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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Procrastination will get you

Alright, it's wednesday, May 7th, 2008, 1:34 p.m. Lets kick things off with a quote eh?

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”
-Aristotle
I need to wake up soon to get ready for school and I haven’t even gone to sleep yet! Happens all the time, lol. I did take a nap earlier today, so I guess that helps. I’m a really bad procrastinator, every night I procrastinate going to sleep and every morning I procrastinate waking up. I’ve been playing online games for 3 hours when I could be studying or sleeping. I am proud to admit that I just scored 716 on Gyroball. It’s a miniclip game; check it out if you have some time to kill. But if you don’t, don’t! Okay, so I’m going to hit the sac now, goodnight everyone, God Bless
P.S. I have a lot of good habits; I just talk about the bad ones. I guess that’s kindove a bad habit too. Hmm, I’m going to work on that.
Oh, another side note. It’s much more efficient for one to improve on his strengths than to strengthen your weaknesses. Weaknesses are biologically logged into your DNA. You can work on them, but you’ll never have the potential to be as good as somebody who has a strength in that particular area. Just focus on your strengths and achieve greatness, that’s what I do, most of the time.
One more, you will remember what you did right before you wen’t to sleep much more so than if you were to do the same thing during other hours. So, don’t fall asleep watching TV or after a scary movie or something stupid. Learn something right before you go to sleep, read the BIBLE or something. It’s fun.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Sunday @_@

Hey everybody. Robert Bell here. Well, it's sunday and I missed church, but atleast I got to sleep in. As a matter of fact, I just woke up! So, on the topic of church, I recently found out that 90% of church-going christians stop going to church once they start going to college. Although disturbing, I am happy to know that my friends and I are in the top 10 percentile.
Yesterday before we wen't to church, I got to take three pretty girls to the mall and then to the movies and they all payed for themselves, which is allways a plus. We watched "The Forbidden Kingdom" and it was the best movie I had seen in a long time. It had so many Kongfu scenes and although some were funny, others were to the death. I love Jackie Chan! Jet Lee was in there too, he's the man.
After the movie we wen't to church but Parastou got in trouble because her dad does not like her to stay out late. Now she is mad at me. She's 20 years old and has an 8:00 pm curview, it's ridiculous! I have about a week and a halfs worth of homework to do today so I better get started. Biology III, Writing 121, Scuba Diving, Life Planning, and Oceanograpy, it's proving to be a difficult coarse load. I'll probably still get all A's though, as long as I can put the time in. I'll be fine. Thanks for listening, this is Robert Bell signing out ;D


Robert Bell

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Thursday ;D

Hey everybody! Robert Bell again, how have you been? Good, I’ve been pretty outstanding myself. So lets get down to it; today I went to two classes: Oceanography and Writing 121. They were both enjoyable. In Writing 121 I forgot to do my HW and ended up reading the required essays during class and didn’t catch much of the lecture, by the end of class I had read the essays and written my necessary responses. I waited for Pam Kelley to rap it up and ask for the homework, and when the time came, she told us “go ahead and keep your homework this week everybody.” So everything that I had just done in that hour was seemingly in vain, but I learned a valuable lesson, which was that there is a time and place for everything, I rushed through the homework and I didn’t really grasp it, and I attended to class, but didn’t really learn anything. Tonight, I’m doing my HW for next week and I’ll be ready to listen in lecture.
Jobapalooza is coming tomorrow with 200-300 high school students from six different local schools, and I am in charge of not only giving tours, but gathering capable volunteers to do the same. Speaking of which, I need to make a call to one right now, it’ll only be a second. Hold please. Alright, I’m back. I made the call, ate dinner, watched a movie, did laundry and now it’s time to brush my teeth and call it a night. I have to wake up early tomorrow and mow the lawn before it rains. Wish me luck. Until next time.

Friday, March 14, 2008

A Friday in the hands of Robert Bell

I did not have any classes today so I woke up about 12:30 and had some egos. My friend Zach called me and I met him at RCC at about 2:30 so we could hang out a little before he went back to Cave Junction. I went to the Rogue Foundation and got a copy of my scholarhsip application because I needed one for my CG 100 class, which is a college success class that wanted proof that I was applying for scholarships. Which is good.

While I was at school I played a game of ping-pong with and Greg and I lost. He was waiting for Daniel to help him with his statistics HW, but for some reason Greg dissapeared by the time Daniel got there.

Since Daniel had office hours in the student government, we played a cpl of games of ping-pong in the game room, which is right next to the student Government office. We played best of 5 and for the first time, I actually beat him, without him playing left handed. He said it was because he didin't have his glasses on but I didn't care. He wen't to the restroom and I ate his cheese-its. We wen't back into the office and he drew me while I was on the computer doing some HW for my Web-CT class. which is CG 100. After I was done, he got on the computer and checked his grade, then I drew him and then we left. I got home, ate a bananna, talked to tahisha on the phone, and then I blogged. That brings us to this point in my life. Now i'm gonna check myspace, eat something, and drive to Cave Junction to spend the weekend with my family. God Bless and Farewell.

