Bar Takers, Spread the World

23 Feb

Hey legal bar-takers, I need your help! I’m compiling a page that lists all the dates that bar results will be released feb. and july. Since the bar administrators don’t want us calling them, I want to get the information out independently.

But I need you all to tell me the dates for your exam results, let me know when they come out. I’ve emailed/phoned the states, but some of them haven’t responded/won’t give me specifics since I’m not taking their exam. If you have a date, comment on this post. I’ll update my findings!

The Rebellion of Lawrence

22 Feb

Ladies and Gentlemen, I regret to inform you all that Lawrence the Laptop has decided to go on walkabout. Yes, he is laying down on the job, taking an unapproved leave of absence in his duties.  This afternoon, as I was researching for the major 3 day exam starting Monday,  Lawrence staged a protest and refused to read his hard drive. That’s right, he quit on me!  The nerve! The scum!  

Naturally, the earliest he can be fixed is after my exam, and I’m going to lose everything.  So I want you to join me today in the snubbing of my old friend.  I refuse to even look at him right now.  Forcing me to resort to poor Dollie the Dell, tired in her old age and maintaining a battery of O seconds (take the plug out of her and she drops dead).  Making me bring the dear out of retirement. I am seriously displeased.  

Art I Love — Wisdom for an Eye

22 Feb

WhatisThursday’s “Wisdom for an Eye”

Art I Love – Handsome Man

22 Feb

By Unknown. If you are the artist, please submit your name and a link to the original source so I can give Recognition!

The Avenging Loki: The Great Irony of the Nordic Ragnarok

21 Feb

The End

The end is nigh. At least according to the blowing of the Nordic trumpet in York, now heralded by the Jorvik Viking Centre as the warning for the arrival of Ragnarok, the war of the gods.   If their claims run true, we’ve got until tomorrow to wind up our affairs and party like there’s no tomorrow, viking-style.  Luckily, I’ve got friends in Korea who say it’s already Saturday there and they’re keeping me updated on the status of our future.  

With all the hype over the foretold end and my eternal love of Loki from The Avengers, I’ve recently been looking into the Norse legends, but I was surprised at the great irony wrapped up in the myth (and happy that finally Loki gets some of his own back!).  

Remember how the great Odin was sadly absent an eye in the film and the big question was whether he represented an alternative Fury?   Well, the short answer is no–Odin lost his centuries before the story we saw began.  You know the legends, of how Loki was born to two frost giants but grew into the feared god of mischief in Odin’s court. However, the story is much deeper than this.  

The Story

According to legend, Odin  was a wandering god, traveling high and low across the worlds in search of ever-greater knowledge. At last he came upon Mimir’s Well, also known as the Well of Wisdom.  The well offered those who drank from it sight of the events in the past, the present and the future, attracting Odin’s interest.  In exchange for Odin’s eye, he was permitted to drink the waters and so watched as all the sorrows of the world passed through his mind.  One such sorrow was the coming of Ragnarok and the end of the gods.  

Odin watched as the future children of Loki destroyed the world at their father’s side, killing the gods and burning the planet.  Horrified, began to watch and wait. Why he failed to keep his counsel to himself, we don’t know, but apparently news of Odin’s vision spread for soon the other gods picked up on his fear.  Angered at Loki’s apparent betrayal, they began to turn on him, casting his further aside with derisive comments about his future destructive behavior.  Furious, they refused him entry into the feasting halls, even Thor joined in with the bullying tactics.  Already derided for his questionable ancestry and love of practical jokes, Loki was titled “the Betrayer” before he ever made a move.  

Tomzj1’s “LOKI–The hell’s children”

Then came the dark-fated children–Fenrir, the wolf; Hel, godess of the underworld; Jormungandr, the great serpent; Vali, the shapeshifter; Sleipnir, the horse; and Nari/Narfi, the boy.  And if any creatures were ever to be pitied, it was them.  Sadly, Sleipnir perhaps fared the best, forcibly claimed by Odin as his warhorse, bearing the god on long journeys.  The others were less lucky.  

