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  • Day 288 – Chicago Arrival


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    I finally got my paper finished, turned it in, then hopped in the vehicle and drive to visit Ryan in Chicago. Before I left, it was snowing in Hillsdale! It stopped after 10am, but there was definitely snow falling for a few hours. The ground was warm enough that it melted right away, though.

    I got stuck in traffic outside of Chicago for about 40 minutes, then once I finally got to Ryan’s apartment, I just hung out until he got home. I planned on going exploring, but it was raining all day, so I just lounged around. After he got home from work, we went for a walk and ended up eating at The Silver Palms. The dining area is actually in an old railroad dining car from the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. Apparently the restaurant was featured on Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations. Ryan ordered the Three Little Piggy sandwich, which is a huge sandwich stuffed with smoked ham, pork tenderloin, bacon, and gruyere cheese, all topped off with an onion ring and a fried egg. I ordered the Smoked Meat sandwich, which is corned beef brisket, grilled onions, and gruyere cheese on pumpernickel. We ended up splitting the sandwiches, so we both are half of each. I liked mine better, but his mountain of pork sandwich was pretty good, too.

    On the walk back, I found a newspaper box that had paper copies of The Onion, so I am looking forward to reading that later tonight.

    I have very sporadic and unreliable internet at his apartment, so I might not be uploading any photos while I am here.

    Plans for tomorrow: Visit Ryan’s office, walk around Michigan Ave. and take photos, eat deep-dish pizza, and go to see Blue Man Group!

  • Day 287 – Football Alumni Game

    I am on my way to Chicago on Thursday. I am excited!

    Besides lots of sight-seeing, photographing, and eating, I plan to update my photography portfolio here on my site while I am there. I have not updated it in a year, and my skills have improved in that time. I have a lot of photos to take out, and a lot of photos to add. I will post it when I get it finished.

    Here are some photos from the alumni football game last weekend. All previous Hillsdale football players were allowed to participate in the event. Guys ranging from their mid-20s to mid-50s showed up to play.

  • Day 286 – More Charger Swimming

    All three pre-fall break exams are finished! Now I have to put the finishing touches on my Austrian Economics paper on the notion of cost and its use in economic regulation, and I will be on my way to visit Ryan in Chicago!

    Now, for the regularly scheduled program:

    4 photos from the Charger Blue & White meet last Saturday:

  • Day 285 – Baseball Alumni Game

    The Hillsdale Baseball Alumni came together last weekend to play a memorial softball game:

    In other news:
    2 exams down, 1 to go, and one paper to finish before I leave for Chicago!

  • Day 284 – ∆T∆ Fraternity


    A shot of ∆T∆ (pronounced Delta Tau Delta) in the homecoming parade:

    ∆T∆’s representative, Taylor Gage, was Homecoming King:

  • Day 283 – Homecoming Victory

    The Chargers had a victorious win over nationally-ranked no. 1 team in division II, the Grand Valley Lakers, this afternoon. The Chargers broke the Lakers’ 48 regular season game winning streak. What a wonderful homecoming! Read about the win at the Hillsdale College athletics page.

  • Day 282 – Economizing on Brain Power

    I had an interesting concept brought up to me today while I was discussing the difference between rationality and reason with Professor Lea. To try to understand the difference, we did a thought experiment about making choices. When a person makes a choice, he or she weighs the expected utility (broadly defined) of each unit, ranks the units by preference, then chooses the one with the highest utility. This happens whether or not a person is conscious of it, and it is a systematic way of making choices and rationally fulfilling ends. Professor Lea and I both understood this.

    How, then, do we account for people who are stuck in a routine (i.e. walk the same way to class every day, go through the motions, eat the same thing almost daily, etc)? Is that routine irrational because it is not a systematic way of making choices, and one does it without thinking? At what point does a decision become a routine? Why is it rational one day because it is based on a systematic choice, and irrational the next day because it is part of a routine and not thought about?

    After much thought, Professor Lea remembered an answer Hayek had to a similar question: individuals economize on brain power. This means that people go through a routine because it requires less brain power. Scarcity is a reality for brain power, too, so whenever individuals can economize on it, they do. This manifests itself frequently when individuals are involved in projects that take a lot of thinking.

    I recognized it about myself when I am writing papers–I don’t think about small details like where I am going to eat for dinner. I just pick somewhere close and eat something on the menu that I frequently eat. When I am writing a paper, I try not to devote a lot of power to deciding on small details like where to eat, what to wear, where to study, etc. I just pick the first available option (within reason) in those cases.

    Individuals aren’t being irrational, for the most part, when they follow habits or routines. Yes, those individuals are not making active choices and weighing the costs and expected benefits, but they are economizing on brain power and falling back on choices they previously made. This has huge implications which I will cover another time.

  • Day 281 – IM Football

    This photo ran in today’s Collegian with this article. I also had a number of portraits I took for the homecoming bios, and I compiled the quick hits this week.

