This blog contains commentary on various social, political and cultural topics, as well as musings about my own life. Read it and weep.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Black day in Blacksburg

The shootings at Virginia Tech hit close to home. In the mid 90's I spent some of my best years in Blacksburg and the surrounding area. As an M.A. student, at nearby Radford University, my friends and I used to spend countless hours at Tech (as it is known to students in Virginia), and in Blacksburg. We used Tech's impressive library, went to football games, got drunk in local bars, and ate fabulous food at places like The Cellar on North main street there. So many good memories.....

During the summer of 2005, while trying to finish my M.A. degree, I took a Spanish class at Tech - in Norris Hall - and worked at the campus bookstore. I loved Virginia Tech, and Blacksburg; It's a great university town.

The random violence of yesterday hits close to home for these reasons, but also because I have spent much of my adult life teaching and working in institutions of higher education. I have relished the openness and safety of life on college and university campuses. However, there are times when the prospect of this type of violence has been in the back of my mind. I think most professors have worried about a problem student at one point or another ,wondering if that student is capable of such an act, if they have a gun in their backpack etc.

I fear the days of open colleges and universities are over. Here comes the surveillance, the metal detectors......and soon college safety officers will be wearing guns....

joyce

Thursday, April 05, 2007

I Love Cornell.....

I love the Cornell campus, and the town of Ithaca. Wish I lived there. This week I took my sister, Cheryl, and nephew, Elliott, to visit the Cornell campus and take the walking tour. Elliott is currently visiting college campuses as he will be applying for college next year. Here are some pics of our visit...




This is Elliott and Cheryl checking out the view.



Elliott and Cheryl walking to the bookstore after the tour......





Can't remember the name of this building, but female students used to live here in the early days of Cornell. This university was unusual in that it not only admitted female students in the late 1800's, but also allowed them to live on campus. Also, according to our tour guide, Cornell, unlike many colleges and universities at that time, wasn't affiliated with any particular religion. All faiths were practiced on campus. Because of this religious policy, as well as the one admitting female students, people on campus were derisively known as "the heathens on the hill."






Not sure what this is, but I love the shimmery, metal nature of this art piece.






The campus tower.




The front of the Cornell chapel - an amazingly beautiful chapel.












An inside view of the chapel.








Another inside view of the chapel.