I got to visit the Garden today as part of a lame "new teacher" thing. There
were a couple thousand of us there, which was pretty impressive. Joel Klein
(the Chancellor of the school system in NYC) was there, and the mayor was a
maybe, but didn't show. Randi Weingarten, the President of the New York UFT,
also spoke. She's straight out of a movie about labor leaders, I swear. That's
a good thing, though, because it gives me a sense that there's competence and
fire at the top of the chain of people who are looking out for my livelihood.
Weingarten actually has an interesting background: she basically studied to be a
labor leader ("industrial and labor relations" was her major at Cornell), went
to law school at Cardozo, worked as a labor lawyer (where, her bio notes, the
UFT was one of her clients), then taught in a Brooklyn public high school.
Anyway, the event was a mess, as it usually is when the Department of Education
is running things, and I'm not sure if I'm going to get my couple hours of "New
Teacher" credit for going. I don't know how big a deal it is if I don't, but I
didn't feel like messing around any more after listening to folks like Klein
talk for about two and a half hours.
My first trip into a basketball arena showed me how good the views are. Then
again, looking at the Knicks' website, I'm realizing that I was sitting in $214
seats. Only courtside tickets cost more. Moving up to affordable seats (maybe
the $30 ones?) would probably reduce my favorable impressions of basketball
arenas a lot. Oh well. I guess I'll have to get my law degree before I start
catching the Lakers when they come to town.
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