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Monthly Archives: October 2002

On crisp, cool nights and speedy trains

While I await the return of my pounding headache, I’ve got a couple of things on my mind.

I sit outside on a chilly metal folding chair on my balcony overlooking the rear parking lot, in full view of darkened houses and apartments, a thin layer of clouds obscuring the few stars that would otherwise be seen on a clear night. Inhale. Take in the refreshing smell of air relatively unpolluted by garbage, automobiles, and industry. Quiet, save for the occasional rush that marks a passing car on one of the streets nearby.

I look towards the sky. By doing so, I can push the images of man-made objects out of my mind’s eye, and only nature remains. I am taken back to the then-sparsely populated outer fringe of Aurora, Illinois, where a residential high school for the Land of Lincoln’s best and brightest sits, surrounded by cornfields that lay in wait for the developers’ bulldozers.

On many a night such as this one, I would escape the small population of adolescents, the beings that, with their insignificant worries and incessant noise-making, made me wish I were just a few years older. I would escape to a spot where I could tune it all out, where it was just me and the night sky. I would lie on the side of a hill and watch the stars, stars that are unfamiliar to a denizen of the city. There were no aural distractions. I was alone with my thoughts.

As I sit outside I remember how wonderful it felt to be able to escape like this. I remember, too, the feeling of sharing the experience with another, a single person, one capable of appreciating the emptiness just as I did. In those quiet times we shared, a great emotional link was formed. It seemed as if we had found the essence of life.

I miss that.

Earlier today, I left work early, miserable with a headache induced by spending another restless 90 minutes in the scanner bore. I caught a bus that travels along the East Busway, a two-lane road dedicated to bus traffic. Here, the lumbering vehicles can cruise at speeds up to 40 mph past scenic foliage that frame small pockets of urban here and there.

The experience tops the normal stop-and-go bus rides on surface streets. Such rides rank at the bottom of my good commutes list. After that comes riding local trains (here I’m thinking of the 6 train and the R train); then the bus rides on the busway.

But I absolutely loved my commute from Queens into Manhattan. I loved the stretches on the Queens Boulevard line between Queens Plaza (later 21st-Queensbridge) and Roosevelt Avenue, and Roosevelt and 71st-Continental Avenue. There, the trains rain express. Express runs, at least when the train is allowed to reach high speeds, are a thing to be savored. It allows for thoughts uninterrupted, the wheels maintain a steady cadence as it passes over seams in the tracks, and the lights that illuminate the tunnels whiz by your window, giving you the feeling of traveling faster than anyone has ever gone before. It is five minutes of pure speed, five minutes uncontaminated by unintelligible announcements over the public address system advising people to “stan clee da doe”…five minutes closer to home.

I miss that.

Catching up

Have a headache right now, about to go to sleep, but figured I’d check in since I’m in front of my computer and I haven’t posted in awhile.

Haven’t been able to go through the server logs since the good folks in the Microlab haven’t gotten shell access to the web server back up, so I don’t know who I’ve been disappointing with my scarcity these past few days. Well, if you’re diligent enough to keep up with my posting, you probably keep up with me through other channels so you know I’m doing fine-ish.

Friday: Stephen Wolfram gave a talk on “A New Kind of Science” here at Pitt. Seemed interesting enough, but not really motivating enough for me to pick up a copy of his book. I’m trying to work on finishing the unread books on my bookshelf first–especially that huge monstrosity of fiction called “Infinite Jest” and a book on string theory, “The Elegant Universe.”

Notes from Sunday: Sacred Heart parish, at Shady and Walnut, feels just like a castle, moreso from the interior. Bought furniture from Ikea. Note to self: glass tables mean 50+ pounds of do-it-yourself goodness. Playing tennis after having had zero exercise for years it feels like means soreness later. But it’s good to know that I can still at least hit the ball in play, though my backhand sucks (since when did I start hitting one-handed? I used to hit two-handed so well) and my groundstrokes in general aren’t as solid as they could be (maybe about a third of my forehands sounded good and looked good, another third sounded good but went high or into the net, and the rest were hit-off-the-frame duds. I didn’t even try serving–my serve percentage looks good as a batting average, but that’s about it.

Started getting restless in the scanner bore today. Heart rate was all over the place. Couldn’t breath-hold to get any good images. And man, it got cold real fast. Hoo-boy.

Let’s hope this headache is gone by the morning…

CYOA

Pick the photo you like better. Votes stand at 3-0 in favor of the right photo at present.

Headshots for the masses

So, the MR Research Center has some web presence. There are pages for the wonderful members of our department. Behold, some of the nutty faces that inhabit these halls.

The photos are nice, but couldn’t they be better? Your visage is getting published where anyone can see it. Why can’t we have headshots similar to what actors have? It’s win-win: the photographer gets some time with his subject, gets to know his subject, and in the process maybe a photo or two that really captures the person’s essence will be created. Then, there will be a page on the World Wide Web that this person can point to proudly and say, “That is me.”

I’m submitting a homemade entry for my photo.

Apologies

www.ee.cooper.edu was down since yesterday afternoon. I can only guess that there was a hardware failure of some kind. Beyond that, I can’t tell you why it was down so long, only that it’s out of my hands. I’m going to pack up and move off of the ee.cooper.edu server as soon as I’ve determined a suitable place to settle.

Delta Charlie

I paid a visit to the District again last weekend. It was, what, two months? I think it’s safe to say that it was due. Was in DC proper for the first time in four years. Hung out with Amy for the first time in a long while. Her hair is back to being long again. And, of course, spent time with Bob and Mike and Judy, and also Sendhil, who is on an extended visit.

Some photos from the weekend.

Notes on the weekend: Amy is a party ANIMAL. Afghan Grill was good but I miss Khyber Pass. Food from Santo Domingo (I think that was it) is excellent…succulent pork chops…*drool* “Here Is New York” was a good exhibit; some images work better in person than others, but you can browse the collection online and save yourself the price of admission. Among other things, the electronic photo frame showing missing person posters one at a time makes you pause to reflect in a way that you couldn’t when confronted with the same images as part of a larger whole, and the NOAA photo of the rubble, with all its clarity, reminded me just how close I worked to the towers and how different the whole financial district is nowadays. Suggested photos to view in their online catalog are numbers 1647, 7120, 7274, 3553, 2336, 1785, 7699, and 1554.

Mike and Judy continue to show how much they rock. Bob, you’ll get that quarterly finished one of these days. I used to be overjoyed whenever Sendhil would grace notesfiles with his presence… not any more. Not after having suffered a case of TMI on Sunday. Never again.