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samurai

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by samurai

  1. MA from September in 2007 or 08? Personally, I won't settle for anything less than a yearly salary equivalent to the cost of my education. If you haven't finished yet, perhaps they will be willing to pay some of your tuition? A big request here in Japan, but standard practice back in the states.

     

    I don't know how anyone could afford to live with a Master's on 4man.

  2. I didn't have to shovel once last winter. I have only had to shovel a few days this winter, and just light falls at that. There is still snow at upper elevations, however. All winters are different.

     

    Minnesota finally has a snowy and brutally cold winter like decades ago. Prior this winter, that last 7-9 years or so were incredibly mild, raising deer populations and destroying the snow-mobile market in that state. They went years without so much as a flake.

  3. I'll be linking those gay double chairs that nobody rides because the courses are so short... ducking into sluffable trees, deep into the mysteries of zao. Nobody will know I'm there, and I won't cross a track. I'll score 12-16 virgin lines around 700-1000 vert (not huge, but defintely worthy). Then, I'll ski down to the base and wonder where all the people came from. \:\)

  4.  Originally Posted By: Mantas
    Sounds like there's something really wrong with your shoulders Samuri. Some of my mates, and my brother, have had the same problem. They all had ops to fix the problem, and they are surfing and paddling fine now. Did you like Iqueque? I thought it was pretty cool place. A smoking right hander too, El Colegio.


    There is a lot wrong with my shoulders. I know more about shoulder dislocations than ANYONE.

    Iquique rocked. My bed on the 4th floor was 100 meters from water. It never rains there, so my patio-door never closed, my curtains flapped for 6 months. My living-room window was floor to ceiling. Tow-in kids lived across the street and had a nice rack of tow-in tools. I used to drink tea in my living-room and watch world-class surfers on Sundays while I recovered from collectivo drunken sunrises. I saw gunfire, a knife-mugging, and once... my student brought his rusty revolver to class so I could teach him "Shooting English." That gun had the safety removed from behind its trigger. One of my lessons even took place in a strip-bar... paid for by one of the world's largest mining companies...


    Iquique was fricking nuts.
  5. off topic alert**

     

    They target fresh grads because A) they're graduates, B) they're eager to travel, C)they can travel, without family ties.

     

    The Jet Programme sends out a survey to all of their recruits asking why they are interested in coming to Japan. Not 30% of those hired choose "teaching" as their primary objective. International work experience, cultural diversity, travel, etc are all selected as reasons for coming before admitting they would like to teach. The Jet Programme is well aware of the motives of those they hire, and they're fine with it.

     

    I highly doubt the Japanese advocate keeping the Jet Programme for reasons of "inter-breeding." That doesn't sound like any voice in Japanese politics I have ever heard, even the Japanese Health Minister, Yanagisawa, who was asked to resign after his "Women are Baby-making machines" comment while under Abe's rule.

     

    And, waste of money is just a matter of opinion. I have read articles written by JETs in the Daily Yomiyuri that labeled themselves as window-dressing. So yeah, those who can't find it in themselves to motivate, are probably a waste of money in any field.

     

    I'm not a JET, and I won't argue my other opinion regarding whether they're necessary for English Education or not. Technology will have more of an influence on that than anyone's opinion.

  6. "That's it, That's All" is nucking futs.

     

    While I do consider this competition to be an evolution of the sport, natural-terrain freestyle comps are more than a decade old. The World Heli Challenge in NZ back in the 90's was groundbreaking with 3 days of heli-accessed competition. 1 day was Extreme (Big mountain riding), 1 day was Freestyle (chucking tricks off natural features, inverted rotations were standard) and 1 day was a Chinese Downhill. (no- that's not racist, it's a race where everybody goes at once... making boarder-cross seem quite childish.)

     

    Rip Curl used to fund it and pulled out in 2001, forcing the athletes to pay their ride. Then it died for a few years and tried to make a comeback last year in 2007. It's hard to get the marketing dollars for events that are in such remote places... but it is the future of the sport.

  7. It didn't come from anywhere, they just never outgrew it.

     

    We teachers can't complain about it. Our job as foreigners is to come over as foreigners and expose foreign language to them. It gets pretty ridiculous when we actually complain about our job duties.

     

    I don't know of many (any? wakaranai.gif) other nations that have something equivalent to the JET programme in an attempt to expose themselves to outside influences.

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