Robert Bell

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Be more than a demographic. Be a part of history.


Do you fit the mold of... Soccer-Mom, NASCAR-Dad, elitist, blue-collar, white-collar, green-collar, or a Gen-"X"er? Do any of these labels accurately describe you? Probably not, and the truth is most of us could be described by several or none of these popular political demographics.


You may have heard these terms circulated throughout the news or in everyday conversation. For instance, the term "Soccer-Mom" became popularized during Bill Clinton's 1992 Presidential Campaign. The so-called soccer-mom proved to be a vital voting-bloc that the Clinton campaign appealed to. This particular demographic tended to include middle to upper-class suburban women who tended to hold liberal social values and conservative views on public safety. Similarly, in the 1980 Presidential Election, Republican Ronald Reagan attracted a significant voting-bloc consisting of working-class Caucasians....this demographic became labeled "Reagan Democrats."


With an electorate consisting of millions of voters, campaigns tend to target specific demographics in order to get the most out of their limited campaign contributions. Just like any resourceful operation, campaigns want to get the biggest bang for the buck. While such methods are typically successful and appeal to major blocs of the electorate, they often leave the general public feeling overlooked. When campaigns focus their messages towards specific demographics, the remaining population often becomes apathetic or resentful towards politics, which consequently reduces voter turnout.


So how does the "non-categorized" American combat this dilemma? I'm sure you've heard it before and are sick of being bombarded with the cliche..."Get out and vote!" But it's true, the only way to have your voice heard is to vote. Want proof? The reality is that political consultants have access to your voter data, not who you vote for, but information including your: party registration, gender, address, age, and how frequently you vote. While this information appears vague and general, political consultants utilize this data to target specific voting blocs. For instance, voters who have participated in at least 4 of the past 5 elections are probably a more resourceful demographic to target than voters who only participated 1 out of 5. Political consultants can also tailor specific messages to target a specific demographic. For instance, a message involving prescription drug coverage for seniors would be most effective if targeted to voters over 50. You get the point.


The reality is if you don't vote you don't exist in the eyes of political campaigns (except the children, because they are "our future" and definitely help beef-up political ads). If you vote, and enough people similar to you vote, then politicians are surely going to recognize YOUR needs and target YOU as a significant voting bloc. Easier said then done, right? For sure, but there's no time like the present make a change. But what if you're not registered? That might be hard and take up a lot time, right? How about if someone were to make it really easy for you to register.....


Associated Student Government is hosting a voter registration drive Thursday, April 3rd in the G lobby. There will be representatives from both the Democratic and Republican parties to provide information on candidates and ways to get involved. But what if you already have lunch plans?....ASG will even feed you.


The 2008 Presidential Election will be remembered (if not for anything else) for historical, record voter turn-out. Would you rather be overlooked again, or be a part of history?







Thursday, February 28, 2008

2/28/08

Wow, I've had quite the busy two weeks.
First, one of my teachers had something come up and so they had to move a new teacher into the class. It's taking some getting used to but he seems to be a nice guy, and things seem to be moving along now, after a rocky start. Tomorrow I leave for Portland to attend the OCCSA meeting with my fellow Student Senator, Robert Bell. This will be the first time I am attending and I'm excited to see what it's like.

My bass guitar is still being repaired. I brought it to Guitar Center a few days ago to have some repairs done to it. Hopefully they call me back soon, I'm really looking forward to getting it back so I can continue to practice and improve.

Today I attempted to register for classes but it says I need adviser approval. Why? I don't understand what they accomplish by making every student call the counseling center before they can register for classes online. I already have five picked out for next term and I want to make sure I get them. It would actually be the first time I have had a decent working schedule.

John Frohnmayer came to RCC today to discuss why he is running for US Senate. It was a pleasure to have him and the event was a success (we had a high turnout). I'm looking forward to having more candidates for that office attending.

Hope everyone is having a nice week!
Jeff

Thursday, February 14, 2008

First Post

I hate valentines day...

Especially when I'm single, but I guess I do have some things to look forward to. Like my valentine I get tomorrow! WOOT! Or...the fact that I don't have to work today.

Or that I passed my midterm! With a B! This is amazing since I had no time to study, and was even late to class on Tuesday. ^.^

But perhaps I should introduce myself. My name is Jeff. I'm a history major here at RCC. I'm involved in student government (I'm a Student Senator) and I'm taking 9 credits this term. My teachers are Dunn, Phillips, and Owens (for History, Survey of Amer Lit, and Writing 122, respectively.) I like all my classes and teachers, and pretty much everyone I have class with. Except the really annoying people that have nothing to say but talk through class just the same.

:O idk if i'm allowed to be that honest here...

Someone let me know!

Well I have no idea what else to say XDXDXD so I guess this will do for a first post.
Happy Valentines Day.

Oh, and one more thing...register to vote!