ELEVENTH IN LINE




About This Blog
A blog about my life, universe, etc. At any given time you might find something endlessly interesting or just me ruminating on something else, which no one (not even myself) finds interesting. That's the way blogs go, I suppose. Anyway, I was eleventh in line, and you weren't. Hah!

About Me
Name:
Sarah
Age:
26
Residence:
Columbus, OH
Religion:
LDS
Political Score:
5.00/-2.15
Job:
Temp @ JPMorgan Chase
College:
Ohio State University
Majors:
Political Science, International Studies
High School: Home Educated
Hobbies:
Reading, standing in line for things, writing, research
Resume:
HotJobs
Email:
lloannna@gmail.com

About My Family
My mom is a
lawyer in Pickerington; my stepdad and dad are computer guys, and my stepmom (who works with my dad) is an engineer. My sisters are, in order of age, a photographer, an artist, and a person too young to have her own website. My brothers are, in order of age, living up north, and again, a person too young to have a website. At some point soon I'll be collecting links for my aunts, uncle, and cousins. ^_^

Message Services
(Please see the notes below the Comment Policy before sending me a message)
AIM:
lloannna
ICQ:
29395930
Yahoo:
lloannna



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Star Wars: Episode 3 Line (Hollywood)
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NaNoWriMo 2007:
My Novel: Cipere Lumen

Official NaNoWriMo 2006 Winner


NaNoWriMo 2006:
My Novel: The Manatee Conspiracy

Official NaNoWriMo 2006 Winner


NaNoWriMo 2005:
My Novel: Beyond the Cliffs of Kefira

Official NaNoWriMo 2005 Participant



NaNoWriMo 2004:
My Novel: sul Okyar tir taTz'ileea

National Novel Writing Month

Monday, September 22, 2003
 
WHAT IS ESSENTIAL TO BLOGGING?  
It seems that Daniel Weintraub's blog is now being subjected to editorial review before being published. I, like Glenn Reynolds, only read the Bee because of his blog. Not only do I just read his stuff, mind, I also read the news stories and other opinion pieces, especially when he points them out as something worth reading. On the one hand, I want to say that this seems contrary to the basic nature of blogging (which is extremely spontaneous, and often controversial or contentious); on the other, this is clearly exactly what one expects from newspaper editors (amongst other things, what kind of editor is going to argue that he's superfluous in ANY medium, let alone an emerging opinion vehicle like blogging???). Are their two natures diametrically opposed? Is it impossible to be a blogger for a mainstream newspaper? Or have we been making assumptions about what makes a blog a blog (and what makes a blog a good blog)? Let me think about it for a bit; I'll get back to you.

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Because only so many people can be eleventh in line.