June 2003

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It would seem as though I have made it through the first summer semester intact! Of course, I haven’t seen my grades yet, so in some sense this semester lacks the full closure that most semesters have.

Typically there is a long break between semesters, and usually within a few days (up to a week) after the end of the semester you have the grades, leaving at least a few (either 2 or 10) weeks to either celebrate or move past the entire experience and prepare yourself for the next onslaught of classes. I get a weekend.

I guess it’s appropriate to say that I’m sitting here enjoying my semester break right now! Yay :-) I’m not really doing “nothing” but I am more or less enjoying what I am doing!

So that’s where we stand right now. Tomorrow begins the next summer semester which will see six weeks of “Signals and Systems” and Human Sexuality. Many people of told me that Signals is a very difficult class, but that I also have a good professor. As for Human Sexuality, I’ve been told that I have one of the best (and perhaps funniest) professors this campus has to offer! This should be (to say the least) a real rollercoaster of a semester :-)

Last Two Weeks!

That’s right folks, we’re winding down to the last two weeks of the first summer session :-) That means my posting will (if it hasn’t already) become infrequent. Sorry about that, I’ll try to keep updates coming.

I had exams last week on both of my classes, which meant no homework over the weekend :-D But that didn’t mean no work! I spent the weekend catching up on work for various clients. I’ve been putting some of it off for far too long, so it felt really good to get some of it done! I hope they’re impressed.

I also cleaned up the apartment and caught up on some household chores. Oh, and I did the laundry. Yep fun stuff.

I’m a bit irritated. Last Tuesday I called my landlord because the water in my bathroom stopped flowing. It’s most odd because the toilet and shower still work, and the shutoff valve would cut water to the entire bathroom (meaning that the problem is not with the shutoff valve). So of course, my landlord never answers his phone but instead has a voicemail thing set up and always calls you back. But typically with maintenance-related stuff he is a little slow on the callback. Last year I had to have doors replaced and it took him two phone calls and a threatening letter (and a month of withheld rent) before he did something about it. But then again, when my heat didn’t work, he called back right away. I consider the water in my bathroom sink not working almost as important! Ugh… So Monday afternoon I’m going to call again, and tell him that if I don’t hear from him by Monday evening, I’ll hire a plumber to come and take care of it, and take it out of the rent. The thing is that I won’t be very discriminating about the bargain of who I hire to do the work.

On a happier note, I talked to my parents tonight. They landed in Dayton, OH this afternoon! They are moving back to the States after having spent the past 5 years in Egypt. I must say that I’m kinda sad, I really thought of Egypt as home, but if I ever go back to Egypt it won’t seem like home (and logistically speaking it will be much more difficult to visit because I’ll actually have to stay in a hotel, no more staying with the parents!). But I’m still planning on visiting them for the Fourth of July weekend, I’ve had my plane tickets for six weeks now :-)

All right, that’s where we are heading into the second to last week of the first summer session! I’ll update again when I get the chance!

So Little Time

Since Monday morning I’ve been bombarded with tons of stuff. But after Friday’s Discrete Structures exam I will have some time to catch up this weekend on stuff I’ve been putting off. It’s about time!

Now it’s time for a few friends’ only entries!

My oldest kitty Ralph died this morning at age 13. He lived with my parents in Cairo, Egypt but has travelled with us to just about everywhere. We adopted him during the summer of 1991 when while he was living at our neighbor’s house in Urbana, Ohio, he kept sneaking out of there and into our house. Apparently he didn’t like the food there? The neighbors didn’t seem to sore about it, and he stayed around.

IMG_0142My sister coined the name “Ralph” for him, based on the character Raphael from her favorite movie at the time: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. I’m not sure how the name fit, but he didn’t seem to mind. He was a long-hair cat, so at that age he looked more like a small poof-ball (i.e. way too cute to be an action hero). But he did have this thing for hunting field mice and chipmunks, an activity my mom called “mousing.”

Ralph was a mild-tempered little guy eager to make a friend. My mom babysitted for some neighbor kids for a few months. One of the younger boys liked to abuse Ralph, but every afternoon once Tyler fell asleep, Ralph would cuddle up on the couch next to him and sleep too.

In 1994 we moved to Saudi Arabia and Ralph came along, complete with his own special kitty visa and passport. Saudis love cats, and he loved all of the attention he received at the airport. I remember one of the customs agents sticking his fingers into the cat case, and my parents cringing fully expecting the guy to lose the finger to the sleep-deprived cat. But instead Ralph stood up and purred, letting the agent pet him with his finger. While we were in Saudi Arabia, we adopted two more cats: Max and Gus. Ralph took both of them in despite the fact that they liked to claw at him and pounce on him while he was asleep.