    I have a very busy weekend coming up. I have three big exams on Monday and Tuesday of next week, a paper due Wednesday (which was just assigned last night via email), and a number of homecoming photos to take and edit for the college by Monday.

  • Day 280 – Taylor Gage

    I had to do portraits of the guys nominated to the homecoming court here at Hillsdale. I took all of the of the photos outdoors. Taylor Gage could only meet me at night, so I got creative and did a little strobist work with a flash off-camera left.

    A side note:
    I am in an epistolary communications class and I love receiving letters. Here is my address if you want to send me one. (I will reply by letter, too!)
    Chuck Grimmett
    Simpson 308 B
    300 N. West St.
    Hillsdale, MI 49242

  • Day 279 – Aggregates

    Today’s post is short.

    After a meeting of the Classical Liberal Organization tonight in which a few people confused this, I feel the need to say something about this:

    Aggregates don’t act. Aggregates don’t make choices, laws, invade other countries, or have rights. Only individuals which make up those aggregates make choices, act, have rights, and the other things that follow. Groups don’t do things. Individuals inside groups do things.

    This has all kinds of implications which I will leave you to ponder. I am open to any questions, just email me or post a comment.

    Oh, and here is something else which is also commonly misunderstood: a change in price does not change demand, only quantity demanded. Raising the price of ice cream will not change an individual’s demand of ice cream, only the quantity he or she demands. Think about it.

  • Day 278 – Central Hall Clock Tower

    I got to go in the clock tower of Central Hall today! What a cool place! The webcams up there had smudges on the lenses, so I volunteered to go up to clean them for ITS. The journey up the various ladders and the rough hand-hewn stairs is a long one, but definitely worth it. The view is amazing from the platform at the top. I took my camera with me (with only one lens, unfortunately). There are some very neat rooms and spaces up in the clock tower. Here are a few photos:

    South quad and Lane Hall:

    Grewcock Student Union and North quad:

    Delp Hall:

    Plumb line to tell if Central Hall is leaning (Don’t worry, it isn’t!)

    Behind the West clock face:

  • Day 277 – Beautiful Sky

    I looked out of my window while I was studying after dinner, and I saw this beautifully colored sky.

    (Just so people know, there are some birds in the photo. It isn’t sensor dirt!)

    After much rest, NyQuil, water, and Emergen-C, I am finally feeling better. Good thing, because I have the first round of midterms over the next week and a half!

  • Day 276 – Coffee House

    Coffee House is a venue where student musicians can perform for the campus in the student union. Hillsdale has some very talented musicians! Unfortunately, I could only stay for an hour. Click on the photos to view them at a larger size:

  • Day 275 – Swimming Photo

    This photo was the sports sections header in The Collegian this week.

  • Day 274 – Flavored Cigarette Ban


    Apparently the government decided to cast its oppressive shadow over more of America and ban flavored cigarettesArchived Link.

    I don’t smoke, so it took me a week and a half to hear about this. This ban is garbage. I have a feeling that the FDA is just getting started with its regulations. Since a lot of people have a negative view of smoking, this was probably pretty easy to push through Congress. The oppressors legislators probably gave speeches about how smoking is ruining the health of Americans and how we need to do something about the number of young people starting to smoke.

    I venture to say that the ban has very little to do with trying to stop kids from smoking and almost everything to do with finding an excuse to regulate the tobacco industry. I asked some of my smoker friends if they started smoking flavored cigarettes, or if they knew anyone who did. None of them started with flavored cigarettes or knew anyone who did. Most of them have tried cloves, but thought they were gross. Granted, this is a small sample, but I think this might hold for a lot of the youth in America. Furthermore, flavored cigarettes are more expensive, which is a huge drawback for young smokers. Think of what kind of beer young people primarily drink – Natural Light. Why? It is dirt cheap. For the most part, young smokers are not going to routinely buy more expensive flavored cigarettes. They are going to buy the cheap stuff.

    Also, if the regulators really thought that flavored tobacco is what lures young people to smoke, why is every kind of flavored tobacco besides cigarettes untouched? I know a number of people who started smoking different kinds of cheap cigars (Black & Milds), then turned to regular cigarettes.

    Again, just so I am clear, I don’t smoke, and I don’t think other people should smoke. That said, I do NOT want to use the government in any way to force people to stop. The government reaching out its oppressive hands and regulating industries does far more harm than possible good, even in this situation.

    Here is what I predict will happen:
    There won’t be a statistically significant change in the number of young people who start smoking.
    –When the FDA figures this out, it will roll out more regulations under the guise of “protecting” America’s youth.
    Smokers of flavored cigarettes will switch over to flavored cigars or flavored pipe tobacco, or roll their own cigarettes, if the flavor is what they are really after.
    –With the increased usage of other types of flavored tobacco, more regulations will come.

    Since the The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act is a blanket regulation that leaves the possibility open of fully regulating the tobacco industry, I predict that we will see more and more tobacco regulations coming in the next two years. (I say two years because I think the government is inefficient and it will take them a little while to get around to it, luckily.)

