Monday, November 9, 2009

Catching up

So what did I do for Halloween?
I spent Halloween at Taylor's handing out candy to the little kids that came (only 2 groups, sadly), we carved pumpkins (Taylor has pictures but keeps forgetting to send them to me, hopefully I'll be able to post them eventually), I baked a pumpkin pie from scratch, which was so much fun. It turned out pretty well except that I mistakenly used a grahm cracker pie crust instead of a dough crust. Whoops! So we just ate out the middle. We also watched the Shining, which I hadn't seen before, but recognized as Timberline Lodge immediately!

Since then I've been to a couple Halloween dinners. At one I hosted a costume contest dressed as Carmen Sandiego. This isn't the best picture, but that is me behind the podium on the right.

The day after Halloween there was another candlelight dinner put on by Alumnae Relations who invited Scripps Alums to come back and socialize with us. That was a lot of fun, and as Scrippsies we love opportunities to get dressed up.

In the bottom one my knee is poking out rather awkwardly....

This last weekend I went to SCAMfest, the Southern California A Capella Music Festival. Every year this is such a great event. It's held in the largest auditorium on campus because soooo many people come out for it. The Claremont colleges have 8 a capella groups, all with different personalities. USC and UCLA both send groups to SCAMfest as well. Here are some videos of my favorite pieces from this year.

This is a group called the After School Specials doing a Backstreet Boys mash-up: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U18trMdi6YY

This is Men's Blue & White doing a new popular song called, Down:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhEddzhRq08
I especially like their dance moves that start about a minute and a half in.

This is a group called Midnight Echo doing their own version of Baby Got Back, which I thought was really creative and the crowd loved it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TeyfsVRvcC0

By the way, my major is now officially Creative Writing: Fiction. I haven't heard back about Study Abroad yet.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Halloween already?

This year is going by very quickly by virtue of perpetual motion. I am always doing something, and there is usually a list of things to do whenever I'm finished.

Fall break was last weekend. We had Monday and Tuesday off, but I mostly stayed on campus. I watched Return of the King with friends, did a lot of knitting and reading, caught up on my favorite tv shows. That Monday night, though, I went into LA with 3 friends to attend a book signing. The book, Heat Wave by Richard Castle, is a promotional thing for the tv show Castle, so the entire male part of the cast was there, including Nathan Fillion who is one of my favorite actors. Here is a picture of me and a few of my friends waiting in line at the book signing.

This weekend Taylor and I went to a concert in LA. Ben Gibbard (the front man for Deathcab for Cutie) was performing a soundtrack to a new documentary about Jack Kerouac. I haven't read any Kerouac, but the music was good, and I really enjoyed the concert.

This weekend was also Preview Day, when a bunch of prospective students come to look at the college. I've been volunteering with the admissions office, and hosted 3 girls for about 5 hours. We all went to dinner and then took a walk along the campuses. I love being able to answer questions and just talk to people about Scripps. I host another prospective student tomorrow night, and she will spend the night in the room. I'm really looking forward to it.

I don't have a Halloween costume yet. It's problematic. I'm supposed to host a Halloween contest on Thursday and I don't want to look lame. :(

Sunday, October 4, 2009

October! Finally!






















I'm not sure why I'm so happy that October is here, but it finally feels like the semester is progressing somewhat.

I am working really hard to 1) finally have a major, and 2) petition to study abroad for a full year. The second really relies on the first. I want to be a Creative Writing major, but since that isn't a major that the college offers, I have to go through a process of petitioning to get it approved. Between the five colleges we definitely have enough classes for a writing major, but writing a petition for it (statement of purpose, explanation, how it will help my future goals) is tedious and difficult.
I want to study abroad for a full year, because I'll never have an opportunity to live in Europe as cheaply as I will with the college paying for it. That is of course among many reasons. I want to do Fall in Rome where I can use all the Italian I've tried so hard to learn, and I want to spend the Spring in Copenhagen, which would give me an opportunity to learn Danish and to learn about a new country and culture.

