Sua Sponte My law school odyssey: three years, three time zones and beyond. |
1/31/2003 G R E E T I N G S Capricorn
Overheard: a guy on his way out of the room where I was studying was talking about how excited he was to be working for a judge this summer. My ears perked up at the mention of one case the judge had worked on, and then, when he mentioned another, I intruded on the conversation.
Best Google hit I've had in weeks: "rent an elephant Michigan." thus spake /jca @ 12:01 PM...1/30/2003 [kidding]
1/29/2003 From a mass email to the student body at my school:
I had a remarkable meeting yesterday with Professor Crim, much of which I'm still trying to parse.
1/28/2003 Not a peep from Hizzoner's chambers since they beheld the albatross. No news is good news, I guess. Or maybe they haven't yet stopped laughing.
1/27/2003 Professor Contracts was about as helpful as I'd feared he might be.
1/26/2003 A fistful of Northern California law schools, every spring, host a daylong interview/schmoozefest for public interest groups to seek out free labor while high-minded students jockey for Work That Really Matters so that they can Make A Difference according to plan. Resume drop for the event is this Tuesday.
Google hits of the day: "bad 1L grades" and "should I quit law school?" thus spake /jca @ 6:04 PM...1/24/2003 Aaaaccckkk!!
I didn't win the wine-tasting with Professor Crim. When bidding reached the price range of a night at a bed and breakfast in Mendocino, I weighed my options and decided that I'd rather save my money and just ask the guy for a recommendation during his office hours. If it should come to that.
1/23/2003 G R E E T I N G S Capricorn
The public interest law club at my school runs an annual benefit auction, proceeds from which provide stipends to students employed in summer public interest positions which would otherwise be unpaid. (As far as I know you can't get one if you work for a judge.) This year's affair starts in about two hours.
1/22/2003 Devils 5, Sharks 4 in overtime.
Another for the list of Law School Firsts (which, apparently, do continue into the second semester): I was, for the first time, called on in class without actually volunteering for same.
1/21/2003 Tuesdays this semester are not so bad as Thursdays were last semester. They don't start full throttle and power straight through the next eight hours, for one thing. Even though Tuesdays do begin early (I've taken to calling the 7:38 "the sunrise train," since that's what I'm usually watching on my walk up Evelyn Avenue to the train station), there's a break for lunch, then two usable hours between Edie and Moot Court. There's time enough to get work done, and when I'm getting work done I escape the sense that my time is being wasted, at least by anyone except myself.
1/20/2003 to heaven, and back...
1/17/2003 Tomorrow my husband and I are headed out of town for a much-needed Actual Break (and this time we mean it), two nights in an oceanfront cottage in Mendocino with no mention of work or exams or law school or any other of the myriad sharp pointy objects suspended tenuously over our heads.
I know entirely too many people who are going to be marching in this protest.
Employment Discrimination (hereinafter "Edie"), my statutory elective, was canceled twice this week. Professor Edie had informed us at the introductory class that he and his wife were anticipating the birth of their second child within roughly two weeks, upon which occasion he intended to cancel "two or three classes." I chuckled at that, figuring that once the baby arrived he'd reassess and take a paternity leave in excess of three days.
1/15/2003 thus spake /jca @ 6:48 PM... I have seen my Torts exam.
1/14/2003 Today's quote:
"No good with the clips," said the clerk at the post office in the basement of the federal building.
1/13/2003 Mondays and Wednesdays provide me with the comparative luxury of sleeping in until 8 am. Property doesn't start until 11:30, and the appropriate train for an 11:30 class leaves my town at 9:19. What a relief. The sun was up before I was. I am going to relish Mondays and Wednesdays.
1/12/2003 I have to update my resume and gin up a cover letter to send out to judges as soon as possible, since it was actually due sometime last month.
1/11/2003 Simon and Garfunkel:
1/10/2003 Vermouth, straight up, tastes just like Robitussin. thus spake /jca @ 9:58 PM...Professor Torts tells me that I almost earned my Civ Pro grade in Torts (which would still have been bothersome, but not unprecedented in my graded life), but then a few key flaws intervened and knocked me over the cusp into no-JCA's-land. I'll be meeting with him on Wednesday morning to discuss exactly what those flaws were. It's funny; I'll be meeting with Professor Civ Pro (whom I still have, this semester) the following week to review his exam, and that's a meeting I'm actually anticipating. I misfired in Civ Pro but can still fix it, am excited to fix it this spring. Torts is dead in the water, and while I'm presumably mature enough to swallow a litany of my own screwups and digest same into a working model for self-improvement, it's less fun when I know there's no chance to undo them.
1/09/2003 This is how it will be. The alarm sounds at six-fifteen. My husband groans. I shut off the noise, roll out of bed, and grope my way through the pitchblack room to the bathroom, where the light burns my eyes and the shower, no matter how hot I run it, gives me a chill. I gulp my vitamins, force down some cereal, and shamble out to the elevator, huddled in my winter coat. The morning is foggy. The sun won't rise.
1/08/2003 G R E E T I N G S Capricorn
I can't dislike this man. Professor Torts, who is technically already on sabbatical, returned my voicemail this morning. "I'm sorry I had to be the bad guy," he offered, unsolicited. He's checking his math on my exam (the last forlorn hope of any student at my school; no reevaluations here, only recounts), and is happy to meet to discuss what actually went wrong once the exam booklets are handed back to us in a month.
Silver lining to every cloud: there's nothing like a day spent convulsed in misery (coupled with regular gym attendance since returning home, of course, it's not like I'm going completely nuts) to burn off four out of the five pounds I gained over Christmas break. thus spake /jca @ 8:48 AM...1/07/2003 The sad thing is, this is exactly the nightmare I've had for the past two nights. Well, almost exactly. In last night's dream it was Torts that presented the problem; the night before it was Crim. Crim, in real life, turned out to be unremarkable. But Torts --
This is bad, bad, bad.
They have updated the grades site, but I am being a coward and refusing to look up my grades. I have too much yet to do this afternoon, and don't have time for a crash-and-burn reaction if the news is bad. When my husband gets home tonight, I'll look.
G R E E T I N G S Capricorn
1/06/2003 Scary, scary, scary. I feel vaguely guilty: my first thought, upon reading the headline, was Whew, at least it wasn't a Caltrain. thus spake /jca @ 5:28 PM...I was optimistic, it seems, in my estimation of the efficiency of web-enabled publication of grades.
1/05/2003 We returned home yesterday to find the kitchen acrawl with ants. Not the dangerous red Florida kind that bite you, or the huge fat shiny Southern Californian kind that scare you. These were just tiny black ants in search of food, wherever they could find it.
1/03/2003 We are headed back to California as of tomorrow morning. I've just spent two weeks at my inlaws' house, gained back several months' worth of lost weight, and accomplished exactly nothing that I intended to do while in New Jersey. Now, tomorrow, if the weather quits mucking with my schedule, we get on a plane to go home and I'm left with four usable days to get everything done before the semester starts on Thursday, at which point I will almost certainly get nothing done for the next four months. I have nothing but ill will towards anyone who has the chutzpah to call this vacation.
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