Muffin Bottoms [not] Just another WordPress weblog

04/22/2009

We Shall Remain; Episode 1: a Non-linear Review

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 2:56 am

we shall remain

thoughts

sandwiched after mark walberg’s antiques roadshow

a bunch of white people figuring out how much things are worth.

Annawon and Talloak.

late summer 1621

neil salisbury historian

the american creation story – wow, never heard it called that

jill lepore  historian

no offense but will all the historians that will speak identify as white people?

Rae Gould . Nipmuc . ok, there’s my answer, thanks.

Tall Oak, yay!

pau wows.

native people the first to say “world turned upside down?”
1618. according to ‘we shall remain’

Jessie Little Doe

Lepore wrote a book about King Philip?

Colin Calloway

downplayed the 900+ dead in Pequot war
calling it “hundreds” and spending almost no time
describing exactly what had happened.

metacom, phillip. (played by annawon)
did they say massasoit’s son?
yeah.

daniel richter, historian

Praying indian towns.

relate a ‘conversion experience.’
must be deemed efficient. here we go…

a panel of ministers. yikes.

They don’t name Philip’s wife. Just describe her as
daughter of a chief who opposed his dad’s appeasement
of the settlers from the beginning.

That must be thrilling paddling a dugout canoe, if even
in acting and anacronism.

years ago Charlie from Harbor inn and cottage used to
let me use one of his canoes on the Mystic river every
summer whenever I wanted as long as there was one not
rented yet.

1660’s. wonder if they’ll discuss deer island 1675 much
or at all.

Forcing Philip to write an untrue confession.
Was that the first CIA action, 300 years before
the founding of the CIA???

wow, charles river. canoes.
deer island middle of boston harbor
300-400 perished.

no blankets, food, anything.

1676 Philip retreats to mount hope.

philip’s head displayed for two decades???

Mark Samels in ‘behind the scenes’

I know this was a 5 year project.
Annawon is Philip’s descendant through his
dad Tall Oak, so when he was asked to play
Philip he was very touched. I remember him
asking all his Facebook and Myspace friends
for their advice whether he should take it
or not. He would try to listen to everyone.

What a warrior!

Next episode — Tecumseh

Chris Eyre says each of the five are very different.

So sandwiched after this is mummies and tornadoes???
ok. this is just a preview of many things, not the
next show. But I do want to see what’s after it
since before it was antique road show.

I’ll never forget Jerry Mander’s response to his
documentary about his friend Thomas Banyacya being
sandwiched by real junk, and noticing in his tv
guide that it competed with strange stuff on all
the other channels and was sponsored by stuff like
hasbro and stuff.

ken burns lewis and clark is after a half hour
show that continues the we shall remain things?
I’m a bit confused. I guess I don’t watch enough
PBS (or TV for that matter) to keep up with all
this.

OK. looks like they repeat this show next.

Here’s what BlueCornComix says about this episode
also:  http://www.bluecorncomics.com/2009/04/quality-of-after-mayflower.html

And here’s the transcript to the episode:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/weshallremain/files/transcripts/WeShallRemain_1_transcript.pdf

And it looks like you can watch episodes 1 and 2 in their entirety right there on the pbs.org website

already. Good on ’em!

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/weshallremain/the_films/episode_1_trailer

03/29/2009

Blogging My Favorite Tibetan Tonic Tea!

Filed under: Food,Mundane Or Sublime,Tech — admin @ 10:10 am

I wrote this to someone else today and realized that I write someone this pretty much every other week or so at least once; so I figured I’d just copy/paste it into here and from now on just link people to it.

Cheers:

Hey ______,
Here’s what I use the minute I figure out something is cold or flu rather than just an allergy attack:

ginger,
lemon,
garlic
pepper.

I boil the ginger in a saucepan for a couple minutes after it starts rolling, then I turn it down a little higher than a simmer.

Cut a lemon in half, squeeze all the juice into the ginger and water, and rinse lemon skins and toss them in too.

I cut a couple pieces of garlic up, saving peels and all, and toss them in just a little bit before it’s done, let that simmer another minute or two and then turn it off.

I dash either black pepper or cayenne pepper onto everything else, and stir it a little.