This weekend has been such a good one for me! I got my first paycheck from my job, which is a relief. And I finally have all my banking figured out down here. I've given up on Chase, and changed to Wells Fargo. I've had nothing but problems with the former... I also made some money on Friday by selling some of my knit things at the craft fair! It's very exciting as it's the first time I've sold anything that I've made. And an alumna from CMC came over to talk to me about possibly knitting some things for a handmade clothing store that she's starting.

Saturday, Taylor and I went to San Diego to go see the zoo. It was amazing! They had pandas and kangaroos and hyenas and gorillas and just so many other animals. The Oregon Zoo is amazing, but the scale of the San Diego Zoo is just so large. We didn't make it around to see everything, despite being there for 5 or 6 hours. It also has a Scripps Aviary. And a Hummingbird Aviary, which was fantastic! It was a really good trip, and I'm glad Taylor and I finally got to do it.




























Friday, September 25, 2009

Wake me up when September ends?

Hey guys,

School officially started... forever ago? I guess I've been here almost a month already, and I miss everyone! But it doesn't feel like it's been a month. Time is flying by so quickly, and I've been really busy. So I will catch you up on my semester so far...

I'm taking 5 classes, which is one more than the typical course load. I am taking-
Women in the Italian Renaissance (it could be worse, it could be better)
Italian (despite all my efforts I can barely speak. I might actually be regressing. d'oh)
Introduction to Psych (I was thinking I might minor in Psych, but who knows)
Contemporary American Fiction (AMAZING class, probably my favorite)
Creative Writing as Creative Thought (we're working mostly with short stories, this class is exactly how it sounds, if you catch my drift)

Aside from that I've been very busy with my job on campus, which is an internship in event planning. There is so much to do all the time, I'm surprised things ever get put together. This last Wednesday, we had Elizabeth Gilbert (she wrote Eat, Pray, Love) on campus. I had lunch with her and introduced her (to a theater full of 600 people) before her presentation in the evening. That has been my highlight thus far. She was such a nice person, and although I was very nervous, I spoke pretty well. Tonight I am introducing The Lovell Sisters, a bluegrass band that is playing a concert here on campus.

In my spare time? I've been knitting for a craft fair on Oct. 2. I went to the beach, which is so amazing down here. I had totally forgotten how much I love it. I'm going back this weekend, to escape the intense triple-digit heat of Claremont. I saw Blink-182 (and Fall Out Boy, but only because they opened for Blink) in concert. That was pretty good. I'm not a big fan of huge amphitheaters, but the show itself was pretty good. Unfortunately, we had tickets on the lawn, which is where a bunch of intoxicated, shirtless men started a bonfire. Hot dry grass + fire = Me, slightly alarmed. But for the most part it was under control. What concerns me most is that security would have seen it from their vantage point on the roof, but did nothing. Isn't that a job of theirs?

I should go and get ready for tonight's concert, and then tonight's dance party in the courtyard of the Humanities building. What a fabulous, strange location. I have no doubt that people will be dancing in the fountains or hanging off the olive trees. It should be a sight to behold.

Ariel

Monday, May 4, 2009

The Final Countdown

Hey there! I know it's been awhile. I feel like I've been busy forever. Technically, next week is finals week, but all my my final work is this week!
Next year I will be working as the Malott Commons Programming Associate, which is an intern position where I will be helping to organize events and arrange speaker series. It'll be a really good experience, and I'm sure I'll learn a lot.
I'm also babysitting tomorrow for a nutritionist who is doing consultations at the gym.
I need to finish my Death paper (she didn't like the first one and I have to write a whole new 10 page paper) and my Anthro paper (another super long final paper).
But then Julia and I will go to San Diego for Friday+Saturday to visit her friend who goes to school there and to see the legendary zoo! It'll be a great reward for finishing these awful papers and being done with my Freshman year of college. Already... wow.

