Tag Archives: University of California

Lair of the Golden Bear, 9th Week

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School start dates keep moving earlier, so over our 21 summers at the University of California at Berkeley family camp, the Lair of the Golden Bear, we have moved in Camp Blue from 12th week to 11th to 10th and this year, to 9th week. The transition to 9th week meant a new location for our three tents: we are now creekside.  Creekside is farther from the bathrooms but has a prettier view.

9th week is both the same and different from 10th. We were too early to see the annual Perseid Meteor Shower and we missed Ed’s 10th week Margarita Party but 9th week features a Pirate Party and there is more water in the rivers. This year, we went rafting on the Stanislaus River. The rapids were no rougher than Class 2 but we enjoyed our day out of camp. We also drove to the Trail of the Gargoyles to see the sunset – made very colorful by a forest fire about twenty miles away.

We attended one of the talks (Dr. Larry Michalak on “Tunisia and the Arab Spring”), danced during Disco Bingo, celebrated Jessica and Matthew’s 2nd wedding anniversary and Paul’s 21st birthday with a Lair Cake, enjoyed arts and crafts, and played board games for many hours in the lodge.  My brother Pete and his wife Julie went running to Pinecrest Lake early every morning but most of us slept in until the first breakfast bell.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Creative Writing Exchange

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This month I am enjoying experimenting with new writing – part of an exchange my daughter Jessica set up among eight pairs of friends. We are committed to write for at least ten minutes a day in answer to her email prompt and also to giving only positive feedback to our writing partner. For example, on 6 July 2013, Jessica’s prompt was: “What are the women saying to each other? One is wearing cultural dress, another a stove-pipe hat, and the third sunglasses.”

My response was the short story below.  Following Mark Twain’s advice to “Write What You Know”, I borrowed the names of some TechWomen friends but this is a work of fiction – not about particular women!  Only the conferences and places are real: I have travelled recently to both Portland, Oregon and Amman, Jordan.


Afnan, Noor, and Colleen were shopping in Amman. The three geeks had met at the OpenStack conference in Portland, Oregon, the year before. Professional discussions between technical sessions, about programming and politics, had moved into complaints about guys and how pleasant it was for once not to be the only woman in the room. The usual complaints had become more personal and by the time they went to Powell’s Books and lunch together, the three were friends.

Afnan and Noor were both graduates of Princess Sumaya University, although from different years. Colleen had gone to Cal and was fascinated by the other girls’ stories about Jordan and the developing technical culture of the Middle East – so different from her experiences in the People’s Republic of Bezerkley and California. By the time OpenStack ended, the three were collaborating on an open source project together, firmly connected in Facebook, LinkedIn and all of the other web-based glue of the technical world. When Colleen’s Cal thesis advisor was invited to speak TEDxAmman the following year and offered her a ticket to the big event, she grabbed the chance.

Colleen was a true nerd, wearing what was comfortable and clean, but sometimes adding a bizarre element to keep her all-male co-workers noticing that she was still a girl. Some days it was yellow socks with pink and white nigiri sushi images, today it was a stove-pipe hat. Colleen was a firm believer in the principle that you can be as weird as you are good. She was a very good programmer. At first, that Afnan and Noor wore hijab and more stylish clothes did not concern Colleen. It was their kind of uniform, just as jeans and funny socks or hats were hers. Noor wearing her sunglasses propped on top of her headscarf was kind of like a hat.

Colleen told Noor and Afnan that her professor’s TEDx talk had gone well and that she was meeting amazing new people, men and women whose work had made a difference, who were trying to change the world. But for the first time since High School, Colleen was a little worried about her clothes. Maybe the hat wasn’t right for this high-end crowd. She asked her elegant friends to go shopping, to help her spend some money. Colleen did not want to wear hijab or that western-uniform, the skirted suit, but the long dress and coat that Afnan wore or Noor’s fitted slacks and jackets looked good. Colleen was ready for a change.

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Moby Dick and Shakespeare in Kickstarter

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Kickstarter just closed funding for a big successful project on the classic 1851 whaling novel Moby Dick by Herman Melville. “Moby Dick, or the card game” was backed for $102,730 (410% of the amount requested!). The whaling card game is one of ten Moby Dick theme Kickstarter projects listed, five of which were funded (four over-funded) and five of which did not meet their funding target. 50% success is a good since an estimated 75% of startups fail. Overall, Kickstarter has had 100,600 projects, of which 44% were funded (as of 30 May 2013).  In comparison, there have been 128 Kickstarter crowd-funded projects with a William Shakespeare theme, 43 of which were unfunded and three of which are still in process – at least a 66% success rate.  Literature is good business!

