COE

Dear Jonathan

I am pleased to inform you that I received your Certificate of Eligibility
last Friday.
It was sent out on Saturday morning.
I am actually concerning the address I sent the certificate because you
asked me to send it to your university, but I knew that your advisor,
Michelle Huling Halverson, has been out of office.
So I checked your emails before sending it, and I found the address below.

Jonathan Roberts

123 Dunot Po St.
Yuradresonthe Internet, MN 55987


I sent the certificate to the above address.
Will you be able to receive the packet at the address?

Regards,
*************************************************
Makiko Fujiwara
Division of International Affairs
Akita International University

This is very good news. Cheers.

Ketchup

As I said before, this past week was spent at Camp Nathanael near Hinkley, MN. It was amazing. I had a great time getting to know all the other counselors and workers there and the campers were awesome too. It was a lot more laid back than the Boy Scout camp that I went to as a kid. Not as much focus on “doing stuff” and getting badges and all that, more emphasis on relationships and “personal growth”. Less utility, more fun.

The rhythm went something like this:

  1. 7:15 – wake up
  2. 7:20 – hustle down to the gazebo by the lake for devotions (kind of like stretching in the morning but with prayer)
  3. 8ish – eat breakfast
  4. 10:30 – teach Woodsmanship with Luke, Jordan, and Zach Wormwood
  5. 11 – work with the grounds crew (clearing brush, shoveling horse poop, you know…)
  6. 1:30 – eat lunch
  7. 2:30 – teach sailing with Luke (Joe helped sometimes)
  8. 4:30 – free time till dinner
  9. 7 – dinner
  10. 8ish – a game or something, usually involves running through the woods
  11. 9ish – campfire includes songs, skits, and a story

And thats about the gist of it. I usually took a nap immediately following sailing which was bliss, and then read a book until dinner. I sat with some of the grounds crew guys for meals. There are 3 levels in the Camp Nathanael hierarchy. At the top is staff, then non-comms, and finally the Freshmen Work Crews (pronounced “fwocks”). Zach is staff, along with 6 other guys, and then all the cabin leaders and skill teachers are non-comms, usually 2nd or 3rd year fwocks, and fwocks do whatever anyone tells them, but mostly grounds keeping and things like that.

There were table games, deep conversations, philosophy, theology, jokes, NFRs, music, tons of guitars, an accordion, camp traditions, lots of songs, and great weather. I’m glad I got to see Zach before I leave and I’m glad I got to practice making new friends before I have to do it on a larger scale in Japan. It was an excellent week for personal reflection and struggles.

Also I got my hair cut. Many hairs in fact. I donated it.

Yep.

I saw

The Dark Knight at midnight. It was amazing. The darkest most intense batman ever, i think. absolutely loved it. Heath Ledger, peace be upon him, was amazing. I wont say anymore until everyone i know sees it. cause its that good.

also I was really sick today until about 6:30 pm. I just stayed in bed and rolled around in pain. i dont know why. I eventually got up, took a dump, ate some food and showered and then went back to bed. eventually i work up and felt better. it was kind of a waste.

But I saw Josh and Joel and Jordan and Randy and Peter’s new band, Good Night and Godspeed, tonight at Ed’s, which was amazing. followed by The Dark Knight. which was amazing.

meh. today wasnt so bad.

Tentatively tentacly

I have just made out a class schedule twice in 24 hours. I was supposed to meet with my adviser concerning a few classes because I am not quite sure if they will fulfill some course requirements I have at WSU, yet they seem to have the same content, but I had lost all my planning papers. For example:

At WSU there are two separate Political Science courses – POLS 346 and POLS 347 – International Law and International Organizations, respectively. Now, I’ve taken 347 this past semester with Dr. Yogesh Grover, and was looking to take 346 this semester at Akita. On the WSU/Akita Trasfer Guide they are listed as two separate classes, but on Akita’s 2008 Fall course listing it is only listed as POLS 440 – International Organizations and Law. So do I get credit for both? Does it count as retaking 347 and then also 346? Probably not. I’m sure theres a simple answer for this that I’ll find out tomorrow, when we meet for real this time.