Monday, April 20, 2009

20 aprile, 2009

Things are going pretty smoothly. Not too much work this week. I guess it's the calm before finals. Tomorrow night is room draw, the purposely stressful process by which we choose where we live next year. Dinah, Julia and I are trying to get a triple. Hopefully there's one left for us by the time we choose tomorrow night. I have an interview for a job on campus for next year on Thursday. I really hope it goes well.
This weekend is UCLA's book fair, which is supposedly a really cool event. But the weather has been scorching and I feel in need of another beach trip. We'll see where the weekend takes me.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Volatile

Today I had a bad day. But this has been a pretty good week overall. I had a lot of work to do Monday (I didn't start my religious studies paper due that day until the night before), but I got it all done and went to work. Tuesday we watched a movie in Anthro. Wednesday my core class got canceled and I figured out my schedule for next year (to some degree at least). Today my Italian class was canceled and I got to sleep in and do reading for my Anthro class.
I was scheduled to work at 6pm, and I was hungry and wanting to go to dinner at 5. But a neighbor had laundry going and wanted me to wait 15 minutes, which turned into 25, so that I didn't get to the dining hall really until 530. All of that would've been ok if Mudd had been serving what was written on the menu online. You see, tonight was supposed to be Appetizer bar- a buffet of fried potstickers and eggrolls and yummy things. They haven't had it very often this semester. But instead Mudd chose this night to serve lobster tail on a whim! WHAT? WHY? Everything else being served looked horrible, but I no longer had time to wait to get a lobster tail because I had to go to work, unlike my friends. I thought, at about 5:42, after inhaling some pasta, that maybe I would. The lobster line was short and moving quickly, so I hopped on board. However, when I got to the front of the line, they were out of cooked ones, and I had to wait 10 more minutes. Which meant by the time I got back to my table I had 7 minutes to get to work and a steaming hot fresh lobster tail that wasn't cool enough to eat.

So at this point (and still, actually) I'm hungry, frustrated, have a headache and just can't keep perspective. These are all actually good problems for me to have. I go to school that decides to serve lobster for dinner out of the blue, and I have a job to go to (it's less than Oregon min. wage, but I can't complain- I mostly just surf the internet anyways). Despite what awesome problems there are for me to have, it does not make me any less bitter about the lobster.

My awesome friends saved and brought back the lobster tail for me. They put it in the fridge. But really, what do I do with a cold lobster tail? Microwaving it makes it rubbery. Not to mention the rest of the dorm might crucify me for making the kitchen smell like fish. But I'm kind of hungry and might just do it anyway.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Easter

I'm heading out to Taylor's today to spend the weekend. His friend is having a barbeque today which will be fun, and then tomorrow I'll be having Easter with his family. This is an acceptable alternative since I can't be home having Easter with you guys. But here's a little bit of information I stumbled across that makes a traditional Easter hurt a little. I'd almost rather be in a dining hall with friends. Almost.
Without further ado... Harvey Mudd's Easter Brunch Menu:

Soup

Homestyle Chicken Noodle

Cream Of Broccoli

Lumberjack Vegetable

Salad Bar

Mimosas

Buffet

Orange Glazed Ham

Carved New York Striploin

Portobello Mushroom Ravioli w/Marsala Sauce

Au Gratin Potatoes w/Carmelized Onions

Country Style Scrambled Eggs

Chicken Apple Sausage

Hickory Smoked Thick Sliced Bacon

Home Fried Potatoes

Whole Grain Pancakes

Tofu Scramble

Vegan Sausage Links

Asparagus w/Hollandaise Sauce

Omelet Station

Lobster Tail

Bagels & Lox

Cheese Blintzes

Fresh Made Strawberry Pies

Carrot Cake

Self Serve Waffle Bar




Lobster Tail?!?!?!?! No wonder these schools cost so much. But that's not a complaint. I'm just bitter since I won't be around to benefit.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Death

I've had the busiest week and a half ever! I had to write a 10 page paper about Death, a 5 page paper for Religious Studies and a 3 page paper for Anthropology (on a book we just read about how sugar changed the world). Hall draw is coming up as well, which is the process in which we choose a room for next year. Julia and I are going to be roommates again, so we're looking for awesome doubles in the older dorms. We saw the coolest 2 story triple, but we don't have a third person, otherwise it would be awesome.