Then I just pour it over a glass filled with ice. I keep doing that til all the juice is gone. If you’re not lactose intolerant, I recommend picking the pieces of ginger out (don’t worry about the spices they’ll help even more) cut them up even finer and fold it into some vanilla ice cream. It’s “oh my god” good, trust me!!! hehehehe

Hope you feel better soon.

ps: if you can’t handle how generally terrible the drink tastes at first, you can add honey or whatever sweetener you need. The important thing is getting all four elements into you at the same time. It’ll knock back flu, cold, and almost any virus you can imagine.

cheers,
marco

I see others are blogging about this too, now that I’ve spoken up:

http://blog.socialworkout.com/2010/02/12/lemon-ginger-garlic-pepper-winter-health-savior

http://thefantasticmrfeedbag.com/tag/lemon-ginger-garlic-honey-cayenne

http://www.lup-tup.com

http://kimberlysnyder.net/blog/2009/11/27/immunity-tea-with-cayenne-pepper-step-by-step-instructions

Yay!

03/26/2009

SCOOP: Ashton Kutcher 2 film his own bodyhair waxing. Will keep U posted.

Filed under: Humor,Mundane Or Sublime,News,Sports — admin @ 9:50 am

SCOOP:

Ashton Kutcher is planning on filming

his own painful chest & bodyhair waxing

4 stickam or liveleak or something.

I’ll keep U posted.

03/08/2009


Bruce Sterling Gets It! Cypherpunk Author Knows How 2 Twitter.

Filed under: Food,Humor,Mundane Or Sublime,Tech — admin @ 11:00 am

So I was NOT surprised that Bruce Sterling would really know how to use Twitter effectively.

Here’s just one great example and then a link or two to some of his earlier works for any who don’t already know him.

  1. Icon_lockCollapsonomics, Econocataclysm, Uneconomy, The Opportunity, Economy 3.0, The Crisis, The Long Emergency, The New Dark Ages

  2. Icon_lockGreat Reset, Global Reboot, Unreal Estate, Wall Street Blues, Uncapitalism, Capitalism Eats Itself, the Deep Economic Wrinkle…

  3. Icon_lockHousing Crisis, Market FAIL, Global Economic Restructuring, Tsunami, the Enronicom, The Great Ponzi, the Great Fake, Bush’s Legacy…

  4. Icon_lockGreat Restructuring, the Bailout, TEOTWAKI “The End of the World As We Know It,” the Inflection, The Great Disruption…

  5. Icon_lockReplies pour in: “Compression, Subprimicide, World Economic Crisis aka Svetska Economska Kriza, Economic Debacle, The Great Re-Skilling…”

  6. Icon_lockI’m hunting neologistic synonyms. “Meltdown, Credit Crunch, Great Recession, Econolypse, Depression II…” Help me here, Twittersphere.

http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/2009/01/2009_will_be_a_year_of_panic.php

http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/topics/343/Bruce-Sterling-State-of-the-Worl-page01.html

http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/Sterling

03/04/2009

PEARLS AND PEQUOTS: An Ethnohistorical Document

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime — admin @ 10:55 am

PEARLS AND PEQUOTS: Of How Native American Indians Ended Up in Bermuda At About the Same Time Shakespeare was Producing The Tempest At Britain’s Globe Theatre.

By Marc Frucht

University Of Connecticut,

Anthropology 3027

“Safely in harbor / Is the King’s ship; in the deep nook where once / Thou call’dst me up at midnight to fetch dew / From the still-vexed Bermoothes, there she’s hid / The mariners all under hatches stowed / Who, with a charm joined to their suff’red labor.”

(The Tempest i.2.)

On Feb 14, 2002 St. David’s Islanders announced plans for their first ever Reconnection – Native American Indian festival on their island off the coast of Bermuda.

This event would not only celebrate “the Island’s rich and unique ancestry,” but it just might’ve redirected a part of world history. These islanders are descendents of enslaved, indentured and impressed people from 17th Century southern New England and they formed a committee that organized what quickly took on a life of its own in a sense, with annual gatherings in both Ledyard, Connecticut, St. David’s Island; and now it’s even set off cross cultural communications between the two of them which is only now filling a historical void many centuries old.

In 1976 anthropologist Ethel Boissevain visited the Mashantucket Pequots on their reservation before a research trip she was taking to Bermuda hoping to find out with more certainty what did happen to Mohegan, Pequot and Wampanoag people sold into slavery in 1637. The Pequots she met with were very enthusiastic about her research and gave her a message to pass on to their relatives on the island if she met them: “Invite them to come back and join us here.” (Hauptman 79)

Boissevain’s interviews and published work had been instrumental in setting in motion what has now become not just annual festivals but family gatherings complete with new religious traditions.

“I think what they were looking for was never completely lost,” said Paula Peters shortly after that first ceremony, “it was just wearing different regalia.”

