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  • Day 27 – Gennady Stolyarov II

    Sharply-dressed Gennady Stolyarov II asks author Martin Fridson a question. Click the photo to view larger.

     

    Gennady is a senior at Hillsdale College with a remarkable triple major in Economics, Mathematics, and German. He is an independent writer for a variety of online magazines and websites and runs an online magazine, The Rational Argumentator, and a blog, The Progress of LibertyArchived Link.

     

    Today was the third day of the CCA. Today’s speakers were Martin Fridson, author of Unwarranted Intrusions: The Case Against Government Intervention In the Marketplace, and Myron Ebell from the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Both speakers were excellent. Fridson spoke about why ethanol regulations do not make sense and Ebell spoke about why government should not have a role in creating new car technologies.

  • Day 26 – Joseph White and Peter Collier

    Day 2 of the Cars & Trucks, Markets & Government CCA. Joseph White from the Wall Street Journal (top) and Peter Collier, political author and founder of Encounter Books (bottom), spoke today. White spoke on the decline of the Detroit 3 since 1970 and Collier spoke on the history of the Ford Motor Company. Both speakers were very interesting and, in my opinion, much better than yesterday’s John Engler. White was engaging and witty, and Collier’s story about Ford was full of fascinating information. Click the photos to view them larger.

  • Day 25 – CCA Week

    Tonight was the first lecture of the Center for Constructive Alternatives lecture series titled, “Cars and Trucks, Markets and Government.” Pictured here is John Engler, former Governor of Michigan, who delivered the first lecture. Click on the photo to view larger.

     

    Mr. Engler disappointed me a little with his question dodging and his support of the government bailout of the auto industry. Let’s hope that the other speakers will be better. It looks like a few other people on the schedule are going to be great. I will report what I think on here in the coming days.

     

    Here is the schedule for the week:

    SUNDAY, JANUARY 25

    8:00 p.m. “Michigan’s Competitiveness, Yesterday and Today”
                   John Engler
                   Former Governor, State of Michigan

    MONDAY, JANUARY 26

    4:00 p.m. “The Decline of the ‘Big Three’ Since the 1970s”

                   Joseph White
                   Wall Street Journal

    8:00 p.m. “The Fords and the Rise of the U.S. Automotive Industry”
                   Peter Collier
                   Co-Author, The Fords: An American Epic

    TUESDAY, JANUARY 27

    4:00 p.m. “Do Ethanol Regulations Make Sense?”
                   Martin Fridson
                   Author, Unwarranted Intrusions: The Case Against 
                   Government Intervention In the Marketplace

    8:00 p.m. “New Car Technology: Should Government Have a Role?”
                   Myron Ebell
                   Competitive Enterprise Institute

    WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28

    4:00 p.m. “The U.S. Automotive Industry: Looking Ahead”
                   David Cole
                   Center for Automotive Research

    8:00 p.m. “American Cars and American Culture”
                   Paul Ingrassia
                   Author, Engines of Change

    THURSDAY, JANUARY 29

    11:00 a.m. Faculty Roundtable

  • Day 24 – Response to Comments

    Today’s post is a response to the numerous comments that I received, both online and in person, on my post about President Obama’s Inaugural Address. Please read the comments before reading this post.

     

    I want everyone to know that I appreciate the comments. If you ever need clarifications on what I write, just leave a comment and I will do my best to explain. Also, I enjoy reading individuals’ thoughts on what I write, especially if they disagree or find an error. Anytime errors that can be corrected benefit us all by bringing us closer to the truth.

     

    First, I want to start out with a few clarifications of what I do and do not support, in case it was not clear in my last post. From some of the comments that I received, there seems to have been a little confusion with this.

     

    I do not support the Republican Party or the Bush administration. Both have strayed far from their original goals and I think that the Bush administration brought more socialism to the United States since the 1930s than any other administration through massive intervention into the financial markets, the attempted take over of the auto industry, massive intervention into the medical industry, and a very large growth of government. That said, I do not support any political party, so in criticizing President Obama’s ideas, I am not in favor of any other candidate.

