Jan. 23rd, 2005

fox: little cartoon self (doll)
so i was up all night morning playing in the Williams Trivia Contest with [livejournal.com profile] sanj, [livejournal.com profile] ellen_fremedon, [livejournal.com profile] miraielle, [livejournal.com profile] darthrami, [livejournal.com profile] strange_selkie and associates, and after careful tabulation it turns out that the team of Deine Mutter Ist Geekenwermachtstaffle (Your Mother Is A Geek Army, i.e. us) is the winner.

which means that (a) we have to run the next trivia contest -- note that not one of us is actually in Williamstown, MA -- and (b) something Very Big has happened because remote teams don't win, and thus pretty soon fire will rain down from heaven and only the worthy will be saved, or something.  i don't quite get what the big stuss is, except in the way that the first time anything happens it's a harbinger of the sort of change people who do traditional things don't like.  and i can get behind that.  but i also like winning.  so, cool, and the odds are overwhelming that i can't be in Williamstown to help actually run the actual thing in may, but whatever, it has been and will continue to be fun.  :-D


oh, also, welcome-back bop at college tonight, and [livejournal.com profile] cannons_at_dawn came by for a bit, and that was cool, and then she left and i stayed, and kept drinking, and things are fun.  i like my college and my college-mates.  they are cool.  but i should probably go to sleep now, and see if i can't groove myself back into this time zone.
fox: flag, vote (vote - by lysrouge)
You know how we've been saying that we need to find a way to stop seeming (or, as some would have it, being) anti-religion, within the context of a liberal or at least progressive society?

This isn't it.  (Briefly: ))

I mean to say.  Are the Bible classes funded out of the public school budget?  (No.)  Are the kids required to go?  (Nope.)  Then shouldn't a commitment to principles of religious tolerance dictate that the program be allowed to do its thing unmolested?

Okay, I'm sympathetic to the fact that kids who don't go to the Bible classes most of their classmates attend are liable to feel left out.  News flash:  kids who don't go to the _________ most of their classmates attend are liable to feel left out.  When I was in school, a bunch of kids (admittedly not a majority, but still) went to dancing school on Friday afternoons, and those who didn't felt like we were missing something.  By all accounts the dancing-school crowd hated every minute of it and we were lucky we didn't have to go, but that didn't change the fact that they were a group of which others of us weren't members.  (Another bunch of kids, with some overlap, went to Hebrew school two afternoons a week.  That's probably a better analogy with the Bible-study thing in this article; it wasn't all the Jewish kids who went to Hebrew school, but obviously nobody who wasn't Jewish went, because why would they?  And the kids who did had a community the rest of us couldn't be part of.)  It's just a fact of life.

What ought to happen, of course, is that the school should use the kids' time better who aren't going to the Bible classes.  It's not a free period for the teachers, after all.  The superintendent says "We don't participate or encourage participation" -- so far, so good -- but as for the kids who stay behind, doing art projects or remedial work, he says "[generally], new work is not started, because the majority would fall behind."

[headdesk]

Dear superintendent:  Or, those kids could be getting ahead.  Just a thought.  :-)

But now that I've been so reasonable from the left, a quick note to Jack Hinton, head (as the article tells us) of a group that funds and administers the classes, who says "We have a small core of a group philosophically opposed to any connection between religiosity and schools.  They're articulate and persuasive, but they are in the minority" -- that's as may be, sir, but they're also right, constitutionally speaking.  You may keep your weekday Bible classes, but don't try to actually connect them to the schools, please.  Thank you.
fox: my left eye.  "ceci n'est pas une fox." (not-fox)
back to the mozart requiem, something i noticed last term but have just been reminded of while listening to this recording i ripped from a CD of my dad's:  wow, this "hosanna" stuff is (musically speaking) textbook mozart, eh?
fox: little cartoon self (doll)
okay, first off, i admit, this is the very first time ever ever that i am listening to verdi's requiem.

with that confession out of the way:  where have i heard this "dies irae" before?  ... it's something lame like in a car commercial or similar, but damn, man ...

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fox: my left eye.  "ceci n'est pas une fox." (Default)
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