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The man in room five

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[Apr. 16th, 2006|03:35 pm]
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Today on "Damn liberals on the internet":

Fetuses don't feel pain
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Happy hoidays, season's greetings and fuck Bill O'Reilly [Dec. 15th, 2005|06:28 am]
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[Spirits | pleased]
[Voices |TMBG - Snail Shell]

http://www.thinkgeek.com/homeoffice/gear/7a5c/images/1295/
sex (I wish I could read the pIqaD).

I've been getting my editorial mojo going this morning. I had so much fun writing the ID article, you have no idea.

Read it and I'll like you, critique it and I'll love you )

And my other article, the staff ed:

Happy holidays )

In all actuality, I don't really care whether people say "Merry Christmas", "Happy Holidays", "Eid mubarak" or whatever to me as long as the meaning is there. But we have to write from the assigned viewpoint for staff editorials, and this "war on Christmas" bullshit is getting insane.

~Joy can write when she's awake. What an amazing new concept!
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Marso aux Aldebaran' [Dec. 13th, 2005|10:53 pm]
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[Voices |Persone - Liza Pentras Bildojn]

This afternoon I watched a documentary about evolution on the Science Channel.
It was so amazingly in-depth and interesting and it had a large chunk of time devoted to the purpose of language.

And boobies.
Blue-footed and red-footed.

Basically, it was fucking amazing. Quite some ego-stroking too. Watch enough Science shows and read enough Pharyngula and you start to wonder "...How can people NOT believe in this? The evidence is right there, staring us in the face."

Hurm.
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I'm hungry. [Nov. 7th, 2005|10:28 am]
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[Spirits | chipper]

Let's start off this school day which I've essentially written off because tomorrow we don't have school with a hilarious out-of-context quote from an evolution blog (which, for the first time this year, I'm reading TO DO my schoolwork and not to procrastinate it):

Personally, as an unfulfilled atheist, I really want to feel Jesus's salvation all over my face.

I blame the Internet. And bukakke. They're the reason for my dirty mind. NOT MY FAULT! o.o
I'm a bit hyper today.

The local radio station started playing Christmas music. Allow me to remind the world that it's not even Thanksgiving yet. Not that I'm opposed to Christmas music or anything, but ...! Halloween just ended! We've still got plastic pumpkins in our front yard, nevermind turkeys or snowmen!

This hyperactivity and passion and all that would be better used writing my editorial on Intelligent Design for The Torch.
Will anyone at Glen Este High School care about it? No, probably not. But I should enjoy writing it and we need something to take up space on the editorial page.

They should never let me around a computer. I can't get anything done when there's a monitor in front of me.
Except I can never write articles on paper, either. I only type 'em up in Word.
I don't make any sense sometimes.

~Joy won't get to sleep in tomorrow, because she has in-car driving practice =(
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SCIENCE! *trumpet fanfare* [Oct. 16th, 2005|08:33 pm]
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[Spirits | pleased]
[Voices |Weezer - My Name Is Jonas]

Absolutely random series of events:

A Bill Nye vs. Beakman [vs. Mr. Wizard] thread pops up on MC, a sister board of Superdickery. My passion for Bill from way back when I was but a wee nerd springs up again and I find myself wanting to watch a show or at least hear some of the old parody songs. I go searching for them.

During my Google search, I come across a Slashdot post about The Elegant Universe. I read the comments.

Isn't one of the most interesting implications of superstring theory the notion that there may be an infinite number of "parallel universes" comprising all possible combinations of events? So like, in another universe somewhere really far away, there could be an alternate version of this TV special starring the goatse.cx guy, demonstrating anal penetration with a "super string."