     

    I do not support ad hominem attacks on the new president. Calling him by his middle name, Hussein, is trying to make a connection between him and terrorists and is nonsense. He clearly is not a terrorist and, though I do not know him personally, I suspect he is most likely a morally upright man. Calling him a terrorist makes one sound like a jingoistic, nationalistic, talk-radio host. We should look at what President Obama advocates rather than the correlations between his name and the name of a man who slaughtered hundreds of thousands of people. I also want to remind everyone that ideas expressed in the comments on my blog are not my own unless posted by me under the name “cagrimmett”. Each person takes responsibility of his or her own comment.

     

    When I say “government”, I mean government as is seen in the world today. Technically, the word government can mean the regulation of any relationship between any two or more entities. What I mean here when I say government is the coercive body which regulates and controls a nation, state, or community, which we see in the world today. (All governments proper in the world today employ coercion to stay in power.) I am not arguing government in its regulation of some sort of relationship between entities should not exist, because that is impossible. Any time there is a regulation, even if both sides contractually agree, there is government. What I am against is coercive government, a.k.a. the kind that we see most often in the world today. When I say government, I mean the coercive sense rather than the regulation of any relationship between any two or more entities unless I specify. If it is ever unclear, ask.

     

    When I talk about the free market, I am not talking about the market that we see in America, I am not talking about “American Capitalism” as we see today, and I am not talking about the so-called free market that the Republicans advocate. Such things are not the free market. There has not been a free market in America, or anything relatively like it, since the 1800s. In fact, I do not think a clear example of it can be seen in the world today. I am talking about the free market that Mises, Hayek, Rothbard, Menger, Hazlitt, and others advocated. If you do not know what I am talking about, ask me. What we see in America today is a market with very large interference and control by the government. Some people call it a free market, but it really is not. 
     

    Happeningfish, this part is addressed to you: A large part of what I wanted to reply to you with was said in the free market paragraph and the government paragraph above, so I will not repeat myself. You wrote, “To say that more government necessarily means less freedom is naive in the extreme and displays a lack of familiarity with different shades of government and policy in effect around the world.” I agree that I do not know all of the different shades of government and policy around the world. I do, however, understand how government exists and I understand the necessity of freedom. I agree with Mises when he says, “Government is essentially the negation of liberty.” If you can show me a situation where more government proper produces more personal and economic freedom than less government proper can, I would be very interested and it would, if your example is true, change the way I view things and what I believe.

     

    Sean, this part is addressed to you: I think that our country’s biggest problem is not intolerance of race, religion, or lifestyles (though certainly those are problems, I agree); it is that we do not have a firm foundation of property rights and what we do have is not entirely protected. I think once property rights are fully in place and respected, it will do more for fixing the problems that intolerance causes than President Obama can fix by trying to unite people. We have discussed this before. I think it works the opposite way as well, though. Once people are “united” and people are more tolerant, property rights will be respected. The more difficult of these two tasks is in getting people united, though. Like I said, once property rights are respected–by the government as well as people–the problems caused by intolerance will be minimal to non-existent. 

     

    Also, Sean, when I say “sheep”, I mean people blindly following what they hear without fully examining the consequences. I admit that I am occasionally a sheep, as is everyone at some point in time) but I try to minimize the amount of time I am by continually learning and questioning.

     

    Alex (and partially, Mort), this part is addressed to you: Monopolies can not happen under an actual free market. Artifically high prices can not be sustained for any long length of time unless there are government barriers to entry. If prices are too high, the “monopoly” has to contend with the possibility of competitors entering the market and producing goods and selling them at lower prices. If the original firm once afforded to sell its goods at a lower price, chances are their competitors can do the same and the artificially high price becomes unsustainable. On the other hand, Rothbard extends Mises’ socialism argument to show that a free-market monopoly cannot persist anyway. If a firm has no competitors, it becomes subject to the same calculation problems inherent in a socialist system, and will become uncompetitive and lose its position of dominane. The real monopoly is the government. Do you have any choice to start another form of government in an area? No. Force will be used to subdue you and tear down what you started. As of now, your only choice is a coercive government here or elsewhere and the degree of coercion (forced confiscation of wealth or slaughter). I will write more about my understanding of monopolies, and why they do not exist under a free market, in the future.

