Friday, May 28, 2004

Track and Field

It seems like there's a track meet at Waterloo every single day. How do I know? Well we live within 200 m of the Waterloo stadium and every morning I get woken up by the announcer at the stadium saying "last call for all boys 13-14 for the 1500 m race". Or "Boys 14-15 shot put is beginning now". Or something similar. I'm finding that I'm getting very poor sleep in my waterloo home and it's having a negative effect.

Anyway, I just reinstalled ICQ...I didn't have that program installed for 3 weeks!

Kitty is coming up to visit Waterloo this weekend, yay!

Wednesday, May 19, 2004

I'm Finally Back...

I seem to dissappear for a month or two at times. Most of the time it's laziness. This time laziness was part of the problem. At the end of the term, during the exam period, I disconnected my internet connection, so that I would waste less time. And it sort of worked. I spent less time on the internet. I estimate that I spend at least an hour or two just reading stuff on the internet everyday.

Then when I went home, I didn't connect my computer to the internet either, I left it in the basement. When I got back into Waterloo, we didn't have internet or a phone line for the first week and a half.

The end result is that I've lost my addiction to the internet. I don't make my usual rounds of reading on slate, slashdot or Slam! I even forgot to set my lineups in the basketball pool! I'm not following other people's blogs that closely either, which I usually really enjoy, but I'm just not in the flow of things.

Anyway. I'm back at school. Here are some funny IRC quotes.

Sunday, May 09, 2004

Beantown

I just got back from Boston to present a research project I had been participating in over the year (still ongoing) with 6 other undergrads and our prof. It was the American Cultural Studies Association Annual Conference at Northeastern University, and it was my first experience presenting at an academic conference. Our project involved a comparative study of evening newscasts from countries around the world (I watched the HK news for a month, getting some help from my parents, but improved my Cantonese a lot in addition). But being a cultural studies conference, there were a lot of black-clad radical academics who presented theories on sexuality, pornography, and radical feminism. I attended a few sessions, but most of them struck me as very pretentious in a way in which only academics can be. As a result, many of us used the 4 day trip to Boston as an all-expenses-paid trip to one of America's most historic cities. It was pretty sweet.

By far the highlight was catching a Red Sox game at Fenway Park. This is a must for a baseball fan -- the most storied ballpark in the majors, and one you always see on TV. We lined up and got standing room tickets for $25 US, but we grabbed some seats that luckily went unfilled -- Luckily because Boston has rabid fans and sell out every home game they play. Baseball is just incredible when you're at a 90-year old stadium that's packed full of the most devoted fans in the league. Plus, I got to see an incredible game in which Boston scored 5 runs in the last two innings and won it on a walk-off double in the bottom of the 9th. The place literally exploded when that happened. Final score: 7-6 Boston over KC.

Other highlights included eating lobster, walking the freedom trail, and the renowned Museum of Fine Arts where we spent an afternoon. The only other big American Art Gallery I'd been to was the Met in NYC -- and while it wasn't nearly as big, the MFA does have a good collection, the strongest areas being American colonial-era and postcolonial painters like Winslow Homer, Gilbert Stuart and John Singleton Copley. There were some famous portraits of Washington in there. While the international collection was not nearly as extensive as the Met's there was still a decent-sized collection of Monet/Manet/Renoir impressionism plus a couple Picassos and Van Goghs. It had been a while since I had been to a gallery, and I had started to forget the names of many famous painters, so this was a good experience for sure.

Also cool was touring Harvard and MIT. With Harvard, MIT, Boston U, Boston College, Northeastern, Tufts and Brandeis (I'm sure I'm missing some) the Boston area probably has the highest per-capita concentration of elite schools anywhere in North America. While Harvard is typically New England and red-brick, MIT has some really radically-designed buildings... It's always nice to dream....

But back to reality... Time to start work for the summer. I'll be here on weekdays, and likely home most weekends. I'm off!