Lego Star Wars Snowtrooper Battle Pack 8084

January 27, 2010

I took a quick break from Dos Passos’ The Big Money this morning to put together the Lego Star Wars Snowtrooper Battle Pack 8084, one of the new sets for 2010. This is another ESB themed set for the film’s anniversary this year, and I would say that I like this set better than the Rebel Trooper Battle Pack 8083 only because the speeder bike and command station seem more integrated than the tank that comes with the Rebel set. I think I would have preferred to have a ‘radar dish’ cannon or a gun turret tower in the 8083 set. At least, in both cases, we do get some snazzy minifigs to inhabit our own models and dioramas.

You may wonder why I’m posting so many things about Lego lately. I certainly do enjoy building with Legos, and I can honestly say that Lego has provided a lot of stress relief as I’m preparing for my exams. However, I do have several ideas simmering that I hope to do something fantastic with soon.

See below for more pictures.


Lego Star Wars Mini Sets, TIE Fighter, General Grievous’ Starfighter, V-19 Torrent

January 26, 2010

Over the holidays, Target sold the above three Lego Star Wars mini sets in their Christmas stocking stuffers section of the store. They are the TIE Fighter 8028, V-19 Torrent 8031, and General Grievous’ Starfighter 8033. Each are fast and fun builds. The cool thing about the single seater starfighters of the Lego mini line is that they scale very well to the Millennium Falcon midi-scale. I don’t own any other mini sets, but I would like to find an X-Wing or more TIE Fighters to build a panorama when I have the time. More pictures below.


Lego Star Wars Rebel Trooper Battle Pack 8083

January 25, 2010

Part of the new 2010 Star Wars Lego sets, the Rebel Trooper Battle Pack 8083 gives you a mini-tank, four minifigs, and weapons for the Rebel defense of Echo Base on Hoth. This is obviously a small set, which doesn’t take too long to put together, but I do like the figures, especially the three Hoth Rebel troopers. The troopers come with backpacks, fatigues, and hats. The really cool detail on the trooper hats is that the cold weather visors can be repositioned above the hat bill or over the eyes. Well done, Lego! Now, I’m thinking I may use that bin full of white bricks to build Echo Base–muwahahaha!

I will post pictures of the Imperial Snowtrooper Battle Pack 8084 when I have a chance to put it together. Yufang has already assembled it and disassembled it before I thought to ask her to take pictures. I believe it is completely within bounds to say that she is a Lego maniac, heh.

More pictures of the set are below.


Lego Star Wars Millennium Falcon Midi-Size 7778

January 24, 2010

I’ve posted before about the Lego Star Wars Millennium Falcon midi-size model 7778, but I wanted to post again with more pictures just because this set is so dang cool. Above, the Falcon is pictured with the mini TIE Fighter 8028, which I think scales very closely to the “midi-size” Falcon.

I am currently cannibalizing an extra 7778 set for my refit of the Falcon 7190 set. Unfortunately, I have had no time to build with my Legos for over a week due to reading and teaching beginning again. See below for more photos.


Lego Star Wars Mon Calimari Home One 7754

January 23, 2010

I picked up the Return of the Jedi themed Lego Star Wars Home One 7754 set during the Christmas sales that were changing from week-to-week at Toys’R'Us. It comes with a boatload of minifigs, though admittedly not as many as in the Death Star set, an A-Wing Fighter, and the command deck of the Home One Mon Calimari battle cruiser. This was a particularly enjoyable build, because it has lots of compartments and moving parts that add something to the model when you display it. You can make a change here and there occasionally so that it is always ‘made new’ again. I really do want some of the other large sets like Cloud City and the Death Star, but Home One will have to suffice for now.


Give to Hope For Haiti Now

January 23, 2010

You may have seen the Hope for Haiti Now benefit on television tonight, and I hope that you contributed something if you could. Yufang and I contributed to the cause, and we urge others to do the same. Please visit the official website here.


Lego Star Wars Darth Vader’s TIE Advanced Fighter

January 22, 2010

What was by far the best wedding gift, at least in my opinion and maybe Yufang’s as well, was the Lego Star Wars Darth Vader’s TIE Advance Fighter 8017. Our good friend Kolter, who is now living it up in New York at Columbia University, gave us this Lego kit when he came to our wedding back in October 2009. I cannot really speak to the pleasure of building this particular Lego model, because Yufang beat me to it–she put it together while I was busy reading and providing feedback to my 50 students last semester. I do think that she had fun building this Star Wars Lego set, but I think I will take it apart in the near future so that I can see how it is put together. Again, I really like the updates that Lego made to Vader’s TIE Fighter. I used to own the first version from the beginning of the Star Wars Lego line, but it seems that this version has more detail and more accurate use of colored bricks (something that all of the first kits suffered from–particularly the 7190 Falcon, which is why I am giving it a ‘refit’).


Where Have All the Tenure Track Jobs Gone?