Bermuda‘s famous Gombey Dancers, as it turns out, bear a striking resemblance to Fancy Dancers at modern day Pow Wows and adult Kachinas in contemporary Hopi ceremonies. Some will carry tomahawks, bows and arrows and wear peacock feathers in their hats. The rhythms and beats were easily recognizable by the Mystic River drumgroup who was visting in Bermuda and helping host in Ledyard months later.

Two circles were formed, one with our New England family in an outer circle and one with the St. David’s Islanders in an inner circle. After a moving and emotional ceremony, with Mystic River (a drum group from the Mashantucket Pequot reservation) drumming a soothing welcome song, we joined in one big circle. We were [smudged] with smoke from white sage, given Wampanoag-grown tobacco to add to the ashes, and we approached the fire one by one. In doing so, we called on the spirits of the ancestors to join us and to bless us. We were not alone in Dark Bottom that day. Silence was heavy in our ears. It felt as if nature had stopped breathing. No one could speak for a long period of time, and gentle weeping could be heard around the entire circle. Our ancestors were truly there with us. (Leiker)

The edge of the horizon could be seen from Dark Bottom, and as we glanced toward the ocean, all of us seemed to share the same feeling in our hearts — that our ancestors had crossed that ocean, having been taken away from their families in shackles as slaves, leaving behind what was left after a bitter, no-single-cause, no-simple-answer Pequot War and King Philip War, leaving their homes, charred bodies, their customs, their ancestral lands, smoldering villages, misunderstandings, personal ambitions and cultural differences — all of which contributed to the conflict in the 1600s of those unnecessary wars. The voices of our ancestors were weeping in our ears. After 375 years we were together in person and in spirit for the first time. The moments turned into minutes before anyone could speak or move away from the circle of life. (Leiker)

“Can they reconstitute a tribe like powdered milk – just add water and stir?” Peters asks. Not in the sense that they may join the rolls of North American tribes. Those links appear to be lost forever. But certainly they can incorporate the new with existing culture to enhance their already rich community. As displaced Indians, they can establish themselves as a band, develop rules of organization and a mission that defines and preserves their unique identity. (Peters)

Five generations from the slavery that oppressed Native Americans in Bermuda for nearly 200 years before emancipation, many St. David’s Islanders live well and free and could have let the legends of Wampanoag royal families fade into obscurity. They could have allowed the assimilation process to do its work and meld them into the world population like so many millions of others. But they knew they were different, and different for a reason. (Peters)

They were related to British Colonial America; and not just because they live and work almost exactly half way between Virginia and Spain either. They are directly descended from people forcefully relocated from places like Mystic, Connecticut and Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

Think back almost 400 years to a time prior to King Philip’s war. Bermuda “was uninhabited,” according to Jean Foggo Simon, “when it was discovered in 1609 due to a shipwreck of the “Sea Venture” commanded by British Admiral Sir George Somers.”

The Admiral,

was on his way to the colony of Virginia with settlers and supplies. Sir George Somers was caught in a hurricane and separated from the other 8 ships, wrecking on Bermuda’s reefs. There were birds, an abundance of turtles and wild pigs found on the island.

[VIDEO] – Annawon describes, “We have found those people sent to Bermuda.”  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTwCTRpbL2c

The shipwreck led to British colonization in 1612. When the British

captured Native Americans during their period of attempted colonization up and down the coast of America, some were shipped to Bermuda as slaves. These captives were taunted with insults and name-calling because of their differences in language, customs, food and skin color. (Foggo)

Many New England Indians were disappeared in the early 1600s and there weren’t many specifics as to where they would end up to live out their days. Some accounts simply say “Caribbean Islands” but many people living at St. David’s Island have known for many generations that they’re related somehow to Indians in New England. Some believed it was upstate New York because the slave masters often referred to their ancestors as ‘Mohawk.’

For more than half the next century slaves were being shipped from what is now Southern New England to places as far away as Bermuda, England, and Australia on a fairly regular basis. These captures, impressments and enslavements continued right on past the timeframe known today as King Philip’s war. Here’s one battle raging at about the same time Natick Nipmuc people were being rounded up and forcefully moved to Deer Island. (Oral histories show that they too feared any number of them might also be moved onto other ships headed for Bermuda.) (Eliot 22)

Many of the Pequots not in the fort during the conflagration were captured, killed in skirmishes, or executed in the months that followed. Others were enslaved, assigned to the “protection” of colonists or to Indian leaders – Uncas, the Mohegan; Miantonomo, the Narragansett; or Ninigret, the Eastern Niantic – or sold into slavery and sent to Bermuda and the West Indies. (Hauptman 76)

Native American slaves arriving in Bermuda as cargo were listed simply as “Indian man” or “Indian woman,” along with the dollar amount they would be sold for, and they were originally called Mohawks as a generic term. But there is no current evidence that any Mohawks were enslaved on the islands. Did “Mohawk” just mean Indian? How did that happen?

