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Overheard on the Escalator

Administration Suit: “Libraries are filled with passive aggressive people.”

I’ll buy that, and I’ll cop to it, too. The cataloging department tends to see the worst of it, I think, but I have to say that as academic libraries go, my experience is that the passive aggression level here–even in cataloging–is below average. I hear a lot of whinging about it from coworkers, but as most of them have spent their entire professional lives here (which in itself speaks very highly of this institution), I don’t believe they have a very accurate compass by which to judge.

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Monday Excitement

A coworker’s car caught on fire this morning. She’d only been here for about 15 minutes when someone came up to tell her that she needed to go down to the parking lot to talk to the police and fire guys. It sounds like it was an electrical problem. The surrounding cars were fine, but a nearby tree got a little scorched. Her car is totalled. Everything from the windshield forward is scorched, including the tires, which melted.

What an awful way to start the week. I would be in tears and probably throwing up if it had been me.

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Red Fox

I saw another fox this morning. A red one, this time. As I was driving down 17th street, between Fee and Jordan, he streaked across the road, right in front of my car. I think he must’ve been chasing a bunny, because he ended up in a field, running and pouncing and generally looking like he was having a lot of fun. It was early and there was very little traffic, so I stopped for a minute to watch him. Day-um, was he ever cute! His little white tail tip kept flicking around, making him look like a cat on the hunt.

A campus cop pulled out of a parking lot up the road from me. I decided it was best to move along, so I didn’t get to see whether or not Mr. Fox ever caught his breakfast.

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Pareidolia

Holy asparagus, Batman!

It appears that The Son of God has been potted. The owner of said visage reckons it’s better than Mother-Theresa-in-a-Bagel. I tend to agree.

My favorite, though, is the “artist’s impression of Jesus” included in the article. I mean, it’s good of them to point out that it–unlike the fifty brazillion other depictions of Christ–is only an artist’s interpretation, because otherwise, we might think it was photographic proof or something.

Boggle.

And, as if potting weren’t enough, the aforementioned Lamb o’ God shall also be cubed. Another artist’s impression of Jesus has twice lost his right hand to vandals. As a prophylactic measure, after the hand has regenerated, the statue will be placed in a Plexiglas cube. Personally, I think the cube should not be transparent. It could be a physics experiment, e.g. Schroedinger’s Christ. It would also force folks to take it on faith that Jesus was, indeed, in the box. And then there’s the endlessly entertaining gag: “What’s in the Booooooooox?!

Also, I have now added two more phrases to my Cursing for Jesus repertoire: Christ in a Pot and Christ in a Box.

Teh Enb.

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Mrs. P.

On a good day, and when I’m warmed up, I can type 90+ words per minute. I find that a little mind-boggling. Sometimes, when I’m tap-tap-tapping along, I think of Mrs. P., my high school typing teacher.

I didn’t want to take typing. It was considered a secretarial/business class, which I had absolutely zero interest in. I begged and pleaded and whined and complained, but my mom insisted that I take one quarter of typing. “Just one quarter. It won’t kill you.” Computers were going to be the wave of the future, dontchaknow, and typing would be a necessary skill. I disagreed, because after three disastrous quarters of computer programming classes (that’s a whole ‘nother story), I sure as hell wasn’t going to go into any field that had any connection to computers. But mom insisted, so I took typing.

Enter Mrs. P. Mrs. P. taught typing, keyboarding, accounting, and career planning. Basically, all the classes I’d tried my damnedest to avoid. Mrs. P. was kind of short and kind of dumpy. She had closely cropped fakety-fake orange hair, orange lipstick, stubby little beringed fingers, painted on eyebrows, and fluorescent green eye shadow. She always chewed green gum, cracking it loudly while she talked, so that you could see all her fillings and the hardware of her dental bridge.  One of her favorite “words” was “simular.” Her wardrobe consisted of polyester double-knit pants and bright, flowered polyester tops. At some point, she’d had breast cancer, and had had a double mastectomy. Occasionally, her prosthetics would go walkabout, ending up somewhere along her waistline.

I used to sit in typing class, staring at Mrs. P., unable to look away. She held some sort of horrific fascination for me. It’s a wonder I ever learned to type. It’s even more amazing when you consider the machines we learned on. The school had a few electric typewriters, but the typing room was mostly filled with old manual machines. They were truly awful. I have really small hands, and had trouble trying to span the keys and apply enough pressure to them. When I was able to manage both, my fingers would slip between the depressed keys and their neighbors. On the up-stroke, my fingers would become trapped between the keys. I constantly had cuts on my knuckles where they’d been scraped.

So it’s no wonder that I sometimes think of Mrs. P. while I’m typing. She was actually a pretty nice sort. It’s funny, but when I think of the high school classes that had a significant impact on my adult life, only two come to mind, and one of those is Mrs. P.’s typing class.

Thank you, Mrs. P. And mom, for forcing me to take that horrid typing class.

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Instant Reviews: Undead & Hostel

A video store recently opened up next door to me. Actually, my neighbor has acquired a roommate who has a ginormous DVD collection, so I’ve been availing myself of it. And, lucky me, he has a good selection of horror fil-ums. I win!

First, Undead. It’s a hi-larious little zombie movie, set in an Australian fishing village. In addition to zombies, it has a cowboy fisherman, a reluctant beauty queen, aliens, and the requisite woman-in-labor sub-plot. What’s not to like? For the zombie aficionados, it has a bit of a Shaun of the Dead feel, what with Teh Funny and all, and the zombies are slow and shambling.

Second, Hostel. This is another Eli Roth film. Hostel wasn’t as good as Cabin Fever. It lacked the same humor component, which made the gore feel more relentless. Roth does a great job of creating texture and atmosphere, though.

Next up, Dog Soldiers. Werewolves? Check. Gore? Check. Stunning views of the Scottish Highlands? Check. Okaythen!

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Creationism = Paganism

It’s official.  The Vatican’s astronomer, Brother Guy Consolmagno, says that Creationism is “a kind of Paganism,” so it must be true! 

Religion needs science to keep it away from superstition and keep it close to reality, to protect it from creationism, which at the end of the day is a kind of paganism – it’s turning God into a nature god. And science needs religion in order to have a conscience, to know that, just because something is possible, it may not be a good thing to do.

Not that fundamentalist Christians will give the proverbial rat’s behindermost, because they dismiss Catholicism as a kind of Paganism.