...<3
and I'm downloading the first season of Eyes of Nye on BT right now. With Driving School starting tomorrow I will have no fucking free time ever, but we'll see. I have plenty of blank CDs ready.
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Shand I think I need to get that CD of Dawkins music. :D [Oct. 10th, 2005|06:06 pm]
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[Spirits | bouncy]
[Voices |Super Furry Animals - Gwreiddiau DWFN Mawrth Oer AR y Blaned Neifion]

Things worth noting from the day (not night, but the day) of Saturday:

We went up to Columbus in the first place because Mom wanted to go to some psychic/spirtualist convention. So she did that and spent a lot of money on snake oil and crystals and a "healing harp" and stuff. Ugh.

Right next to the convention center though was COSI - Center of Science and Industry is what it stands for, I discovered. So it's a science museum in Columbus and it's big and nice.

Cool things:

A giant pendulum that proves the earth's rotation. There's a circular ledge set up around the pendulum with metal balls placed at intervals around it. Every 15 minutes or so it knocks two of the balls down: the pendulum keeps swinging in the same area the whole day, but because the earth rotates it seems like it's moving its way around the circle.

A keyboard that plays bodily function sounds according to pitch: at the low end was snoring, then things like burping and farting and sneezing and all that. Fricking awesome.

Things that fuck with one's perception. For instance, a same kind of turning tunnel thing like I saw at King's Island: you go across a bridge in a dark tunnel, and there's this big thing turning all around you that throws you off balance.
Also, an echoless room. You step in from the hall and everything falls dead silent. Really eerie.

A sign in the space exhibit. "13 billion years ago, the universe happened." I thanked my lucky stars for carrying a set of post-it notes and a pen. My addendum to the sign: "This has made a lot of people very angry and is widely considered to have been a bad move. --Douglas Adams."

Weird things:

A display showing the development of a human in the womb. Great visualisation of birth development, yes? It was pretty fascinating to look at until I noticed a sign on the side explaining how the fetuses had to be imported from Germany and how they all were donated by families when the mother had unexpectedly died. FUCKING CREEPY.

The gift shop was pretty lame. I don't understand it; there were about 50 things in the gift shop for the Field Museum in Chicago that I wanted but nothing at COSI or the Zoo gift shops. Oh well. The weird thing is:
They had a box of rubber bracelets. You know, stupid ones riding the Livestrong wave. Well, among the assortment were "PRAISE THE LORD" and "JESUS LOVES ME" bracelets. Bundled up in a 'COSI' tag. I little bit of brain slithered out of my ear when I saw them.

They did have space pens in the gift shop, but they were expensive as all hell. No, I can't tell you why I've gotten a pen obsession all of a sudden. I guess I enjoy quality writing instruments.

Also, we saw two movies. One was about lions and the other was Vikings.
Vikings rock. For real. And I never knew that they were the ancestors of like, everyone. A whole lot of Europe. They became the Normans, the Russians, and they were from Scandanavia, to start. And Iceland and Greenland and everything. They're everywhere.
LEIF ERIKSON YAY!

Oh, and we also had a reunion with the Buckeye Bullet. Last time we saw the ugly fast long thing (huh huh huh *snort*) it was at Nextfest in Chicago. Funky eh?

~Joy will recount the other two events later
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"Because if this were real it would be fucking terrifying." [Sep. 15th, 2005|07:38 pm]
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[Spirits | busy]
[Voices |Jason Mraz - Rocket Man]

Rofl.
http://www.monkeyspit.net/4thwall/011703.php

I've only been sniffing through this webcomic for a few minutes, and already have seen 4 "Jean Grey keeps coming back from the dead" jokes. TWO with Monty Python references.
Really funny though.

http://www.chick.com/tractimages58714/1025/1025_08.gif
...God "let them find corn" after they nearly froze and starved. Dick.

In Choir, John came in wearing a painfully ugly pimp hat (and: Why is there a picture of Domo-kun on the 3rd Googleimage page for Pimp Hat?), his normal painfully ugly soul patch and a goatee to match, making him look like some 70's devil.
Except he also had glasses. So once he took off the hat and I was able to get over the facial hair, damn did he look nice.