Definition 3 of the Oxford English dictionary says, “Used by mistake for Amuck I. Obs.1772-84 Cook’s Voy. (1790) I. 288 Most of our readers have heard of the Mohawks, and these [the Indians of Batavia] are the people who are so denominated, from a corruption of the word amock.” (OED Mohawk)

Unfortunately earlier origins of this word would be anybody’s guess. Madge Hunt who has lived on St David’s Island all of her life, says, “I can remember as a child they would say, ‘There goes that little Mohawk from St. David’s.'” (Peters)

Author William S. Zuill interviewed a Bermudian who has worked with the St. David’s Islanders “in their area,” and it was suggested “the idea of Mohawk origin may be the result of a joking relationship which came about in the 1940’s. (Boissevain 6)

The first Indian traveling to Bermuda may have been indentured or employed although his or her living conditions were not described in much detail.

Ever since the first Indian landed in Bermuda in 1616 to dive for pearls a number of Pequots and Mohicans were brought into the colony. They were introduced in sufficient quantities to significantly alter the appearances of many Negroes [sic.] through interbreeding, many of today’s Bermudians possessing facial features which provide strong evidence of the Indian influence three hundred years ago. (Smith 23)

Not only does this show the greed and avarice involved during the Colonial era of British Imperialism, but also illuminates the deliberation employed in constructing concepts of nationality and race rather than ethnicity while further performing “husbandry” on other human beings as if they were so much livestock.

The following list shows generally (and somewhat specifically when possible) just who these Colonial Native Americans were who got shipped to St. David’s Island as slaves.

1640 “A number” of Pequots and “Mohicans” arrived.

1645 Captain Wm. Jackson, “the victorious general” brought “many Indians and Negroes captured from the Spanish.

circa

1642 Captain B. Preston brought 30-40 Indians “who were born free and taken by deceipt” There is no indication of their place of origin. Judging by the date these may have been Pequot refugees rounded up after the massacre in Mystic, Connecticut in 1637.

after

1650 About 80 “Pequot Massachusetts Bay Indians” were sent to Bermuda and purchased by Captain Whit of St. David’s Island.

1676 After King Philip’s death “most of the rest were shipped off for slaves to Bermuda and other parts” This shipment probably included the widow and young son of King Philip.

Undated — A family in their canoe off the New England coast were picked up by a slave ship and taken to Bermuda and sold as slaves. Their tribal origin is unknown. (Boissevain 106)

Here Ethel Boissevain says she assumes Mahican was “the tribe reported as ‘Mohicans’ arriving in 1640. She also assumes “Mohegan was not the tribe since the Mohegans supported the English in colonial wars.” I would point out however that it is possible for some of them (if not many) to have been impressed by the Britain’s Navy just like they’d done to poor and middle class whites all over Long Island sound those years. If their work as seamen did not please their British captors at any time their punishments could include being dropped off on prison ships or slave ships if not thrown right overboard to their deaths. So some Mohegan people may even have been sold into slavery right alongside Pequot and Wampanoag people; or at least it should’t be completely ruled out just because of their political affiliations. England was not exactly consistent with whom they remained allies or enemies.

If someone owned a St. David’s Island Pequot person he or she might keep enough social distance to simply dismiss their ethnic background as “Mohawk;” and that might happen even more often with a Mohegan family, since the two names sound so similar.

Mohican, Mohegan, a. and sb. Also Mohigon, Mohickon, Mohiccon, Mohigan, Moheecan; also in renderings of the native form, Muhhekaneew, Mahicanni, Mo-hee-con-neugh. [From the native name.]… B. 1. One of a warlike tribe of North American Indians of the Algonquin stock, formerly occupying the western part of Connecticut and Massachusetts. (OED Mohican)

Not every Indian who arrived in 17th Century Bermuda lived under slavery, including two Virginia women who came sometime between 1619 and 1622 to marry locally. But relations on the Islands were often quite tense among the various different ethnic groups.