     

    Also, Alex, a choice between two individuals in government is not the same in any respects to a choice between two goods in the free market. You are correct, the majority of the people wanted Obama. I am not saying that if they want to be happy they should go against what “they feel in their own hearts is correct.” Being happy is a subjective thing. I am saying that if they want to be free, the LAST place to turn is the government. I do not know “more about what they want and need than they do.” If they want Obama, that is fine. I am just telling them what is likely to be the consequence of their decisions. (By the way, you might want to check your basis of what is a right. In my opinion, “the most important right[s] in the history of the world” are property rights.) Also, I do not like democracy. Like our government, I think it is illegitimate.

     

    I have a few more comments about President Obama’s address. If he wants to extend opportunity to every willing heart, he needs to immediately stop government subsidies of all kinds, because they are selective and amount to favoritism. They help out inefficient businesses and encourage the misallocation of resources. Additionally, he needs to read up on the Austrian Business Cycle Theory. If he is worried about these booms, busts, and recessions, the best thing to do is deregulate the financial markets. A basic understanding of the ABCT tells us that these conditions which cause recessions and economic downturns are caused by the Federal Reserve artificially lowering interest rates. Artificially low interest rates amount to printing money and “is an artificial means of recovering from a very real effects of an artificial boom.”  To quote more of Dan Mahoney, “Money is property, and under a monetary system which makes it appear that more property exists for production than actually exists, failure is inevitable.” Instead of allowing markets to clear malinvestment, the current monetary system keeps propping it up until the bottom drops out. What happens then? A recession, until entrepreneurs have time to liquidate. Only though the process of converting malinvestments to productive capital can the foundation for growth be achieved.

     

    One thing I am positive about in Obama’s presidency is that he loves technology. He promises to set up a website, recovery.gov, to show where tax dollars are spent. He also promises to digitize the nation’s health records within 5 years. Anytime the government becomes more accountable (if you can trust their information), it is a good thing. He also is doing a weekly YouTube address.

     

    Also, keep perspective in mind over the next four years. The bar has been set pretty low by the socialism and false promises of the Bush administration, so it is difficult for Obama to look bad.

  • Day 23 – Jeff Wysong


    This is my friend Jeff Wysong running in the DMR (distance medley relay). I took photos tonight at the indoor track meet here at Hillsdale. Click the photo to view large.

  • Day 22 – WilliamClayton.com


     

    WilliamClayton.com 

    William Clayton is a friend of mine that I met here at Hillsdale last semester during lunch the first week. He is an excellent photographer and I really enjoy his work. He has been a great council whenever I have questions and he is always willing to help. He does a photography 365 at his site, WilliamClayton.com. I suggest that you check it out and add the feed to your aggregator so you can see his wonderful photos daily.


    This coming weekend and next week are going to be pretty busy for me. I have a lot of reading to do, a paper to write, and math to keep up with. Additionally, I signed up to take the third CCA which starts next week. The CCA is a lecture series, put on by Hillsdale, called the Center for Constructive Alternatives. There are four CCAs per academic year, in September, November, January, and March. The one in January is always about economics, so that is the one I am taking. Students get a credit towards graduation if they attend the lectures and do well on the assigned paper afterwards. This CCA’s topic is titled, “Cars, Trucks, Markets, and Government.” It will consider the history of the automotive industry with a special focus on the role of government. I am looking forward to it, though it will take up a lot of my time since there are 7 lectures and a discussion group fit in from Sunday to Thursday.

