Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
5.5/four tet, daphni b2b floating points, avalon emerson 5.12/neil young 5.19/mannequin pussy 5.21/serpentwithfeet 5.25/hozier 6.12-16/bonnaroo 6.28/goose 6.29/goose 9.17/the national + the war on drugs 9.23/sigur ros 9.27-29/making time 10.17/air
Weather Rule #1: Don't bother checking the weather reports.
Haha it was 70 yesterday.
It was 80s yesterday. Today in the low 40s but feels like 36 and tonight there is a freeze warning and "light snow." If that really happens, this city is going to shut down and freak the fuck out.
A University of Arizona coed received an unwelcome accordion "serenade" from a male peer, a UA Police Department report stated.
According to the female student, she'd met the subject about three semesters ago in a class, and he asked her name. Then, she said, he found her on Facebook and started sending messages containing "weird" questions and statements—so often that she blocked him.
Undeterred, she said, he subsequently discovered her UA email account, which became his new weird-message medium.
Then, the previous day, she saw her harasser at the Student Union and demanded he stop emailing—but he "(didn't) really respond" to her words.
The same day he reportedly appeared at a meeting she was in where he didn't belong—but when he was forced to leave the meeting room, he stubbornly sat outside. Then he started playing an accordion, loudly—throughout almost the whole meeting. (This was despite numerous requests to stop; even when someone threatened to call the UAPD—though he finally left once an officer actually arrived.)
When the UAPD contacted the accordion player for his side of the story, he insisted that he and the reportee were "friends," though he admitted she hadn't actually responded to any of his many attempts at electronic communication. Regarding the accordion incident, he said he'd originally heard about the meeting through his "friend" (the reportee), and although he wasn't supposed to be there, he felt justified in sitting outside because it was a "music-related group." He said he'd just "wanted to play his music and he was not trying to bother anyone."
In the end, he agreed to stop contacting the reportee, and the deputy sent a Code of Conduct report to the dean of students.
A University of Arizona coed received an unwelcome accordion "serenade" from a male peer, a UA Police Department report stated.
According to the female student, she'd met the subject about three semesters ago in a class, and he asked her name. Then, she said, he found her on Facebook and started sending messages containing "weird" questions and statements—so often that she blocked him.
Undeterred, she said, he subsequently discovered her UA email account, which became his new weird-message medium.
Then, the previous day, she saw her harasser at the Student Union and demanded he stop emailing—but he "(didn't) really respond" to her words.
The same day he reportedly appeared at a meeting she was in where he didn't belong—but when he was forced to leave the meeting room, he stubbornly sat outside. Then he started playing an accordion, loudly—throughout almost the whole meeting. (This was despite numerous requests to stop; even when someone threatened to call the UAPD—though he finally left once an officer actually arrived.)
When the UAPD contacted the accordion player for his side of the story, he insisted that he and the reportee were "friends," though he admitted she hadn't actually responded to any of his many attempts at electronic communication. Regarding the accordion incident, he said he'd originally heard about the meeting through his "friend" (the reportee), and although he wasn't supposed to be there, he felt justified in sitting outside because it was a "music-related group." He said he'd just "wanted to play his music and he was not trying to bother anyone."
In the end, he agreed to stop contacting the reportee, and the deputy sent a Code of Conduct report to the dean of students.
You should bring your accordion to brunch and serenade the ladies there.
Ah, yes. Sarte's "No Exit". My 12th grade English teacher had us read "No Exit" during an excruciatingly long segment on existentialism. Turns out he was a very wise man.
That day was a rough one for me as well, but I am a living testament for you that "it gets better". I've survived like 4 years with not only that original grey beard hair, but like 5 or 6 more. If I can make it, you can too.
I found my first gray hair (from my head, obviously) when I was 11. I am now 25 and still kicking. Two weeks ago I found a gray in one of my eyebrows. You kids will be fine, promise.
Post by Paroxysm714 on Mar 5, 2015 18:48:30 GMT -5
Just because the weather fluctuates a lot doesn't mean the weather reports are bad. When weather forecasts are actually bad, it's because forecasting the weather is hard as shit.
My boss said he wasn't coming in today so I was excited to be the only manager working the morning shift...and then he decided to come in anyway. Booooo.
5.5/four tet, daphni b2b floating points, avalon emerson 5.12/neil young 5.19/mannequin pussy 5.21/serpentwithfeet 5.25/hozier 6.12-16/bonnaroo 6.28/goose 6.29/goose 9.17/the national + the war on drugs 9.23/sigur ros 9.27-29/making time 10.17/air
Just because the weather fluctuates a lot doesn't mean the weather reports are bad. When weather forecasts are actually bad, it's because forecasting the weather is hard as shit.
So I was a meteorology major in college for two years, and it is hard - and a lot of people don't understand it. The science is still getting better, but it takes time and it's still not perfect. And few understand the whole modeling process or physics or anything like that.
Just because the weather fluctuates a lot doesn't mean the weather reports are bad. When weather forecasts are actually bad, it's because forecasting the weather is hard as shit.
So I was a meteorology major in college for two years, and it is hard - and a lot of people don't understand it. The science is still getting better, but it takes time and it's still not perfect. And few understand the whole modeling process or physics or anything like that.
My friends and I who majored in atmospheric science like to refer to ourselves as pseudo-engineers. Our physics and math background isn't nearly as strong, but we were still required to take at least a year of physics, three semesters of calculus, and upper-level classes like atmospheric dynamics and thermodynamics.
So I was a meteorology major in college for two years, and it is hard - and a lot of people don't understand it. The science is still getting better, but it takes time and it's still not perfect. And few understand the whole modeling process or physics or anything like that.
My friends and I who majored in atmospheric science like to refer to ourselves as pseudo-engineers. Our physics and math background isn't nearly as strong, but we were still required to take at least a year of physics, three semesters of calculus, and upper-level classes like atmospheric dynamics and thermodynamics.
The formulas that were seemingly a mile long gave me nightmares for months.
My own professor admitted getting D's in physics while at Cornell.