Tonight is the last night of Evolution Schmevolution week on The Daily Show (were it that I lived a 4-day week!). Sad. It's getting pretty lukewarm treatment by some of the folks over at Pharyngula, but I can understand that because they eat live breathe science and evolution: TDS is targeted at not these people, but at the average 18-34 viewer. It did its job very well for the audience in mind.

I have been surprised at how much the whole series of shows has felt like it was "preaching to the choir", though. TDS never honestly claims to be fair and balanced or an authoratative news source or anything like that, but all of these shows have played with the attitude of "I know evolution is fact, you know evolution is fact, let's laugh at these other people and their weak arguments for a little while."
Maybe it's just my community (here's hoping!), but I can think of SO FEW other people who would relate and enjoy something like this it seems like a very daring move. TDS being as wildly popular as it is, this stance is bound to alienate some viewers.

I'd like to thank Jon Stewart, Ed Helms, Lewis Black for restoring my faith in humanity. A little bit.

YAY!
http://www.afa.net/petitions/images/tylenolpm.jpg
First homosexual magazines are just wrong. Magazines should not be having sex with magazines. Magazines should have sex with newspapers. That's the way God intended it. When a magazine has sex with another magazine, it makes the baby Jesus cry.

Know what's more fun than a box of shit-slinging, disease-carrying monkeys? Rolling the hell out of every single R in Dragostea din Tei, and imitating the Romanian as best you can. "vrrreeeejsa vrrrrreshtarrrr numa numa iei, numa numa numa ei, numanumanuma iei, kittoturrrrrshti drrrrragostyueah din teeeeejjjji ndadifeesccc deiohhh ki tejjejejejejejeje"
Faux Romanian brought to you by O-Zone, Joy, and the gift of mimicry.

We had a neat activity in Spanish today, even if it did get tedious halfway through. We're learning the verb seguir, to follow (among other things). Mr. Ammerman instructed us to line up in alphabetical order without speaking any English, and then we went down the line saying things like "Sigo a Andrew F." or "Sammie G. me sigue". It was a nice way to change the class up a bit.

No Chem work tonight, which is a bloody miracle. Journalism drafts ARE due tomorrow however so omgI'mgoingtowriteitnowandstopwastingmytimewiththisentry.
Wonder if that word will stretch my table on my journal page. XD;;

~Joy will spend some time OFF of SD. Won't she?
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Words start losing their meanings after you sing the same line 10s of times in a row. [Sep. 9th, 2005|12:58 am]
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[Spirits | hyper]
[Voices |Crash Test Dummies - Superman's Song]

LMAO @ Harvey Birdman.
Captain Caveman sues because a school won't teach evolution.

Birdman: Ladies and gentleman of the jury the question before you today is a simply one. Besides pointing to traditional fossil forms or DNA polymorphisms or tonsils or domesticated animals or gene sequences or male nipples or common sense, how does one prove evolution?

---

Also, today in Choir my desire to learn ASL was poked and prodded until it finally woke up again. Jade's interpreter signed all the songs, and translated everything Mrs. Whitaker (that's the new choir teacher, BTW) said, and also signed things to Jade on the side and they had conversations. Lauren sat by Jade and watched, and at one point she signed "understand". It was amusing. The sign reminds me of a lightbulb coming on.

Signs I learned from seeing them signed over and over as part of our songs: boy, until, false, dear
I also learned bass, alto and soprano - I don't know how 'official' they are, they're just like the sign for 'family' with B, A and S hands.

I also learned that 'bonny' means 'beautiful' by watching the ASL interpreter. LOL Madrigals.

~Joy gets to come to Choir late to stay for Journalism meeting yay!

