Saturday, July 23, 2005

Gaining New Perspectives


As you may recall (or not), the week before last we had our first overseas visitors. Actually, Ali’s nephew, Armaz, and his lovely wife Angelique, didn’t come to Auckland just to see us. Armaz had been invited to make a couple presentations at Massey University, and the result was a job offer. Seems like the opportunity to move from post-doc life to a permanent position with light teaching duties and strong research support (read: available funding) is pretty attractive, especially since there may be good opportunities for Angelique as well. Doesn’t hurt that they found Middle Earth strongly reminiscent of Old Europe (not to mention rural northern Iran), so that even though it’s farther from home, they might suffer less homesickness than in San Diego. And it was great to have them here; we rented a car for the week and had a blast showing them around our new hometown and seeing it through new eyes.

But, fun as it was to have company, as soon as they left I had to hit the books. Last week was the beginning of the spring semester at U of A, and I had homework to do. Lots of homework. My first class, Imperialism and International Law, is what’s called an “intensive.” More like a bloody endurance test: the entire semester is crammed into 5 days. Plus I got my teaching assignment – I’m tutoring Commercial Law 101, which involves meeting with groups of about 15 students to go through problems/questions based on what they were supposed to learn from their regular lectures. Fortunately, my tutoring sessions – 3 per week – are all on Thursday, and don’t begin until next week.

In the meantime, the class I’m taking is really wonderful, totally absorbing, with a great professor (Tony Anghie, visiting from U of Utah) and a really good group of students. There are only ten of us, with backgrounds including international relations, politics, arms control, aid/development, and refugee issues; there’s even another former commercial lawyer who’s just taking the class because it sounded so darn interesting. It’s both an introduction to international law and a look at inat’l law’s history with an eye towards colonized/Third World perspectives.

But it’s getting late, and I’ve still got more reading to do, so ta-ta for now.

Cheers,
Sandie

Friday, July 08, 2005

Now London

From The New York Times op-ed page
July 8, 2005
The Surprise We Expected
By IAN MCEWAN

THE mood of a city has never swung so sharply. On Wednesday there was no better place on earth. After the victory of the Olympic decision in Singapore, Londoners were celebrating the prospect of an explosion of new energy and creativity; those computer-generated images of futuristic wonderlands rising out of derelict quarters and poisoned industrial wastelands were actually going to be built.

The echoes of rock and roll in Hyde Park and its wave of warm and fundamentally decent emotions were only just fading. In Gleneagles, Scotland, the Group of 8 summit meeting was about to address at least - and at last - the core of the world's concerns, and we could take some satisfaction that our government had pushed the agenda. London was flying and we moved confidently about the city - the paranoia after Sept. 11 and Madrid was mostly forgotten and no one had second thoughts about taking the tube. The "war on terror," that much examined trope, was an exhausted rallying cry, with all the appearance of a moth-eaten regimental banner in a village church.

But terror's war on us opened another front on Thursday morning. It announced itself with a howl of sirens from every quarter, and the oppressive drone of police helicopters. Along the Euston Road, by the new University College Hospital - a green building rising above us like a giant surgeon in scrubs - thousands of people stood around watching ambulances filing nose to tail through the stalled traffic into the casualty department.

The police were fanning out through Bloomsbury, closing streets at both ends even as you were halfway down them. The machinery of state, a great Leviathan, certain of its authority, moved with balletic coordination. Those rehearsals for a multiple terrorist attack underground were paying off.

In fact, now the disaster was upon us, it had an air of weary inevitability, and it looked familiar, as though it happened long ago. In the drizzle and dim light, the police lines, the emergency vehicles, the silent passers-by appeared as though in an old newsreel film in black and white. The news of the successful Olympic bid was more surprising than this. How could we have forgotten that this was always going to happen?

The mood on the streets was of numb acceptance, or strange calm. People obediently shuffled this way and that, directed round road blocks by a whole new citizens' army of "support" officials - like air raid wardens from the last war. A man in a suit pulled a fluorescent jacket out of his briefcase and began directing traffic with snappy expertise. A woman, with blood covering her face and neck, who had come from the Russell Square tube station, briskly refused offers of help and said she had to get to work. Groups gathered impassively in the road, among the gridlocked traffic, listening through open windows to car radios.

