Advice for you pesky college kids

In Sunday’s New York Times Op-Ed page (which just celebrated its 40th anniversary), they ask grad students and instructors for their advice regarding the college experience. And it’s spot on.

“Parties, activities, dorms and classes help you find people you actually like to talk to. That is, unless you’re in your room every night, on the phone with your high school sweetheart, who’s back home or at another school. Or worse, you’re leaving school every other weekend to visit your significant other. Break up.”

– Rebecca Elliott, Ph.D. student in the sociology department at the University of California, Berkeley

Or this one:

“You don’t need a computer to take notes — good note-taking is not transcribing. All that clack, clack, clacking … you’re a student, not a court reporter. And in seminar or discussion sections, get used to being around a table with a dozen other humans, a few books and your ideas. After all, you have the rest of your life to hide behind a screen during meetings.”

– Christine Smallwood, Ph.D. student in English and American literature at Columbia

And finally:

“Somewhere in your childhood is a gaping hole. Fill this hole. Don’t know what classical music is all about? That’s bad. Don’t know who Lady Gaga is? That’s worse. If you were raised in a protected cocoon, this is the time to experience the world beyond.”

– Willie X. Lin, student in the M.F.A. program in creative writing at Washington University in St. Louis

Don’t be so damn arrogant, okay?

9/11 x 9

image
Flags everywhere, Champaign, Ill.

We’ve made it to the 9th anniversary. I feel obligated to mention something before the day is over, but I really don’t have much. My memories of the event itself are scarce; I was in college, not yet eating news for breakfast, lunch and dinner. On the 6th anniversary, I wrote words that seem a little too strong now. I agree with some of the sentiment still, blaming the rest of it on memorial fatigue. As a news organization, how do you localize a remembrance? How do you make a ceremony seem genuine from 2,000 miles away? So I leave you with a few links today, important stories and photos that otherwise might be lost amid the Internet bustle. We shall see how September 11th is remembered 20, 30 and 100 years from now.

Fallen Marine laid to rest

It’s been about 3 weeks since I’ve produced any video at work; that streak is now broken with the death of a Marine. I ran into a few problems along the way… a motorcade over a mile long to chase (unsuccessfully, for the most part), intense wind that reminded me of Kansas more than Illinois, and several dead batteries. I shot tight, quickly threw together an edit and here we go.