PS: OOO SHINY
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/09-07-2005/0004102163&EDATE=
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[Aug. 26th, 2005|09:16 pm]
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o.0

http://www.zsl.org/london-zoo/whats-on/the-human-zoo,94,EV.html

The August Bank holiday welcomes an extra special exhibit to London Zoo as a flock of Homo sapiens gather on the world famous Bear Mountain.

http://gxangalo.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=2231

"The volunteers, chosen from more than 30 candidates, are treated as animals, but with a few more luxuries than the other beasts - they will be able to listen to music and admire pieces of art."

PS: I have FSM wallpaper now and it's the bomb.
http://www.venganza.org/
http://www.venganza.org/images/wallpapers/noodledoodle1024_768.jpg
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I'm tired of reading about this, but somehow I can't stop looking at the blogs... [Aug. 20th, 2005|01:07 am]
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[Spirits | annoyed]

Behold his noodleyness.

My Intelligent Design *coughGooglebombcough* rant, in concise, easy-to-chew format:

It doesn't matter who is right. No, really! It doesn't matter if Intelligent Design is correct or not - even if it WERE, Intelligent Design is not science. Evolution is science. Intelligent Design is faith, and thus has no place in a science classroom. QED.

Goodnight everybody.
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What's a noun for 'facetious'? [Aug. 18th, 2005|08:05 pm]
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ROFL.

Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity with New 'Intelligent Falling' Theory

I love The Onion.

M-W says it's "facetiousness". That's just lame.
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Robot Chicken... Pee-drinking... A Delorean Monster Truck... Damn this is cool. [Aug. 15th, 2005|03:07 am]
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[Spirits | nerdy]
[Voices |Rush - Different Strings]

Hmm. Okay, time for another epic, rambling piece of writing regarding something no one much cares about. =]

I got my first issue of Wired a few days ago - a free subscription was included with my NextFest ticket. In fact, two issues arrived at once. The magazines were very enticing; they screamed at me to be read. The first issue had Gorillaz on the cover, and the other one had this intriguing headline: I DRANK PEE FOR NASA.

I don't read magazines. Ever, basically. I got a free subscription to YM a little while back via Neopets, and I used to be subscribed to Nintendo Power, but in the past year I don't think I've read any outside of a waiting room for something or other. A lot of magazines don't hold my attention; a lot of magazines are stupidly expensive; and a lot of magazines are infected with advertisements.

Think about it - People complain about banner ads on the internet (accessing websites which are generally free). However, they gladly pay for a magazine, which will be at least 25% if not closer to 50% full of advertising. I don't get it.

Anyway, on to Wired: I will be enjoying the day that this thing comes to my doorstep for the next 12 months. Heck, I'll probably renew my subscription once it runs out. It's just $10!

So, I crack open the floppy magazine. It's... awesome. Just awesome. There are articles on robots, on Google map hacks, on phone sex, on the fact that "Happy Birthday" is still not public domain yet.

The cover story is a huge section called "Remix Planet". In it, they expand the definition of 'remix' beyond the realm of music - it also applies to fanfiction, casemods, Roy Lichtenstein, and the like. And Robot Chicken. Oh yes.

In the first article, Neil Gaiman interviews the guys behind Gorillaz. Dude! (Don't accuse me of going off topic... >_>;; ...I thought Gaiman was awesome even before I became a comicbooknerd-in-training. I read his novel Neverwhere and my dad had a couple Sandman comics.)
The interview inspires me to go out and get Demon Days just a little bit more...I really should, y'know. (Oh, and I managed to find a remix of Feel Good Inc. that doesn't have the rapping! ^_^ Random-K remix.)

The last segment of the story (after Quentin Taratino, car hybrids, mashups, custom Nikes...) is a really amusing and enlightening timeline, from the Jackalope to Choose-your-own-adventure books to MST3k to Power Rangers to Sealab.

The second issue is more of the same awesomeness. There are little snippets of interesting stories - Wedding rings grown from a spouse's bone cells, the Grokster ruling in layman's terms; and then some longer articles, like the aforementioned test of NASA's urine-to-water purification system; and then one MONSTER article that gave me a lot of food for thought.