There were also “abortive” slave revolts on the Island throughout the 17th and 18th centuries; with some of the years of these listed as follows: 1629, 1656, 1673, 1730 and 1761. (Zuill 92-93)

Children of slaves could be born free under certain circumstances as early as the mid 17th Century and there were occasional emancipations of adults over the next century. The remaining people still enslaved on St. David’s Island were soon emancipated in 1834 under the authority of a law entitled “An Act for Extirpating all Free Negroes, Indians, Mallatoes such as have been Slaves.” In one account their Chief Justice said the following:

Your name is George Hammett, you came in the brig Enterprise, as a slave, and it is my duty, (understanding that you were kept on board that vessel against your will) to inform you that in this country you are free, — free as any white person. (Smith 288)

One could assume that there would be many more differences than similarities between St. David’s Islanders and New England Indians. You would think contemporary American Mohegans, Pequots and Wampanoags have more knowledge of their tribal identity, through both oral and written histories. But keep in mind many contemporary New England Indians were also held back from their own history by what is commonly referred to as “The last Indian” or “vanishing Indian” syndrome. While Bermudas’ “imported slaves were cut off abruptly and completely from their cultures,” (Boissevain 112) New England Indians who weren’t killed, impressed or shipped out to sea were being moved from reservation to ever smaller reservation; leaving any survivors to lose some of their own roots right there where they come from because of everything from generational forgetting to fighting off the misinformation of historically inaccurate epic feature films such as “Last Of The Mohicans” based on harmfully fictitious books by authors James Fenimore Cooper.

Native American screen actors would work so hard at strategic storytelling techniques for instance, wearing Plains regalia and expression of Pan-Indianist philosophies such as using phrases like “Hau Kola” (Lakota for Hello Friend) and “treat the Earth as your Mother” hoping more positive energy will thrive and take root; while at the same time each and every one of these actors were portrayed in the wider context of the movies’ plots as a “unique symbol of all that is best and finest in the fast disappearing race.” (Deloria 213) Those who don’t die off or fully assimilate seem to vanish into some kind of obscurity through antiquity; similar to what Madge Hunt described with her quote “’There goes that little Mohawk” we’re forever stuck with Hollywood telling us, “Look at that cute little Indian brave raising one hand with all his stoicism to say ‘How!’ to any who pass him by.”

Luther Standing Bear sums up these struggles fairly well too. “I determined that, if I could only get the right sort of people interested, I might be able to do more for my own race off the reservation than to remain there under the iron rule of the white agent.” He worked for the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch which was a traveling show much like the Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Shows. They were similar in that some accurate portrayals were carefully treated, yet always in the context of each of these people who will soon be the “last of his kind.” (Deloria 75)

Seven years have passed since the first annual festival, and almost 400 years since the first southern New England Indian boy discovered pearls under the sea near there. It has also been 28 years since Boissevain asked the following:

Now that schooling and literacy is universal in Bermuda and since United States television is dominant there, it is interesting to speculate to what extent some Bermudian Indian descendants will take interest in their areas of origin and make efforts to communicate with fellow tribal descendants in New England. (Boissevain 113)

Hopefully Ethel Boissevain got to enjoy an awareness that just such speculation was answered many different ways by so many different people during the summer and fall seasons of 2002 in Bermuda and Ledyard. A December 22, 2002 New York Times Obituary says that she died at 89 November 29th of that year while still teaching anthropology at CUNY in Ithaca.

Post Script:

In Slavery in Bermuda Smith had written a little bit about a few occasions when unfree people were shipped between Bermuda and Ireland also. None of it seemed directly related really; but I bring this up because some of them may very well have come from New England before ending up in Bermuda for all we know.

Here’s just one of the entries: 1650, “an unknown number of Irish war prisoners, defeated by Cromwell, were imported for a 7 year penal indentured service term. (Smith 23)

Works Cited

Boissevain, Ethel. “Whatever Became of the New England Indians Shipped to Bermuda to be Sold as Slaves?” Man In The Northeast 21 (1981): 103-114.

Deloria, Philip. Indians in Unexpected Places (Cultureamerica). Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2006.

The Eliot Tracts: With Letters from John Eliot to Thomas Thorowgood and Richard Baxter (Contributions in American History). Praeger Publishers, 2003.

Foggo Simon, Jean . “St. David’s Indian Committee.” Rootsweb Ancestry. 2003. 14 Dec. 2008. <http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bmuwgw/stdavidislanders.htm>

Hauptman, Laurence. The Pequots in Southern New England: The Fall and Rise of an American Indian Nation (Civilization of the American Indian Series). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1993.

Leiker, James n. The First and the Forced: Essays on the Native American and African American Experience. Ed. Kim Warren. Lawrence: University Of Kansas, 2007. 14 Dec. 2008 <http://www.shiftingborders.ku.edu/Hall_Center_CD/All-in-one-books/First/First_binder.pdf>.

“Mohawk.” Def.3. The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989.

“Mohican.” Def.1. The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989.

