Category: a

  • Assignment 5: Domain Analysis

    Semantic relationship: strict inclusion
    Form: X is a kind of Y
    Cover term: occassion
    Included terms:

    • funeral
    • birthday
    • payback
    • thank you
    • sympathy
    • hospital stuff

    Semantic relationship: sequence
    Form: X is a step in Y
    Cover term: opening procedures
    Included terms:

    • open the back door
    • unset the alarm
    • put the cat down
    • turn the lights on
    • let the cat out of the channel
    • feed the cat
    • check my messages on the machine

    Sematinc relationship: strict inclusion
    Form: X is a kind of Y
    Cover term: arrangement
    Included terms:

    • vase arrangement
    • traditional arrangement

    Semantic relation: strict inclusion
    Form: X is a kind of Y
    Cover term: unclear
    Included terms:

    • designers (the creative people)
    • customer
    • wholesalers
    • clerks
    • drivers
    • owners

    Semantic relationship: means-end
    Form: X is a way to do Y
    Cover term: clients build relatioship with the designer

    • building a trust with your customers
    • getting you know your clientele

    Semantic relationship: spatial
    Form: X is a part of Y
    Cover term: store

    • front door
    • back door
    • executive offices
    • green house
    • garage
    • front office
    • design area
    • printer
    • cooler four
    • big cooler
    • little cooler
    • front store or sales area

    Semantic relationship: spatial
    Form: X is a part of Y
    Cover term: design area

    • Na’s bench
    • Marion’s bench
    • Sarah’s bench
    • jean’s bench
    • Jan’s bench
  • Assignment 4: Overhead transparency of first interview transcript

    diversity weekend committee does, is doing diversity weekend. So how do you go about doing it?… Or planning or…
    J: well.. every committee has its own structure but what tends to happen is, committees.. I mean subcommittees. Subcommittees. (uhuh) subcommittees meet outside of, together two or three people, sometimes more, sometimes lesss, there’s actually three or four people, sometimes more sometimes less, together – and they arrange all the details they have to do for the specific event that they have committed themselves to. Then on Sundays we get together and coordinators discuss, you know, broad structural things about the event, such as.. funding an organization, and vision, mission statement, but it’s all in contribution with what other people on the committee are saying. And we give different reports about how we’re doing. An important part of Diversity Weekend, too, is that we are also learning about one another, and getting to know about the types of interest that we have for each other, and that we personally have on our own, and there’s always space for socializing at the beginning and the end.
    Y: you said that.. during the meetings? Is that right? (uhuh) during the meetings, people will go over structural things, like the budget, and vision.. are there other kinds of structural.. how do you call these things, the budget, vision..
    J: I call them.. I call them.. organizational necessity? [laugh]
    Y: is that how everyone else in the diversity weekend committee call it? (I don’t think so) how do the rest of the people call it?
    J: they may call it.. no, I don’t think we have established a name for it..we actually just call it… structure, budget, funding, vision.. [laugh impregnated in tone] (uhuh) but I don’t know if there’s actually been.. a… umbrella term to cover all these things.
    Y: But when you think of it, you call it organizational necessities. (uhuh) so what other kinds of organizational necessities are there, there’s budget, vision, funding.. are there other kinds?
    J: I think a lot has to do with diplomatic relationships with other committees, (uhuh) …. Of course every one of the members has responsibility of keeping their members informed of what’s going on. And so that’s responsibility that’s dispersed, and not concentrated, the way some of these activities are. Although, actually, there’s been a lot of participation from non-coordinators. For example this friend of mine Yongho Kim, he umm, he’s organized much of the funding, even though he’s not the coordinator (uhuh) but has he’s visionary [laugh] (uhuh)
    Y: umm.. you said that some activities are coor.. dispersed, and some activities are concentrated, can you give me some examples of activities that are concentrated?
    J: uh.. yes.. yes. I think some of the activities that are.. or some responsibilities.. that would be my word. Responsibilities that have become more concentrated, happen to be relationships that occur between other organizations like Macalester Student Govenrment, and the Program Board, where they have assumed responsibility for being a liaison and representing diversity committee in those types of spaces. And that’s more concentrated [heavy breathing – stress?] and so I know that you know when there’s discussion going working on the theme, and the mission statement and the questions, we discussed them in a group but the people who actually went to write on the actual theme, were actually a group of two. Sometimes three. (uhuh) and they came together and then the entire committee would check it. And make sure that there was consensus on the vision.

  • Politics of Yahoo! Groups

    Yahoo! Groups : DNBAM Calendar

    So I just found out that “club” settings are customized depending on which category you put your “club” in. Defend Need Blind Admissions is under Colleges and Universities -> Minnesota. For College groups, Yahoo! provides the following options:

    Anniversary
    Appointment
    Bill Payment
    Birthday
    Breakfast
    Call
    Chat
    Class
    Club Event
    Concert
    Dinner
    Graduation
    Happy hour
    Holiday
    Interview
    Lunch
    Meeting
    Movie
    Net event
    Other
    Party
    Performance
    Reunion
    Sports Event
    Travel
    TV Show
    Vacation
    Wedding

    Hopefully, these categories have been based on what most college groups in the U.S. announce frequently via their mailing lists and such. It’s such a sad picture. I don’t think I have ever used any category except “meeting” and “performance”. What the fuck does a “public debate” fit into? Should “public debate” be a “meeting”?

    Bah.

  • Alumni Board

    Alumni Board

    Look at those healthy blond white alumns, all very happy to serve in executive positions of the Alumni Board.

    Then the minority-looking last names are put in the “Multicultural Committee” and “Careers Task Force”

  • Request for MCSG web space for SS2

    From: “Yongho Kim”
    Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 9:48 AM
    Subject: Request for MCSG web space for SS2

    MCSG executive officers:

    Roscoe and myself, representatives to the Social Studies II division withinthe Legislative Body, would like to request a space within MCSG’s website tohost our website.

    We have created an open blog where constituent members and anyone else canhold discussions on current topics, and though which we also plan onannouncing our next constituency meetings in the future. Currently, theblog, http://ss2.uni.cc/, is set to point to a folder in my personal website(macalester.edu/~ykim/ss2) and we would like to request a space to begranted so that student would be able to access SS2 underwww.macalester.edu/mcsg/ss2

    I am CC’ing this message to Tamara since I heard she maintains the websiteitself.

    Also, I would like to use this opportunity to remind you that I had asked ifLB members could have an office time at the MCSG office.

    yours,

    Yongho Kim
    Legislative Body Representative, Social Studies II

  • Outline: Health insurance policy and the immigrant U.S. latino working class

    Wednesday, October 06, 2004
    Medical Anthro Paper Outline
    October 6, 2004
    Yongho Kim
    Medical Anthropology 239

    Paper Outline: Health insurance policy and the immigrant U.S. latino working class

    During my summer volunteer work at Centro de Derechos Laborales [Workers’ Rights Center], a community program at Minneapolis focused in self-education, organization and mobilization for immigrant latinos’ rights as workers in the United States, I gained a quick glimpse on the state of the health insurance and worker’s compensation among immigrant workers in Minnesota.

    (more…)