Professor Donovan Cohen

January 24, 2011 2:59 PM
Standing alongside the door that led to his cabin-esque classroom, Don Cohen made sure to give a warm greeting to all his students with a variant of ‘hello,’ as well as to let them know that they may leave their things in the classroom if they would like to but to all gather around him when they were ready for the lesson. He flicked his gaze up casually toward the open sky every so often, as if waiting for something to come into view, but he made no verbal indication that he was looking for anything.

Once everyone was assembled, the dark skinned made sure to make eye contact, silently willing everyone to quiet down and give him their attention so he could explain things. “Today we are going to be learning about the proud species of hippogriffs. I had the chance to become acquainted with one a friend of mine domesticated, and she is one of the more levelheaded hippogriffs I have met, so she would do fine in a classroom setting. Unfortunately, my friend took her out to fly around a while ago and they haven’t come back yet.” He shrugged noncommittally and chanced a quick, curious glance up again.
“I’ll just take advantage of this time to explain some important aspects of the creature, then.”

“Hippogriffs, if you’ve never seen one, resemble a combination of a giant eagle and a horse. They have formidable looking beaks and talons on their front legs and their wingspans are impressive. Probably the most important thing to remember about the creature is that they like to be treated with a good amount of respect. You must not – and I mean absolutely must not – make fun of them while they’re in range. If you need to poke fun at them, save it for after class when you’re in the building. I trust you all to be responsible enough to not agitate the creatures by now, but anyone I catch not listening will be dealt with.” He didn’t like having to strictly emphasize this, but it was imperative to get the point across seriously. “This is because hippogriffs like to defend themselves, but they won’t try anything if you don’t.”

Certain he had made his point clear, Don went on to the more pleasant aspects of getting acquainted with the creature. “In order to get on a hippogriffs good side, just follow a simple procedure. First, you slowly take a few steps towards them, keeping a couple of feet between the two of you, and bend over slightly in a bow – it’s alright to look at her, because you’ll have to see what she does next. If she bows, then feel free to walk up and touch her. If she doesn’t bow, then back away, wait awhile, and try your luck later – ah, here she is now.”

Coming down from the sky at lightening speed was a man who looked to be in the middle of his fifties riding on a adult hippogriff. They landed in front of the class and the man gently got off and stroked the hippogriff’s beak appreciatively as he looked apologetically at Don and the class. “Sorry for being late, I lost track of time. Did I miss anything?”

“Only the whole lesson,” Don joked before turning back to everyone. “Class, this is a former colleague of mine named Ray Laurent,” Ray waved slightly, looking slightly embarrassed, “and this is his hippogriff, Flora.” Said hippogriff clapped her beak at her name, almost as if to announce that she was in fact present. “Ray and I are right here so you won’t have to be afraid of anything going wrong so long as you follow directions. So anyone who would like to pet Flora please line up at a reasonable distance and approach her one at a time.” Making sure they did that, Don nodded at the first person in line when it was their turn to go up.

---

OOC: Alright, so feel free to god-mod Flora’s actions (i.e. if she returns your bow or doesn’t, how she reacts to being pet, etc) – I trust you guys to do it realistically. If anything goes awry, know that there are two trained professionals who won’t sit back and watch a student get mauled, so try to resist having your character injured via angry hippogriff. That said, tag Don or Ray with any questions, remember standard posting rules apply, and have fun with it :)
Subthreads:
0 Professor Donovan Cohen Let’s see how well you follow directions (Intermediate Years) 0 Professor Donovan Cohen 1 5

Alessa Hinckley, Aladren

January 31, 2011 9:13 PM
Over the summer there had been a change in Alessa. Whereas last year, she had been growing up and not really feeling it or wanting it, this year she felt mature, like a woman. This past summer, she had become betrothed to Wally Jacobs. Alessa thought she might grow to actually really like Wally someday, she liked him well enough now. He was very polite and not too bad to look at.

However, one thing that had not changed over the summer was Alessa's feelings about COMC. The Aladren was still pretty bored by it. She'd never had much interest in animals, unless they were stuffed or her dinner. Alessa couldn't wait until CATS just so she could drop this class along with DADA (the worst class in her opinion) and probably potions. The dark-haired girl didn't really have too many issues with Potions but it was generally not considered an appropriate classes for proper young ladies such as Alessa.

Another thing that had went on over the summer was that Alessa's cousin Xavier's wife Brooke was expecting a baby. The Aladren hoped, just like she had when Annabeth was pregnant, that it would be another boy. Alessa liked being the family princess, even though she was no longer the youngest overall. Still, at least it wasn't her parents or even when of her aunts and uncles. She could still be the youngest in her generation on that side of the family. Besides, her aunts and uncles were too old to have any more kids. So were her parents.

Also, Alessa was the only female grandchild and her mother had been the only daughter. Grandmother Ellen had only brothers. Both were the youngest in their family. It was a pattern and Alessa liked patterns. She wanted it to continue. It was irrational and strange but Alessa just had those thoughts sometimes. She thought about lots of weird things that others didn't.