New York Times 22 Dec. 2002, sec. Obituary.

Peters, Paula . “Finding a link that was never really lost.” Cape Cod Online. 14 Jul. 2002. 28 Nov. 2008. <http://archive.capecodonline.com/special/tribeslink/findinga14.htm>.

< http://archive.capecodonline.com/special/tribeslink/emissed14.htm>.

Shakespeare, William. The Tempest (Signet Classics). Signet Classics, 1998.

Smith, James E. Slavery in Bermuda. Vantage Press, 1976.

Zuill, William. The Story of Bermuda and Her People. Macmillan Caribbean, 1999.

02/23/2009

Open Letter To University Of Connecticut About Tuition

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,Sports — admin @ 11:42 am

I have an option E, please take it seriously. I’ve been thinking about this a lot and I plan to craft it  even more in between my mid terms and finals this semester.

Let’s give our coaches like Geno Auriemma and Jim Calhoun the opportunity to make even more each year but risk making less too, by making each aspect of their income depend on the gross take each game spread over the year.

Three bad years in a row and they have to justify their salary just as eloquently as the President Hogans and Vice Provost Comprones of our campuses.

Then we can make proffesor salaries AND tuition amounts each semester more aggressively variable as well. We have all these computers and bandwidth, right? Why not put a few of them to work crunching all the numbers so we can see how much more we might be able pay our professors each semester too!

When our sports teams, and the annual Pow Wow, and the ROTC donations and nanotechnology grants give us a smaller amount one semester, my tuition goes up a little and Calhoun’s salary goes down a little.

When all those elements climb a little, my tuition goes down and Calhoun’s salary goes up.

Seriously, and don’t get me wrong, I honor athletics, but it really is quite surreal that Calhoun can command 1.6 million a year plus incentives, yet my best professors teaching me can only look forward to a smidgen higher than $111K a year!

Is your main roll in administration still doing whatever it takes to get me a quality education or had it become figuring out how the heck you’re going to get the Basketball coach his salary every time there’s a new contract negotiation?

Unfortunately I can answer that for you, I’ve been dropping out and returning to UConn as an undergrad since 1982.

Marco

Fellow students,

On March 10th, the UConn Board of Trustees will determine tuition for the
2009-2010 academic year. This decision will affect all students; therefore, we
want your voices to be heard.

Please consider the following information, which is a list of
options that the Board of Trustees will be reviewing regarding tuition
increases:

• Option A: would be no tuition increase. It would require cuts that would
likely result in approximately 290-310 layoffs. If tuition is not increased at all,
UConn will have to close programs and cut services to students. The hours at
the Library, Rec Center, Student Union, dining halls, museums and other
venues would be sharply reduced and many students working at these
facilities would lose their jobs. More classes would be moved to Fridays and
weekends, fewer classes would be offered and they would be larger. The
University would have to reduce financial aid and increase charges for things
like parking and ticket prices to events.

• Option B: would be a tuition increase of 6.0% (this is the standard amount
that tuition has increased by annually over the past few years). This would
amount to a $432 annual increase for resident students over the current
tuition rates. It would require cuts that would likely result in approximately
150-170 layoffs. Programs and services would still be curtailed. Student jobs
would still be lost. Classes would be fewer, bigger and offered at less
convenient times and financial aid would still be cut.

• Option C: would be a tuition increase of 8.67%. This would amount to a
$624 annual increase for resident students over the current tuition rates. It
would likely result in the equivalent of approximately 80-100 lay-offs. It would
save more jobs, programs and services. Financial aid would not have to be cut.

• Option D:  would be a tuition increase of 13.67%. This would amount to a
$984 annual increase for resident students over the current tuition rates. It
would not entail any lay-offs. This would avoid the need to close down
programs and services. Student jobs would not be eliminated. Financial aid
would not have to be cut.

President Hogan has recommended an 8.67% tuition increase (Option C,
shown above) in order to save as many UConn programs as possible, while still
keeping tuition affordable. He has asked for the support of the Student
Government in this recommendation.

However, we at USG do not feel that we can responsibly support a tuition
increase without first getting direct feedback from as many students as
possible. It is our job to represent you, and we need to make sure we are
doing what is in your best interest.

In order to get direct feedback on the options for next year’s tuition, we have
set up a poll, click the link below to take the poll:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspxsm=8LL2HkzTVn9XNHZYd6f_2bCw_3d_3d

Please complete the survey (it’s only ONE QUESTION) so that we can begin to
understand which of these four options you, the students, are most
comfortable with. We will be presenting the results of the poll to the
administration and Board of Trustee’s at the begining of next month so please
respond ASAP.

