ALA/Proquest Scholarship Bash

When: Saturday, June 25 2005 08:00 PM
Where: Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago IL
My Role: Attendee
After a little soul searching, I decided to buy a ticket for the ALA/Proquest Scholarship Benefit Bash at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry last night.

$35, a little more than I’d usually spend for such an outing. But it was after the museum closed, some of the pay exhibits were included, I’d heard friends rave about the place, and I wanted to do something touristy while in town.

Good choice on my part! ALA ran shuttles from the convention center, which could have been labeled much more clearly. But they worked, I got there shortly after 8. Proquest was giving out battery powered light-up fans, which were a Godsend. The A/C was severely underpowered for some reason.

Not everything at the museum was included in the $35 price. The U-505 and Bodyworlds cost $5 and $10, respectively. Bash Cash to the rescue!

In order to entice attendees to talk to them, about a half dozen vendor booths were giving out certificates during the day, good for purchases at the museum. I made sure to visit them all early. Even so, one was out by the time I got there. But the other five payed off, and I hopped on the shuttle with $31 in Bash Cash to spend! I don’t want to sound like a bad person – I did sit through the vendor’s presentations and even learned a bunch in the process. So I bought tickets to both extended exhibits with money left over.

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U-505 was an amazing experience. I’m a sucker for visiting historical sites and artifacts, especially World War II related, and this one was a whopper: A German U-Boat, in drydock and open for tours. The only one ever captured intact, and which the Enigma code machine was taken from. I’m told the exhibit was majorly renovated over the last year and a half, and the museum did a bang-up job. Immaculately placed light and sound simulates what it was like in the last hours of U-505’s German service, and an elaborate multimedia presentation leads you into the drydock. Picture to the left.

Bodyworlds was likewise impressive, but more as a work of art. The exhibits are all real human bodies, donated to the Dr./artist and posed so you can see the muscles and/or veins in action. Every part of the body was preserved through a process called “Plastination”. They really are amazing pieces of art and science to look at – Andrea was even more in awe of the exhibit than I was, as she’d wanted to see it for ages. They don’t allow pictures to be taken, but check out the exhibit’s web site.

Even after all that, I still had $16 in bash cash to spend! Luckily, it was good in the gift shop. I found two freezie mugs; the kind of thing you put in the freezer before use so it keeps your drink cold.

That left me with a mere $1 remaining. Amazingly, I happened to be in the right place at the right time. A group of women leaving donated their remaining bash cash to me – another $10! I had a couple drinks from the bar, and still had enough left over to help Steven buy a sprite on the way out the door.

Totally worth the $35. Even if it was only 3 hours. I’d love to go back to the museum sometime during normal hours and explore their other, less glamorous exhibits.

There has been an alarm…

Sitting at my gate at the airport now. For at least the last 20 minutes, the loudspeaker has been repeating:

“There has been an alarm in the building. While this report is being verified, please do not use the elevator. Please await further information.”

Nobody seems too worried though…

Star Wars vs. Hidden Peanuts

A while back I posted links to a couple of leaked Episode III images. As we approach the release date of the film, I notice more and more referrals to that entry from Google Image Search. They all go to the thumbnail of Darth Vader that I used. Today alone saw dozens of hits, a growth from one or two a day a couple months ago.

My rudimentary referral tracking unfortunately doesn’t capture the search string used to find the thumbnail. I’d be curious to know what it is.

Will Work For Food

Why is the job picture so different between LIS professors and practicing librarians?

Professors always tell me that jobs are plentiful and easy to come by. People I meet in the field almost universally tell me it could take a while before I find anything.

It’s sort of demoralizing.

For more, see LISnews.com

Apologies for lack of posts recently, end of semester rush is upon me.

April Fools? Amazingly not.

I’d like congratulate New York state for passing the state budget on time. Why is this a cause for celebration? The last time it happened was 20 years ago.

1984. As this article says:

“That year, the Apple Macintosh computer was introduced, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated, and Soviet athletes boycotted the Los Angeles Olympics.”

And I was two years old. Puts it in perspective. Many years of those twenty the budget was late by at least half a year, if I remember correctly.

I just hope Albany doesn’t pat itself on the back for doing what is, after all, simply their job.

As a nice bonus, $4.5 million of library funding cut in years past has been restored!

Flickred Out

Hoo boy. I’ve spent my free time yesterday and today uploading and sorting and tagging pictures into my new paid Flickr account. As of right now I’ve got 511 photos in there. I need a break.

At first I was uploading everything. Then I realized how ridiculous that is and started uploading only the good ones. That’s enough of a backup for me. But as a result, 1999 (the first year I took digital pictures) has more pictures than any other year. Thankfully I’ve been remembering to tag with the year so I can bring you this handy data. I’m caught up to February of this year in my uploading now and I’m pretty proud of the organizing job I’ve done so far.

If for some reason you’re interested, the sets are viewable here. Every picture I’ve put up is in one of those sets, even if just the Miscellaneous one.

I just gotta say how unbelievably awesome Flickr is. However, it would be even more unbelievably awesome if my camera had recorded the correct date on every picture.

I’m off to have a drink on my 18 inch balcony. Still 62 degrees out, woo!

Grrr

I returned from class today to find this on the front door of the building:

03/28/05

I’m going to hurt the landlords, I swear. Not only have they not completed repairs I requested last August, or replaced the dead lightbulbs in the hallways, but now this!

I called the company and their reply was “Oh. We’ll look into that.” Click. Then I called the water authority and they said it was affecting almost my entire block, which is all owned by the same company, and that they’ve been swamped with calls all day about it.

How in the world do you forget to pay $4600 in water bills?!

Does someone more familiar with lease laws than me know if I have anything I can do about their general ineptitude? Suing wouldn’t be worth it, I’m looking for something less drastic.

Save Our Bluths!

Nick passed on this link to SaveOurBluths.com

You’ve probably seen me rant before, but Arrested Development is one of the funniest shows on TV today. Intelligent humor like this is all too rare. AD even won the Emmy for best comedy series last season, yet it continues to be threatened with cancelation.

While Fox claims no decision has been made on whether or not to cancel the show, the cut from 22 to 18 episodes for this season recently does not bode well.

I’m always dubious about the power of these letter writing campaigns to save shows. While it was somewhat successful with Farscape, bringing it back for a concluding miniseries, it failed with most others that I’m aware of (Angel, Firefly, etc). I have a feeling studios make up their mind and nothing we can do will change it. But still, it can’t hurt to spread the word I suppose.

I’m also going to attempt technorati tags one last time, since I know the Arrested Development tag is an active one on there.

P.S. does anybody have any idea how to make Technorati Tags work again for me? I’m formatting the link correctly, Technorati just doesn’t pick them up for some reason.

Tag:

Eep

I’m just realizing how many assignments are due in the next month. I really wish professors would space things out more…

Ah well, if I post less often you know why.

Sneakernet reborn?

There’s a new Pew Internet report out from yesterday on the topic of music and movie downloading.

Particularly interesting is the rise of iPods and other portable media players as a file swapping mechanism. 19% of those surveyed have used the method.

While on the surface all the RIAA lawsuits seem to have cut down on use of Kazaa and its ilk, I wonder if the real result is just the pushing of file sharing further underground and into more personalized spaces. 28% have gotten music and/or videos through e-mail and instant messages.

And then there’s usenet. I haven’t seen it covered at all in the file sharing press bonanza of recent months. It takes a bit more technical savvy to find what you’re looking for, but there’s more copyright infringing materials on usenet (not to mention being a haven for child pornographers) than you’d believe.

Ah well, just some thoughts.