This weekend I am again going home, and leaving my room in the dubious care of my roommate. But I am more optimistic than usual, because I don't have as much work to come back to as I previously thought (yay for paper extensions). Though my goals for writing and drawing are a bit lofty, I hope I can at least get two more Karma pages done (since I'm going home next weekend too, for fall break) and write more on Clarity and Twolle and I's thing... and I'm also taking home the PS2 to play Kingdom Hearts. :B;; (mom's gonna be mad at the amount of stuff I'm bringing with me, but oh well..)
Apparently my crazy world drama professor is indeed bisexual. He told us that his 151 (intro course) students were looking to jump out the window when he told them that, and also that he would be frequently beaten up while in bars (because of his one earring). The reason why this is interesting to me, and why I'm recording it here, is because no one in our class expressed revulsion. If they were repelled by the knowledge, they internalized it, probably to avoid looking stupid. But I don't doubt that at least a few of them were. Rhodes, despite being a liberal arts college, is actually pretty conservative. No hippies here, Twolle. X3 Or at least I haven't met'em.
Actually I would think that, in terms of liberal arts colleges, Twolle's Beloit and my Rhodes are polar opposites. The funny thing (to me) about them both is that it seems like there's a focus of service at both--but at Beloit, it's more service in the let's go rally and try to get Congress to change the laws because we don't like the establishment and the patriarchy and whatnot, whereas Rhodes is more like, let's go volunteer at soup kitchens and build houses for the homeless.
And there is definitely not a club for gays and lesbians. :B;
Apparently my crazy world drama professor is indeed bisexual. He told us that his 151 (intro course) students were looking to jump out the window when he told them that, and also that he would be frequently beaten up while in bars (because of his one earring). The reason why this is interesting to me, and why I'm recording it here, is because no one in our class expressed revulsion. If they were repelled by the knowledge, they internalized it, probably to avoid looking stupid. But I don't doubt that at least a few of them were. Rhodes, despite being a liberal arts college, is actually pretty conservative. No hippies here, Twolle. X3 Or at least I haven't met'em.
Actually I would think that, in terms of liberal arts colleges, Twolle's Beloit and my Rhodes are polar opposites. The funny thing (to me) about them both is that it seems like there's a focus of service at both--but at Beloit, it's more service in the let's go rally and try to get Congress to change the laws because we don't like the establishment and the patriarchy and whatnot, whereas Rhodes is more like, let's go volunteer at soup kitchens and build houses for the homeless.
And there is definitely not a club for gays and lesbians. :B;
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