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First of the month means a link for Global Giving .

The day went really well. Everything happened like it was supposed to and I’m happy for it.
I discovered that the waiting room is very conducive to a Latin review.

A month of Latin: Chapter 7 and 8. Third declension and Third conjugation. I forgot about the third conjugation future imperfect tense.

I also finished the July issue of National Geographic with articles on 21st century power grid, bowerbirds and their crazy mating dances, and sand and water dunes in Brazil. I’m glad I subscribed. It certainly helps to have reading material to bring with you on long hospital waits.

And I read a few of Philip K. Dick stories. I really liked “Beyond Lies the Wub” even though with years of reading and watching sci-fi under my belt I expected the twist. It was still a fun story. Eh on “Roog” story, I really just didn’t care for it. I also started “Paycheck” (I’ve never seen the movie so I don’t know much about it). So far it is interesting

Really, Switzerland? You are not extraditing Roman Polanski ? That is a fail on your part.
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A month of Latin: Chapters 5 and 6. Future and Imperfect tense of first and second conjugation, sum and possum. Those are easy to remember. I think most of my review today paid more attention to subtle meaning of some vocabulary words. I discovered that plural ‘animi, -orum’ can also mean “pride” or “courage” which I never realized. And ‘supplicium’ means ‘punishment’ and ‘angustus’ means ‘narrow.’ And, no matter how many time I review I always forget that “peritus, -a, -um” means ‘skillful.’ (I need to remember that is how we get the word ‘expect’ in English) On a brighter note, I didn’t need to look up any vocabulary in the reading practice they give in each chapter; of course, it is all pretty basic. I was also happy to note that, somehow, I never have problems anymore while reading a sentence in distinguishing what part of sentence the word is – a subject, an object, genitive or verb or where the adjective belongs. I think through years and years of practicing Latin (even in not looking at much in the last four years) it all sunk into my brain. Yay.

This evening I went to a funeral. Yeva’s grandfather died a few days ago and I wanted to be there for her. My parents drove me to Brooklyn. I was only going to stay for half an hour until they picked me up, but Yeva asked me to stay longer, so I sent them home. Marianna and Adama came as well. Yeva’s Mom and Uncle asked me to read the Mourner’s Kadish (they had Russian/Hebrew prayer book) so I read Hebrew transliteration and the Russian version. And then we sat there and talked and, hopefully, made the process a bit easier for Yeva. Her grandfather lived a long, full life and he was a good man who was always very friendly even if he couldn’t speak to us. May the earth be like down feathers for him (this is a Russian equivalent to ‘rest in peace’).

After the viewing and the time in the funeral home, we went to the Uzbek restaurant to sit and eat and commemorate. We went in a car with Yeva’s friend Ira, who is very vivacious. Yeva’s friend Vito also came and this was his first Russian type restaurant. There was a lot of food. I wish the circumstances of our gathering were better but it was really nice to see everyone. After 10pm, I got a ride to my bus and waited a bit and just arrived home, ready to just go to sleep.
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A month of Latin: Chapters 3 and 4. I went over masculine and neuter nouns of the second declension, the present indicative of sum and vocabulary and sentences from these chapters. I also took out the second Harry Potter book in Latin and read a page (while looking at the English version, so I didn’t have to look up the vocabulary that much). I know Latin for “frying pan” now. Well, the first Harry Potter book taught me a Latin word for “owl.”

Interview with Max Brooks about his “Zombie Survival Guide” as it just sold a millionth copy.

It is 103 F today. Mama and I went to the cemetery this morning to water flowers. This was at 8:30am and it was already unbearably hot. I will sleep on the second floor again.

I’m mad at MTA. They completely changed one Brooklyn bus route! There is no straight connection anymore if I wanted to visit my friend there. I was looking up Brooklyn’s bus routes since I want to go to funeral services for my friend’s grandfather tomorrow and I just noticed this. Wow. I used that connection for over twelve years. I used to go to high school like that. Now it will make staying in Brooklyn overnight basically impossible.

