Friday, July 21, 2006

Day three...

So day three.... Survivor Architecture - light winds gush outside, though the sun shines through with a little chill in the exposed air. Thesis class remain calm, unknowing the horror to come over the next hundred days or so. She woke me up early this morning, pleasant... yet, i shat my self as the vibrate function continued to hammer on the bare wooden bedside table like a million wood peckers on a caffine high.

Lecturarers on strike set chaos through the air, the distant cries of help and discertainty ripple the natural flow of energy through this place. I dunno what i'm going to do, - sleep, sleep sleep...... whilst mild mannered students run down to the nearest watering hole for an early morning beer, its Amstel in the Kraal friday.

So wat is it i'm trying to do?? the ever evolving society, particularly our generation, has a changed set of needs, or rather different. What is the world we live in, what is this place?. It is different now, technology has altered urban settlements - that certain interaction of activities which once defined parts of cities, has changed in nature. Have traditionally beautiful spaces n places become a redundant or outdated function?? The dominant nature of place has changed with the social and political globalisation. Technology has affected society - socially, culturally, commercially, and in an industralist wager. A critical place, that uncertainty of future, as people are more informed, and strive to be through their curiosity. This place, a world of information exchange, Event through exchange, Trade through exchange...

Important Messages :

- as it is Friday, alcohol restrictions have been dropped in outer Port Elizabeth regions...
- Jono ran down the hot water again - this guy uses hot water!
- Carol was caught in the act labeling fellow student Tsolo ' Hans Solo' to the rolo, a " raging alchoholic".





Yes, it is this man!! I introduce Group Leader Lapham, fellow house mate, winner of most charitable archi to hobo's Award, pianist, bassist, falconist and surviving Zimbabwean. Sir Jona I. R Lapham.

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