In 1997 we moved to Iowa, and then about 6 months later, to Kettering, Ohio. Ralph, Max and Gus all made the trip with us. When we got to Ohio, Ralph was happily middle-aged but was still up to his old mousing tricks. Once Max somehow caught a chipmunk and snuck it inside where it got loose where he couldn’t catch it. We brought Ralph in, and within 5 seconds the little chipmunk was caught and disaster was averted!

In 1998, my family once again made a move, this time to Cairo, Egypt. The cats got their shots updated, new visas, and snuggled up in their cat cases for the long flight (actually, it turned into a huge ordeal because their cat cases got lost along with the rest of our luggage – but we found out later that KLM took excellent care of them and they were well played with!). Unfortunately they had to stay inside the apartment since it was in downtown Cairo and the traffic outside was far too heavy there were too many stray cats running around.

This morning my parents took our cats to the vet for their checkups. My family and cats are due to leave Egypt in a week to permanently return to their house in Kettering, Ohio. On the way home from the vet, Ralph stopped breathing and my parents lost his heart beat. They rushed him back to the vet, but they were unable to revive him.

I think it’s always hard to lose a pet, but it’s especially hard to lose that one pet (if there is one) that has been there for your childhood. Ralph has been through it all with my sister and me. Whenever we got on a plane to make a bit trans-Atlantic move, Ralph was on-board. There was some comfort in that fact, especially when we moved to Saudi Arabia. When we got to our new apartment and the three of us (my sister, Ralph, and I) all explored it together, somehow that made everything feel better.

So here’s to Ralph, my childhood buddy :-)

This morning I met with my department’s degree clearance officer. Once again, he’s the guy who decides whether or not people in my department graduate, and whether or not their programs are worthy of a Rensselaer degree. Apparently the courses I’ve taken so far has been deemed worthy, and everything is on course for me to graduate next spring! That’s a year earlier than I’m really supposed to graduate. That’s good news, it would kinda suck to have to stick around for another semester to take just one more class.

We got our Discrete Structures midterm scores back today. I mentioned that the instructor (a grad student) was a little displeased at our performance based on his initial flippings through the exam when we handed them in on Monday. There was one A, two B’s, and 11 C’s, and a few D’s. I was one point away from a B, but if he had curved the grades I would have had a solid to high B. He seemed really disappointed in us, but then again he did blow through the material, I’m not sure what he is expecting out of us!

Tonight I had my first Abnormal Psych class in a few weeks. The instructor has been out of town at a conference and he didn’t hold two of the classes, and we missed a day for Memorial Day. I really like this class, it’s great! I always enjoyed psychology in high school, especially stuff related to relationships. I’m particularly looking forward to Human Sexuality next summer session. Sometime I will post more about my psych class.

So what’s next? My Discrete instructor assigned homework today due on Friday. Crazy stuff. Last time he gave us a week to do it. But at least it’s not quite as many problems. I still have to get cracking on that!

Story of my life: I came home this afternoon completely intending to read Abnormal Psychology and do the case study that is due tomorrow night. Instead, I fall asleep and sleep comfortably for two hours, and then when I wake up I happen to flip past HBO and what movie is starting? No other than The Time Machine. Being the huge utopian/romance sap that I am, I had to watch it, especially since I hadn’t seen it yet and I enjoyed the original movie.

The cool thing about The Time Machine is that I noticed from glancing at the ending credits that it was actually filmed here in Troy, NY! That’s incredible :-) Some of the scenery in the movie (the cityscapes, that is) were really attractive. I should watch it again, paying particular attention to where some of the scenes may have been filmed. Cool stuff :-p Plus it was a pretty good movie, not another cheesy remake. It was different enough to be interesting, but nothing as horrible as the remake of Planet of the Apes.

Here was one of my favorite lines of the movie from the Über-Morlock character:

We all have our time machines. Some take us back, they’re called memories. Some take us forward, they’re called dreams.

So now it’s after 9:30 and I haven’t done anything for Abnormal Psych yet. But I am well rested, and quite motivated O:-)

I saw this on CNN this morning: a website is selling fake ATM receipts that show a 6-figure balance in your Fidelity National bank account. The idea is that single men write their phone numbers on the back of one of these fake receipts and give it to the girl they meet at the bar or club. Then once she goes home and sees the account balance, she is supposed to be more inclined to call him.

Now, hopefully they aren’t too smart, because if they are even remotely attentive, they will probably notice that the account balance is the value of p with the decimal shifted several places. If you have to get some of these, here’s the link for you. Likewise, the URL at the bottom of the receipt (www.fnbsatm.com) also points to their main website.

The Discrete Structures midterm went off without a hitch today. Actually it was pretty easy, despite the pounding headache I had throughout the entire thing. A lot of people finished early (within the first hour of the hour and twenty minute exam), and after flipping through their exam, the instructor (a math grad student) just signed and slammed their exam on the overhead. It’s the first time he has taught the course, but I think he’s doing a pretty good job. I guess he’s concerned that there are people in the class that aren’t doing well.

