Tuesday, May 29, 2007

No words, again

I just learned today that one of my colleagues in the Law Library was shot and killed in what seems to have been an attempted robbery at a Chinese takeout five blocks from here. I knew the guy pretty well; he did Aikido, and was interested in all things Japanese, so he used to drop by the library for a chat with Yukino and myself on occasion. He used to bring his son in to work from time to time, too. He worked in the copy room and I saw him every time I got sent in to make some processing slips or something. It happened nearly three weeks ago, and since my supervisor was back in Japan these last two weeks I only just found out. Nobody at the library said anything, and it didn't seem to make any headlines.

The last time I saw him was when I ran into him at the Sakura matsuri in Brooklyn, shortly before he was murdered. Still can't believe this happened.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Beginnings and Endings

Commencement this week, referring of course to the enormous ceremony that marks the end of the school year and the official conferral of degrees. I was eligible to take part since I had earned my MA, awarded sequentially on the way to the PhD, in February. These things are probably more exciting for the proud parents than the students themselves (though with undergraduate education at Columbia costing around $55,000 per year, both are surely entitled to a bit of ceremony), and Dad was here to see it all happen. It was, funnily enough, my first graduation ceremony of any kind; we don't have high school graduation in the UK, and I took my BA in absentia, though the Oxford MA ceremony will come later this summer. I suppose seeing how they do it on this side of the pond serves as a point of reference.

Each of Columbia's 19 schools has its own separate ceremony, followed the day after by a university-wide Commencement. Attire is of course cap and gown, a (to my mind) somewhat odd light blue colour, those being the colours of the University. It's different for BA, MA and PhD - as you can see in the photos, the PhD is much more luxurious, though hopefully in a few years I'll be wearing one of those myself. The Convocation, for the GSAS, was on Tuesday and held indoors in one of the University's auditoria. It took about 90 minutes, during which time we were photographed in front of the American flag and while shaking hands with the Dean, after being subjected to a couple of fairly mediocre speeches from the assorted faculty and one wide-eyed Iranian graduating student, whose address, though well-delivered, verged rather too much on being a polemic for the occasion. Wonder what the folks back home'll make of his shot in front of Ol' Glory?

The big one, though, is Commencement. As you can see from the photos, this one is held in the main quad of the University campus, and while I couldn't really see from my position, they welcomed something in the region of 25-30,000 people that day. The atmosphere was perhaps best described as a cross between a graduation and the Last Night of the Proms; an occasion for celebration, not for sombre ceremony as I fear we may get at Oxford, most notably for the Columbia College graduates (i.e., undergrads) for whom it represented the culmination of four years of varying degrees of application.

The main speaker was University President Lee C. Bollinger, whose address struck roughly the right note for the occasion - light-hearted, with a certain degree of the patriarch's advice to his charges about it. Honorary degrees were awarded, the Dean of each school requested the President to formally award the degrees, which - by the power vested in him - he did, and that, after about three hours, was that. We filed out to Frank Sinatra's New York, New York, not least because, as Bollinger said, "if you can make it here, you'll make it anywhere".

All good clean fun, though sitting out in the sun for that length of time with temperatures touching 30℃ was not the most pleasant of experiences. At least it didn't rain like it did last year.

In other news, I have my TA marching orders for next year. I'll be teaching East Asian V2361 Intro East Asian Civ: Japan, which is a survey lecture course on more or less the whole of Japanese history. I'm delighted by this appointment; although it's probably a bit more work than some of the other courses, it's ground I'm very familiar with, and the senior Professor, David Lurie, is a great guy - he's one of the younger faculty members here and his kanbun class was enormous fun this past semester. So basically, I have to mark papers, lecture a couple of times, and hold discussion section for two groups of fifteen students once each per week. I have no doubt it'll be very hard work, but this is rather what I signed up for, so I'm definitely up for it.

In other news, for reasons related to applying for scholarships for Autumn 2008 to go to Japan, it looks like I'll have to cross the Atlantic at least twice this summer. Nice to get to spend some time in Blighty, of course, but given my druthers I'd rather do it in just one swing than have to shuttle back and forth...

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Trees' Company

The day after coming back from DC, I went down to the Botanical Gardens in Brooklyn for the Sakura Matsuri. As you can see, the flowers in Brooklyn were still a good few days off being really mankai, but they were still very pretty, and seeing as I'd not been to the BBG before, it seemed like a good way to waste a Saturday afternoon when I really should have been working, and to tell everyone about how the meeting with Abe had gone. As you might expect, there was a fairly strong contingent from JETAANY and related organisations; one could also spot a sizeable number of what must have been anime geeks dressed up as ninjas or wearing weirdo black and white numbers (if you've been to Harajuku on a Sunday afternoon, you'll know the kind of thing I'm on about. See below for reference).

The weather held, luckily enough, and it was even warm enough for me to get a little bit of a tan through the intermittent cloud cover. Kate and I left around 4 after a little stroll through other parts of the garden; it's very pretty, and well worth a repeat visit, though living where I do I obviously don't get down there that often. Parenthetically, I grew up with the Durham University Botanical Gardens at the bottom of our garden way back in the mists of time, so maybe I'm a bit blase about the whole botanical thing...

We went to see Hot Fuzz that night. It owns. See it.

Tuesday I had dinner at Kai, a very swish Japanese place on Madison Av., as part of a gathering in honor of the recipients of the Honjo/JAANY scholarship I mentioned a while back. The food, as is often the case with the really upscale Japanese places in NYC, was excellent, but there was nowhere near enough of it, and I wound up getting a slice of pizza on the way home. The people there as reps of JAANY were pretty much a who's who of business in the city; two CEOs, two partners in city law firms, a VP at Merril Lynch...you get the picture. And there was me as a scabby, impoverished graduate student trying to work out what the hell to talk about, but everyone there was really nice. And, of course, I actually got my hands on the money...

I'm told that this blog has achieved a measure of fame in the last couple of days, since it was discovered by one of the guys I talked to at the DC reception, and forwarded on to the Japanese embassy, which then proceeded to send the link to all of the consular offices in the US. All I can say is, it's a good job that last post wasn't anything like most of the previous 256, or most likely my ass would have been grass by now. I don't quite know what the procedures for impeachment of a JETAANY president are, but I'm in no hurry to find out.

And while we're on the subject...what the hell? One comment on that last post? I meet with the Japanese PM and all sorts of important people - probably the single most interesting thing that's happened to me in the last two years - and that's the best you lot can muster in response? You do realise that the entire diplomatic staff of Japan in the USA now has me pegged as billy-no-mates? Jeez...