I thought I would finally go ahead and post some pictures from Disneyland! It was easily the best day of my Spring Break :)

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

School Resumes

Spring Break is over now. It was a lot of fun staying with Taylor. I got a small amount of reading done for my classes, but that's better than nothing. We spent a day at the beach, and hung out with his friends and went to the park a few times. He still had school and work, so we didn't have full days to hang out, just sections of them. And going to Disneyland with my 2 cutest cousins was so much fun!!! I'll post pictures soon, but not yet. Too much else to do tonight. (and this next week in general)
1. I didn't get the Wolf Hollow baby animals internship either, so there's a bunch of applications I should be filling out for other internships. What do I do all summer if nothing comes through? Vegetate?
2. Something about Spring Break makes teachers pile on the work. I have 18 pages to write in the next week (5 on women's roles in gnosticism, 10 for my Death class, and 3 for Anthro). All that would not be so bad if I didn't have so much reading to do on top of it. I need to read a book and a half, and then find/read other sources for my Death paper. Maybe do an interview? Ugh. College this semester is so much harder.
3. This weekend is a 3 day weekend (for Cesar Chavez day, pretty much the only holiday we get off aside from MLK). I plan to spend Friday at the beach with Julia, her friend visiting from Wilamette, Abby and Dinah. Don't worry, that's my reading day. It's called multitasking. The other two days I'll be virtually chained to my desk writing page after page.

Wish me luck!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

I can smell the sunshine!

Spring Break is so close! And much needed. I hope I can soak up just as much motivation as sunshine.

I finally heard back from the language program, and I didn't wind up getting it. It was a stretch, anyway. They got 4500 applicants for 500 positions. If I'm in Portland for the summer, I might want to take a beginning Arabic class, and that would put me in a smaller pool of applicants for next year.

Ellie, and her boyfriend Tucker, had their plans change so they came and visited me this weekend. It worked out fine, because I had very little homework. We watched Step Up 2 and Hairspray, and laid out in the sun on the lawn. We ate with some other kids from Wilson so Ellie could catch up with them. It was a good time. Too cold at the beach to warrant driving out there, and I didn't want to drive to Chinatown (downtown LA driving scares me!) so we stayed in Claremont the whole time. And yesterday they left to drive up to the Bay area to visit some other friends.

My Spring Break starts Friday the 13th. Hopefully that's not unlucky! I really need a good long break from work (but I'll probably wind up doing a bunch over break).

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Tick-Tock

I'm not normally this impatient, but it has been so long since turning in my CLS application, and now that it's finally March and almost there... I can't take it anymore. And the worst part is that it's so competitive I've probably waited all this time, and built up all this anticipation for nothing.
I'd like to know what I'm doing for the summer. I'd like to know how many more applications I need to fill out. I abandoned the Teach Breakthroughs idea, because, well. No good reason I guess. If it's going to be that stressful, I'd rather it be in Portland.
PSU's website has a great list of newspaper internships available in Portland, unfortunately application deadlines are not listed anywhere. I find that strange for a business that thrives on deadlines. And I have so little actual experience in that direction. I have the photo portfolio I built up for my AP, but studio work I don't have much experience with. Or lighting. Maybe next year when I've taken more photo classes here, and have a professor I can ask for advice. Though next summer I can finally apply for a whole new range of scholarships... most don't want freshman.
It's almost Spring Break! Just one more week of school...
And for the first weekend, Ellie is coming to visit me! She and her boyfriend Tucker are roadtripping to Cali to spend time at the beach and they're going to hang out with me for a couple of days before heading home. We'll have to trip around a bit outside of Claremont, since most of the school will be gone, and therefore I have nothing interesting to show them. Pity. Maybe we'll go spend some time in the parks nearby. Joshua Tree isn't too far... We'll see. Whatever it is, it'll have to be cheap!

Monday, March 2, 2009

Murder Mystery!


Last Friday night we had a Murder Mystery party, which was fun and silly. (I didn't do it, I swear!)