The first to suffer were Vali and Nari/Narfi.  When the other gods refused to give Loki a seat at a dinner because of the “threat” he posed, Loki grew enraged and started mocking them for their unwillingness to do something about him if he was truly such a great threat.  Angered, Thor and the other gods caught Loki and his two sons, bringing them deep into a cave. There, they deliberately forced Vali to shift into his wolf form and set him upon his vulnerable brother. After ripping his brother apart, Vali was executed and Loki bound to the cavern rocks with Narfi’s guts.  That would have been enough to drive anyone insane!

This seems to have been the beginning of the end. Not long afterwards, Odin had Fenrir, Hel, and Jormungandr brought before him under “peaceful” terms.  Once trapped, he cast Jormungandr ocean.  Hel, Odin sent to the underworld, forcing upon her the task of housing the dead. Out of sight, out of mind I suppose.  Fenrir, who was prophesied to be Odin’s future killer, faced the most painful betrayal of all. At first, Odin’s guards simply kept his as a pet. But as he continued to grow, they tricked Fenrir into trying on a collar meant to control his fearsome power.  Once he was bound, they chained him to the earth, forcing a sword into his tender gums to keep him from biting down.  Continue reading

Airline Reviews: American Airlines

20 Feb

This one was SERIOUSLY NOT GOOD!

Date:

2013

Airline: 

American Airlines (AA)–Domestic (1 flight).  

Plane:

Boeing 737

Pre-flight Interactions:

This is where everything went VERY wrong on the part of American Airlines.  I ordered the tickets via CheapTickets.com, so the process was fairly simple.  They didn’t show up on the AA list before my flight though, so I had to have the email confirmation in hand.

MAJOR PROBLEM:

I was coming in from Seoul, South Korea and originally planned a three hour changeover from Korean Air international to a domestic American Airlines flight at LAX.   When the Korean Air flight had to go north to avoid a pretty large storm, it changed my changeover window to 1.5 hours. 

Still, according to the airline website, you need to arrive about 1-1.5 hours ahead of time for a domestic flight anyway, so I wasn’t actually late at all.  Since AA had access to my itinerary and the flight records, they would have known that my planed would arrive in time.  Figuring everything was okay, I showed up at the check-in counter only to be told I’m not on the flight list.  You can imagine the trauma that brought forth–my bags were scheduled to be put on the plane, my family was waiting on the other end for me to arrive, and suddenly I’m not there.  

Immediately I start asking questions; I had the confirmation number, I had the itinerary, I was on top of things. So what the heck went wrong?  I was shuffled off to a customer service kiosk,fwhere I waited in line 10 minutes trying to explain to VERY RUDE employees that I was now in a hurry.  They told me to just “wait my turn young lady” (very condescending btw), and then informed me that I had been deleted from the system. It wasn’t an accident at all–AA deleted me on purpose. Unable to answer my questions or resolve the issue, they sent me across the building to another kiosk with less than 45 minutes remaining before my plane left. After another 10 minute wait, I’m told that since my flight was late, they  had removed me from the roster. LATE?!?!?!  Since when?!?!?  I had a whole hour (as recommended by their directions) before I was supposed to leave on the AA plane! The only reason I was late now is because someone took me off the roster!  I was FURIOUS with them; they had no right to give away my seat when I showed up on time according to their own guidelines.   Finally, they said they thought they might be able to slide me in last minute, but I’d have to run and I wouldn’t get the seat I’d chosen. I was left with 20 minutes to get through security and run to the gate.  No apologies were offered, no discount, nothing to make up for the stress.  I arrived as the last people got on. While I made it onto the flight, this is one of the worst examples of service I have seen with an airline.

Baggage Allowance:

First/Business Class customers get 3 free checked bags all the time, but it differs for economy depending on your destination. You can find all the rules here, but generally you get a personal item (I always make it a backpack because it counts as a purse but is bigger) and a carry-on.  If you want a checked bag, they cost around $30 each for the first 2. I prefer airlines with at least 1 free checked bag.

