French students are at it again! This time it’s all about insane new labour laws.
From the Guardian Unlimited:
It’s like a reprise of the May 1968 protests. The CRS riot police cruise the streets of the Latin Quarter in Paris, breaking up groups of protesters, and storm the Sorbonne where students staged a three-day occupation last week. Between 51 and 64 of France’s 82 universities are now disrupted by the wave of angry protests.
This is amazing, and although most of the protesting is overshadowed by senseless vandalism, I’m glad there are still countries in Europe where people are not too lethargic to actually go out and protest.
Check out this blog for some English language coverage of the protests!
Thanks to the outspread infrastructure of the University of Vienna, I am constantly discovering new places. This time it’s a park next to the university building that hosts, among other things, the tiny, tiny institute for numismatics. I’m attending a lecture there on medieval gold coinage, and although it’s quite an interesting topic, I’m one of a staggering eight students there, four of which are already retired, and, I believe, have devoted the few remaining years of their lives to the study of coins.
Well, click the below picture to get to the gallery. Please once again note that it’s mid-March, and the white stuff on the pictures is indeed snow.


Alright, so it’s not a give-away specifically for students, and it’s not exactly one give-away either, but I’ll still add it to the “give-away” section. It’s a door mat and slippers, all based on a pun involving a colloquial term for TV. What for? Digital TV.
This time my extreme procrastination came in handy, because I’ve actually thought about putting a “no ads” sticker onto our apartment door. Our neighbour has one, and she was slipper- and matless.
Sometime during the summer, the university installed so-called waterless urinals. I’ve read up on these things, and in theory, waterless urinals seem a really good choice. Here’s a quote from something I found in the vast plains of the Interweb:
[...] there appear to be three primary advantages of the waterless urinal: water savings; reduced maintenance; and improved hygiene.
Now, I’m all for water savings, reduced maintenance and improved hygiene. Too bad it doesn’t work that way. Ever since these things have been introduced, the restrooms smell even worse than they did before. Which leaves us in a bad place, considering that they smelled like a wet, dead cat before. So what went wrong?
According to manufacturers, bacteria need moist environments to do their thing, and since these urinals always dry out, there’s no place for them to sit. Ergo, no smell. Well, there is smell, and my educated guess is, that someone at the administration level at the university thought that waterless urinals are the best, because you don’t need any water, and since you don’t need any water you can actually totally forget about them and don’t have to make maintenance people go in there and fix them if they don’t actually do what they were promised to do, which is NOT SMELL LIKE DEATH!
It’s not surprising that just above the urinals, someone scribbled this Shiningesque message of despair. Murder indeed.
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