Stress Chart

December 2, 2009


The conspiracy of the giant rat maze

November 23, 2009

We’re fairly certain that the chain link thoroughfares between Wygal and Brock Commons have nothing to do with student safety and everything to do with studying the spatial learning and memory capacity of Longwood students.  It is, essentially, a giant rat maze.

It’s taken us a few weeks to come to this conclusion — but the facts are sobering.  Let’s review:

1)  Every time we journey into the maze, we’ve seen a congregation of solemn-looking people in lab coats staring down at us from the library, writing on clipboards.

2)  There are an inordinate amount of right-angle turns and dead ends.  And there’s the electric shock — what’s up with that!?!?  That hurts!

3)  More than once, we have been tempted inside the maze by the aroma of grilled cheese sandwiches.  Despite  many exhaustive searches, we have yet to find such a sandwich in the maze.

4)  Once, after ten minutes of wrong turns and electric shock, we fell to the ground, curled into a fetal position, and started crying.  Suddenly, a friend appeared and helped us find out way out.  What was the friend’s major?  Psychology.  How convenient.

5) When we asked the aforementioned psychology major friend if this was, in fact, a giant rat maze, he laughed uneasily and told us we were “crazy.”  We pushed him against the wall and demanded an explanation.  He said “Dude, I don’t know…shit, maybe it really is a rat maze.  I don’t know.  Who cares, anyway?”   Since making this quasi-confession, this friend has disappeared, failing to return any of our calls for further elaboration.

Thus, we have been avoiding the maze as much as possible.  We wouldn’t wish its horrors on even our worst enemy.

However, if you’re still an unbeliever, we recommend you go fucking try it for yourself.


The Intervention Quiz

November 19, 2009

When people gush all over the pleasures of the holiday season, they always leave out the big family intervention. 

Don’t act like you don’t know the routine:  malfeasances listed.  Tears cried.  Demands demanded.  Every year, one poor bastard gets ambushed by his/her family and methodically cut apart and passed around like a Thanksgiving turkey.  

Which is all fun and good, until the shoe drops on you.  And let’s not be coy — it will drop on you. 

When will it happen?  Take this quiz to find out.  

1.  When your friend says “You need help,” the tone is

     a) joking/ironic  

     b) half-serious 

     c) earnest and tearful, with heavy emphasis on every word

     d) all too familiar: nagging, Debbie Downer-esque. 

2.  Are your actions often misunderstood and/or looked down upon by your peers and family?  

     a)  Not really 

     b)  Sometimes

     c)  Now that you mention it…kinda!  

     d)  God, they need to just fucking lighten up and let me live my own life

3.  How do you view your lifestyle in the context of those around you? 

     a) Very similar

     b) Mostly similar, with a refreshing, kinky twist

     c) I follow my heart, unlike those around me.  

     d) Everyone’s got problems…you know.  That’s just…a fact of life. 

4.  How bad did you fail your classes this semester?

       a)  Would have done fine, were it not for the attendance policy!  

       b)  I hung in there until about the midterm

       c)  It was over by the third week

       d) Lissssten…

5.  Do you make your friends cry?  

       a)  Not often.

       b)  More than I would care to admit.

       c)  Only when I get defensive.  So — yes.   Quite often.

       d)  Uhhhh it wouldn’t happen so much if people would respect my privacy and just let me live my life.     

If your answers fell in the B-C range, you have nothing to worry about this holiday season.  Enjoy yourself.  However, an intervention is nigh if you answered D to any of these questions.  You can spend the next week trying to sort yourself together, or you can practice your best pouting/arm-crossing posture.


Where not to dispense bodily fluids, and other miscellanea for your Thursday

October 22, 2009

Remember:  The SGA is hosting a Student Services Open Forum this evening at six in the Lankford Ballroom.  Never have so many prominent members of the Longwood community been gathered together at one time.  That’s a fact.

