Lucky you, two posts in one day! This one is to celebrate a momentous occasion I just remembered/found pictures of that happened a few days ago. I am speaking, of course, in case you haven’t already heard, of Anupam Zaman’s first taco.
Tag Archives: Ithaca
Good morning, this is Kafka Taxi, how may we help you?
I’m really starting to think of myself as a hip and cool person, travelling around and becoming a distinguished gentleman and scholar. This weekend I went to Ottawa to be told how great I am, and I was thoroughly convinced.
Fulbright Canada, the benefactors of the Killam Fellowships program, to whom I am deeply and eternally grateful, put on annual seminars for all the students and researchers they’ve given money to. My understanding of the situation is that Fulbright is funded heavily by the Canadian and American governments, who like to see pictures of things in order that they may be proven to exist. Unfortunately, Fulbright is not in the business of, say, building bridges or delivering refrigerators. Fulbright’s goals are more abstract: things like learning, cultural awareness, and open-mindedness are all fine things to put in brochures, but somehow, Fulbright needs to find a way to take pictures of them. To this end, Fulbright gives us all a bit more money to fly to Ottawa in the fall (and Washington in the spring, but that’s down the road a ways yet) and participate in “fall orientation”. Fall orientation consists of a lot of meetings and fancy dinners and speakers and panel discussions, none of which are terribly interesting but which are easy to take pictures of and suggest some degree of intellectuality, thus comforting the powers that be and protecting Fulbright’s income streams in the years ahead.
My adventures with fall orientation began dispiritingly early last Thursday morning, around 4:30. I, being a responsible, think-ahead kind of person, had called for a taxi in advance the evening previous, and was disappointed to find it not where it had promised to be, that is, outside my dormitory. Calling the taxi dispatcher, I was assured that I must be mistaken and the taxi was, in fact, in exactly the same place as I was – outside my building.
One of the things I’ve learned about America is that there is a very high degree of respect for authority in all its forms. Campus police, for example, the object of ridicule and occasional pranking at Dalhousie and UPEI, are genuinely feared here. I think this is because the campus police actually do have some legal power here, although I still haven’t had it explained to me clearly. Being caught by campus police doing something contrary to university regulations leads to being “written up” or “referred” or even “documented”. Clearly, the threat is of a descent into a Kafkaesque quasi-judicial system that even a business student could not fill out enough forms to escape. I do my best to avoid the campus police.
Anyway, this respect for authority comes across in more subtle ways as well. A person presented with clearly false information will assume it is true as long as it bears the stamp of an authority figure of some sort. Securities are purchased based on good ratings given by ratings agencies that have a vested interest in the success of the securities. “Authority” is trusted even to the extent of causing the near-collapse of the global financial system, so maybe I shouldn’t be surprised that a tired taxi dispatcher wasn’t quick to properly assess the assertion of his high-tech taxi tracking system – the details of the operation of which I was not able to find out despite repeated questioning – that this taxi was directly outside Terrace 3, Ithaca College. I would have thought, though, that he would have been able to come to the conclusion without my help that that information, in combination with my telling him that I was directly outside Terrace 3, Ithaca College, was an obvious contradiction of the laws of either physics or normal human behaviour. After a few seconds of waiting, though, I decided he had had long enough and was not going to get there on his own.
I informed him that I was not standing on top of, lying underneath, or intersecting the taxi. I inquired once more as to the nature of the taxi tracking system and was once more rebuffed. I asked if the system might possibly, in some way, ever in a million years, be mistaken. He mulled this over for several seconds, attempting to radically change his worldview, and finally made a deep “Hmmmmm” sort of noise that I naively interpreted as sudden comprehension.
“Where are you, again?” he asked. At that moment, the taxi pulled up. I said a hasty, no doubt deeply confusing goodbye to my friend the taxi dispatcher, and got in.
Now, reviewing this blog post for (maybe obviously) the first time, I can see that it rambles a little bit, clouds the narrative with unnecessary musing, and could be a little too colourful in its literary style. I can also see how that could be annoying to readers. However, I have spent a full 35 minutes writing it and I’m not about to just delete all that. So, in the interest of balance, the rest of the post shall contain no musing, speculation or time-wasting of any kind. My ride to the airport was uneventful and reasonably priced. My flight left on time in the morning without major incident and I arrived safely and punctually at the Lord Elgin hotel in Ottawa. I walked around Ottawa for a couple of hours, got tired and returned to the hotel lobby to read for 45 minutes while I waited to check in. The book was Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. I recommend it but offer no comment.
I like my way better. This whole post has gotten boring and dreary. It is also as much as I feel like writing for the moment. Next time, we’ll explore fancy meals, long walks, and infringements on my freedom of speech.
Pictures finally!
Well, it took longer than I expected, but I finally got out to get some pictures of the campus today. I apologize for the flakiness, but it’s been a busy couple of weeks, lots of early September just got to campus let’s have a party kind of things, as well as just trying to get settled in to classes and things like that. A bunch of us internationals went out to Collegetown and Cornell for a bit last night, and they do this cool thing with chimes I thought you might like, so I tried to record it.
The quality’s not great, but it gives you an idea. They started off with the Imperial March from Star Wars. I’ve got something new for my resume now too: I have peed in an Ivy League bathroom. Anyway, the pictures.
This is the main quad, fairly well centered on campus. See the clock? I’m pretty sure we have that exact same clock at UPEI. Small world.
On the left here you can see a bit of the fountain, which lights up at night – very cool, there’s a video further down. I’ve never had occasion to go inside the far building, so I’m not sure what it is, but it looks pretty good. In the building on the left, which is some sort of film or theatre arts building, there’s this, which I thought was neat:
It was hard to capture them in a picture, but there were more movie posters all over the walls. Through the doors is a theatre. Back outside, and looking up the hill rather than down:
Pretty close to this is some art of some kind.
I’m not sure exactly what they call this thing. I’ve heard it referred to as the Textor Ball, a reference to Textor Hall, which it sits on top of, and also as “The Fish”. Yes, fish – look again. Behind Textor Hall, there’s the Park Center:
It’s one of the college’s three LEED Platinum certified buildings, whatever that means. It’s very eco-friendly and sustainable and so on. That’s one of our claims to fame – no other college has three such buildings. We also have more buildings called the Park Center than any other college, with two. They are not related in any way or even very close to each other, which is fun for people that are new on campus. Down the hill is the Muller Chapel.
This is where they send us to relax so we don’t go insane around finals. It usually works; we do better than Cornell, anyway. Here’s another shiny new LEED Platinum building, the Athletic Center, which is having its grand opening in a few weeks.
I don’t know if the picture really captures the scale of this thing, but wow. Americans love sports. Going back up to the top of the hill, we have the Towers:
These are residences, one of which is set aside entirely for freshmen. I haven’t met anyone yet who thinks that’s a good idea, and everyone seems to be at a loss to explain how it happened. There’s a lounge up at the top of East Tower, but it was closed when I was taking these pictures. I’ll go up there some time to get some views of the city and the lake. In the meantime, here’s the fountain at night.