It's a retrospective on the past 10 years in terms of the internet. This is, basically, my whole life in an article. I think I'm going to look back on what all happened these years and be astounded, 20 years from now. History is being made, you know?

So it goes through all the big foundings - Netscape, Amazon, Ebay, and the cultural phenomena in the making - Did you know TiVo began in '97? And Netflix began in the same year as Google. And one day children will read about these things in the history books, I think. No one had any idea what was coming.

Included (for the lay-days, obviously) is a full-page photo of Google's founders in a hot tub. Okay...

There's some more interesting articles after that - A guerilla graffiti artist who put one of his images in an art museum, and the museum accepted it and put it on display themselves; blogging soldiers in Iraq - but on the last page was one thing that took up probably way too much of my time. The headline of the section reads "Found: Artifacts fromt the future", and it's a proposed crossword puzzle from 2019. There are clues like Former sky layer (5 letters), Pop. Word Guide (Before Wiktionary) (3 letters), and First vidgame to nab Oscar: ____ 4 (4 letters); but also mundane clues as you'd find in modern-day crosswords, so it doesn't seem so wildly farfetched: Blood, phlegm, or bile (5 letters), Dr. Who's organization (4 letters), Birth a sheep or goat (4 letters - I actually had to look that one up in my dictionary).

I ended up filling in about half the puzzle or a little more. I'm scared to look at the rest of the answers and ruining it for me. I had a lot of fun doing what I had done :P

All in all, Wired is a lot on the same lines as Boingboing is - and it's perfect for me. I love it. It gives me a window to a culture I'd love to become more a part of, with lots of fancy gadgets, lots of programming (and hacking) skills, and lots of amazingly intelligent people who seem to know everything about what's going on in the world but still have time to spend an hour or two at a time looking through funny flash videos. They're all just really cool and popular nerds, as paradoxical as it seems.

Also, as an odd bit of coincidence: the night my Wired issues arrived, I was watching The Daily Show and some guy came on to talk about the Blogging in Iraq story. It's kind of eerie to see flashed on your telivision screen the cover of a magazine you're holding in your hand at the moment.
The mag made a bit of an appearance in the Fantastic Four movie as well - Dad and I both chuckled as it came onscreen.
I'd never heard of Wired before I started regularly reading Boingboing (though since then I've read about it constantly - Xeni had an article in this month's issue in fact). So either those two days were an odd coincidence, or Wired's more popular than I thought and I never noticed it until now.


So I've found myself a good magazine. And you should pick up an issue or something. It's a pleasurable reading experience.

~Joy should sleep, but... nahh.
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Rupert found ... again [Jul. 29th, 2005|11:57 pm]
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4730061.stm
Didn't they already find this a year or so ago?
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What I did on my summer vacation... Part the last! Finally! [Jul. 7th, 2005|10:27 pm]
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[Spirits | accomplished]
[Voices |TMBG - The Famous Polka]

So, I finally decided to resume those French lessons, after multiple weeks off (est-ce que vous avez beaucoup de l'argent? ...Mais non! Je n'on ai pas.). My mp3 player was turned up to full volume so I could hear properly. The lesson finished, and I was about to go upstairs when... POLKA!
It was, needless to say, one of those moments of sheer awesomeness that you experience from time to time.

So, I decided to finally finish up my vacation story. The "original" plan for today was to visit all of the attractions we were planning to visit on the first day: The aquarium, planetarium, science museum, Field museum, Sears Tower... whew. That's a lot to visit in half- or three-quarters of a day, so we decided to cut the list down a little bit.

All Chicago pics:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/joyuna/tags/chicago/
Sorry you'll have to comb through them, I don't feel like making a "Misc. Chicago" set.