In Your Rotunda: These folks know how to grab you by the lapels and keep you reading.   Here’s how they do it:  begin with a word, a word the simpleton reader may not understand.  Give the word’s definition.  Proceed to lecture.

For example, here’s a word:  irony.    Definition:  when a WMLU member, fresh from being issued an official reprimand on Sunday by her fellow board member, publishes an article in the Rotunda titled “Apathy IS a Problem.” The editors knew what they were doing when they filed this baby in the Entertainment section.

Is it possible to capture the essence of Longwood’s students and staff in a single photo?:

frazer Yes!

UPDATE: We originally wrote that the WMLU member/Rotunda writer was “raked across the coals.”  This was an exaggeration.   Based on the descriptions of the Sunday night meeting, the proceedings were civil.


When Investments Self-Destruct

October 21, 2009

andersHello, again.  Happy Campus Sustainability Day.  I’m proud to be speaking at Longwood this afternoon, discussing the great green strides this school has achieved — efforts which have been made possible, for the most part, due to my largess.

In other news, my daughter tried to kill herself.

Kids — one minute they’re learning to walk, and the next minute they’re scarfing down a Tylenol parfait and sending you disturbing texts:

“i wnt u 2 no tht i <3 u … :  )”

Jasmine sent that to her mother, who forwarded the message to me.

I admit, I’ve never been very good at understand this texting; I had to ask Gerald, my intern, to act as decoder.

“It says ‘I want you to know that I love you.  Smiley face.’” Gerald said.

This may sound pedestrian enough — but I know from experience that any time Jasmine is texting smiley faces to her mother, you better look the hell out.

Luckily, Jasmine also posted a few of her fond farewells on Facebook, which her RA spotted.  Jasmine was found in bathtub, slowly fading away, typing into her laptop with one hand and texting with the other.  She was rushed to Southside, had her stomach pumped, and has been slated for release today, having suffered no permanent damage.

She seems to be a lot happier.

What about me, though?  How am I supposed to feel that my daughter didn’t even bother to send me a farewell text?  She could have at least CCed it to me!

“I was going to text you,” Jasmine said.  ”I was going to text you after Mrs. Duncan.”

So.  It seems that in my daughter’s absurd hierarchy, her middle  school swimming coach ranks higher than myself.

That’s how I’ve come to this realization:  furiously shoveling money onto an invest does not guarantee superlative dividends.

Just because I have provided Jasmine with an enviable life doesn’t mean that she will appreciate it.  Kids don’t appreciate money; they appreciate human interaction.

Thus, from now on, I will be visiting my daughter every weekend.  If I find myself in Irvine on Friday, I will  jet back to Farmville in time for Saturday brunch.  This may sound extreme, but I love my daughter: she is one investment I don’t want to see self-destruct.

Hope to see you around campus today.


SGA jumps on the “hysterical townhall meeting” bandwagon

October 14, 2009

According to an email from Cam Patterson, tomorrow afternoon at six the SGA will host an extra special Student Services Open Forum in the Lankford Ballroom. 

Patterson wrote:

This will be a [sic] opportunity for students to share their thoughts/concerns on key areas of student life. The following offices will be represented at this forum

• Dr. Richard Chassey – Honor and Judicial Affairs
• Chief Bob Beach – Campus Police and Public Safety
• Doug Howell – Residential and Commuter Life
• Grant Avent – Dining Services
• Dr. Tim Pierson – Administration and Everything Else 

Sounds like something worth attending.  We’re already scribbling down a list of grievances. 

First on the list:  Bob Beach, why won’t you accept our friend request on Facebook?


How I will deal with the cheaters

October 8, 2009

mcguffey1I’m starting to get a kick out of teaching; it makes me feel like a patriarch.  Ninety-plus needy children, some of them looking to me for guidance, some of them seeking to rebel.  All dependent on my benevolence.