On television, the news programs were having trouble finding the images to match the awfulness of the event. But this was not, or not yet, a public spectacle like New York or Madrid. The nightmare was happening far below our feet. Everyone knew that if the force that mangled the bus in Tavistock Square was contained within the walls of a tunnel, the human cost would be high, and the rescue appallingly difficult.

Down the far end of a closed-off street we saw emergency workers being helped into breathing equipment. We could only guess at the hell to which they must descend, and no one seemed to want to talk about it.

In Auden's famous poem, "Musée des Beaux Arts," the tragedy of Icarus falling from the sky is accompanied by life simply refusing to be disrupted. A plowman goes about his work, a ship "sailed calmly on," dogs keep on with "their doggy life."

In London yesterday, where crowds fumbling with mobile phones tried to find unimpeded ways across the city, there was much evidence of the truth of Auden's insight. While rescue workers searched for survivors and the dead in the smoke-filled blackness below, at pavement level men were loading vans, a woman sold umbrellas in her usual patch, the lunchtime sandwich makers were hard at work.

It is unlikely that London will claim to have been transformed in an instant, to have lost its innocence in the course of a morning. It is hard to knock a huge city like this off its course. It has survived many attacks in the past.

But once we have counted up our dead, and the numbness turns to anger and grief, we will see that our lives here will be difficult. We have been savagely woken from a pleasant dream. The city will not recover Wednesday's confidence and joy in a very long time. Who will want to travel on the Underground once it has been cleared? How will we sit at our ease in a restaurant, cinema or theater? And we will face again that deal we must constantly make and re-make with the state - how much power must we grant Leviathan, how much freedom will we be asked to trade for our security?

Monday, July 04, 2005


Nash the Magnificent Posted by Picasa


Barbara and her Cozy Cottage Posted by Picasa


Raisah and Kian Posted by Picasa


Stepping Into Liquid - Very Cautiously Posted by Picasa


That's a "surf board" Posted by Picasa


Apres Surf Posted by Picasa

Just a Big Catch Up

Another example of Kiwi humor: they commemorated the 4th of July by showing “Independence Day” on tv. I, of course, also got to take the Contracts exam - part of the local equivalent of a bar exam. Haven’t taken an exam in 14 years, so I’m a bit out practice. I think it went ok (although it was harder than I expected), but I won’t know for sure until the results are posted in September.

While I was busy studying for the exam, I finally got confirmation that I’ve been hired to teach part-time at University of Auckland. I’m meeting with the department head tomorrow to get more details.

I also seem to have picked up another part-time teaching gig. UUNZ Institute of Business wants Ali to teach some finance and accounting classes; they asked him if he could also teach commercial law; he deferred and sent them to me. Turns out they want me to teach Employment Relations law, and the fact I have no experience was not a problem. (The school caters to international (mostly Asian) students, who get credit for a two-year program in 18 months. My guess is the courses are pretty streamlined.) Class doesn’t begin until November, so I’ve got four months to prepare.

Our trip is old news by now, but the rest of it went like this: We got off the ship in time for Memorial Day, which I celebrated in patriotic fashion. In other words, I went shopping and experienced the gargantuan wonders of Costco and Ikea.

Undeterred by our Mexican experience, Ali and I went surfing a few more times with Bob, who, it turns out, is a first-class instructor. He took us to SanO (dudespeak for San Onofre State Beach, just south of Dana Point) and it was so much fun. I completely get it – can’t wait for summer. Even if I never stand up.

Unfortunately we didn’t get to go surfing quite as much as planned, because Bob and Julie live in Bluebird Canyon. (Where the landslide occurred.) Fortunately, they live a good half-mile up from where the real damage happened and their house was fine (although they were evacuated for two nights). Even more fortunately, they rent.

The earthquake was so minor, it's hardly worth mentioning. I also cashed in some miles and visited dear friends in Seattle for a few days. While I was there, Ali drove up to San Francisco for a quick visit with Wharton pals Ashish and Anjali. We stayed with Ali’s sister and her family (including Nimcha, the Bug-Eyed Pug) but, of course, we also spent time with Maman, and with Armaz & Angelique – Ali’s nephew and his wife, a couple of genius research scientists who live “nearby” in San Diego (and are coming to visit us here next week!). All in all, it was a great trip.

But, like any trip, it was also good to come home at the end.

Cheers,
Sandie

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