carew4@stanford.edu
testing testing testing
helllo?....helloooooo? ok, that's good for now.
My list of sites within the
2006 Dunstanburgh Project:
here's some info for your enjoyment. esp if you like horses
http://www.stanford.edu/group/set
okay, so I'm obsessed with Cerveteri and the Etruscans,
the dark ages and the legends of Arthur and his knights,
the phenomenon of Akenaten,
the archaeological history of astronomy
and the ruins of the earliest churches.
our ancestors knew less about the multitude of things we know about now,
(evolution, plasma)
but knew more about fewer things than we care to pay attention to.
(the identity of humans, the power of nature)
i think we forget to look at the anthropological history of our thought and
forget to analyze the origins of our beliefs
and that others have thought these things before us, before we've adopted them as gospel.
but i'm not sure,
and so i like to experience history through sites and the micro histories that surround them.
i have a red horse named Easy Street who lives in the Stanford Red Barn and
who's smarter and funnier than many people i know.
i grew up in the shadow of the twin towers and then upstate in the
countryside on the New York-Massachusetts border.
now i go home to a 10,000ft peak outside of Boulder CO.
i've wanted to be a vet,
a steeplechase jockey,
a doctor/pianist/travelling-archaeologist,
an astronaut, a sailor,
a jet pilot and a teacher.
i'm sticking to the doctor/pianist/travelling-archaeologist idea.
someone amazing gave me the chance to fly a glider over winter break
and i'm going to learn how to fly this summer.
or not.
i like Stanford in the summer and the small patches of green
you can lie on and calmly do homework.
i'm majoring in anthropology and pursuing the archaeological track,
and enjoying the amazing ferociousness that is my pre-med peers.
--
brainstorming site
2006 Dunstanburgh Project