Archive for September, 2009

Stressed as a college student?? Same here!!

JP Park Friday, September 25th, 2009

Hey there guys!! J.P here again with a few words of wisdom!

Well in case you didn’t already know, I’m a freshman here at Azusa Pacific University. Ironically, I’m not on the campus (The campus is pretty dope!), I’m at the semester long program called “High Sierra” where we study in the mountains and get to do outdoors-y stuff like go on a 6 day trek in Yosemite (We leave this Thursday which means no school for 6 days! hah)

Here’s a picture of the 23 students and teachers/mentors/friends here at the High Sierra program. It’s an amazing community:

high, sierra, freshman, experience, jp, park, yosemite, trek,

high, sierra, freshman, experience, jp, park, yosemite, trek,

Anyway, even though I have only been in college for a couple of weeks now, I’m already starting to slowly get stressed and even more stress. STRESS  SUCKS!! In college, you tend to get so busy with countless things such as SCHOOL WORK, clubs, sports, extracurricular activities, friends, and so on.

The most helpful tips I found out were obvious, of course. Here are some of them:

1. PRIORITIZE!!!! Always start and finish the things that are most important like class work like essays and reading books. I procrastinate A LOT, so the faster you finish your work, the faster you get to all of the other fun stuff APU offers. I can’t “stress” enough about how important it is to get the most important stuff out of the way first.

2. Make a “To do list”/ Calendar —-I always make a to do list with my homework for each class, upcoming events, and planning what days I can go out and have fun and whatever else. It helps a lot to see what you have already completed but crossing them off the list, and what you still need to do.

3. DON’T PROCRASTINATE!!!!!!!—–It’s so easy for a friend to stop by your dorm and want to chill or go out to lunch or dinner. I know it is hard to say no when all of your friends urge you to do something, BUT there will be plenty of countless opportunities to hang out and socialize. You have 4 years to do that! Grades and academics come first!!!

I could say a lot more, but none can come to mind right now. Haha.

The faster you do your class work, the sooner you’ll be able to do this:

Me, (JP) sleeping in my dorm

Hahahaha! Naps are even more amazing in college, except when you constantly have people knocking on your door to hang. But I don’t have to worry anymore since I”m here in the mountains for High Sierra semester.

College isn’t all fun and games…Don’t get me wrong…I LOOVVVEEE college, but there has to be a balance between socializing and studying/doing homework.

Just last night, I had to read 5 chapters (50 pages worth) and while I was reading, my roommates asked me if I wanted to go kayaking in the lake. I really wanted to go, but I knew had to finish reading…. Being productive means making compromises. The more you say no to your friends, the more they will respect your studying time.

Hope this helped a bit, ha! I need to go work out for my Fit For Life class, so lataz!

The day I wanted to hang up my cape…

Staphon Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Well, today started out very early In The weight room and was followed closely by a lone run around the block. I then proceeded to class where I instantly had a brain blast and realized I had a lot to do, things I had put off that were now coming up to me and demanding that I give them attention. I realized that my disease had not gone away, but had simply gone into remission. Most of you know this disease well, it’s called procrastination.
I had a temporary freak out in my head which spewed out a little during my rather delightful lunch with Kathie at SaMs Subs on west campus. (best club SAMMICHEz btw) I went back to class and still could not grasp what it was that I had to do. My mind could not organize itself between track, school, ra, work, and all the side projects and favors everyone asks of me.
But then, an angel in the form of Alexandra came down and she took the form of a type of ball wall for me to bounce my problems off. Once spoken aloud I realized that all I had to do was take everything one at a time and write my tasks down in my chapel planner (best thing ever!) as well as my iPhone (which I am making this post from by the way!). So I calmed Down a little and was back to normal.
I then proceeded to have a deligtful adventure with Jena as we went to get supplies for Music and Lyrics 2: Rythm and Harmony. We went to two grocery stores ( Ralphs an Stater brothers), the 99 cent store, Starbucks, and Little Ceasars all within one hour. Didn’t get lights, but got a bungee cord, 2 green teas with the name Bareet on them (told the lady
My name was Barett, which is my starbucks name, but she didn’t hear me too well), and a pizza. On the way back, we saw quite a sight as the sun was setting on the first day of Fall.
I realized on duty later that night that if I am going to continue to strive to be like Superman (who I look up to more after “The Gospel according to Super Heroes” by BJ Oropeza), I will definitely have to find myself a Fortress of Solitude…

Cookies and a Bedtime Story

Staphon Monday, September 21st, 2009

So last night I had an event with the second stairwell of my building. I decided that meeting a whole building right off the bat can be a little overwhelming, so I broke it up into sections so now I have an event for each section each week, and that will be the beginning of T-time so everyone can meet each other little by little and relationships can stick. However, whenever you get a group of more than 10 people together, you begin to have time conflicts. So this T-time was forced into the corner pocket time of after Kaleo (Wednesday night Chapel.). Now, Kaleo gets out at 10:30ish, which means this was going to be quite a late event, not just for me who had to be awake at the butt crack of dawn to be in the weight room by 7am for track, but for all the others who had classes in the morning and lots of homework. So I came up with the perfect plan/activity.Cookies

Since it was so late, I decided to have milk and cookies, which is a great before bed snack. We all sat around, talked about our weeks, and then, I read them a bedtime story.

