Too Far!

Two teenage girls came to see the show at Medieval Times tonight– one dressed as Tidus from Final Fantasy X and one as Squall from Final Fantasy XIII. Not only am I sad to have recognized this, but also that Otakon has spread so far as to infest the greater […]

Post #28

Finally, photos from the wedding I helped shoot in April are up, over here. I do another wedding on Monday as well. Barring a call back from the Howard County Library system, I’m giving up on finding a full-time job that won’t make me miserable. Instead, I think I’ll go […]

a-hmm

The AACPL job turned out to be a no-go. After I waited around, practically sick, all day waiting for the lady to call me like she said she would, a letter came in the mail saying: “The position has already been filled.” Thanks a lot guys. So I’ve applied to […]

are we there yet?

I’m still a little shocked that SU actually let me graduate, a year early, and with two BAs. Be honest, some of you were also thinking that it wouldn’t quite work out. And actually, I wasn’t sure that I was getting both degrees until I opened my diploma. There are […]

optimism

As of today, things are starting to look up for me. Classes are done; I just have a paper due Thursday morning and a final Thursday afternoon. Then its home for a week. Mom and I are going out Friday to get birthday presents for all the nieces I’ve never […]

Research Paper: 19th Century London’s Burgeoning Professionalism

Heather Haynes London Underworld Dr. J Andrew Hubbell April 30, 2007 London’s Burgeoning Professionalism Throughout the nineteenth century, British writers viewed London in a myriad of ways that has allowed the meaning of the city to develop along with the century. Yet within each of the ideologies presented by nineteenth-century […]

Research Paper: Whiteness in Antebellum Portraiture

“The portrait is a powerful material culture document; I think it is more meaningful than any other tool.” – Joan Severa, Introduction to My Likeness Taken: Daguerreian Portraits in America, xvi (cover image: 59) The society of nineteenth-century America placed a heavy emphasis on citizens’ physical appearances, most notably in […]

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