First we went to the Sears Tower, which according to my all-knowledgable father is the 3rd or 4th tallest building in the world, now. Either way, it's high. Something like a half-mile high.
Before we went up we watched a really lame Chicago tourism film. There was a group of people speaking Portuguese behind us, which was pretty awesome even if it was only awesome for me. Portuguese is a gorgeous language.
Also, I got a text message during the film. Hi Lu!

On the elevator up, my ears popped. It just added to the impact of the whole thing. We went up and there were windows all around, as well as screens that displayed and labeled all the sights that could be seen from that particular window - in English, French, Spanish, German, Japanese and Polish. Sorry, I just can't keep language off my mind. That was a big fun part of it for me between the airports and all.

After this, we drove around some. Got lost some. You know, the usual. Eventually we got to the "Magnificent Mile", a bunch of stores and malls, where Dad and I proceeded to drop Mom and Paula off so they could do their own mother-daughter bonding thing and we could do our own nerd-geek bonding thing. We went to the Field Museum.

The Field Museum is great. We have our own natural history museum in Cincinnati, sure, but it's just not the same thing at all.
The Field Museum is HUGE. I don't think we even saw a third of it, and we were there for hours.

The first thing we went through was an exhibit on newly discovered dinosaurs from China. Dinosaurs are cool... and stuff. I don't really remember many specifics, but quite a few of them were like the dinosaurs I grew up with (brontosaurus, triceratops, stegosaurus), only smaller. Which was interesting.
I can't really write anything intelligent on this subject. Dinosaurs are cooool and this one had a really really long neck. @_@
Sorry.

While Lu was in Transylvania [Lousiana], Dad and I started through the labyrinth of DEAD STUFF! WOOHOOOOO!
The Field Museum has an insanely massive collection of taxidermied animals from every corner of the planet. I'd like to think that I'm pretty knowledgable about animals, particularly mammals, but some of the stuff I saw was just too weird/cool, and completely unknown to me.
Among others, I saw this goat...thing, and a pig with horns that went straight through his snout on top, as well as a deer the size of a cat.
The goat's nose is like that because it lives in a cold climate, and it uses its nose to heat up the air before it takes it in. Nifty, eh?!

Dad was really wise in splitting the family into two groups for the afternoon. Dad and I wouldn't be able to bear spending hours looking at sparkly handbags, and Mom and Paula certainly wouldn't enjoy the museum. It worked out quite nicely and Dad and I had fun talking about evolution and all that good stuff.

Along with exotic stuff, the museum also had relatively run-of-the-mill animals... Deer (and more deer and more deer), bears, local animals and the like. And also pigeons.

Pigeons. PIGEONS ARE COOL NOW.
Sorry. I really had no idea that there was such variety in domestic pigeons. I think that pigeon breeders must not get out much; why else would they breed pigeons with huge ruffs of feathers on either side of their head? Pigeons with feathers fanning out from their feet? Pigeons the size of owls? It's all a bit strange. There was a display case of all these different pigeons, and one right next to it with wild pigeons. The domesticated ones were much, much weirder.

I know this is boring... Sorry. : )
We also saw some man-eating lions. Yeah, nifty!
You hear about these things on the Discovery channel from time to time or whatever, and their bodies will be on display in some far-off museum that you'll never visit. But I did visit this one so it was kind of neat.
These were male lions without manes, that killed 140! people. Pretty creepy and also intruiguing.

Okay. TIME TO RELIVE CHILDHOOD MEMORIES!
I'd actually been to Chicago once before. When I was 6. That was ten years ago, and my one surviving memory of it is going to the Field Museum and seeing a mummy. I was completely entranced with Egyptian culture when I was little - Loooved it. Mummies, gods, hieroglypics, I was interested in it all. I don't know why; I was like that. Mummies and dinosaurs and unicorns were just my thing.