  • Day 21 – Bowling


    Click to view the photo larger.

    Tonight some of the guys in Niedfeldt (my dorm) decided to go bowling and invited me along. I had a lot of fun and ended up bowling a 159 (better than normal for me). I also got to take some great action shots of guys throwing the ball, since we were in a lane on the end.

     

    Good news! I got another job today! In addition to working as a computer technician in the afternoons at ITS, I am now a lab assistant in one of the big computer labs from 11-2 on Mondays and Wednesdays. As a lab assistant, all I have to do is make sure that the printer does not malfunction and add paper, help people if they have a question (which other assistants tell me is quite rare), and watch over the lab to make sure people do not make off with the college’s stuff. (Since this is Hillsdale, I am not worried about stealing. Students, myself included, leave their laptops and books unattended in rooms almost on a daily basis with no worries. Crime is not a problem here.)

     

    Basically, I am getting paid to sit at a desk and do homework, which I usually do at that time between classes anyway. Of course, part of my compensation is the opportunity cost of what I could have done with that three hours, but since I am doing what I would have done anyway, it is a great deal. Additionally, since I have to work through lunch, I get paid for an extra hour on top of my normal shift, so I get paid for 8 hours of lab work each week when I only do 6 hours. Not a bad deal considering the cafeteria at Hillsdale will make you a lunch to-go, which I can pick up right before my shift starts. This brings up my total number of paid hours to 19 hours a week, just shy of the 20 hour limit that the state of Michigan imposed upon students.

     

    I want to reiterate from previous posts that I really enjoy my classes this semester. Calculus II is going well and my professor is funny if you understand clever math jokes. My econ professors are also pretty funny and I just enjoy economics all around. Also, I think that my English and History professors both are very bright, great lecturers, and very entertaining. Hillsdale is a wonderful place.

  • Day 20 – Inauguration Day

    As nearly everyone knows, President Obama was sworn in today at noon eastern time by Chief Justice Roberts on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol. I was in English class with Dr. Jackson during the whole process, so I missed it, but I watched the speeches online later in the day. I admit that the new President is a wonderful speaker, but be wary of thisArchived Link. As Alan Caruba wrote over at The Progress of LibertyArchived Link, “[I]f words alone could lift this nation out of its current financial crisis, its wars, and other problems, President Barack Obama could make that happen.” Unfortunately for America and its new President, good intentions do not guarantee desirable outcomes.

     

    I just want to comment on a small part of what the President said. A little over half-way through, he said:

    Nor is the question before us whether the market is a force for good or ill. Its power to generate wealth and expand freedom is unmatched, but this crisis has reminded us that without a watchful eye, the market can spin out of control – and that a nation cannot prosper long when it favors only the prosperous. The success of our economy has always depended not just on the size of our Gross Domestic Product, but on the reach of our prosperity; on our ability to extend opportunity to every willing heart – not out of charity, but because it is the surest route to our common good.

    Download the full-text transcript of President Obama’s address.

     

    He has absolutely correct when he said that the market’s power to generate wealth and freedom is unmatched. No system even comes close to rivaling the free market in its power to generate wealth. Where he went wrong was in what followed. What this crisis has actually reminded us is that with government intervention into the market, artificially created inflation, fiat money, government bailouts, high tax rates, and deficit spending make the market no longer free – in fact, it drives it into a brick wall. “The success of our economy” depends on the government backing out of the market entirely and stopping its nonsense. Only a market entirely free of government intervention and a people free from government coercion can “extend opportunity to every willing heart”. The government cannot do these things, and to a great extent, a market infected by the government cannot either.

     

    The President closed with this: 

    Let it be said by our children’s children that when we were tested we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back nor did we falter; and with eyes fixed on the horizon and God’s grace upon us, we carried forth that great gift of freedom and delivered it safely to future generations.

