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November 25, 2008

Denouement

I think I've swallowed the egg in terms of work for this quarter: seminar paper is turned in, midterms are over, cow's in the barn for my final project in English 405. Except not really: next week I have a final on Friday, a Christmas party to plan for Thursday night, an outreach event on Saturday, final project due Monday, final exam and take-home exam all on Tuesday.

But all that matters not, for tomorrow I go...to CABO SAN LUCAS. Don't be surprised if I go parasailing into the sunset, never to return.

November 23, 2008

Starstruck

I am not condoning jumping into Mirror Lake, but I have to say it.

I SAW BEANIE WELLS!!!

I was not able to see this live, but that's okay.

I don't know if I've ever been so starstruck. Except maybe the time I met Bill Nye. Which makes no sense because I don't even care THAT much about football and I'm frankly kind of relieved that the season is over because that means I don't have to help host a football party every other weekend. But in the end, GO BUCKS ALL THE WAY!

November 19, 2008

Beat Michigan Week

I sort of wish I cared enough about Beat Michigan Week to have any desire to participate in any of the *festivities* but honestly it is so cold and I am up to my ears in schoolwork that banking my emotional well-being on a game of pigskin seems rather unwise.

I had vaguely considered jumping in Mirror Lake as a senior year hoorah, but that was last week when the temperature was still in the 60s. And before my friend told me about the lab work his microbiology class did on the Mirror Lake water...

But in any case, I'll be down there tomorrow night with Chi Alpha handing out free hot chocolate to those who have less common sense than I do. I figure I should at least go see it once in my time here.

November 14, 2008

Empty Bowls

Today from 11am-1pm OSU Serving With Honor is putting on the Empty Bowls event where students can buy a bowl for a donation of $10. They also receive soup, bread, and a drink for their donation. All funds raised go to the Mid-Ohio Food Bank to help fight hunger in Franklin County. My high school participated in a similar project every year, with the Pottery Crew lending their skills to making some pretty nice bowls for sale. All this makes me really want to take ceramics spring quarter, but that will depend on whether I can make all the content course substitutions I want for my master's in education. So I could have anywhere from one to three classes that I actually need to take spring quarter. Boo...

November 10, 2008

A Thousand Paper Cuts or the Guillotine

The title of this post refers to the two ways your grade in a class can die.

Death by a thousand paper cuts: Between weekly quizzes and homework assignments, discussion problems, lab reports, cleanliness points, and the ever-popular "participation grade," there are a million ways for you to earn but also lose points. The danger of having a class structured this way is that you tend to ignore the 0.5-point lost here and the 0.75-point lost there, until the law of subtraction catches up with you and suddenly you are out half a letter grade. Examples of this in my academic history include: Chemistry 245, 246 (organic labs), Microbiology 520 (laboratory portion), English 405 (Carmen-based science writing course)

Guillotine: You have two, maybe three, exams in which to prove your mastery of the course content. One of them has just passed. You got a 75. (This situation being PURELY hypothetical, of course.) This happens more the higher your course number. Examples of this include PCMB 432 (Plant Physiology) and Mol Gen 607 (Cell Biology).

Sometimes I wonder why I didn't just major in general biology rather than specialize in molecular genetics. I thought that entomology and plant biology would be horribly boring, but it turns out I need some of those classes for my teacher certification content anyway. Why, why, why. I used to be able to say that I found it fascinating, which I do, but not enough to compensate for the damage I am about to do my GPA and sanity.

November 5, 2008

History Made

So just in case you live under a rock and my blog is your only window to the outside world, America has elected its first black president, Mr. Barack Obama.

In other history-making news, it has been over 70 degrees in central Ohio for the past three days. Yes, it is November, no, the weather did not get the memo. As a result you see students wearing intriguing and innovative combinations of gym shorts and Ugg boots, trench coats and flip-flops, in this unprecedented spate of meteorological shenanigans...oh wait, it's always this crazy in Columbus.

November 3, 2008

My Big Chicago Adventure

So this entry will be huge, so I'll put most of it in the extended entry. Chicago is the nearest BIG city, which is why it was the site of my JEOPARDY! audition this weekend. There is also gobs of good shopping all around downtown, although the 10.5% (&#@!) sales tax really put a damper on my purchases (that, and the Christmas sales haven't really started yet). A lot of OSU graduates (and Ohio students in general) wind up in Chicago for work; I have a friend who graduated last year working there now and another friend in my year who is going there for an internship winter quarter. I'm not sure I'd like to live there, but it's certainly a lot of fun to visit. Plus it is literally about 45 minutes flying time away, closer than New York or Philadelphia, and without any of that slightly weird East Coast vibe. (No offense to the East Coast, of course, but Midwest is Midwest!)

