Mr. Moon, two or three hours ago.
Looking east, again, two or three hours ago.
Flag waving, a turd in a punchbowl, along Santiago Canyon, yesterday.
My Chrysler 300, along Santiago Canyon, yesterday, a mile or two above Cook's Corner.
Burnt tree on hill, in the new grass, sprouting leaves. Yesterday, along Santiago Canyon Road.
Sand Canyon, just a few days ago, looking north. It sure has changed.
I think this fellow will go far:
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: "Winter is dead."
SOMETIMES their household is all Winnie-the-Pooh, which Rebel Girl prefers, she must admit, to Harry Potter.
It was A.A. Milne, yesterday, all the way down the snowy mountain.
Selections from "When We Were Very Young," poems like this one:
"They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace -
Christopher Robin went down with Alice.
Alice is marrying one of the guard.
'A soldier's life is terrible hard,'
says Alice."
Ah, Christopher Robin, Alice, a tubby bear, a dormouse, the King of France, pictures books with knights and ladies. Why is Alice marrying a soldier? What kind of mouse is a dormouse?
As the reader, a bear-like Charles Kuralt, announced each title, the little guy would announce from the back seat: "I love that poem!"
They had had a weekend away – the end of winter together. Unexpected snow. The first trout of the season. The little guy's first loose tooth.
This next poem they enjoyed, then Rebel Girl paused the tape and reminded the little guy of the daffodils by the Santa Ana river. The day before she and he had pulled their frilled yellow heads out of the snow. Do you see the flower in the poem, she asked, the daffodil?
He did not.
He saw a girl, with a yellow hat and a green dress.
Listen, she told him - it's about a flower too. It about two things at once. The poet is giving human qualties to the flower. She rewound the tape. She pressed play.
He listened again. This time he saw the flower and the girl. He saw the flowers that they had seen together at the riverside the day before and he saw the one that A.A. Milne had described - all at once. A wonder.
by A.A. Milne:
Daffo-down-dilly
She wore her yellow sun-bonnet,
She wore her greenest gown;
She turned to the south wind
And curtsied up and down.
She turned to the sunlight
And shook her yellow head,
And whispered to her neighbour:
"Winter is dead".
Tenure, the Movie
From this morning’s Inside Higher Ed: Tenure, the Movie:
Higher education has provided plenty of plots for film, with student oriented movies the most likely to pack in audiences. Campus hijinks have always been popular (think “Animal House“). Getting into college featured prominently in “Risky Business” and “Orange County.” Faculty stories also get told of course, with many an academic novel having been dramatized. But tales of infidelity, failure, and visions of political correctness tend to dominate — such as the stories in the films “Wonder Boys,” “We Don’t Live Here Anymore” or “The Human Stain.”
But what about tenure? It’s about to have its 15 minutes of Hollywood fame. Blowtorch Entertainment will next month begin filming on “Tenure,” which is about a college professor coming up for tenure (Luke Wilson) and facing off against a female rival who recently arrived at (fictional) Grey College. (The part of the institution will be played by Bryn Mawr College, where the movie will be shot.) David Koechner will play the professorial sidekick to the Wilson character, and the production company is planning kickoff events next year to promote the film in college towns.
…Addy N., the blogger whose recent promotion made moot the blog title What an Untenured College Professor Shouldn’t Be Doing, said via e-mail: “I guess the problem I’ll have with the movie is that it will be what Hollywood thinks the process should be like, rather than what really happens. I guess if they told the real story it wouldn’t be as entertaining, though. There would be lots of people sitting at computers writing papers and grant proposals.” If the producers “make the movie in a way that the masses will enjoy,” then “we academics will say ‘that’s not how it works.’ “
Elaine Showalter, a professor emeritus of English at Princeton University, wrote about depictions of academic life in Faculty Towers: The Academic Novel and Its Discontents (University of Pennsylvania Press). She said she had a tough time thinking of tenure as a major plot line in film. “Somehow the sturm and drang of university life has not appealed to the entertainment industry,” she said….
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