    I will close for the day with this: If the government and America stay on the current course they are both on, freedom will soon be a thing of the past. Our children will know nothing but the statist quo (yes, I spelled that correctly…it is a play on words). Future generations, instead of rejoicing in freedom, will live under the coercive hand of government and know only of tyranny. As the new President said, we must act now. Just be sure not to follow his advice if and when you get around to acting.

     

    By the way, I am willing to answer questions and clarify anything I wrote here. If you disagree with me, that is fine, I just ask that you be nice about it if you leave a comment.

  • Day 19 – Hillsdale Swimming

    I was going through my Aperture library today and found this photo of someone on the Hillsdale Swimming and Diving team. Click to view the photo full size.

     

    On a side note, I am looking for an ultra-wide angle lens or a fisheye. I think I have partially narrowed it down to these four. Does anyone have any thoughts on these lenses or any suggestions of others? They must fit a Canon 40D.

    Sigma 12-24mm f/4.5-5.6

    Tokina AT-X 116 PRO DX 11-16mm f/2.8

    Canon EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM

    Canon EF 15mm f/2.8 Fisheye

  • Day 18 – Thespian Statue

    Walking around downtown Jonesville yesterday in the wind and snow, I spotted this interesting statue. An icicle naturally formed on its face. Click the photo to view it large. 

    50mm, f/2.8, 1/1000, ISO 100.

  • Day 17 – Hannah and David’s Cookies


    I awoke this morning to the wonderful smell of cookies baking in Niedfeldt. After I took a shower, I went to explore. Hannah M. and David W. were baking in the house director’s kitchen, so I took a few photos and sampled a cookie. It was delicious! (Click the photo to view it large.)

     

    Here is the recipe they used (originally out of the Nestle Toll House Best-Ever Cookies book): 

    Choc-Oat-Chip Cookies

    1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour

    1 tsp baking soda

    1/2 teaspoon salt (optional)

    1 1/4 cups packed brown sugar

    1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened

    1/2 cup granulated sugar

    2 eggs

    2 tbsp milk

    2 tsp vanilla extract

    2 1/2 cups oats

    2 cups (12 oz package) chocolate chips

     

    Combine flour, baking soda, and salt in small bowl. Beat brown sugar, butter, and granulated sugar in large mixing bowl until creamy. Beat in eggs, milk, and vanilla extract. Gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in oats and chocolate chips. Drop by rounded tablespoon onto ungreased baking sheets.

     

    Bake in preheated 375 degree oven for 9 to 10 minutes for chewy cookies or 12 to 13 minutes for crispy cookies. Let stand for 1 minute; move to wire racks to cool completely. Makes about 4 dozen cookies.

  • Day 16 – Memory from High School

     

    This video is from the beginning of my senior  year in high school. My friends Tyler, Dylan, and I decided it would be fun to eat Kool-Aid powder and record it. All three of us had a free two hour block where we hung out in Mrs. Opel’s room and were for the most part unproductive.


    Have you ever breathed in through your nose in cold weather and froze the inside of it? That is what happens when you walk to class in the morning and it is -13 degrees without the windchill. With the windchill, it is -21 degrees. 

     
    Tonight I volunteered at the Hillsdale County Senior Center to get my HTA hours for my scholarship (so it is not actually volunteering… just exchanging my labor for something else). I had to dress in a white shirt, black pants, dress shoes, and a tie. They had their large 25th Anniversary Banquet. Their donors were all invited.0 We were serving food and wine, as well as cleaning up and tearing down after everyone left. I was there for four hours, from 6-10. The good thing is that we had a break after everyone ate we got to eat as much of the delicious food as we wanted. Hors d’oeuvres, steak, and wonderful chocolate mousse were just a sample of the tasty fare. 

     

    I will have a busy weekend of reading and starting my first paper (already) on Virtue in Joseph Addison’s Cato, A Tragedy.