I wanted something simple, yet interesting. They all got comfortable on the couch, and I pulled out Beedle the Bard, the spin off book from Harry Potter 7, and I picked the wizards fairy tale of the 3 witches, the knight, and the Fountain (the actual name of the story escapes me at the moment).

Hopefully they liked it, the goal was to just have a time to relax and just sit and listen to a story, let all their stresses float away and just spend time with me and they immediate community. Since they looked relaxed at the end, I will chalk it up as success.3 of my girls listening to Clown Slicer

Honoring Glen Dawson

Jon Wallace Monday, September 21st, 2009

Dawson's Minaret

Last Friday (September 18, 2009) was an historic day for APU. I was honored to present the highest recognition our university can bestow on someone–an honorary doctorate. I wish you were all there to witness the event! Glen Dawson is a generous and amazing man, with a wealth of experience and  knowledge that he has shared with us over the years.

Below is the speech I made to a gathering of many of Glen’s family and friends, as well as a few from the university community.

Robert Kirsch, the longtime book review editor of the Los Angeles Times, once wrote, “History is too important to be left to the Ph.Ds. The right to be called historian should be earned by one’s works rather than by one’s certification.” Today we have evidence of that truth in the life of Glen Dawson.

Glen, a graduate of Los Angeles High School and UCLA, is a longtime Pasadena resident. He is an internationally recognized antiquarian book dealer, a foremost authority on books and printing, and a leader among the world’s bibliophiles. Modest and unassuming, Glen has served the great collectors and great libraries of California with distinction.  He has been the catalyst for launching more library and historical programs and publications than we have time to list. For example, he published 370 books that carry the imprint of Dawson’s Book Shop, which is considerably more than any bookseller we know of in our nation’s history.  By his works, therefore, he exemplifies the best of what it means to be a disseminator of historical knowledge–and the right to be called “historian.”

Among those 370 books, Glen published a fifty-volume Early California Travels Series and a fifty-volume Baja California Travels Series, in addition to a Los Angeles Miscellany series and a Famous California Trials series.  Indeed, his publications are among some of our most important and finest printed books on Los Angeles, the Southland, and California.  In one decade alone, 1963 to 1972, Glen published an astounding total of 123 books—averaging one a month, and nineteen in the year 1972!  All of this productivity came after his father, Ernest Dawson, had early advised him against publishing.

Dawson’s Book Shop publications bear the stamp of Glen’s personal guidance and careful reading and checking as editor and publisher:  W.W. Robinson’s Maps of Los Angeles, Neal Harlow’s Maps of the Pueblo Lands of Los Angeles, Robinson and Lawrence Clark Powell’s The Malibu, Harris Newmark’s Sixty Years in Southern California, Lloyd Currey and Dennis Kruska’s Bibliography of Yosemite, Jane Easton’s Marbling: A History and a Bibliography, and leaf books on the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493, Aitken Bible and King James Bible are but a handful of examples that could be mentioned.

He has done all of this with an active and transparent Christian witness that remains gracious and generous.  A longtime member of Lake Avenue Congregational Church in Pasadena and a participant with a group of men from his church known as the “Encouragers,” Glen has quietly supported missionary and related church efforts while also quietly helping fledgling collectors and libraries build their collections, and new booksellers start their businesses.

At Azusa Pacific University, we stand alongside the others who are grateful to Glen Dawson for his assistance.  He shared with us his expertise on rare books and fine printing at the very start of our special collections endeavor.  He was available during our trial-and-error period to mentor us and help shape the direction and content of the collection, valued today at over three million dollars.  He was present at the creation.  It bears his imprint.

But there is more to Glen Dawson that deserves mentioning.  At age sixteen he climbed the Matterhorn, and from the late 1920s through the 1940s he was one of a handful of our nation’s premier mountain climbers.  He was the first to scale the east face of Mount Whitney, the first to climb one of the Minarets, now named after him, and he has climbed all the 14,000 foot peaks in California—and many impressive peaks elsewhere.  He did all of this without the advanced equipment of today’s climbers.  He summed up his climbing adventures with these words:  “We were not concerned with insurance or liability.  We knew there were risks involved but felt they were our risks.”  Glen also was an accomplished skier who served in the Alpine Division of the United States Army in Italy during World War II.

Glen also worked briefly for the FBI, an interesting adventure that befell him when Steven Bloomberg, the notorious book thief of a couple of decades ago, was caught and the loot of his thievery spread out in a giant warehouse. It was Glen Dawson that the FBI called to come and help sort out the stolen property and find the rightful owners.  This was recognition of his stature and trust in the book world.  Glen proudly wore his FBI cap afterwards.

