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outtie

20-Aug-06

I’ll be leaving about 6 o’clock tomorrow morning for Pittsburgh. It’s been really good to catch up with everyone I ran across in Morgantown, and my ex-co-workers are wonderful people for putting up with me for another two days. I’ll update next from the other side (unless I get really bored near free wi-fi in PIT or JFK).

In an exciting update, the TSA has decided to allow solid deodorant in carry-on luggage. This is a good thing for everyone in Economy class everywhere.

Please keep in touch. I’ll miss you.

“and they don’t take American Express”

13-Aug-06

My Hong Kong Student Visa

held hostel

12-Aug-06

It seems WVU has finally gotten around to billing me for my room (per the exchange agreement). I’m living in an exclusive international section of Arnold Hall (which happens to be thousands of miles from Prospect St.) in a double room for $1,750 per semester.

The Lingnan hostel fee for 2005-06 averaged a bit under HK$4,400 = US$565.76.

I’m getting the short end of the exchange here…

Liquids On A Plane!

11-Aug-06

Well, this morning I was greeted by the heartwarming news that the previous Aging Empire broke up a terror plot involving liquids. Not that that hasn’t been tried before. Now, it’s a wonderful thing (and I’m typing that phrase in an atypically sincere way) and a fabulous victory for British law enforcement.

What isn’t a victory is the hysterical overreaction both in the UK and here at home (which I desperately hope will be softened by the time of my trans-Pacific flight). Both countries have banned liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and such from carry-on luggage, but the UK has gone a giant leap farther and temporarily banned all carrying-on except for a select set of items carried in a clear plastic bag.

This is starting to sound like junior high school already, if you grew up in the right places—suburban Charleston, for instance. But the British top the school systems: you can’t even carry a book (textbook or Sudoku, equally ungood) or newspaper aboard to provide some entertainment, as you wonder how that baggage handler is enjoying his new laptop—which the airline refuses liability for, and which you were forced to check because it’s not on The List. And I hope you don’t mind the e. coli-laced “potable” water you’ll be getting when the flight attendants have handed out the last of the 3 bottles of water provided by catering.

For my selfish purposes, I can only hope that the electronics ban is not extended to the States before I get out–I don’t know how comfortable I am with checking my laptop. It got Fedexed to me from China, maybe I’ll just Fedex it back. I’m sure that the assorted lawyer- and corporate-types who would be breaking professional codes by doing that aren’t so comfortable either. The idea is not that smart either—we were making sparks long before anyone even thought about flying without flapping his wings, and planes are not exactly short of electrical equipment for budding pyros too lazy to work on their deadly flint-knapping skillz.

Most of all I pity the thankless soul meeting me coming off a sixteen hour non-stop without toothpaste and clean water (the ban will probably be in effect at least that long).

I hope some of the hysteria calms down over the next two weeks. Or at least over my lifetime–cattle class is a pain, but traveling is a joy. But if you ratchet up the pain enough (ask Ryanair for tips, they’re getting almost good enough) it just isn’t worth it anymore. Proper detection of any type of explosive in a few bottles of toiletries or drinks should not be the unsolvable problem that breaks the back of commercial air travel. We’re smarter animals than that.

Solution: put luggage through a trial by fire! If it doesn’t explode, it’s a witch—and we’re forced to dispose of it in a controlled detonation. Freedom isn’t free, people.

just a reminder

10-Aug-06

DL 5125 21AUG PIT JFK 1050A 1217P

CX 831 21AUG JFK HKG 345P 805P#1

(Arrival of 8:05 p.m. HKT = 8:05 a.m. EDT on the 22nd).

countdown’s on

08-Aug-06

As my ex-co-workers get started with RA training back in Morgantown, their two weeks of purgatory will coincide with my two weeks left stateside: I leave from PIT at 10:30 on the first Monday of school. With any luck I’ll be able to find a way to actually get to the airport: it’s my father’s first day of class in Montgomery, too, and it would be quite a drive to make it to PIT by 8:30 from here anyway.

I have e-mailed my roommate and not gotten anything back… hope he can understand me at least a little, it’ll make things run smoother.

Finally took my tuberculosis test (well, the first part: I still need to get it read on Friday) at the Health Dept. here today, which has started charging. I guess they can’t be expected to do everything for free, but it would have been nice if $10 had bought a bandage instead of a piece of (unwrapped) gauze off the counter.

I’ve started thinking about communications: I’ll need to try to sweet-talk Sprint into cancelling my service without charging me $150. For Hong Kong, I’ve done a little research and it looks like the CSL Prepaid SIM card will work fine, as long as I can find a tolerably-priced unlocked phone. I might even be able to get reasonable (around five US cents/minute) international rates, which would be nice.

Meanwhile, law applications have continued to distract me from the more important goal of finishing a paper for my Summer Guided Reading course in Information Ethics. To my frustration, many of the schools require a “certification letter” to be sent by mail. But instead of writing about this, I think I need to go write ten pages or so about Information Ethics. And upgrade the blogging software… NO. Information Ethics. Capitalized Words. Yes.