  • Day 15 – Charger Basketball

    Tonight I took photos for both the men and women Charger Basketball teams. I caught a nice shot of this foul. The lighting in the sports complex is not optimal, so I had to shoot on 1600 ISO and f/2.8 to get enough light, so I apologize for the graininess. I need to invest in another flash unit since I have one already and a wireless transmitter for it. Two wireless flashes set up in the basketball area would give me plenty of light. I saw another photographer tonight that had that setup. Next time I shoot, I think I will try it with the one I have. Even one unit will give me more light.

     

    Today was the second first day of classes (I have different classes on T-Th than MWF). So far, I am very excited for this semester. My first impression of my professors is that they are all very intelligent and on-top of their jobs. Instead of just handing out their syllabi, briefly explaining the course, then releasing everyone, my professors gave a full lecture in their first classes. I learned a lot from them on the first day, so I am very hopeful for the rest of the semester. Also, many upperclassmen told me that I have some of the best professors at Hillsdale for the courses I am taking; that also makes me excited for the semester. As I began reading the introductory material and first reading assignments, I found the works thought-provoking, yet not so difficult that I could not get through them. I will have a lot on my plate this semester as far as reading and writing go, but I think I can manage it without getting too stressed. I am looking forward to a great semester!

  • Day 14 – Disk Warrior


    ,

    Disk Warrior

    Disk Warrior, produced by Alsoft, has saved me and hard drives that I have worked on multiple times. Corrupt catalogue on your drive?  Lost file directory data? Corrupt sectors on your startup disk? Disk does not mount? Disk Warrior will fix it. I keep my CD in my bag just incase something happens. You never know when disaster will strike your hard disk, so when it does, save your files with Disk Warrior. (Of course, I still recommend frequent backups…)

     

    Here is some praise from Macworld on Disk Warrior:

    Few utilities are as important and as reliable as DiskWarrior 4. Throughout many years, this program has showed its value as a data and bacon saver, and this new version continues to provide essential maintenance and repair features. This may be one of the few programs that every Mac user should own.

     

    Today was my first day of classes. I think this semester is going to be great! After my first English and Microecon classes tomorrow, I will write my initial thoughts on my classes. I also got my Vibram Five Finger shoes today! I wore them around for a few hours; they are pretty comfortable!

  • Day 13 – Reflections


    I took this photo two summers ago. The figure in the glasses is my great friend Sean Nelson. The warm summer sun shining on this picnic table is a big change from the cold, windy, snowy weather Hillsdale has been having the last few days. It is 3 degrees as I write this.

     

    Today was a nice day overall. I sold yearbooks at registration all morning until lunchtime, and did some preparation for my classes after lunch (getting binders together and printing out documents, including over 200 pages for Dr. Birzer for the semester). I also relaxed a little by watching Rainman with some friends and then went to Tuesday Tea at Waterman for two hours, where everyone stood around and caught up about finals and the break and what classes everyone is taking. 

     

    Tomorrow I start classes! (If you are reading the email notification, since it goes out the day after I post, I start today!)

  • Day 12 – Snowy Day at Hillsdale

    East Lawn of Campus

    I hiked through the 12 inches of snow around campus today to take photos. View the full gallery.

     

    Last night after I unpacked and caught up with some of my friends, I decided to ride with Matt Stone to Detroit to pick up our friend Adam Peterson at the airport. The roads were pretty slick, so we had to drive pretty slowly, but we made it there and back just fine. We left at 10:00 p.m. and arrived at 12:30. I then went in to find Adam at the baggage claim and helped him carry his bags back to Matt’s car. We stopped to eat at Steak ‘n Shake in Jackson (about 45 minutes outside of Hillsdale), then finally got back at 3:30 a.m. 

     

    I went to the store today to pick up a few things, then went through registration, and then took photos. My history professor emailed my class over 200 pages of documents to print out for this semester, so tonight I am printing those off, hole-punching them, then relaxing and catching up with more friends for the rest of the night.

  • Day 11 – Back at Hillsdale


    Today I drove back to Hillsdale after a nice break at home. The new semester starts on Wednesday.