One cannot describe Glen Dawson without mentioning miniature books.  Ninety-two titles carry Dawson’s Book Shop imprint, starting with the first one in 1949, the printing of a miniature on Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address for a Lincoln collector, and ending in 1994 with Glen’s bibliography of miniature books written or edited by Monsignor Francis J. Weber.  Weber, a major author and collector in the field himself, refers to Glen as the “doyen of miniature books,” pointing out the 195 miniature book lists, four catalogues, eight articles in the Miniature Book Society Newsletter, and five miniatures that Glen produced while lecturing widely on the subject.  Glen’s wife Mary Helen and daughters Karen and Susan participated in the enterprise, as did brother Muir—all helping to make Los Angeles an important gateway to the miniature book world.

In conclusion, Glen has generated respect, loyalty, and lasting friendship by his honesty and hospitality.  His influence on readers and collectors of books is as great as that of any bookseller in the state.  It is no accident that Dawson’s Book Shop, the oldest bookshop in Los Angeles, became the gathering place and forum for readers, authors, printers, collectors, and librarians.  Glen’s sixty-one years as a partner with Muir helped to change the cultural landscape of Los Angeles in terms of the printed book.

Therefore, by the power vested in me by the State of California and by the Board of Trustees of Azusa Pacific University, I hereby confer upon Glen Dawson, the degree Doctor of Humane Letters.  Congratulations!

Beach Trip

Kelsey Bjugstad Monday, September 21st, 2009

My hall’s awesome RA* (see note below) Megan planned a trip last weekend to celebrate our first week of classes. It was really nice to be able to go somewhere, forget about homework, and most of all, celebrate at the beach!!

About 20 of us piled into cars and took off to Huntington Beach!!

By the time we got there half of the group wanted to go eat but I stayed with the group heading towards the water.

The half that wanted to go straight to the water!

The half that wanted to go straight to the water!

I’m from Northern California and while we have some beautiful beaches, they are usually very cold and windy. Especially because I lived pretty far north. Only brave kids got farther than their ankles in the freezing water and I wasn’t one of them. So the idea of a warm beach was extremely exciting!! It has been a really long time since I’ve been to a warm beach. It was weird to see all of the girls go so far out into the ocean and swim in the huge waves. I’ve been taught never to go above waist level because of the horrible sleeperwaves in NorCal. It was really fun to just hang out in the sun too.

We laid out on the beach for a while and then switched with the other group and ate at BJ’s. BJ’s is a really good restaurant that has delicious deep-dish pizza and Pizookies. Pizookies are huge cookies baked in a deep dish covered with vanilla bean ice cream and they are amazing.  A bunch the girls in the hall are planning a trip to go there (and the beach) soon!

Overall, it was an amazing time to get to know the girls in my hall better, hangout at the beach, and have some amazing food.

Our entire group!

Our entire group!

*Resident Assistant- An upperclassman who is in our hall all year to support, counsel, and love on us.

Greetings from a Freshman perspective!!!

JP Park Monday, September 21st, 2009
Me (J.P) at Yosemite!

Me (J.P) at Yosemite!

Hey everyone!!! First off, my name’s J.P and I’m a freshman here at Azusa Pacific University! I’m from Virginia, so deciding to travel all the way to California was a HUGE decision, but I can say it has been the best decision I have made in my entire life.

For those of you who don’t know, there is a program at APU called the “High Sierra” program. For a semester, you get to live on the mountains at Bass Lake, CA with other students who can be in any grade level. You have the chance to rock climb, wake board, trek, hike, and even conquer Yosemite!!

Here’s a picture of the sunset here at High Sierra. It is so amazing

Sunset at Yosemite

Sunset at Yosemite

Since I’m an out of state student, I really wanted to stay on campus and study there and make tons of friends and just live the “freshman life”, but through a series of countless events during my first few days at APU, I decided to do the “High Sierra” program.

So………here I am with only 22 other students up in the mountains!! I love being here. The community is just as awesome as it is back on main campus, just fewer people for sure! I literally went from having over 40 hallmates in the Trinity Hall dorm back on campus to 4 here at High Sierra!! But hey…it’s a good thing because you get to become so close with the few people here. I love each and every person that’s here with me, but unfortunately, I get extremely “campus sick” sometimes when I think of being on campus at Azusa

I find it extremely weird and awkward that I miss being on campus when I have only been there for a week and a half. But during that week and a half, I met so many amazing people. The community at APU is amazing!!! You are destined to make friends no matter what.

I have so much to blog about and I really want to give you guys still in high school and future transfer students a glimpse of what life is really like here at Azusa Pacific University, and not to mention the awesome things I’ve been up to!

For now, here’s a picture of my first football game at APU with my friends. I’ll definitely keep blogging!

Me and my friends before our first APU football game

Me and my friends before our first APU football game