USG is also sponsoring a Town Hall Meeting on Tuesday night, February 24th
at 7p.m.-9p.m. in the Konover Auditorium (at the Dodd Center). President
Hogan, UConn’s Chief Operating Officer Barry Feldman, and Vice President for
Student Affairs John Saddlemire, along with other key figures will be on-hand
to discuss the recent budget cuts and tuition with anyone who would like to
attend.

This meeting will be a great opportunity to voice any opinions or questions you
might have about the potential tuition increase. Please try to attend.

I realize that these are difficult times for all of us, and I thank you all for your
time and effort.


Meredith L. Zaritheny
President of the Student Body
University of Connecticut
Undergraduate Student Government
2110 Hillside Road
Storrs, CT 06269
(860) 486-3708
meredith.zaritheny@uconn.edu

01/29/2009

Metaphorical History Lesson What Does Pfizer Mean?

Filed under: Academic,Mundane Or Sublime,News — admin @ 7:21 am

Pfizer Shooting: One Injured, Gunman Not Found

Jan 8, 2009 A gunman terrorized employees at the Pfizer campus in Chesterfield, St Louis. What was THAT all about? Was s/he angry? Despondent? Out of a job? Let’s leave that one alone, and check out OTHER aspects of the pHarmaceutical company.

So what does PFE mean besides Pfizer’s stock symbol?

Hope you’re ready for this:

Page Fault Error

Planning for Employment

Please Find Enclosed

Post Fire Evaluation

Potential Future Exposure (credit risk)

Pressurized Fluid Extraction

Priests for Equality

Pulmonary Fat Embolism

Purchaser Furnished Equipment

[and assorted other notes:]

Pfizer PDM Executive Team too busy to be present on laid off people’s last day!: These global twits.. http://tinyurl.com/d2ej9b about 15 hours ago

Should Pfizer Dump Dr. Jarvik? Tell Us http://tinyurl.com/23wbp2 10:31 AM Feb 9th, 2008

atizine Ex-Pfizer peeps packed their things yesterday & PFE has already announced layoff #s after they buy Wyeth. 15%’ll be about 18,000 peeps. 🙁 less than 5 seconds ago

CT Pfizer: Long faces & grumpy moods as people help laid-off coworkers pack, with two more rounds of cuts inevitable. Can we blame Bush? 8:29 AM yesterday

Fen-Phen Lawyer Convicted For Bilking Wyeth http://tinyurl.com/7vqwyv 11:35 AM Dec 23rd, 2008

Pfizer Must Pay $38M For Stealing Trade Secrets http://tinyurl.com/7eeqmd 6:04 AM Dec 23rd, 2008

01/04/2009

Microsoft Actually Does A Quickfix!

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,News,Tech — admin @ 7:45 pm

Microsoft announced yesterday they have a fix for what people started calling the Zune 30 leap year bug.

My Zune 30 is frozen. What should I do?

Follow these steps:

  1. Disconnect your Zune from USB and AC power sources.
  2. Because the player is frozen, its battery will drain—this is good. Wait until the battery is empty and the screen goes black. If the battery was fully charged, this might take a couple of hours.
  3. Wait until after noon GMT on January 1, 2009 (that’s 7 a.m. Eastern or 4 a.m. Pacific time).
  4. Connect your Zune to either a USB port on the back or your computer or to AC power using the Zune AC Adapter and let it charge.

Once the battery has sufficient power, the player should start normally. No other action is required—you can go back to using your Zune!

My Zune 30 has been working fine today. Should I be worried?

Nope, your Zune is fine and will continue to work as long as you do not connect it to your computer before noon GMT on January 1, 2009 (7 a.m. Eastern or 4 a.m. Pacific time).

Note: If you connect your player to a computer before noon GMT on January 1, 2009, you’ll experience the freeze mentioned above—even if that computer does not have the Zune software installed. If this happens, follow the above steps.

What if I have rights-managed (DRM) content on my Zune?

Most likely, rights-managed content will not be affected by this issue. However, it’s a good idea to sync your Zune with your computer once the freeze has been resolved, just to make sure your usage rights are up to date.

What if I took advice from the forums and reset my Zune by disconnecting the battery?

This is a bad idea and we do not recommend opening your Zune by yourself (for one thing, doing so will void your warranty). However, if you’ve already opened it, do one of the following:

  • Wait 24 hours from the time that you reset the Zune and then sync with your computer to refresh the usage rights; or
  • Delete the player’s content using the Zune software (go to Settings, Device, Sync Options, Erase All Content), then re-sync it from your collection.