Another one is Akita’s POLS 430 – North East Asian Politics and Relations. This seems to be consistent with WSU’s POLS 337 – Asian Political Systems – but really who knows? The course requirements for many of the college degrees I’ve looked into are really frustrating. I haven’t been this confused in a long time. Not since the preview for that new Chihuahua movie that played before Wall-E. I was left with the pounding question of “why would someone make something like this?” Again with some college degree requirements, “why would someone make me take at least 3 credits from each of the following 3 categories, but at least 9 credits from one category?” Of the three categories, your left with two options: take 3 classes from one, 2 from another, and 1 from another, OR 4 classes from one category, and 1 from each of the other two. Why not just pick any 6 classes you want? I know that variety and balance is the underlying reason but it still seems silly. Maybe figuring out what classes you need to graduate is the final test in critical thinking, an important skill that a well rounded liberal arts education should provide. Maybe.

So, as of now, I will be taking the following:

  • Intro to Global Studies – IGS 200/GS 200
  • Intro to East Asian Studies – HIS 250/GS 250
  • Modern History of China – HIS 290/HIS 343
  • International Organization and Law – POLS 440/ POLS 346/7
  • Intermediate Japanese – JPL 301/ (WSU does not offer equivalent) (yet…)
  • North East Asian Politics and Relations – POLS 430/ POLS 337

That is 19 credits, so I will need to get my advisor’s permission, and though it seems like a lot, I’m pretty confident that the Intro classes wont be too difficult, and since apparently I’ve taken half of Int’l Org and Law, that shouldn’t be too difficult either. I’m most worried about my language class. I’ve been a C student up until now, but I am counting on actually using it everyday to really speed along my learning and solidify what I’ve already learned. I hope that even with a full schedule I will still have plenty of time for field trips and other things that an international student (ryugakusei) can do.

I leave for a week at Camp Nathanael on Friday, to spend time with my good friend Zachary Wormwood before I leave for Japan. I’ve got all the transportation worked out to get to camp, though the timing may be tight. Thus, probably no post for a week starting Saturday. I’m hoping that when I get back, my Certificate will be here. My opinion of efficiency in government bureaucracy is pretty poor so I’m not hoping too much, but just a little.

ready, set, go

blog activated.

purpose statement: to record my travels over the next year as I head to Japan to study at Akita International University in Northern Japan. I plan to keep a written journal too, but in the past I have been undependable to keep up with it, as I have with blogs, but other people seem to be able to do it perfectly fine. like Dan Wilson.

First up is finishing my paperwork, including registering for classes, straightening out bank things (so that I will have money while I’m there without paying a 19$ fee every time i use an ATM or a check/credit card), and waiting for my Certificate of Eligibility to arrive with an “OK” stamped on it. Once I get my Certificate I can go up to St. Paul and speak to the wonderful consulates at the embassy and beg them for a Visa. Hopefully everything will go smoothly and I will be able to leave according to my tentative plan which includes a short visit with friends in Seattle from August 11th to the 17th or so.

Then, I will head across the border to Vancouver, British Columbia (aka CANADA), visit our kind northern neighbors, and bord my 3:30 pm flight from Vancouver, BC to Narita, Tokyo. the flight is an overnighter and clocks in at about 10 hours but because of the time difference I believe I will be landing around early dinner time.

After arriving in Tokyo, I will spend the next few days meandering up to Akita where I will be enrolled in school for the next year. I will arrive in Japan on the 20th and must be at school by the 25th for orientation, so I think that I will pick a few towns on the train route and spend a day in each. The deciding factor will be how lightly I travel. I am planning on one larger pack for clothes, a carry-on bag with my computer, toothbrush, and pocket dictionary, and then my guitar. Now ideally my carry-on will go into my pack once I am done on the plane so that I will only have to carry one bag (on my back) and my guitar. I think that would be manageable for a few days of travel.

Lastly, I will go to school. more on that in the coming year.

Please stay tuned and give feedback. I plan to add a flickr account for pictures which will be linked at the left.

Gambaru!