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% 24.11.01

# I don't know why, but I'm getting a kick out of the fact that I'm citing Erich von Däniken's Chariots of the Gods? in my anthropology seminar paper. I think if I had to do another seminar paper I'd do it on crackpot archaeology. Or on the amish.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 22:20 -- link -- comment

 

# Satan, oscillate my metallic sonatas!
posted by Stentor Danielson at 01:24 -- link -- comment

 

# Computer-adaptive tests (where they give you a harder question if you get one right, and an easier question if you get one wrong) mess with your head. They keep you at your maximum level of competence, which fools you into thinking you did much worse than you actually did. Even so, I still don't know how I managed to get a higher score on the analytical section of the GRE than on the verbal. I'm much better at finding antonyms for "apocryphal" than I am at determining whether Bob can sit next to Sally given that there are six seats and Joe can't sit to Steve's right and Sally and Edna have to be across from one another.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 00:18 -- link -- comment

 

% 22.11.01

# Quincey is shedding all over my keyboard.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 22:19 -- link -- comment

 

% 21.11.01

# Today I read. A lot.

When I got home I felt really lost. Zeke was using the computer, so I couldn't be online. I certainly couldn't do non-computer things while signed on to IM in case someone decided to talk to me. So I felt really disconnected when I went up to my room. I don't even have a stereo there (not that it would do me much good, as my CDs are all at school anyway).

So I got lots of reading done, having no distractions. I finished Seeing Like A State. It wasn't that much reading, and I would have just left it until I got back from break, but I need to use it in my anthropology paper that I'm writing over the next few days. I'm using it in my geography seminar paper, too. And as I think about my honors thesis (more on that in a bit), I think it will be key there as well.

Then I picked up Gold of the Gods, by everyone's buddy Erich von Däniken. I'm not entirely sure why. I think some part of me just needed to read something -- a book, preferrably -- that was inconsequential and had no bearing on anything for any class. Crackpot archaeology is always good for that. Although I could probably rationalise it somehow -- maybe saying that since von Däniken is unfortunately more widely known than, say, Tom Dillehay, I should be familiar enough with his ideas to be able to point out how patently absurd they are.

Then I started in on background research for my thesis. I decided suddenly a few weeks ago that I was going to do my project on Aboriginal fire ecology. I've had mixed luck with the sudden inspiration system of picking topics. My summer research fiasco started as an inspiration. So did the Oneida Land Claim GIS project that gave us so many problems. But my geography paper on the Aral Sea, which is working out ok, was conceived 20 minutes before I committed to it. So we'll see.

What I can say now is that, contrary to expectations, I'm finding myself interested in this. I don't mean to say I expected the whole project to be drudgery. But I had thought there would be a lot of boring background reading on how fire ecology works before I got to the good stuff about Aboriginal burning practices. Anthropology is great, but I thought the biology and physics of it would be a pain. But that isn't proving to be the case. Maybe it's just a matter of Rob Whelan being an accessible writer, as I'm sure some of the more technical papers on the subject would bore the crap out of me, but I'm genuinely interested in how fire works. I just need to keep this up for a few more months.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 00:10 -- link -- comment

 

% 20.11.01

# Tell me about taxidermy.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 10:07 -- link -- comment

 

# Sometimes it's the simplest things, like plugging in the speakers so you can jam with They Might Be Giants while you turn off the computers in the geography lab. Socks get no traction on this floor.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 00:01 -- link -- comment

 

% 19.11.01

# Amanda has also temporarily moved to blogspot, and Marty has creatively used blogspot to update his people.colgate.edu site. So there are now three Colgate server blogs active.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 11:10 -- link -- comment

 

# OK, so I've temporarily moved to blogspot, since people.colgate.edu seems to not want to work properly. Hopefully going through this trouble will jinx people.colgate.edu into working again. Although saying that might jinx it into not working. This would all be very confusing if I were superstitious.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 10:19 -- link -- comment

 

# gah.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 10:05 -- link -- comment

 

% 18.11.01

# It's interesting how liberal students are always complaining about how entrenched Colgate is in the conservative status quo, while conservative students feel they have to resort to "freedom of speech" arguments to keep from being silenced by the pervasive liberalism on campus.
posted by Stentor Danielson at 15:56 -- link -- comment