The Kickstarter projects with a Moby Dick theme since 2010:

  • Moby Dick, or, The Card Game by King Post
  • Jeff Finlin – “Moby Dick”
  • Emoji Dick by Fred Benenson
  • The Moby-Dick Variations: Theatre of Multiplicity by John Zibell
  • Sea Monster: a 3-D stereoscopic web series exploring new film grammar. by Gray Miller
  • A Beautiful Annotated Edition of Moby-Dick by Chris Routledge (not funded)
  • Project 40/Moby Dick by Benny Lumpkins (not funded)
  • HOLLYWOOD FRINGE FESTIVAL: ISHMAEAL by Benny Lumpkins (not funded)
  • Call Me Ishmael: One song for every chapter of Moby-Dick!!! by Patrick Shea (not funded)
  • Zomby Dick or, The Undead Whale by JD Livingstone (not funded)

When I was studying English at the University of California at Berkeley, seniors could follow one of four teaching paths: Shakespeare, Milton, Chaucer, or a great author chosen for that year. Melville was the author for my year. I wrote my honors thesis (“Goneril as a Complete and Motivated Character in King Lear”) on Shakespeare under Dr. Hugh Richmond but I was so tempted to study Melville. Of course, I am one of the 2,583 Kickstarter funders for “Moby Dick, or the card game”. I look forward to receiving my game copies, postcards, and the other goodies in a few months.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson
Links updated 3 April 2014

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Peninsula School – Grads Doing Well

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In 2007, I wrote the blog entry “Peninsula School – A Successful Alternative” about the school my daughter Jessica attended from age three through 8th grade. Last weekend, many of her Peninsula School alumni classmates gathered at the annual Spring Fair in Menlo Park, California, to celebrate their 10th anniversary.  Although they started at an alternative school with no grades or tests, she and her friends have done very well indeed.

Here is where they were in 2007:

  • Academy of Art University (San Francisco)
  • Bard College (Annandale-on-Hudson, NY)
  • California College of the Arts (San Francisco and Oakland, CA)
  • Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, PA) – Jessica
  • Colorado College (Colorado Springs, CO)
  • Foothill College (Los Altos Hills, CA) 2 going
  • Portland State (Portland, OR)
  • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI, Troy, NY)
  • Stanford University (Stanford, CA) 2 going
  • Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, PA)
  • University of California at Berkeley (Berkeley, CA)
  • University of California at Davis (Davis, CA) 2 going
  • University of California at Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA) 3 going
  • Wesleyan (Middletown, Connecticut)

What Jessica was able to discover about her class at their reunion:

  • Motion animation business founder
  • Social worker
  • Online outreach specialist for a national non-profit (Jessica)
  • Still at the university – studying abroad or in graduate school (at least six)
  • Serial Silicon Valley technical entrepreneur
  • User experience software designer
  • Photographer
  • Elementary school teacher
  • Ultimate frisbee – professional sports player
  • Deputy US Marshall
  • Financial professional in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Jessica was graduated in 2012 from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh PA, with college and university honors, Phi Beta Kappa. She is now working at Polaris Project in Washington DC.

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Jessica and I traveled in Jordan and Lebanon together in February 2013.  Here we are in Petra, Jordan:

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Wade’s Favorite Ties

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My father, Wade Dickinson, liked to dress very well. When he passed away in 2011, my brothers and I distributed his excellent clothes to family members or charity, depending on the condition. In rearranging our basement to make room for installing the new furnace, I found a bag of six of my father’s favorite neckties, pictured above. It was interesting to see how many of his lifelong areas of study and passion were reflected in these sartorial accessories.  From left to right, top to bottom:

  • Eagle and shield – silver on navy – probably a West Point momento.  My father was graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1949.
  • Bah Humbug – red and navy – reflecting my father’s lifelong Scrooge-like hatred of the waste and expense of Christmas.
  • Pigs – silver on red – in honor of my father’s many years (and many patents) studying how to promote food animal growth through the application of Physics.  His company name for this work was AgroPhysics.
  • Bears and stripes – The Cal Golden Bear mascot, from his many years teaching the University of California at Berkeley class Engineering-110, “Venture Design: The Start-up Company”.
  • Cows – Black and white on blue – in honor of my father’s many years (and many patents) studying how to promote food animal growth through the application of Physics.  His company name for this work was AgroPhysics.
  • Owls – silver on red – the mascot of the Bohemian Club of which my father was a lifelong member.

Here is a 1993 portrait of Wade Dickinson, taken by my mother, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson:

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Images Copyright 1993-2013 by Katy Dickinson and Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson

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Scarf Adventure

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Earlier this month while my family was camping at the Lair of the Bear, my scarf went missing. It was a small silk rust-colored neck scarf I wore on the day we arrived, something I inherited from Grandma Dickinson many years ago. I had laid it on my pants when I changed for bed and it wasn’t there in the morning. I looked and asked around but no one had seen it. I figured it was mixed in with someone else’s stuff and would turn up eventually. But it didn’t.

On the last day at the end of our camping week, during my final check that our tent was completely empty and clean, I moved the shelving unit where we put our towels and games. In the far corner, in a heap of shredded tissues and feathers, was my scarf. I guess that a mouse grabbed it when we were asleep and dragged it away. Surprisingly, there were no holes or stains.  After being washed, my scarf looks the same as always even after being mouse bedding for a week.

Image Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Paul’s 20th

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My son Paul turned twenty recently, with much celebration of the life milestone – no longer a teenager!  Paul has been camping at the University of California Alumni Association Lair of the Golden Bear family camp since before he could walk. As usual, his first birthday celebration was a chocolate Lair Cake in the dining hall. His final party was last night at the Melting Pot restaurant.  The big present was a violet and white deep carved crystal vessel by Celestial Art Glass which he fell in love with last month at the Palo Alto Clay & Glass Festival.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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