As any patriarch knows, ninety-plus kids are comparable to a barrel of apples.  In my case, I have veritable orchard of strange, sometimes dangerous apples.  There, shivering in the front of the class, wall-eyed, is the obsessive compulsive who makes sure all the assignments he turns in have three overlapping folds in the corner of each page.  He’ll go far in life.  There, looking normal in the middle of the row, is the manic-depressive who went all manic on me during class last week when I asked him how he was doing.  There, doodling on her notebook, big ‘ol head laying on her arm, is the girl who won’t let me complete a sentence before asking another fucking question.

I have no qualm with any of these apple students.  I would — to continue the metaphor to its logical conclusion – peel each of them and bake them into a pie, and it would be delicious!

I have a problem with the bad apples.  The plagiarists.  More specifically, the sloppy plagiarists.  Don’t get me wrong — if I actually went to J-school, I’m sure I would have bullshitted through an assignment or two.  But never in my career have I fabricated a source…and got caught.

Because that’s what at issue here:  when you turn in something you ripped from the Internet, or when you make up sources, you’re insulting my intelligence.  In reality, effective plagarism requires so much work that in most cases you might as well just do the fucking assignment.  Because I will extract you, the bad apple, from the barrel, and proceed to grind you into a fine, dry powder.

Sitting on my desk are five research papers.  Four of them, a quick Google search will reveal, were not composed by anyone in my class.  One Mongoloid turned in a paper I think he forced his girlfriend to write.  There’s a line in the paper that makes me think this.  It goes:  ”Please, whoever is reading this, I’m being forced to write this paper.  I’m his girlfriend.  Please help me.  He won’t let me leave.  I have other homework to do.”

That one is being sent to the police, after I finish recording the grade.  As for the other four, I’m calling up the scholarly authors after class, after I have passed out all the other papers, and explaining how much I enjoyed reading their papers.  I’ll look them in the eye, tear up slightly, and tell them how the quality of the research, the insight and analysis, it makes me feel like my life actually has purpose.  I believe God put me here, at Longwood University, so that I could lead you to write these stellar papers.  They’re so good, I’m going to tell them that I’ve submitted them to be published by the Columbia Journalism Review — the journal from where two of them have been stolen.

I’ll then explain how I think this augers the beginning of a scholarly Renaissance at Longwood, how each of these students will have their own Wikipedia page, have their face painted in the Rotunda’s dome, and will subsequently embark in a lucrative career in journalism.

At that point, I will be so overcome with emotion that I will drop the four papers on the floor, hug each of the students, and flee from the classroom.

I’ll try to look through the window to see their faces, to how they react when they pick their papers from the floor and see a big goose egg, followed by a terse notification of their impending date with the Judicial Board.  There will also be a frowny face, :  (  , to make sure the illiterate fucks understand.  Suck it, bad apples.  Get that shit outa my proverbial house!

Verily, teaching is the profession of the mighty.


In this week’s Rotunda: Green Drama

September 23, 2009

This week, as we followed the Rotunda‘s admirable coverage of the First Avenue murders, we noticed a curious amount of responses to Rebekah Tucker’s opinion piece regarding Longwood’s funding.  

Remember how she used her first piece to complain that no one was utilizing the website’s commenting system for thoughtful responses?  This time there were lots of thoughtful responses.

There was criticism for her grammar, spelling, fact-checking, snarkiness, even for her assumption that the ghost of Dr. Jarman would disapprove of renovation.  

And it was not just students.  A poster named “Ramesh Rao” even chimed in:

“It is snarky in tone, uninformed, and takes pot shots at people in a manner that is ‘cringe-worthy’. Let not the excuse — ‘We are students, we work very hard on the newspaper, sometimes we say things we should not’ — be offered here. Reporting and commenting is a serious business, and one should take them seriously.”  

