Okay then! I just went and screwed around with my schedule for fall 2009, dropping some classes I was no longer interested in and one for which I wouldn't recieve credit for my major, and my schedule now looks like this:
ASTJ 203: Intermediate Japanese I (my last Japanese class ever)
CLAS 220 (H): Ancient Christianity (replacing CLAS 210 Intro to the Hebrew Bible)
ENLS 436: Antebellum American Literature (replacing ENLS 361 Creative Writing)
GESS 290: Inro to Gender and Sexuality Studies
GESS 289: 20 Hours Public Service component of GESS 290 (Tulane requires 20 hours of public service for freshmen and sophomores)
HISE 391 (H): The Russian Revolution (replacing COLQ 401 History of Voodoo; this was the one where I wouldn't get history credit)
JWST 322: Arab/Israeli Conflict
If you can't tell, I'm a liberal arts major. *grin* I haven't decided yet whether I'm going to major in English, history, or classical studies -- or some combination of the three; most likely is English and history with a classical studies minor -- but I'm trying to cover all my bases. Japanese 203 fills my last semester of foreign language, Into Gender Sexuality covers my public service component (I have to do another 20 hours junior and senior year), and Arab/Israeli Conflict fills the Comparative Cultures and International Perspectives requirement. I feel very practical. *beams*
Most days of the week I have three classes, most of them actually at the same time -- 9:30, 12:00, and 2:00 without a 12:00 class on Tuesdays but with a 3:30 lecture (Russian Revolution) -- except on Fridays, when I have no 9:30 and can thus sleep in until I have to go off for my noon Japanese class. Yay! Which means that I can go to Fridays at Newcomb, which starts at 1:00, and get actual food, and then get done at 3:00 and go off to Borders or...something of the sort; I have to get an on-campus job this year because tuition went up and my financial aid went down. THANKS A LOT TULANE.
Granted, I'll probably never be able to get an actual job in the real world, but maybe I'll write some interesting books...after I finish paying off the twenty I have to get this semester. (WHY? WHY? Last semester I had just shy of 30 books, this semester looks like it's going to give last semester a run for its money.)
ASTJ 203: Intermediate Japanese I (my last Japanese class ever)
CLAS 220 (H): Ancient Christianity (replacing CLAS 210 Intro to the Hebrew Bible)
ENLS 436: Antebellum American Literature (replacing ENLS 361 Creative Writing)
GESS 290: Inro to Gender and Sexuality Studies
GESS 289: 20 Hours Public Service component of GESS 290 (Tulane requires 20 hours of public service for freshmen and sophomores)
HISE 391 (H): The Russian Revolution (replacing COLQ 401 History of Voodoo; this was the one where I wouldn't get history credit)
JWST 322: Arab/Israeli Conflict
If you can't tell, I'm a liberal arts major. *grin* I haven't decided yet whether I'm going to major in English, history, or classical studies -- or some combination of the three; most likely is English and history with a classical studies minor -- but I'm trying to cover all my bases. Japanese 203 fills my last semester of foreign language, Into Gender Sexuality covers my public service component (I have to do another 20 hours junior and senior year), and Arab/Israeli Conflict fills the Comparative Cultures and International Perspectives requirement. I feel very practical. *beams*
Most days of the week I have three classes, most of them actually at the same time -- 9:30, 12:00, and 2:00 without a 12:00 class on Tuesdays but with a 3:30 lecture (Russian Revolution) -- except on Fridays, when I have no 9:30 and can thus sleep in until I have to go off for my noon Japanese class. Yay! Which means that I can go to Fridays at Newcomb, which starts at 1:00, and get actual food, and then get done at 3:00 and go off to Borders or...something of the sort; I have to get an on-campus job this year because tuition went up and my financial aid went down. THANKS A LOT TULANE.
Granted, I'll probably never be able to get an actual job in the real world, but maybe I'll write some interesting books...after I finish paying off the twenty I have to get this semester. (WHY? WHY? Last semester I had just shy of 30 books, this semester looks like it's going to give last semester a run for its money.)