Boarding:

Yet again of the bad.  I arrived at the desk rushing up to ask if I had been added or not, and was yelled at because “you should have been here earlier, we’re boarding now, so you need to hurry up if you want to board”  (not the most polite response I’ve ever gotten).  Realizing that if I wasn’t on the flight, my bags might not be on the flight I attempted to ask about my luggage. Their response “Ma’am you need to get in line now.” Finally, I was obviously upset and a lovely cleaner woman stopped and asked if I was okay. After explaining my problem, she patted me on the shoulder and hurried off to stop the pilot walking by. She brought him over and he informed me that it should be okay (Thank you both if you read this; you saved me a great deal of grief).

In Flight:

I’ve yet to be impressed with AA flight attendants–their concept of customer service is one of the worst I’ve experienced. Food is horrid and there is little of it; drinks are hard to come by. There are few amenities, and the only entertainment was a tiny tv at the front that you couldn’t really see and the microphones were broken.  Trying to sleep didn’t work because the flight was cramped; and I ended up crushed in the middle when I wanted an aisle seat.  We still arrived late.

Only positive–for the first time since I’ve been flying with them, the AA plane had a fairly smooth ride.

Luggage Retrieval:  

My luggage wasn’t where I was told, and no one was available to tell us where to go.  I was happy though to find out it arrived on the plane.

Overall Conclusions

HORRIBLEThis airline was extremely and unnecessarily problematic due to bad business  practice on the part of American Airlines.  Given the significant issue over my retracted ticket, I would have expected at the least helpful kindness and patience from their staff. That was not forthcoming.   I was also expected some kind of apology or reparations for my aggravation, and they acted like I was the problem and that I should be grateful they were working with me to fix it.  

For Comparison’s sake, I once arrived at a Korean Air flight check-in fifteen minutes before boarding.  They rushed me through check-in, grabbed my bags, and hurried me through to my flight with 2 minutes to spare. Plus, they were exceedingly polite in the process.  AA FAILED. I will avoid them in the future.

Change Your Typing Language in Windows 8

19 Feb

Art I Love – Temple Guardians

19 Feb

“Temple Guardians” by the Gryph

How to Type in Korean on Windows 8

18 Feb

안녕하세요!!

How to Type in Korean on Windows 8

 

You can enlarge the images by clicking on them

  • Go to your Windows 8 Sidebar on the right and click the “Search Button.”  It looks like a magnifying glass.

Sidebar

 

Great Theatre: Notre Dame de Paris

17 Feb

I recently posted a link to the song “Belle” and some of you asked where the song came from.  It’s from a Parisian play based on Victor Hugo’s classic, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.”  No it’s not the version you watched as a child. Yes, the make-up is a little excessive. But this is still a truly gorgeous piece of theatre, and I would highly recommend watching it.  

This particular version focuses on the fact that this was a time of increasing emigration into France, where the people were confronting a flood of ever new and different methods of thought; most of which were often seen as a threat to both French culture and the power of the church itself.  These new people brought with them different languages, ideals, morals, and ways of life, which would forever alter the way France viewed itself and the world.  Indeed, it was a change that the entire world was facing.  I think perhaps the first song best describes the setting for the scene in Notre Dame. . . . The year was 1482 and earth sat at the cusp of change.  The Guttenberg Bible came out in the 1450s, and suddenly potentially anyone could have a translated version of the Catholic Holy book.  By 1517, Luther would bring with him the Reformation, and the church as they knew it would never be the same.  There is also strong evidence suggesting that the Church was already losing its sway over believers as new cultures (such as the Gypsies) introduced their own faiths into the mix.  No one can deny that this was a HUGE change for Western culture, and for many one of the greatest changes in their way of life.  And France was sitting on the very horizon of this change in our beloved hunchback’s time.  But it wasn’t just religion that was changing, so was philosophy, science, and the arts.  Remember that before the turn of the century, America would be on the map. This was the time of the Cathedrals:

 Today, the country is quite contented to remain a hub of globalization and a hodgepodge of peoples and faiths. But long ago, that was not the case and this version of the classic story does an excellent job of capturing that movement towards change.  You’ve already heard the love story, and the tale of triumph for the suffering; now listen to the story of a world on the brink of change, and the events that pushed it over.

You can see a translated version via QueenisGod via YouTube.