Rao would know about this, as he was once the faculty advisor for the Rotunda, and has contributed to the Richmond Times-Dispatch op-ed page.  Still, we were surprised he chose to leave a comment visible to everyone, instead of sending an email to Tucker or to the current faculty advisor.  Actually, we weren’t surprised at all. 

The responses continued.  A poster named “john graham” made the case that, tone and mechanical errors aside, Tucker’s piece had a real point to make.  We agreed with Graham — so did a few others on the comment board.

Today, in addition to Rebekah Tucker’s mea culpa, there is a Letter to the Editor from none other than T. Jordan Miles III ©, who took time from his busy schedule — which includes blogging for the Real Life Longwood — to express righteous outrage and come to the defense of The Great Dismal Swamp of Longwood.  

That’s certainly not necessary; we all know The Great Dismal Swamp can more than defend itself.  

As for Tucker’s apology, it was mature and timely, reflecting both the Rotunda‘s growing pains and good intentions.


A restaurant review

September 21, 2009

Full disclosure: we did not actually eat a full meal at this Farmville restuarant.  Our sampling of their cuisine begins and ends with a single fried shrimp we snagged from the buffet as we were walking to the bar.  The manager saw us, apparently, and he followed us to the bar, where he gave us a terrifying berating.  We left shortly thereafter.

The ambience at this family buffet is sort of like that of a war; you don’t know how you got here, you’re scared, and you don’t think you’re going to make it out alive.  Goddamn, people get pissed off when you snag a shrimp from the buffet.  Holy shit.   

“Let me tell you something about etiquette,” said the manager, Mr. Man With a Throbbing Vein in His Temple.  ”You get a plate if you want something to eat.  You understand me?  You get a plate.  A plate.  You do not just grab something with your hands.  Somebody could have been looking.”

“There’s no one in your restaurant, so we didn’t think it would be a big deal,” is what we did not say.  Indeed, we were scared that Man With a Throbbing Vein in His Temple was one comment away from kneeing us in the balls and shoving his hand down our throat to retrieve his pilfered shrimp.

About the shrimp:  it was pretty good.  Sort of like what you get at Golden Palace.  Heavily breaded.  Extremely greasy, but not in a satisfying way.  In  fact, it was a little cold.

Worth all the hassle?  Hardly.

The dining area was clean and homey, the bar dark and sanitary.  Lot’s of parking space available outside.

They have a slogan, something about family dining and live music for everyone.  Our suggestion is “Where the hands that feed you also bite your head off.”

Scorecard

Cuisine: N/A

Service: N/A

Prices: N/A

Overall: Five stars!*

*Certainly this will end our nightmares of Man with a Throbbing Vein in His Temple?


Sustainability Shenanigans

September 11, 2009

Yesterday was convocation, that hallowed time when seniors put on graduation robes and sit in Jarman to hear a keynote speaker describe how they are the future of our nation  are gluttonous consumers poisoning our planet and leading to the quick death of humanity.

witschey

"I DO NOT ENTERTAIN!!! I DO NOT ENTERTAIN!!!!"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kudos to anthro professor Walter R. T. Witschey for not giving a boring speech about sustainability.  What he gave was a very angry speech about sustainability – grinding a big ole axe against the graduating class for their consumption.  We’re sure he didn’t plan to get steamed, but going to the lectern and staring out at a cretinous congregation of double-chinned sororiety girls is enough to make any tweedy professor loose his shit.

And how!  At one point, Witschey used the Mayan civilization as an example of why we should protect the environment.  We were puzzled.  What, exactly, does the ficticious civilization of a 2006 Mel Gibson flick have to do with sustainability?  Maybe he was thinking of Mad Max.     

Anyway, we were just about to create a Facebook group for Witschey when received these photos.

waterOh, no. 

bottleOh, no.

witschey

Our advise to anyone else who wants to badger the student body about sustainability: drink from the water fountain.  Because we all know how terrible those empty bottles are to the environment, right?  Isn’t that what killed the Mayans?


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