So I remember going into the exhibit, looking down and seeing the mummy. It was part really cool and part scary but I was little so I don't know. But that's my one memory of it.
Back to the recent past -- We went into the Ancient Egypt exhibit, a recreation of a tomb. We walked into the first room and I saw a glass-covered hole in the ground. I looked down, and I saw the head of the mummy.
It was insanely creepy deja vu. It was very memorable. :']

So that was that. We saw a lot, but barely scraped the surface of the museum but we had to start getting ready to go. I got a book on Napoleon and the Rosetta Stone and stuff from the giftshop, which I have yet to read because I already have way too many books on my list. But I intend to read it eventually. And I swear I didn't just buy it 'cos it had the word 'Linguist' in the title... >_>;;


We left, and collected Mom and Paula from their shopping. They got me a bag and some melon-scented body wash stuff.
I had ONE purse, just a year ago. It was awesome, it fit my CD player and everything I needed.
Now I have FIVE. And none of them have been bought with my own money. Mom just goes out and buys me purses. It perplexes me.

Mom bought some stuff to plump and redden her lips. "For that bee-stung look". That's what it says on the tube. I put some on my hand and 15 minutes later it looked like I had a rash on my hand. I do not trust that stuff.

The drive home was mainly uneventful, but that doesn't mean it was bad. We put into the car's CD player Paula's newly-burned TMBG CD and we sang the whole drive back. It was nice.

And THAT is my vacation. The rest of my summer will be spent mainly monotonously, but that's okay. I still have to learn to drive. I should do that, shouldn't I? Heh.

~Joy is FINALLY FINISHED writing about her vacation. Whoa.
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[Jul. 6th, 2005|08:22 pm]
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CHARLES DARWIN HAS A POSSE.

http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/cpurrin1/evolk12/posse/chazhasaposse.htm

...I'll write up the rest of my vacation soon, I promise.
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Science rules [Jul. 5th, 2005|09:57 pm]
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http://www.rotten.com/library/religion/quantum-physics/
I think my brain is broken now. But it's cool to read about.

Maybe I should watch some of these and stuff.

And LOOK, FAYE! You can watch The Elegant Universe WHENEVER YOU WANT! :D
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/program.html
I saw the book at Borders the other day... but TV is funner. ;D

I love PBS! Forevah!
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Why can't you be sensitive and good? Why don't you want to be understood? [Jul. 3rd, 2005|11:21 pm]
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[Voices |They Might Be Giants - Counterfeit Fake [*]]

o_o
I finished reading the thread.
I am fatigued now. It was basically the same arguments over and over, from both sides, moving on to a more interesting tangent now and then, and returning again to the core point - ID isn't science - Oh but it is! And how could things so complex randomly evolve - It doesn't matter. It shouldn't be taught in school because it isn't science --- These, over and over for 13 pages.

And it only took me 6 hours to do it. I hate being such a slow reader. And still I feel no more prepared to argue for evolution myself - I just know that I agree with all the arguments others make for it.

Hurm. I should read more on this. There's a lot that I should read, in fact.
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I love snopes four-evah [Jul. 3rd, 2005|05:54 pm]
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http://www.ucomics.com/tomthedancingbug/2005/05/14/
The enlightened know that water freezes whenever God wants it to!

From this thread, lots of fun all around:
http://msgboard.snopes.com/message/ultimatebb.php?/ubb/get_topic/f/39/t/000836.html
And I don't think I'll ever be able to resist giggling when I hear the name "Big Bone Lick". Not ever.

And the quote of the day issss...
Can we please stop using the term theory to mean "something we just pulled out of our ass?"

Another quote to the continuously-edited entry:
My paleonotology professor said: "I do not believe in evolution. I regard it is true. You do not usually change your beliefs. But if new evidence about evolution comes out tomorrow, I will change what I think about evolution."

This is what you get when you skim the thread...
I suppose you are thinking that ID doesn't save lives, so it is ridiculous to compare it with dialysis.
Kidney Machines?? Creationism?? WHERE DID THIS COMPARISON COME IN?? *falls over confused*
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c'est tres chouette [Jun. 23rd, 2005|07:07 am]
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We should steal "chouette" from the French.

