Wednesday, September 01, 2004

Registration Day

Today was registration for school. I was put temporarily in a rage when I thought that I did not get any of my top-choice professors, but I found out later that the real designations will be given out later this week.

After registration, I had a chance to explore the New School area. What a writer's Mecca! There are all sorts of stationery stores, pen stores, book stores. Of course, the biggest stand-out is the Strand bookstore. Its ads boast 18 miles of books. I stepped inside and was overwhelmed. Books were piled twenty feet in the air. There are al types of categories: Art books, occult books, chess books (yes, there's a small section only on chess!). Everything is so damn cheap there. I still think it is cheaper to buy used books online, but the Strand is so well laid out, so chock full of books that it demands your patronage. I did not even make it to the rare books section today. I'm going there for Christmas.

Orientation was not too informative. I know I should not have been, but I was actually surprised when the director has us each rise and (gag) say something about ourselves. My heart was pounding ten people before me. When I stood, I tried to mutter a joke about me being tired of editing nonfiction and looking for an escape, but I started to sit down halfway throughout it, and it got no laughs.

Afterward, there was a meet-and-greet. I talked to the assistant director about the idiosyncrasies of Berkeley Heights, NJ. He told me that there is a little artists' community there that share a pool. I spoke to Helen Schulman, author of P.S.: A Novel. She explained to me the nuances of having one's book made into a movie.

I was quite shy today. Everyone else was downing Brooklyn lager and siphoning bottles of wine and I was wallflowering it, trying not to seem like I was eavesdropping on anyone's conversation. Ultimately, I did meet some interesting fellow students.

One guy worked researching furniture for the Times magazine. A activist woman had just yesterday harassed Elizabeth Dole as she was being interviewed my reporters with down syndrome (a blatant photo op by the GOP). Alex and Darryl were singing the praises of Shelley Jackson, a professor there that they had workshopped with in undergraduate school. Another guy wanted to write essays assailing the fact that many intellectuals scoff at sports. There were a lot of interesting views today. Bring on tomorrow.


1 Comments:

At 5:02 PM, September 03, 2004, Anonymous Anonymous said...

From experiences as the only non-drinking member of an intercollegiate debate squad (1958-1962) in the Midwest, I advise developing social alcohol-defense skills. Maybe the following can't be used if an alcoholic, but I recall accepting champagne from waiter during a social hour at Radcliffe and promptly "watering" the nearest plant and ordering the cover-charge minimum at Pete Fountain's Club in New Orleans, then letting the decoy-drink sit all night. Not drinking was a winning advantage during wee-hours bridge games. When tired of the inquiry, "Why doesn't she drink?" the asst debate coach replied, "Because she doesn't have to." Good luck with the New School!

 

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