January 21, 2010

Andrew Pilsch, pictured above on the right circa 2005 at Georgia Tech, recently wrote a very cogent and important post titled “Luck, Hard Work, Blame: How (and Why) Older Generations Hate Us,” which is about the trouble our generation is having finding tenure track jobs and the blame that some entrenched academics mete out on us poor saps for listening to them in the first place.

The problem with finding good jobs in academia now is a revisiting of ghosts from the past. The bad economy keeps folks at work who otherwise might retire, and even when professors retire, administrators convert those positions into non-tenure track, part-time posts–the Wal-Mart-ification of higher education workers.

Andrew’s beef is with people of authority who told him that things would be okay as long as you do well, publish, and give it a good effort. Unfortunately, things are so bad now that even knocking it out of the park might just be a foul ball. I haven’t been to MLA, but I heard from friends who went last year and this year that the available job interviews decreased from about 1,200 to 900. It’s not just that there are fewer jobs available, but it’s also a tremendous number of folks vying for those few jobs. I realize that these metrics of getting a job are affecting everyone right now, but I believe that Andrew does make a valid point that some authority figures in academia that we have each encountered separately have painted rosier pictures about our future job prospects. However, I can honestly say that at Kent State I have encountered more Simon Cowell’s than Kara DioGuardi’s. The early wakeup call that I got from some professors at KSU have put a lot more drive into my motor to build a terrific CV, but my own struggles getting published and meeting young folks who are equally, if not more so, bright with a hunger in their eyes that I recognize from my own have made me question to some extent where I am right now and what I plan on doing in the near future.

I love what I do, I want to do more of it in the future, and I want to excel in my field making lasting contributions. However, the way things are right now and the administrative changes that are taking place with long term implications are making me worry about there being a place for me to do the things that I set out to do several years ago before I earned a B.S. and M.A. and put in almost three additional years thus far on my Ph.D.

I agree with Andrew that we, as graduate students and fellow academics of this generation, have to stick together. I have told my friends here at Kent State the same thing–we are all in this together. These are good sentiments, but I do not know to what extent we can affect a change that will result in more jobs that will provide research and pedagogical fulfillment. Perhaps we are all just weathering a rather lengthy and terrible storm.

What would you say is the best way to survive the current academic job slump? How can we as graduate students pull together to make things better for ourselves?


Kent State Bookstore Grinds My Gears

January 21, 2010

Mr. Japanese Sea Cow and I are visibly upset over not being permitted to buy a fucking Ampad notebook from the Kent State University Bookstore in the Student Center Complex, because I wouldn’t put my backpack in their “Place Bag Here” wooden cubby hole matrix. First, I disagree with the attitude that the bookstore takes toward students and anyone else who may be carrying a backpack–obviously, women are permitted to carry their bags into the store, large and small. I realize that many bookstores on college campuses have these bag areas with the idea in mind to reduce shrinkage. There are other, more effective ways to reduce shrinkage without overtly labeling all potential customers are thieves. Second, the Kent State Bookstore in no way assumes any responsibility for my bag and its contents, which includes a laptop, iPhone, books, notes, tools, etc. That’s right–tools. I don’t want to appear hypocritical–not wanting to be viewed as a criminal, yet distrusting others with my things out of sight at the front of the store by a heavy traffic, public area, but there is a difference–the store has substantial capital and the potential means to effectively protect their goods without criminalizing all who enter their premises. I, on the other hand, do not have the capital to run the individual risk of someone purposively or mistakenly lifting my nondescript black backpack from a public space unattended. I can, however, hold on to my bag and dutifully give others respect as human beings and fight the urge to steal, which apparently the bookstore is afraid that I cannot control. Third, I’m particularly troubled by the fact that students obey the signs and leave their things at the front of the store. I didn’t stand there after my altercation, so I don’t know how many were rebuked, but a girl in front of me was also reprimanded. However, she went back to the front and left her bag. I, on the other hand, left vowing never to return. Oh yes, I have voted in the market by taking my $3.50 elsewhere, and I will, going forward, tell my students to seek their books from businesses that give them respect as individuals and not treat them as criminals. By putting de Certeau’s theory of individual choice into action, I believe that I am effectively sticking it to the Kent State Bookstore and its attack on respect for persons. In my best Ricky Bobby voice–”Alan Wilde, save me with your magical powers of irony!”


Lego Star Wars Luke’s X-Wing Fighter 6212

January 21, 2010

Luke’s updated Lego X-Wing Fighter 6212 was a particularly fun build. Originally, I had the first version of Luke’s X-Wing from 1999 or so, and though cool, it doesn’t muster next to the awesomeness of this particular model. The wings crank open, there is a storage pod underneath the X-Wing as shown in The Empire Strikes Back, and it uses some smart building techniques to give it the angular look and color scheme. Also, the kit included extra minifigs of Wedge, Han, Leia, and Chewbacca from ESB.


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