     

    Here is my schedule for this coming semester:
    MWF, 9:00-9:50, Intro to Political Economy with Dr. Wolfram
    MTWF, 10:00-10:50, Calculus 2 with Dr. Treloar
    MWF, 2:00-2:50, American Heritage (H) with Dr. Birzer
    T TH, 11:00-12:15, Rhetoric & Great Books II (H) with Dr. Jackson
    T TH, 1:00-2:15, Microeconomics with Dr. Steele
    Also, I work at ITS on MWF from 3-5 and on T TH from 2:30-5.

     

    There is over a foot of snow on the ground here. It is beautiful! I will try to get out tomorrow to take some photos.

  • Day 10 – Snowstorm

    The large snowstorm that hit the midwest and northeast dumped 10 inches on Amherst, Ohio from 1 p.m. on Friday through 1 p.m. on Saturday (when that photo was taken) and the snow continues to fall. I measured at multiple points in the backyard and found an average of 10 inches everywhere. 

     

    I am on my way back to Hillsdale tomorrow afternoon.

  • Day 9 – I, Pencil

    I, Pencil

    The Foundation for Economic Education released the 50th Anniversary Edition of I, Pencil in late 2008. Written by Leonard E. Read in 1958, I, Pencil illustrates the importance of markets and dispersed knowledge and shows why centralized economic planning cannot work.

     

    In the afterword, Milton Friedman writes:

    Leonard E. Read’s delightful story, “I, Pencil,” has become a classic, and deservedly so. I know of no other piece of literature that so succinctly, persuasively, and effectively illustrates the meaning of both Adam Smith’s invisible hand — the possibility of cooperation without coercion — and Friedrich Hayek’s emphasis on the importance of dispersed knowledge and the role of the price system in communicating information that “will make the individuals do the desirable things without anyone having to tell them what to do.”

    If you have not read it, you should. It is short, but powerful.

    Download the 50th Anniversary Edition of I, Pencil (PDF).


    Today was a great day. It started out a little rough with going to work at the high school at 7 a.m. and confronting Radius wireless issues, both server- and client-side, but after lots of headaches in Joe, Sean, Mr. Strohm, Gary, and me, those were finally taken care of.

     

     

    I attended Sean Nelson‘s web design class at AJH in the afternoon to see how things were going. It looks to me like he is teaching his students quality tips on web design and he is doing a great job at it. He explains what he is doing in words, shows how to write the code, then shows the final result all while explaining how and why what he is doing works. He teaches very valuable lessons. Great job, Sean!

     

    Later in the evening, Amanda went to dinner with my parents and me, then we came back home and watched a movie then finished one she started previously but never had the time to finish. It was nice to spend time with her. When I drove her home, the roads were terrible! The roads had at least two inches of snow on them and they had not been cleared. Luckily I drove my parents’ Suburban which has four-wheel drive. While other people were sliding all over the road, I had no issues. Overall, I had a wonderful day today.

  • Day 8 – Vibram FiveFingers

    Vibram FiveFinger FlowArchived Link

    Today I decided to order these awesome shoes made by Vibram. In addition to looking cool, these unique shoes provide health benefits, including improved balance, stronger foot muscles, and reduced back pain. They have a neoprene body and rubber sole; and yes, they have individual toes.  Check out Vibram’s seven reasons to wear their shoes.Archived Link

     

    I first saw these shoes at the Foundation for Economic Education when someone else attending the seminars wore them. He told me all about them and vouched for their comfort, so I decided to check them out. I temporarily forgot about them, but I remembered today and wanted to order a pair before I forgot about them. I am excited for them to get shipped!

     

    Besides ordering shoes, I worked today and helped setup RADIUS service up and running at Amherst High School and tomorrow we are setting it up for the rest of the district, which should be easy since the server is already set up. I also held the second calculus and physics study session tonight. I think it was pretty productive. Then I visited Amanda for a little while. She reminded me of the Vibram FiveFingers (by making fun of them, but she still reminded me). I think they are very neat and should be comfortable. I will review them when they come in.