    Do you think I am overreacting? It is just a little ban for the common good, right? Wrong. The door of regulation is now wide open. In the last year, Congress managed to move its way from regulating the financial sector to the auto industry, and now they gave the FDA the right-of-way to even more closely regulate what Americans consume.

    Americans, hold on to your freedoms while you can. I fear that it won’t be long before most of them are gone.

  • Day 273 – Sick Away From Home


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    Last year, I managed to not get any sicker than a sore throat or sinus problems. Nothing I had to miss class over. I am not so fortunate this year. I caught a bug which managed to take me down. I slept 16 of the past 24 hours and missed 3 classes today. I went to one, thinking I would be okay to go to more, but I felt worse as the class progressed, so I went back to my dorm and slept more. I plan to go back to bed as soon as I am finished with this four hour shift I have sitting at a computer lab.

    I never realized how easy my Mom made being sick. I could stay at home and rest while she took care of me. I didn’t have to walk across campus to eat, I didn’t have to drive to pickup medicine, and I didn’t have to worry about anything other than getting better. As this is my first time being legitimately sick at college, I never thought about those things. Something as simple as making tea is a lot worse when you are sick and incoherent. Mom, I appreciate how much you took care of me when I was sick at home!

    I’ve been taking NyQuil, DayQuil, lots of vitamins, drinking lots of fluids, and getting extra sleep, so hopefully I will feel better in the morning. I don’t have a fever, so I think this should pass quickly. It has been a rough 2 days so far. I miss my Mom.

  • Day 272 – Happy Birthday, Mises!

    Today is the birthday of the great Austrian economist, Ludwig von Mises. Read reflections on Mises at ThinkMarkets and The Austrian Economists.

    Unfortunately, I didn’t have time to make a celebratory visit to the Mises Room in Hillsdale College’s Mossey Library, which is home to Mises’ personal library. I will have to do that tomorrow. I did read a part of Human Action today, though!

  • Day 271 – Fountain Pens


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    The fountain pens I ordered from xfountainpens.comArchived Link arrived today! I’ve been practicing writing with them, and I hope to use them exclusively after I get used to them.

  • Day 270 – Theatre Auditions & Rehearsals

    A few shots from the auditions for Red Herring and rehearsals for Our Town. It looks like this year is going to be a good one for the Hillsdale theatre department!

  • Day 269 – SAI Ball


    Tonight, Amanda and I went to the SAI Ball!

    Photo by Shannon Odell:

  • Day 268 – Men of The Graveyard


    Here are two of the men who live in a house named “The Graveyard.” I took the photo for The Collegian, but it ended up not running. Oh well.

  • Day 267 – The Dark North


    I took photos for a Collegian articleArchived Link this week that featured senior Tyler Sharette, co-owner of The Dark North.

    The Dark North “is a burgeoning apparel and entertainment outfit with aims to discover and promote emerging talents, be they musicians, athletes, designers or anything in between.”

    Check out the Collegian articleArchived Link, and visit The Dark North.

  • Day 266 – New Internationalist Planner

    On Day 249 I wrote about Illum’s photos in the New Internationalist 2010 PlannerArchived Link. Mine arrived in the mail today!

    (Sorry about the low quality photos.)

  • Day 265 – Hillsdale Blogs I Read

    Today I thought about the blogs I read authored by people at Hillsdale. I want to recognize them because I think there are wonderful insights and photos on these blogs. Please check them out.

    WilliamClayton.com
    William Clayton’s photo blog. I link to this often-it is worth visiting. I learn new things about photography every day from William.

    LifeAbundant
    My suitemate Zach Howard’s academic, religious, and political thoughts aimed at learning to live well.

    Shannon Odell
    Shannon Odell’s photo blog. She is an excellent photographer with a style all her own. Check out her work.

    Stormfields
    Dr. Birzer’s blog: “An irregular blog, of sorts, dealing with culture, religion, western civilization, etc.”

    HoldFast
    Sam Branchaw’s thoughts on current events, culture, books, politics, movies, and “anything else that [he] can apply biblical thinking to.”

    Liz Essley
    Liz Essley’s journalism blog.

    The Sigdorian
    Adam Peterson’s writings on subjects all across the spectrum.

    Laffy Taffy
    Hillsdale graduate Rebekah Wilhelm’s blog of weekly poems and wonderful recipes.

    Ambrotos PhotographyArchived Link
    Jan Wanek’s blog on photography (not necessarily a photo blog).

    Burt FolsomArchived Link
    Dr. Folsom’s political and historical ventures.

  • Day 264 – Studying on the Quad, Part II

    Part II of my Studying on the Quad series. I was walking around campus taking photos for the college last week, and I saw my friend Casey studying in what was left of the dwindling sunlight of the late afternoon.

    Hopefully the college will use some of my photos of students studying outdoors in its publications soon!