Sunday, March 1, 2009

I dislike title-ing

Friday afternoon/evening, Julia and I went to Old Town Pasadena on another "new student" organized trip. We walked around and did a little shopping, got cupcakes and good sushi, and had a lot of fun. It was nice to be outside of Claremont for the weekend.
On Saturday I went to the LA County Museum of Art (LACMA) with Taylor, my friend Dinah, and her new friend Daniel. The Museum had a Vanity Fair portraits exhibit going on which I've been wanting to see for awhile. I'm glad I finally got there, and I really enjoyed the exhibit. But it was the last weekend and the museum was packed. After LACMA we went to get food and wound up in this Bridgeport type mall in the middle of LA, with a "Farmer's Market" attached, which was really more like a larger, permanent version of the food court at Saturday Market in Portland. It was a good, strange find. But also very busy.
Now I'm just trying to get ahead of my homework for the week. It's super warm today, somewhere in the 80's, but it's supposed to go back to raining tomorrow. The weather here is really bipolar at the moment.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Parents Weekend + Summer Plans

Last weekend was parent's weekend and mom came down to spend time with me. The school had lots of events planned, like speeches by the president and dean, sample lectures given by professors, tours of the campus, the rare book room, and workshops on study abroad, internships and financial aid. The weather was horrible and rainy, but I think she had fun anyway. Mom came to classes with me on Monday, and to my horror she participated in my "Heretics in early Christianity" class. Yeah, I know. She WOULD be all about the heretics... But I'm only kidding! She actually said something relevant and not-stupid which is hard for most students, including myself. So she didn't really embarrass me.

Last night the comedian Lewis Black came and performed to a full house. Some of it was pretty funny, but it wasn't his best routine. A lot of jokes about the economy are a little lost on us because 1) it's hard to see as funny or 2) because we're so secluded in our liberal arts college that we're just not the best audience for those jokes.

My academic adviser met with me last week to discuss my 3 year plan. I am working with her on potentially designing my own major so that I can meet my own needs. I would be combining anthropology, writing and photography. If you're having trouble picturing those 3 things together, National Geographic is a really good example of what happens when they combine. I don't have a name yet. We're working on it.
In addition to thinking about major requirements, we're also talking about my study abroad semester Junior year. It will definitely depend on which requirements I have already filled on where I decide to go, but as for now the options are: Copenhagen, Denmark, Prague, Czech Republic, Christchurch, New Zealand, or Norwich, England. Notice I'm learning Italian but not going to Italy? Yeah... Most of the Italian programs are studio art driven, which I'm not.

And of course, in planning we also come to the idea of internships. Most of them are unpaid, and that's unfortunate, but were I not to do an internship could I really expect to find a paying job for less than 3 months? No, I think not. I couldn't last year, and this summer would be even worse. So here are the options I've come up with.

Option #1- Earlier in the year I talked about the Critical Language Scholarship, where the State Department arranges for groups of students to learn target languages through intensive immersion programs abroad. I applied for the Arabic program, which is run in Egypt, Tunisia and Jordan. They pay for everything, including airfare, and I learn a language that is becoming increasingly helpful in many fields I'm interested in and will look fantastic on my resumé. I don't hear back until late March. It's a very selective program, so I'm hoping for the best.

Option #2- I recently found and just finished the application for an internship at Wolf Hollow Wildlife Rehab Center. They take in injured animals and give them the care they need to heal until they can be released back into the wild. And summer is "baby season," when they need seasonal interns to help them look after the large numbers of animals they get, many of them young. They look after everything from squirrels and bunnies, to eagles and fawns, to baby raccoons and seal pups. Here's a link to a blog that a regular volunteer keeps, I highly recommend at least taking a look through the pictures! http://hollowhappenings.blogspot.com/ I wouldn't be paid, but they have housing for interns, and a small stipend for food and travel. Wolf Hollow is up in Washington on San Juan Island, which would be a great place to spend the summer.

Option #3- Teach Breakthroughs is a program that allows college students to teach classes (designed by themselves) to classes of middle school aged kids. The kids being taught are intelligent, but are not considered "likely" to go to college because of race or low-income, so the program seeks to close the achievement gap with intensive summer institutes that prepare them for college-prep high schools. The work is incredibly hard, and involves 10-11 hour days at the school. But it also sounds incredibly rewarding and the idea of being able to teach something like a Geography class sounds so much fun. Unfortunately the program isn't offered in Portland or Seattle, so I would be applying to San José or Denver, etc. It comes with a living stipend, and may be able to arrange housing through nearby universities or a homestay with a student in the program. I wish it were in Portland though.