Saturday, November 1, 2008

I woke up at 5:51 AM Saturday morning, having set my alarm at 5:40 AM but hitting "Cancel" instead of "Change." After a moment of mild panic, I threw my breakfast into my carry-on and dashed to the airport to catch my 7:21 AM flight to O'Hare. The flight went without a hitch and I made my way to take the train to downtown. Two stops later, the conductor announced this was the last stop. Bewildered, I followed everyone off the train, when a nice hotel worker told me that the blue line tracks were closed between Jefferson Park and Cumberland due to construction. They packed us onto shuttle buses to take us around the closed zone, then put us back on the train. I navigated a few more subway and bus changes and made it to my friend Kailin's apartment near the University of Chicago.

We wrangled out our afternoon plans, I dozed for half an hour, and then headed out the door for lunch in Chinatown. We ate at Lao Shanghai, ordering Xiao Long Bao (soup dumplings for which Shanghai is famous), vegetable soup for two, salt and pepper fish (Kailin), and Szechuan eggplant (me). The food was good and portions were huge, but service was a little poky and ambiance nonexistence, for those who care about that sort of thing. Total for lunch was about $35 including tip. We ended up boxing about 1/3 of our dishes each, though the eggplant was too saucy to survive an afternoon jostling in a cardboard takeout box.


Picture from LTHForum post
Reviews: Yelp.com; Citysearch

At this point, Kailin left to take in a show at Steppenwolf with a friend, and I poked around in Chinatown for about 45 minutes before leaving to meet Anna at Navy Pier. I ended up getting a bamboo steamer and foot pumice, though I tried without avail to find a mentholatum inhaler for Josh.

At Navy Pier there were still some Halloween things floating around, as well as many, many children. It probably would have been more fun if we were, say, five. But I did get in touch with my inner child, sort of...

We hiked over to Michigan Avenue and made a beeline for American Girl Place. This is basically the greatest shrine to spoiled middle-class childhood possible, and I came to do my obeisance.

My parents bought me Kirsten when I was a kid and I loved her a lot, but Samantha was always my favorite. When I went to Chicago last year for New Year's, I talked myself out of buying her and I've been kicking myself ever since. When I found out that Samantha was retiring at the end of 2008, I knew I had to get her before it was too late.

Other stops along the way included the Disney Store, Macy's, Crane & Co Paper, the Lego Store, Ta-Ze, and the Sanrio store. Many of those purchases include Christmas gifts, so they cannot be written about yet. On the way home Kailin took me to Open Produce, a little place "dedicated to providing fresh produce to the community at affordable prices." Their prices were higher than the average Columbus grocery, but the concept was intriguing and I was only buying a little bit, so I splurged on a $1.50 giant plum.

Sunday, November 2, 2008
Woke up at no-idea-what-time-thanks-to-Daylight-Savings-and-Central-Standard-Time. Ate some fruit, then went back to sleep. Woke up again, showered, had some oatmeal and read a little before getting on the bus to go back downtown. Wound up at the Museum of Science and Industry, waiting for the #10 bus to come at 10:10. At 10:20, getting slightly concerned, I called the CTA to check whether the 10 was rolling that day. It was, but did not start until 11:10. My audition was supposed to start at 11:30. I frantically called Kailin to see if there were alternate ways to get downtown, and she told me to cross the street and catch the #6...just as it rumbled away. A cab driver saw me bumbling down the road flailing my arms around and asked if I needed a ride. I spent my last $20 cash to get to the Westin on Michigan Avenue by 11:00 and heard the cabbie's colorful views on politics. (Keeping in mind that Chicago is on fire for Obama.)

At the Westin, I found the audition room and filled out some paperwork. They snapped Polaroids (seriously?!) of each person (19 total) and ushered us into an extremely cold meeting room. After introductions (lots of political science majors and quiz bowl graduates), they gave us some hints about answering questions, then administered another 50-question test. This was followed by 7 mock rounds of Jeopardy with three of us playing at a time. After each round they did the little personality interview Alex Trebek always does after the first commercial break on the show. Then we were free to go.

A girl from Kansas State and I made our way to O'Hare, which was a little nerve-wracking because I rolled in around 3:10 for a 4:00 flight. Luckily I got through security fairly quickly and settled onto the plane next to a guy who turned out to be from England, working for OCLC. The sun set behind me as I jetted back to Buckeye Country, after the craziest weekend I've had in a while. Callbacks will be in late March for taping in April. Stay tuned...

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