Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Art?

Time for my monthly update. Haha.... Hopefully I'll update a little more often than that for a while. Over the next couple of days, I'm going to upload some of my pictures. Some people have a photo blog that they update every day with a new photo, but 1) I'm not that prolific a photographer (unless I did a daily high school sports picture) and 2) I don't think I'd be able to update every day.

Anyway, on to today's photo.



Fort Dale played in the area tournament at Huntingdon a week or so ago, and the night before had been rather chilly.  While I was driving around campus, looking for the gym, I saw this fountain.  Even though I was running a little late, I just had to stop and take a picture.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Prof





















Chris Warden


So after several months of inactivity, here I am again.  Unfortunately, this first post of the new year will not a happy one.   Like a post back in August, this one is going to be about someone who affected my life.

I got a phone call from Greg Phillips on Sunday afternoon about Professor Warden.  Greg told me that they were going to take him off life support.  That shocked me a little because I didn't even know that he had been ill.  He passed away later Sunday night.

Turns out he had fallen in the shower a few weeks ago and broke his hip.  He had to have surgery, but there were complications.  He was a hemophiliac (I had no idea), and apparently things went downhill from there.

In addition to being just a teacher of mine, he was also my advisor for the years I was in the school of journalism.  Any time I needed some advice, he was there.  Classes, assignments, whatever.  Occasionally, I'd get a glimpse into Prof the person - whether it was after class, sitting around eating pizza and putting the Trop together, managing our team for the Trop-Trojanvision softball game, or the end-of-the-year excursion.

Now that I think about it, there was so much more to him than I knew.  He had a ton of real-world experience that he drew on to teach his classes, but I never really took the time to get the backstory.  Speaking of his classes, they were tough.  But they weren't tough because he wanted you to fail — they were tough because he wanted you to be good.  Somehow, I always managed to pull an A out.

I knew him as my advisor, teacher and person, but I wish I had known him better.  Thanks, Prof, for all you did.  We'll miss you.