Option #4- The deadline for my last consideration isn't until May, and I should have heard back from the first 3 by then, so this is really a sort of back-up. But that doesn't mean it isn't awesome. The Oregon Zoo offers photography internships, which would be part-time and unpaid. However, I'd be getting into the zoo for free, and taking pictures of animals, zoo events, etc and helping with zoo publications among other things. I would be able to live at home and be around my friends for the summer, which is a positive (kind of).

I guess we'll see what happens! Look at the Hollow Happenings blog. Cute pictures, I promise!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Some more pictures?






Y'all might be sick of them by now, but that's too bad.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Half of February is gone?

This has been such a busy last couple of weeks! So of course I have neglected posting more pictures and tidbits about my life. There are some more Dubai pictures I want to share, so maybe I'll post some more this afternoon.
Classes have been busy. I dropped my British History class towards the beginning, and now I only have 2 classes a day mon-thurs and 1 on friday. It gives me a lot more time to do all the reading I need to do.
Last week a woman named Ayaan Hirsi Ali came to campus to speak and it was a very big deal. The auditorium was completely full, students were organizing against her and handing out pamphlets and the question and answer session at the end of her talk was full of tension and bad feelings. She's a Muslim woman advocating for women's rights in the middle east and against Islamic law, and to some degree against Islam entirely. So she's a very controversial woman, and the security was tight because she's had several attempts made on her life. It was very uncomfortable, but in an academic way that sparks discussion, which is a very cool part of college.
And on a different note, Saturday was Disneyland!!! It was Taylor's 19th birthday, so he got into the park for free and Scott, Adela and I went with him. We got there at 830, a half an hour after park opening, and we managed to do almost all the rides by 4 or 5 in the afternoon. It was pouring most of the time we were there, which meant the park was pretty empty for a weekend, and all the lines were short, or nonexistant. We only had to wait 15 minutes for Space Mountain, which is normally somewhere between 50 and 90. Taylor and I went on Splash Mountain, but we weren't far along the ride before it got stuck and they had to send someone up to help us all out of the logs. We got to walk back down through Splash Mountain and go out the back. They gave us all free fast-passes for the inconvenience, but since there weren't really any lines anyway it didn't matter much. Taylor and I had lunch at the Blue Bayou, which is the restaurant in the middle of the Pirates of the Caribbean. It was really good food, and Taylor got free chocolate mousse for his birthday, which I was generous enough to help him eat.
Mom comes down here tomorrow for parents weekend. That means I should clean my room, I guess.
Miss you all!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Here it Goes Again

I'm a lot busier than I expected to be. Last semester was much easier and a little misleading that way. I'm dropping my class on the British Empire. It doesn't fulfill any requirements and it's the class I'm least attached too. It could've been fun, but so far I feel inundated with reading, so cutting out the work for it might make my life just a little easier. And I'm still taking 4 classes, a full course load.
Last week we got a new president, and I was fortunate enough to be able to watch the inauguration before class with a room packed with other students. It was a good moment in time. There was a lot of unity and spirit in that living room.

Ok, so now more from Dubai, since that is what I promised.


All these pictures (above) were taken at Madinat Jumeirah, the shopping center I mentioned at the end of my last post.

These 2 are of Ski Dubai, an indoor (!) ski slope located in the Mall of the Emirates. The same mall has a massive toy store, and a large WinCo sized grocery store. The escalators near the grocery store are more like uphill and downhill moving sidewalks so that one can take their shopping cart on it with them.
This one is also of the Mall of the Emirates.



These 4 are from Wafi, which is another mall with an Egyptian theme. The first is of Khan Murjan, an open air restaurant with Middle-Eastern food. Dad and I ate dinner there one night, and I ordered prawns, which came fully shelled with heads and legs and all.A mosque. Lots of these around.
These last 4 are taken inside the Dubai Mall, where they have a huge aquarium with a tunnel that you can walk through inside of it, like Newport. Dad and I happened by it at the same time they had divers inside the aquarium feeding the sharks and rays.
This is it for now. More next time.