Tentative Mailing Address

27-Jul-06

Just got my room assignment/roommate/student number/e-mail address and so on for Lingnan. I am sure that they are subject to change, but my mailing address (just to get used to the sound of it) will probably be:

Room 306A, Hall B
Lingnan University
Tuen Mun, New Territories
HONG KONG

I’ll post on arrival to confirm that.

You’ll need $0.84 postage for airmail (when did that go up? :-/ ) or $0.75 for an aerogramme/postcard. Not bad for a few thousand miles, I think.

(It’ll cost me about US$0.385 to send replies, which is even more not bad–as a matter of fact that’s less than a domestic first-class stamp here, ouch.)

Lingnan class list

21-Jul-06

I recently (finally) got my class list for Lingnan. This is not all-inclusive: I will compensate for the dropping of requested classes for time conflicts during the add/drop periods.

It would have been easier to avoid these conflicts had the class times been posted anywhere I could find, of course.

Fall Term:

  • SSC 201: Trade and International Relations of Asia-Pacific
  • ENG 266: Psycholinguistics
  • POL 215: Taiwan
  • POL 303: Global Environmental Politics
  • LCC 111: Beginning Chinese for Exchange Students 1

The SSC and POL will likely transfer as POLS 000 open credit, with LING open credit for Psycholinguistics and CHIN 101 credit for the Chinese. Good enough for me.

SSC 201 sounds a bit elementary but I am sure that the view of the Asia-Pacific region is much more comprehensive at Lingnan than here. Psycholinguistics will indulge my language geek side, and LCC will prepare me to speak a very little bit of Mandarin (to the English and Cantonese speakers of Hong Kong… oops).

If I’m not mistaken I lack only a chest X-ray or TB test. The visa’s in order, I’m accepted, and I have classes. And I leave in a month.

Wow.

Dublin to home

07-Jul-06

After a day full of tarmac-sitting, I am back on my poor old ibook at home.

The Ryanair flight from BVA to DUB was chaotic and cattle-like as usual, but the pilot had an interesting intercom annoucement in flight: “Italy have won two-nil in extra time.” This leaves me in a serious predicament as I cannot root for Italy or France. I guess I will have to stick with pulling for Portugal in the consolation match.

Dublin was… interesting, as I had a blister ballooning up seriously (for the first time in my life from walking, I think). We saw some churches and did lots of grocery shopping and park benching, and Alana got to attack another H&M (after devastating the one in the Forum des Halles).

The airport wasn’t that bad, as I got to wash my hair each night in the sinks of the deserted mezzanine level facilities and change clothes each day… so I am feeling almost human even after the super-day of travel. This morning we checked in at 0445 for our 0645 flight, which was fine though stuck on the ground in Dublin long enough to mess up connections for some people.

I was particularly impressed by the purser, who kept track of everyone’s connections and rebooked someone’s from the air. The small sandwich’s red cheddar was also pretty tasty (and well beyond what one would expect for such a short haul flight from a US carrier. But it wasn’t a US carrier, it was LH.

I picked up some Toblerone and Haribo goodies in the duty-free in Frankfurt just to be a tourist for a few minutes. Yum. Frankfurt had a quite strange procedure… I ended up going through thorough (hand wanded, no metal detector frame) security just to get between different concourses on the same terminal. Then… well, the boarding process just confused me. I got on the plane, though.

The long hop was pretty uneventful, although the “snack” served at Charlotte’s lunch time was unexpectedly tasty… I had an extra of it too. Pretty decent mini-sandwich with some flavor in the mustard and some tasty little “pretzel bites” from the UK.

Charlotte’s layover was fairly long even after waiting for over an hour, as a US citizen, to re-enter my own country (that always irks me, since I can get into an EU country in under 15 minutes). It looked like they were taking every X person for Customs inspection, but we managed to escape–though I did not escape a trainee at passport control. Apparently someone with a similar name might be on a watchlist… the trainer suggested that one could ask if I had ever lived in Illinois, but that she wouldn’t pursue it since it was a common name and there was obviously no resemblance. Interesting…

Chinese food and Cinnabon improved the layover. Not cool: to get on a computer with Internet access in the airport, you can pay a mere $15 for the first hour in the business center. If you can afford to pay that you must be doing a pretty good job with your business, but I’d imagine if you are paying that sort of thing regularly you’ll be wondering where the money went soon.

The flight from CLT to HTS was marked by another 45 minutes of tarmac sitting, for which I was thankfully only semiconscious (as now). A group back from a Caribbean cruise in the back of the plane kept me from drifting off with annoying voices nearly on a level with the Spanish school group on the way to Barcelona.

The McKees met us in HTS and my dad met me in Cross Lanes and… here I am, with a fresh Hong Kong student visa newly occupying page 14 of my passport. I don’t even want to think about clearing my bed off so I can sleep on it but that (and getting things together to move to Morgantown on the 8th for three weeks) is an urgent errand.

a little more Paris

04-Jul-06

Saw Orsay today, very cool. Alana off shopping in Les Halles. Have to leave about four hours preflight for bus to freaking Beauvais. Found a Brazilian bar with happy hour 3 minutes after it started, nice.

Am getting carded in Europe all the time… to prove I am under 26 and get a discount.

Trying to move a few photos over to my gallery from Alana’s, so that should be done a few days after I get back.