This morning before the exam, I sent a letter to CNN. They read viewer e-mail every morning, and I was hoping that they would read my comment. Who knows if they actually did because I had a 10 AM meeting. In any case, here is the text of the message I sent (based on this post I made a few days ago):

Let’s not have the media convict Rudolph on the air like they did to Richard Jewell back in 1996. Tom Brokaw pronounced him guilty, and the families of the bombing victims were ready to hang him high in Olympic Park. Whatever happened to trial by jury? It has become “trial by media” and everyone is “guilty until proven innocent.” Rudolph is still presumed innocent until a jury decides otherwise.

Lee Emmert, Troy NY

It’s true, right? I mean, come on, the guy has basically been convicted and it will be nearly impossible to find a jury for a fair trial. And unfortunately that seems to be the case with a lot of high profile trials nowadays. So that was the e-mail I sent to CNN’s AM program this morning, it might appear tomorrow morning, I’ll let you know if it does!

I have some meetings tomorrow morning, and then I’ll be hitting the books all afternoon and evening for Abnormal Psychology. I’m quite a bit behind in the reading! I also have a case study due Wednesday night where you get a case and have to come up with a complete diagnosis out of the DSM. Sound like fun? Actually it should be interesting, although I have no idea about how to use the DSM to form a diagnosis :-/

So I’m ending the evening with some work on a couple of web projects. Have a good night!

I can’t believe that the summer semester will be half over after this week! Tomorrow I have an exam in Discrete Structures, and on Wednesday I have a case study due for Abnormal Psychology. There is an exam for that class a week from tomorrow.

I also have a series of meetings lined up this week to get more stuff with my schedule for next year figured out. I’m still waiting to hear back from the Degree Clearance Officer (he’s the guy who decides whether or not the classes I’ve taken so far are good enough to be rewarded with a degree next year!). Hopefully he’ll say that everything looks good and I won’t have to take any additional classes. Yay for that!

Ruth moved in over the weekend. I met her mom a month or so ago, she was really cool! I met her dad yesterday who came along with Ruth to help her move her stuff in. He is really cool! It’ll be awesome having Ruth live upstairs :-) I also got to take a look at the apartment upstairs for the first time – it looks pretty nice! I’m not sure what’s up with boys and busting their fists through doors. When I moved into my apartment last year, the previous tenant had done that and now I noticed the same thing in Ruth’s place.

I think I’ve posted enough for one day! Now it’s my friend’s turn to post some comments! We’re coming up dry recently (and I’ve even been posting comments in their journals!). I’m updating my journal often with seemingly interesting stuff, I’m posting comments in my friends’ journals, so what am I missing? I’m feeling unloved!!! :-)

All right, I’ve pretty much blown off academics for the weekend. With A Time to Kill on CBS in the background, it’s time to hit the books and study for this Discrete midterm!

For non-New Yorkers out there, back in late March NY State passed legislation that would ban smoking in all public places effective in July. At first glance this bill is great. I personally hate coming out of a restaurant’s non-smoking section wreaking of stale smoke because one person in the place had to light up. Like two-thirds of New York’s population, I’m a non-smoker, but am conscientious about smokers’ rights because in the past I’ve had friends who smoked.

But then I started thinking about the rights of the establishment owner – the person who has dumped their life’s savings into buying and keeping up their restaurant / bar / company. Under this new legislation, the government is essentially coming in and telling them how to treat their own customers and/or employees. In many cases, they may actually lose business over this new bill.

I did a search based on some of the key phrases outlined in my ideas above, and I found this article from the Ayn Rand Institute’s website. Worth a read if you are interested in my ideas presented above, along with a good hearty spoonful of Ayn Rand objectivism.

So after discussing the matter with several different friends who have different perspectives and opinions on the matter (some of them smokers, some non-smokers), here is a brief list of myths/facts that I came up with in the month leading up to the actual enactment of the new law. In a few months we’ll see how right this list is!

Myth: When restaurants and bars become all non-smoking, more non-smokers will patronize them and thus these establishments will benefit from increased business.
Fact: I believe that no additional non-smokers will be going out to eat more often than they already do. In terms of bars, most smokers I know directly associate drinking and smoking, and they told me that they may actually go to bars and clubs much less frequently in favor of private parties. A lot of owners are really worried about losing business, not to mention upset about how much money some of them have already invested in smoke ventilation systems to meet existing local laws.

Myth: Making all establishments non-smoking places them on a level playing field.
Fact: This law takes away the right of the establishment-owner to choose for themselves whether or not to operate a smoking or non-smoking business. In the early 1990′s, the McDonald’s franchise ruled that all of its restaurants worldwide would be entirely non-smoking. There are hundreds of other chains that could do the same thing but haven’t, probably because they would lose business. McDonald’s probably even lost some business, nothing noticeable of course. However, there is nothing to say that if Applebee’s banned smoking in it’s franchise they would lose business at the same small rate that McDonald’s did. The point is that there may not be any parity in this situation for these establishments. The level playing field may not actually exist, otherwise I believe these places would have already made themselves non-smoking gradually over the past 10-15 years.

Myth: Secondhand smoke is a leading cause of lung cancer among non-smokers, and by stamping out smoking in public places we are eliminating that threat.
Fact: According to the Environmental Protection Agency’s website on the matter, children are most susceptible to the health risks associated with secondhand smoke. In my opinion, if a child is hanging out in a smoky restaurant or bar enough to be drastically affected by the secondhand smoke, then the State of New York should be doing something to deal with the fact that the child isn’t at home studying or in school taking advantage of this State’s fine education system. While I think smelling like smoke after being in a smoky bar or restaurant is disgusting, I seriously doubt that small exposure as a customer to secondhand smoke is enough to cause any sort of cancer.

The real people that this bill is designed to protect (and the people not mentioned at all in the press or any of the anti-smoking propaganda) are the employees of these establishments. But it’s interesting that if secondhand smoke were really such a problem, why isn’t at lest some money from the American Lung Association, all of these anti-tobacco companies, all of the people suing the tobacco companies, and all of the taxes that poor smokers pay for each pack of cigarettes (now over $1.75 in tax per pack here in NY) going to better educate people about the long-term effects of secondhand smoke? There have been millions of dollars spent worldwide per year in AIDS education, but I’ve personally only seen two infomercials here in the US regarding secondhand smoke (one with the old guy whose wife died because he smoked, and the one about the waitress in the smoky cafe), and I haven’t seen those on TV in over a year. Instead of oppressing those who already smoke, why not educate the public about the benefits and in the ways of quitting? And why not subsidize the price of smoking cessation products (last time I checked at Wal-Mart, the price of a box of nicotine patches was $40 for a week’s supply!).

Further, what if forcing smokers to stay at home instead of eating out or smoking more while at work just exposes their kids to additional secondhand smoke? I truly believe a lot of smokers want to quit (most of the smokers I know have tried to quit at least half a dozen times). It either comes down to lack of motivation or lack of knowledge as to how to quit successfully.

Myth: When smokers need a cigarette, they can just retire to the great outdoors and have one.
Fact: While that may work in California, and even in New York during the summer months when this bill is first enacted, the rest of the year New York might as well be located above the arctic circle (especially after last winter!). We could go on about frostbite and such, but I think you see my point here. Plus, having to walk through a huge plume of smoke to get into a restaurant doesn’t really solve any problems, especially when it drifts in the door anyway. And if you move it across the street, then it becomes somebody else’s problem (but it’s still a problem – nothing solved!).

So What’s Next?

Honestly, I think everything in life occurs in a pendular motion. We are doing everything we can about smoking short of banning the sale of cigarettes. Banning the sale of alcohol during prohibition only proved that if you push people too far, they will fight back to protect their rights. I believe that the same is true of people that have chosen to smoke (or worse yet, who are addicted to nicotine, a drug whose withdrawal symptoms are similar to those of heroin). If the government and anti-smoking lobbying groups continue to campaign for higher taxes and more laws like this one in New York state that prohibit smoking in public places, it’s very likely that soon enough the sale of tobacco products all together could become so prohibitively expensive that there would be a similar backlash. There are already Indian reservation and Canadian border runners who sell untaxed cigarettes on the streets of New York City.

In the end, we have to ask whose agenda are laws like this trying to push, who are they trying to protect, and how effective have they been in doing it? It would seem that their efforts, although politically popular, have been largely ineffective. The number of smokers has continued to increase in most states over the past five years (this chart showing “occasional” smokers) despite higher taxes and tougher public smoking laws. These occasional smokers are the ones who only smoke “when they go out” to bars and restaurants with friends and are essentially generating some of the secondhand smoke that these new laws are targeting. Maybe it’s time to try something different? Maybe it’s time to try a less militant approach, and educate people on the effects of smoking and how secondhand smoke can affect children and those around them. This large scale education effort would be highly similar to the campaign that Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) and other organizations lead every year to educate young drivers about how their intoxication can affect their ability to drive, and how their drunken driving can kill others on the road.

And in the end we come back to the restaurant and bar owner stuck in the middle of the debate. They can’t make their own establishment non-smoking because they might lose customers, but having a law that removes their right to choose is also unacceptable because they might also lose customers that way, and they would have lost the choice. In the end they should be able to and must decide for themselves. Perhaps with the right education, they would join the anti-smoking camp upon their own free will and make their establishment non-smoking. Perhaps instead of shoving it down the throats of the people, the anti-smoking groups should give them the tools to make an informed decision.

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