“The Road” It was sitting on my desk for more than a week and I want a new Netflix movie, so I finally watched it tonight. That was one bleak movie. Just the general atmosphere and depressiveness might give me nightmares. I liked the movie, in general, but I disliked the ending, although it was nicely layered. Viggo Mortensen was brilliant in this. I think I might like the book more.
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100 F (38 C) outside today – I slept on the second floor on the couch last night since it is much cooler there, for once my room was even too hot for me and that rarely happens. I needed earplugs, since the kitchen clock was too loud for me – tonight I will probably just move the clock upstairs or something. I didn’t realize it was a holiday and that my parents were not at work today for half an hour after I woke up, no wonder I didn’t wake up earlier from the noise.

“Highlander” S1 E11-13 These episodes were very good. The season is getting better as the show is figuring out what it wants to be and I’m enjoying it more. I really like all the female characters a lot – both Tessa and Randi, the reporter. (who actually talk to each other) And I like that most people on this show, even victims, get to be interesting and don’t just stand there when they are being attacked. And Tessa runs over a bad guy with the car! That was ‘hell yeah’ moment. Tessa and Duncan’s relationship continues to impress – and when she gets a great job in Paris, he just moves there with her. They are just so nice together, and they talk things out and she scoffs at anyone trying to get to Duncan through her.

“A month of Latin review” project:

I decided today that I need a proper Latin review. I was on my old laptop, downloading some pictures and cleaning out my photo memory card, and, since that laptop works slowly, I decided to have fun by pulling up my LinguaLatina program to see if I can remember declensions and conjugations. Not so much. I mean, it all came back to me, after some practice of it on the program and Latin is permanently wired into my brain from all that study for Toronto PhD Latin exam for years and years. However, it has been almost four years since I passed the said exam and my Latin now mostly involves my legal sources which are not that difficult and are fairy formulaic. So I can’t even do basic declensions without some thinking and ten minutes of looking at it. Surprisingly, I remember conjugations a bit better. And I know that when I look at a latin text, I do generally know what declension a word is in, and I could translate the Vulgate without much of a problem, but still I do like knowing how to do grammar and such.

So I decided to so a grammar review this month and move Latin back to the front of the brain. Each day I will go over two chapters of Wheelock. Today I looked at Chapters 1 and 2: first and second conjugation of active indicative verbs, present infinitive and first declension of nouns and adjectives. I feel smarter already.
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I finished “World War Z” in the morning. Verdict: good and fun book. Some stories more interesting and powerful than others but they all connect very well to paint a picture of a global crisis and dealing with a large disaster. Very realistic scenarios, painting the best and worst of human nature. I enjoyed reading it. It would be great when Bear reads it to, since he was sampling it when he was here on Sunday. I love it when we read the same book and then talk about it.

I then spent the next several hours commenting on rough drafts for Paper 2. I decided just to give very general comments on them. This is the first year we need to comment on Paper 2 rough drafts which I think is a bad idea and not just because it is extra work for me. Students would depend on us more and not learn from each other as much. So just minimal comments this time. It took less time than I thought to do Section 28 rough drafts, so I had time to go to the city in the evening. Conclusion from reading these papers: I need to focus on the connections between quotes with my kids; they don’t know how to relate one quote to another in a specific way.

I also went to the post office to renew my passport. I can’t believe I’ve had my passport for ten years now and need a new one. Last time, I was getting ready for a semester abroad in London and I got my citizenship and passport just in time for the trip. This time, I just need to renew it. I had all the documents and photographs ready, all I needed at the post office was the money order and to mail my envelope. In my post office we have one window that specifically deals with passport pictures and passports but I really didn’t need anything there that other post workers couldn’t do: issue money order and send envelope. However, one post office guy at the other open window was allergic to anything passport related and made me wait until the passport window was available while he helped customer after customer. It was frustrating to wait in front of the line knowing that he really could have done it, he just didn’t want to and there was nothing I could do but wait and let others pass me. Well, at least I can bitch about it.