That is such a totally barn owl shirt you're wearing!

PS: This is a truly disturbing bird. WTF? http://www.orientalbirdclub.org/assets/forks/frogmouth.jpg

PPS: THIS chouette is truly chouette. http://www.chouettalors.com/astrid_lunettes.JPG
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[May. 19th, 2005|03:14 pm]
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I think that all of my reading through Esperanto livejournals has been worth it solely for this post.

Don't worry, it's in English. Almost all of it. Read it; it's interesting.
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Runofthemill 5th bell update [May. 12th, 2005|12:17 pm]
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[Spirits | bouncy]

http://www.boingboing.net/2005/05/12/nasas_silent_speech_.html
Subvocalization! This was in the last three Ender books (Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, and holy crap I can't even remember the other one's title). It's awesome when SF and science collide like that.

I just today realised that one of the classrooms in the hallway where Mr. Smith's room is is the ASL classroom. I'm so oblivious sometimes.

And now I must finish the questions for the email to Mrs. Wilson because I procrastinaaate.

~Joy hasn't done her math homework yet
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Ni ddaw mwy o gyd ddigwyddiadau prydferth [Apr. 30th, 2005|01:38 pm]
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[Spirits | good]
[Voices |Super Furry Animals - Cryndod yn Dy Lais]

OHMYGOD THANK GOD FOR UNICODE
So lately, some special characters around the 'net have been showing up as Chinese characters for me. I didn't realise exacty why 'til now:
I had changed the encoding on IE to default to Japanese, because I was looking at some song lyrics! *facepalm*

So I switched it back to normal, and then realised there was another option -- Unicode UTF-8. I changed it to that, and the Esperanto e-mail I was reading ACTUALLY DISPLAYED THE SPECIAL CHARACTERS! ON YAHOO MAIL!

What an epiphany. Holy shit why didn't I think of it before? I wonder if the IPA symbols on linguaphiles will show up now...

Hah, I'm reading a review for the Super Furry Animals CD in Welsh (that I just bought, hence them showing up in my music):
That the band is capable of cramming a songs with names like "Pan Ddaw'r Wawr" and "(Nid) Hon Yw'r Gan Sy'n Mynd i Achub yr Iaith" in your head is commendable, if not downright astounding.

Also, the Science Channel made me cry today... ='|
They had segments about SETI, the Arecibo message, the Voyager probes, and various attempts to send out information into space on their show Discoveries This Week. The thought about messages and images that may very well live on past us, and will go on forever through space, even if they're not found, shreds of our culture and world...
*wipes off tear* I don't know, it's just kind of touching. Really touching actually.

Oh my god... ahahahah... I just realised it now... Ahahahaha...
Have you all seen *IT* yet? Because if not, I don't know if it's really spoiler or anything, but... AHAHHAHAHA
I had a dream. And I just remembered a part of it. Stop reading now if you don't want to be spoiled a gag from HHG that really did catch me off guard.
Stop now.
Don't look down.
You gone? Okay.
So in HHG, Humma Kavula is the big Popey cheese. His Great Green Arkleseizure-ian religion is hugely huge and as far as I can tell based off the Catholic church to a T. His sermon was fantastic and I laughed my ass off...One of the only parts of the movie where I did.
Okay, enough background. So he's John Malkovich and he wears glasses that eerily resemble my 3d glasses.
He takes them off in one part of the movie -- revealing these gaping holes. His 'eyes' in the rest of the movie are apparently just video screens. It's very creepy and he's an ugly-ass creature for sure.
I can only guess that this scene made an impression on me, because in my dream there was a whale. A big, blue whale. And he had gaping holes in the exact same style for his eyes. I don't know what PART this thing played in my dream, but he was there. Hurm.

~Joy has a boring sleepy weekend ahead of her :)
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