  • Day 7 – Mom’s Birthday

    Today is my Mom’s birthday! Happy Birthday, Mom! (Most of you reading this are probably reading it on Thursday, Jan. 8. If so, my Mom’s birthday was yesterday, Jan. 7.) 

     

    I have very few pictures of just Mom, so I posted this photo of my parents that I took in December 2007 while we were walking around by the Vermilion River in Ohio. It was a cold but beautiful day, so I convinced them to go hiking and photo-taking with me. I love my parents, they have been wonderful in every respect. I can not ask for better.

     

    After taking Mom out to dinner tonight, I spent a few hours running a calculus review session for the AP Calc class that I was a part of in high school. Their mid-term is next week (the course is combined with AP Physics also, so it is a year long course), so I wanted to help them review and also review a little math for myself before I start again at Hillsdale next week, since I was out of math for a semester. I have a second session tomorrow, too. I hope I was somewhat of a help to them.

  • Day 6 – Long Exposures in Oberlin

    Last night around 8:30, I decided to drive down to Oberlin and take a few long exposures. This is kind of new ground for me since the only type of long exposures I have done are the Illum light art photos. Even though it was pretty cold and kind of windy, I stayed out for almost three hours. Here are two of the multiple shots that I took. (Click on the photos to view larger.)

     

    The top photo is a shot of trees with red berries and lights in them with cars driving by on the edge of SR 58. The bottom photo is a zoom-shot of the Apollo Theatre’s neon sign. This is the first time I have tried zooming during a long exposure. I just opened the shutter, waited a second, zoomed, waited a second, zoomed, etc. I believe I did this 8 times. I am pleased with how it came out, since I have never done that before. There is definitely some room for improvement, though. In the future I am going to do some tests to see if I can work that into light graffiti. I have a few ideas of what I can do.

  • Day 5 – “Free” Country

    Thank goodness we live in a free country where we can live the way we want and the government does not control us!

     

    …yeah right.

     

    Don Cooper, an economist in Atlanta, Georgia, gets it right. In an article at LRC, he explains a normal day in statist America. I suggest reading it.

     

    (I updated from my iPod today!)

  • Day 4 – Spring Schedule

     

    I took this photo at Barber Lake, outside of Hillsdale on State Street. It looked like they were swimming across the sky!
     
    Here is my schedule for this coming semester:

    MWF, 9:00-9:50, Intro to Political Economy with Dr. Wolfram
    MTWF, 10:00-10:50, Calculus 2 with Dr. Treloar
    MWF, 2:00-2:50, American Heritage (H) with Dr. Birzer
    T TH, 11:00-12:15, Rhetoric & Great Books II (H) with Dr. Jackson
    T TH, 1:00-2:15, Microeconomics with Dr. Steele

  • Day 3 – Dr. Freeh

    This is a photo that I took on Guy Fawkes Day when my English class had its lecture in the amphitheater. I like this shot of Dr. Freeh. I really enjoyed his English class.

     

    In other news, I had a great day today. I had lunch with a long-time friend, edited some photos of Hillsdale’s swing club (finally), and went to dinner with my girlfriend Amanda and my cousins Henry and Jackie. After dinner we went back to Henry and Jackie’s house and played Cranium (Amanda and I won) and two games of Pictureka (Henry won both!). I had fun.

     

    Oh, a note on comments: I was getting an insane amount of spam in the comments, so I installed Akismet and set the comments so that someone must have a previously approved comment or have the comment approved by me before it appears. Don’t worry, I do not delete comments at will, I just wanted to cut down on the spam. So far, Akismet has done a great job and only a few spam comments have shown up in the pending queue. If you are an actual person posting a legitimate comment and not spam, I will approve your comment and once you have an approved comment, your comments will not need to be approved, they will show up automatically.