The new “Speculum” came (a journal of Medieval Academy of America). I read a really fun Patrick Geary article “What Happened to Latin?” This was his presidential address and his main point was really about the need to include and entice amateurs and others interested in medievalism like businessmen and architects to the Academy and not just limit it to the professionals who are heavily specialized. He used Latin and its trajectory as a language in the Middle Ages as an example. He called the essay a “brief and unscientific survey of the fall of Latin” as the main language of communication. (872) I found it a great survey mostly because I never thought about Latin and its use as a language of communication and its interactions with other languages in detail. Latin was always something I needed to learn because it was pervasive in documents of the time. I never thought much about how it was used in regular day to day activities or people’s attitudes towards it or change in attitudes about Latin over time. Geary discussed how the Romans ignored languages other than Latin and Greek and looked with contempt at those knowing other languages. However by the 13th century many non-clerics thought those who spoke and communicated in Latin might deceive them or were too high-brow. French was the international language by then. Geary blames Neo-Latin for obscuring this fact. In the fourth century, many high figures like Augustine started recommending the study of other languages mainly to help with orthodoxy. Latin still continued in spoken form but other languages became important too. I also didn’t think much about, although I was aware of it, that in Anglo-Saxon kingdoms Latin was not really spoken at all, it was more a written language of government and church. Slowly over time in Europe Latin was associated with higher status and education but it was not until 10th and 11th century when that divide became permanent when the church made Latin Scriptures sacred and didn’t really approve of translations anyone. They froze Latin in its written form while non-clerics developed the vernacular more and more. Latin became specialized and left the rest of the world behind to have another language of communication. Geary does not want that to happen to the profession today.

At about five I left for the city for a free Netflix “Wizard of Oz” event at Central Park. It took me an hour and a half to get there by train, ferry and subway and I kept distracting myself with grading papers, eating a hotdog and playing Tetris on a Gameboy Bear gave me. For the most part I’m over the travel anxiety I struggled with last year, but I still have to deliberately try not to over think things when I travel, especially when I travel by myself, and validate myself when I do so successfully. But the weather was clear if a little chilly and windy and it was a nice evening to spend outside at an outdoor concert and movie screening. I was glad Yeva wanted to go and prompted me to go too. The only bad thing was when Marianna came after seven pm they already closed the entrance because they said it was filled to capacity. No insistence that we saved her a seat and there was plenty of room helped, they just wouldn’t let her in. The evening consisted of a concert and a screening of the remastered 70th anniversary edition of “Wizard Of Oz.” The concert lasted about an hour and consisted of songs from the movie, from “Wiz” and “Wicked.” The highlight was Jennifer Hudson. She sang three songs and she sang wonderfully. (I’m sure someone already posted it to YouTube) Some singers can’t really sing live that well but she carried her voice and the crowd. We were fairly close to the stage and we could see her face really well which was great. It was very entertaining. Then we watched the movie. It was fun to watch it with a crowd of people who were reacting to many things in the movie. Most people there were about our age in their 20s and 30s and for many this movie is a classic. I’ve only seen it once, and I didn’t grow up with it, but so many references in this movie exist in the American culture that I felt like I knew it well. I tried really hard not to analyze it for any gender/class/race interactions and not to read it too much in a way filmmakers didn’t intend (although having the Lion sing his ‘King’ song with a bow in his hair and hand gestures and accent didn’t help matters), but overall I got into the childhood spirit of it. However, I did think the Wicked Witch, who was awesome, should have followed the Evil Overlord List a little better and gloated after Dorothy’s death instead of giving time for her friends to show up. And, of course, I had to overthink Glinda’s pronouncement that “only bad witches are ugly” as sending the wrong message to children about the correlation between morality and outward appearance. It was lots of fun though and I’m glad I got out of the house.

Evil Overlord List: http://www.eviloverlord.com/lists/overlord.html

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