's personal blog. According to Amazon.com, my first order was on Feb 28, 2001. I ordered Slaughterhouse 5 by Vonnegut and A Farewell to Arms and The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway. This was in 10th grade.

I also remember ordering an Intro to Linux book sometime prior to 2001 (in 99 or 00), but that was using a different email address, so it doesn't show up. I remember they sent me an Intro to UNIX book which I had to send back.

What was your first Amazon.com order?

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Posted in: amazon , books , history , school
January 8

2007 (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

I'm back and settled in for my last semester of school. Needing only two credits to graduate, I am only taking two classes, which means I have class only on Tuesdays and Thursdays. I realize many people would kill to have this much free time, so I'm forcing myself to take advantage of it.

My first project for this semester will be sorting through, processing and uploading the 1500+ photos I took on our 10 day trip to Spain over the holidays. It was an action-packed trip, and we were exhausted most of the time, but we saw a ton of stuff, had a wonderful time and met some great people! Definitely something I won't forget for a long, long time.

Being free five days a week means I'll have little excuse to not blog. FWIW, here are my blog stats for 2006 and 2005 (thanks to Alex King for the SQL queries).

					2006		2005
					====		====
	Number of posts: 	 	 162 		 100
	Posts per day:			 .44		 .27
	Days between posts:		2.25		3.65

	Average post length: 		1428 		1362
	Total length of all posts:   231,413  	     136,295

I almost doubled my frequency on 2006 and I think I can definitely double it in 2007.

More goals/projects as they come up. Talk to you soon!

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Posted in: blogs , family , me , school , spain , travel , vacation
December 18

Something tells me I should get back to studying for Venture Capital (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

As I continue discovering new ways to put off studying for my Venture Capital final that's tomorrow at 3, Wharton grad, Half.com founder, and venture capitalist, Josh Kopelman, has posted a link to the Blueprint Ventures' 2006 holiday card. It is available on YouTube as well. So while it won't help me learn how to value Participating Convertible Preferred Stock, the break-even valuation for a Series F investment, or what a real option really is, it does show me what I can look forward to if I do learn those things ;)

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Posted in: education , finance , penn , school , vc , wharton
November 8

1st and 10 (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin



1st and 10

Originally uploaded by Martin Gordon.

As part of the Line (for Basketball season tickets), we went to Princeton last Saturday to watch the Quakers suffer their third OT loss in a row.

The rest of the photos from the game are here and some other photos from Friday night at the Line are here.

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Posted in: flickr , me , penn , photography , school
October 11

Reality Outside The Echo Chamber (Martin Gordon's Blog (cptncelchu)) by Martin

We briefly discussed the Google/YouTube deal in two of my classes (MGMT 230: Entrepreneurship and FNCE 250: Venture Capital and the Finance of Innovation) this past week. In both classes, either I overheard or someone asked the professor, "What's YouTube?"

Now, I don't necessarily expect the average person walking down the street to know what YouTube is, but the people in my classes aren't particular average. For one, we're at the best undergrad business school in the country. Second of all, these are classes focused on entrepreneurship and VC, so I hope that the people in these classes have an interest in the subject. Yet there are some people in this very specific group who had no idea what YouTube is.

I'm still not sure if I've lost faith in my fellow classmates or gained faith in the power of the echo chamber.

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Posted in: blogs , google , penn , school , vc , web 2.0 , wharton , youtube