Thursday, October 30, 2003

2:26 p.m.

So there I was, trying to cram a few last-minute bits of legal research information before the exam, when it struck me: Wouldn't I much rather be looking at the first edition of the Canterbury Tales, published (arguably) in 1476 by William Caxton? You bet I would.

Whew

Well, just a couple more hours until my last midterm and things are rather tense in the library. Groups of L1s sit at tables literally covered with a dazzling array of papers, highlighted in at least seven shades of day-glo, buzzing on coffee and collectively freaking out. This is certainly an important test, but a couple of my fellow students seem about to lose it. I saw one girl's outline - she had highlighted almost the whole thing. What's the point? Despite the stress of exams, I've always sort of enjoyed them, the way everyone is in communal commiseration and one constant theme dominates every conversation. You meet more people when everybody's huddled together packing their brains. Anyway, this calls for celebration so there will be a party tonight at my house in Ada after the exam. I'll expect you all at 8:00 sharp for heavy hors d'oeuvres, and we'll sashay over the the Beagle at around ten. Dress is black tie (except for Regan, who gets to wear Birkenstocks). Just one caveat: No law talk. I'll suffer no federal regulation ponderings during the spiced meats and Veuve Clicquot.

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

Monday, October 27, 2003

I missed my calling

Apparently I should have been a contender. A rock, paper, scissors contender, that is.

Tuesday, October 21, 2003

november 29, baby

Once again, we chastise ourselves for our abuses of the English language. Persnickety or relevant? I never met up with an article on English I didn't like..

Monday, October 20, 2003

Observations concerning my Property midterm exam this morning

- Woke up at 6:45 dreaming of balanced equities and large parcels of unclaimed land, just waiting to be adversely possessed. - Cooked up a bagel while reading over my outline. Could actually feel the knowledge entering my brain, seeing there was no room left, and leaving. - Put my outline away and sat on the front porch, watched mist rise from my lawn through the bright morning light. - Prayed, hopelessly. - Ran inside to consult outline once again, convinced I had done everything wrong. - Realized it was too late and that I would definitely screw this one up. - Rode bike to school in a cold sweat; almost hit car due to freaking out about exam. - Walked into law school, saw classmates cramming, swilling coffee and making vague gestures with their hands. - Sat down at seat, closed my eyes, thought nothing. - Looked at test. - Realized: I know this stuff. - yahoo. - beer.

Friday, October 17, 2003

Mom and Dad are off to India

They'll be gone a while, cavorting among the natives and dining on spicy baba ganouj. Feel free to write them here and wish them luck. Bon Voyage!

Thursday, October 16, 2003

huh?

I just got out of a lecture by Allen Farnsworth, one of the authors of my Contracts casebook and a leading light in international contracts law, and I have absolutely no idea what was just said. The way the professors were all nodding and chuckling clued me in that something coherent and possibly enlightening was being described, but I felt like I was a foreign country, surrounded by a language I had no ability to understand. I'm just glad were weren't quizzed on it. I think he did say "unilateral contract" once, and for a brief moment I was back in little 'ol Ada, Ohio, but after that feeling passed I wandered lost for forty minutes across vast fields of nomenclature, gazing at the horizon for some clue as to where the hell I was. Hoo boy. Maybe one day I'll be able to comprehend a tenth of what was said.

Wednesday, October 15, 2003

Judge Roy Moore, please read this. Thanks. Now be quiet.
Here's a good article celebrating human error, with quotes from leading British personalities. You'd think after all this evolution we'd have ridden ourselves of the biological capacity to make errors.

Monday, October 13, 2003

It's over, the crowds have gone, empty popcorn boxes and pop cans litter the aisles. I think I did OK.

Sunday, October 12, 2003

T minus sixteen hours until my Civil Procedure midterm.

Go thou, my incense, upward from this hearth,
And ask the gods to pardon this clear flame.

Thursday, October 09, 2003

So there I was last week, sitting in my house at my desk, when this little ladybug goes crawling across my Property homework. I brushed her (him?) away and continued agonizing over adverse possession. No big deal. The next day, while riding my bike to school, I got hit in the face by another ladybug. This is weird, I thought. It wasn't until three days ago, however, that I realized what was happening: Ada is being overrun by ladybugs. I looked down the street as I walked out onto my porch Monday morning and it looked like the plague had descended upon Ohio. Ladybugs everywhere, thousands of them, were cruising around and hanging out on houses, pets, cars, you name it. The side of my house was party central. I've never seen anything like it.
So I did a little research and it turns out they aren't ladybugs, but Multicolored Asian Lady Beetles, or Harmonia axyridis, and they're a big nuisance throughout the state. There's a good article on the phenomenon here (with scary picture of beetle infestation). What's interesting is that they were introduced to the area in the 1980s to control tree aphid populations, and it worked. The only catch is that for a few weeks in the fall, after they've been chowing down on aphid cacciatore all summer, the fat and happy bugs have to find lodgings pronto before hibernation season arrives, so they swarm. As we just had our first frost last week, all the bugs in town are out cruising for rooms. Everyone seems pretty tolerant of the little critters, but but I did hear some guy yesterday say one bit him. I've been considering subleasing the upstairs bedroom to a few thousand ladybug families this winter, but I may have to reconsider if there's a chance they might get hungry and find I taste like aphid.

Wednesday, October 08, 2003

Bad California, bad! No treat for you.

Tuesday, October 07, 2003

Some investing advice from mom

- If you had bought $1000.00 of Nortel stock one year ago, it would now be worth $49.00. - With Enron, you would have $16.50 of the original $1,000.00. - With Worldcom, you would have less than $5.00 left. - However, if you had bought $1,000.00 worth of Miller LITE (the beer, not the stock) one year ago, drank all the beer, then turned in the cans for the 10 cent deposit, you would have $214.00.

Friday, October 03, 2003

Don't you hate it when you have too much to drink and you go out and start a community college and you can't even remember it?

Thursday, October 02, 2003

and the winner is..

JOHN MAXWELL COETZEE, for the Nobel Prize in Literature: "who in innumerable guises portrays the surprising involvement of the outsider." A little bit about him here, more here.

Top five ways to tell you're not in Alabama anymore

1. Frost on lawn 2. Frost on bicycle 3. Frost on ears and face 4. Frost everywhere 5. It's October 2