Microsoft’s first response had been:

There is a bug in the internal clock driver causing the 30GB device to improperly handle the last day of a leap year.

And the next one quickly followed:

Early this morning we were alerted by our customers that there was a widespread issue affecting our 2006 model Zune 30GB devices (a large number of which are still actively being used). The technical team jumped on the problem immediately and isolated the issue: a bug in the internal clock driver related to the way the device handles a leap year. The issue should be resolved over the next 24 hours as the time change moves to January 1, 2009. We expect the internal clock on the Zune 30GB devices will automatically reset tomorrow (noon, GMT). By tomorrow you should allow the battery to fully run out of power before the unit can restart successfully then simply ensure that your device is recharged, then turn it back on. If you’re a Zune Pass subscriber, you may need to sync your device with your PC to refresh the rights to the subscription content you have downloaded to your device.

For Zune developers to respond next with these step by step fix instructions in realtime like this is perhaps just as newsworthy as the problem in the first place. I think that when a corporate structure this big reacts so readily to such an issue I’m moved to say “kudos.”

Journal Poem 21 – Dedication: Roberta Blackgoat

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime — admin @ 3:27 am
Ram Dass and Denny's Dishwashers,
Driving to Santa Fe.
Hindi Hostel, Dine.
A humungus stirfry.
Hotsprings, headaches &

Hindu hippies in a hogan.
Dayglow Daisy's on a bus.
Hootenany Green! Hibernating a
Hurt shoulder; pickup hitchers:
Duck & Lizabeth Santa Fe to Boulder.
A Cochiti drum shucking corn all day.
Frybread and honey, a des(s)ert of
Pottery. Shards of southwest.
Directory assistance, gas,
Grapefruit and pomegranite
In Hotevilla, Arizona.

Red clay on a Black Mesa face.
This particular medicine man
Is a blind woman. She's quite
Hard of hearing too & very aged.
Canyons make great ampitheatres
FM drops right out though. Wonder
Is my guitar the only music this
Canyon's heard in centuries?

Mutton, noodles and potatoes in
A broth & bluecorn frybread with
Coffee. Out of honey; almost the
Breakfast of champion
Sheepherders.


Previously published in a $5 Chapbook entitled "I Slurp My Coffee." 

Currently released as an album at:
http://www.reverbnation.com/marcfruchtpoet
And you can get the whole album as a printable .zip file at:

http://www.frucht.org/Poems4RobertaBlackgoat.zip

12/22/2008

Journal Poem 23 – Dedicated To Roberta Blackgoat

Filed under: Mundane Or Sublime,News,Poetics — admin @ 5:28 am

JOURNAL POEM 23

        Pomegranite.

Does anger have taste?
Car's down 'til roads clear.
December the freezin' season.
2-8 a.m. only good times to drive;
Least bit of thaw slides you
        Off-road.
Big Mountain, thrown off a horse;
Hauling water & hay for the elders.
Fixing hay shack, chopping wood.
VW microbus' 1st gear freezes stuck.
'Til 10am or so. (so cold & dry.)
Jan. 7, 1992. 9am. Lamb born to
The sheep who looks like Don King.
Denny makes coffee for wider eyes;
And 85th monkey follows the wind
Pondering the 4 directions. Red,
White, yellow and black; Nevada,
Mexico City, Washington, or Spain.
James buys Edensoy in Winslow's
Art Colony Fish Hatchery Homeless
Veterans Shelter. Vanilla's good;
Original's not. Run cooperatively
Sells bikes and skateboards too.
Customary cleaning woodstove each
Sunrise. Ash is for the outhouses
Always keep hot water on in case
Company comes. And the door key
Hangs from lower branch of a tree.
What's yellow, black and white?
        Uranium.
Headache and much noise. "Don't herd
The sheep near the uranium wash,"
Auntie says, "makes them act wild."
Well, you would too if you had those
        Headaches.
Told my guardian angels are spiders,
Whales, porcupines, buffalo, crows,
Badgers, turtles, bats & dolphins.
Roasted pinons; like chestnuts the
Size of roasted coffee beans.

“Nova” means food in Hopi.
“O” is yes in Navajo. “Ba” is bread.
Go figure.
So what’s red, white, yellow and black?
Pomegranite in a wash full of
Uranium.

 

Previously published in a $5 Chapbook entitled "I Slurp My Coffee." 

Currently released as an album at:
http://www.reverbnation.com/marcfruchtpoet
And you can get the whole album as a printable .zip file at:

http://www.frucht.org/Poems4RobertaBlackgoat.zip
« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress