Monday, January 28, 2008

24 January: In The Sheaf (part I)

I've been meaning to do this since I got the last sheaf (the student newspaper at my university), but the end of the week was busy and the weekend found me away from home. Hopefully I'll be able to do this weekly.

I'm sure everybody in Saskatoon and Regina knows about the strike last semester that left both universities without support staff for over a month. I think this was widely accepted as "not cool" and one expert found it to be "kind of retarded." I myself don't really get strikes. It always comes off to me as more of a tantrum than a justified method of bargaining. During the month that they were away the university of course became progressively less livable. The first day of the strike coincided with a midterm for me. Unfortunately I had decided to go out the night before and didn't come home. I woke up halfway across the city from where I wanted/needed to be. My friend gave me a ride but neither of us had a pencil (the midterm was all multiple choice and so I needed a pencil to fill out the answer sheet). "Oh well, I guess I'll buy one at school. Can never have to many pencils, right?" Well, it didn't work out that way. Where do you buy a pencil when all the pencil store staff are not at work? Also, where do you buy a coffee when all the coffee store staff are not at work? (I was also in dire need of a coffee, for reasons already outlined. Yes, I could have went to the coffee shop across the street, or in retrospect even Browsers and Treats on campus should have been open, but they were both out of my way and I was in a slight hurry) I ended up getting a vending machine coffee, which everybody knows is probably the best coffee anyways so why didn't I just start with that? and borrowing a pencil from the prof.
And many other strike related problems:

  • Buses wouldn't cross the picket line (for no good reason) and so I couldn't wait inside Place Riel like I normally would. I had to wait across the street in the cold.
  • Bathrooms were not incredibly clean (see below).
  • Sandwiches were much more scarce.
  • Most importantly to me, all my biochemistry labs were canceled during the strike. I should have had two biochem labs a week. We couldn't because apparently some of the people in the biochem undergrad labs are CUPE? Of course we still had to be evaluated. We were all given the same data and required to write our scheduled lab reports.
And that's just me. Everybody has their own share of sucky strike stories. Even the strikers. Which is one of the reasons strikes bug me. These people don't necessarily want to go on strike, or if they do, they don't really know if they should. But they have to, because they're in a union, and the union says "strike."

Back to the point, Corey.

The front page of the January 24th Sheaf declares "University promises students $25 for services lost during strike" and below is a pretty wicked picture of the president of the university on a twenty.

Laura Keil wrote an article giving details and reactions. Josie Steeves, the USSU member who talked to university officials about this deal sees the offer as a "goodwill gesture" and I tend to agree. I mean, twenty five bucks is bupkis compared to what most students lost, but what's the university going to do about it? Give everybody a full tuition refund for last semester? As Keil reported, the university says they made no money, or very little, off the strike. Maybe we should be asking CUPE for some cash. In the meantime I'm happy to get twenty five bucks, which apparently I can spend on goods and services at the university bookstore, the campus pub, the computer store, or another campus service. Who wants to come to Louis' the tuesday after we get the money? By my calculations I can get seven pints (would be eight if they hadn't started charging a cover, grumble grumble)

Some students, however, are not pleased. Levi Nicholat apparently thought the offer was a "slap in the face." For some reason Levi thinks the strike lasted two months, which Levi points out would be two-thirds of our semester. It didn't. Strike notice wasn't served until the 26th of October, and they didn't actually walk out for a few days after that. A tentative agreement was reached on the first of December.

Still, a few other students raised some reality based points. Books couldn't be taken out of the libraries, costing Grad students research time. A rec hockey player points out that he missed a handful of games that he payed to play.

I think the highlight of the article would have to be Michelle Brock's statements. She is also not pleased with the offer, feeling that the university mismanaged the strike and are now making an insincere gesture. She had a list of things students had to cope with similar to mine, but see if you can spot the difference.
"She says students had to cope for several weeks with bathrooms strewn with feces and tampons, classrooms overflowing with coffee cups, and library services that were largely inaccessible."

Okay, second place in this article I guess goes to the fact that the U of R has also made an offer to it's students, albeit 1/10th the size.
I wanted to make this a review of the sheaf, but I guess I had too much to say on this, so maybe I'll get back to the rest later.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Found on a Bathroom Stall Wall II

I WOULD BE CHRISTIAN BUT I SO WORRY TO MY C[L]OCK
-ESL Student
-I WOULD BE CHRISTIAN BUT I WON'T
-I WAS CHRISTIAN UNTIL I WAS MOLESTED, THEN I WAS GAY BECAUSE I LIKED IT
-I WAS CHRISTIAN AND IT WAS REALLY OPPRESIVE
Be moral, Go Oral
-for good christian girls or PIITB

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

BQJ 22 January

Matching!
List a: northern, Southern, western

List b: protein, DNA, RNA

Monday, January 21, 2008

Sea Lion Woman

So I had a really bad day today on many accounts. I started telling everybody that I was so upset that I wanted to punch a sea lion. Turns out I might be able to do this in a productive manner.

BQD 21 January

Draw the ring structure of glucose.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

The Top Nineteen

Seeing as today is the nineteenth, I'm going to list the nineteen albums that are on the top of my stack right now (that is, not necessarily my favourite ones, just the ones that have somehow made it to the top of the pile on my desk). I plan on doing this every month.

19. The Sound - Mocking Shadows

18. Room For Squares - John Mayer

17. Johnny Cash (It's some collection)

16. Up to Here - The Tragically Hip

15. Get Behind Me Satan - The White Stripes

14. World Container - The Tragically Hip

13. Icky Thump - The White Stripes

12. Grace Under Pressure - Rush

11. Phantom Power - The Tragically Hip

10. Best of Both Worlds - Van Halen

9. Songs From An American Movie Vol. One: Learning How to Smile - Everclear

8. Nevermind - Nirvana

7. In Utero - Nirvana

6. Incesticide - Nirvana

5. No Code - Pearl Jam

4. In Between Evolution - The Tragically Hip

3. Coke Machine Glow - Gordon Downie

2. Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell - Meat Loaf

1. Soft Machine - Teddybears

Somehow all of my Nirvana CDs ended up together, right next to my one Pearl Jam one. That's nice to see that they're getting along. The Hip are maybe a little overrepresented, but that's okay. They're good. I'd like more Teddybears discs, but I haven't found any yet. Please somebody feel free to send me some. I saw the Mocking Shadows a few years ago, I think shortly after they released Out of the Blue, and they kicked it in. I went to a show a few months ago when they released The Sound, and they were quite different than I remembered. I'd recommend getting Out of the Blue though.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

My First Album

Through Science After Sunclipse I found a first album meme.

Title is from "In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts; they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty." by Ralph Waldo Emerson.
The background is pretty cool. I think it even fits the title.
I'll talk to my bandmates about changing our name to "Payne, Oklahoma"

Friday, January 11, 2008

BQD 11 January

A peptide bond is not thermodynamically stable, so why don't proteins break down faster?

Thursday, January 10, 2008

BQD 10 January

What are three "Omics"?

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

BQD 9 January

Which amino acid(s) has(have) two chiral centers?

Monday, January 7, 2008

BQD 7 January

Does an enzyme change the equilibrium of a reaction?

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Somebody gets a free test

So somebody's offering me entries in their contest, and all I have to do is write this, which I should probably be doing anyway. If you're interested in genetic genealogy or if you're interested in genealogy or genetics, you should probably read his blog. If you aren't interested in this stuff, reading the blog will probably cause you to be.

But to the point.
The Genetic Genealogist is offering a free genetic test to one lucky someone who enters his contest. This is REALLY cool.
If you win you can even choose whether you want your Y- CHROMOSOME or your mtDNA tested. Sweet.