She sighed as she tried to listen. Care of Magical Creatures just seemed so dull to her and was probably the most useless class for Alessa to learn about after flying lessons. The Aladren was proud to say that she had not been on a broom since then and rather never intended to go on one again.

As soon as the professor was talking about hippogriffs, Alessa got in line with the other students. As uninteresting as she found it all, she still had to do well in her classes. Alessa had previously managed an E in this course, despite lack of interest. Her worst grade was an A in Defense, due to lack of any athletic ability.

When it was her turn, Alessa approached the creature and bowed. She wasn't too disappointed when the hippogriff did not bow back. The fourth year stepped aside, to let the next person have their turn.
11 Alessa Hinckley, Aladren Pretty well, for someone whose bored 150 Alessa Hinckley, Aladren 0 5


Rachel Bauer, Crotalus

February 19, 2011 5:04 PM
There were times when Rachel wondered if trying to be a good student and a good not-really-but-pretending-to-be-pureblood girl was really worth it, that she shouldn’t just pick one and stick with that. Not only did it get exhausting, putting forth her best while seeming not to and trying to remember what she’d told people she made on assignments versus what she really did, but the clothes changes were just as ridiculous.

She would be willing to bet there were not ten other girls in the school who knew how tiring it was to have to pick out two outfits – one for classes, which, with Potions and Defense and Care of Magical Creatures usually not having the decency to all happen on the same day and the others having the potential to be just as messy, really did need to be something functional and with pants while still being fashionable and girly enough to pass muster, and the other for meals and the evening – out every day, then run back and forth to the dorm to change depending on the situation, and that was before she even got to her hair. French braids were not exactly quick or easy even with magic, and neither was re-straightening her hair, much less getting it into a precise degree of curl, once she was out of the classes where she had to wear it back. Shoes and bags also had to be matched to all that, and she had to remember to take jewelry off and put it on. And all that was before make-up, and all the shades going together with her coloring and what she was wearing….

Really, it was a wonder she didn’t mismatch more often, if only because of how much time it took to take everything out of one bag and put it in another and still not be late to classes, where she had to put forth her very best while looking like she wasn’t. No matter how often she repeated it to herself, though, it didn’t make her feel any better whenever she glanced down and, with a fresh wince every time, noticed she was wearing brown shoes with a black sweater.

It could, she knew, have been far worse. The sweater had some pink in the line of plaid going down the front, and she was able to keep her robes over most of it, so there was a good chance that a) no one noticed, and b) it wasn’t really that bad, since brown and pink went together. Still, though: she knew they didn’t go together, and she was not looking forward to spending the next hour trying to concentrate on Care of Magical Creatures when she knew she didn’t match properly.

Come on, Cohen, she thought. She knew the worst thing she could possibly do was pay attention to the problem, because that would draw other people’s attention to it, and that was the complete opposite of what she wanted to happen. Show me something interesting.

Shortly after that, a hippogriff landed. Rachel deduced, based on the previous lecture and its presence and him telling them so, that they were supposed to interact with it and blinked, impressed. All right, Cohen. That’s interesting.

She would have gone to the front of the line, but knew that would be bad form in so many different ways that she didn’t even want to count them, so she found herself a spot a bit behind Alessa. Alessa was a good pureblood lady for real, and Momma said she was engaged now, which even Veronica couldn’t also say, which made something she could do permissible for Rachel to do without too much fear of societal disapproval. Flora bowing back to her and not to Alessa was a little less ideal, but Rachel couldn’t help that.

She approached slowly, with her hands clearly visible, in case Flora felt skittish and was poised to run in case Flora felt like changing her mind, but when nothing bad happened, Rachel very cautiously touched the hippogriff’s neck and began stroking her. After another moment, she spoke softly to her, which also didn’t get an especially negative reaction. When she stepped away, it was almost reluctantly. That had been a little scary, but also very cool.

Now, though, came the social aspect of class. Sometimes Rachel wished there was less of it, but wishes didn’t make fishes, so she went over to Alessa. Alessa was a safe person to talk to, and someone Rachel needed to remain friendly with. “Hi,” she said, smiling as she approached. “Different lesson today, huh?”
16 Rachel Bauer, Crotalus I do my best, but it's hard. 154 Rachel Bauer, Crotalus 0 5

Alessa

February 28, 2011 10:33 PM
Alessa sighed as she looked around the clearing. She hated to stand up for a whole class period, it sort of bothered her to stand in one place for any length of time. The Aladren could sit, but standing was just...uncomfortable. However, Alessa couldn't sit on the ground either, as she would get dirty. Her mother had always taught her that proper young ladies didn't do so, anyway.

She smiled pleasantly as Rachel approached her. Alessa hadn't been able to find anything on her family in the last few years, so she figured the Bauers were a relatively new pureblood family that weren't in any of the geneology books that Alessa had studied relentlessly. Not that Rachel's blood really mattered that much to her anyway. She was merely curious to find out about a family she didn't know about and who they were related to and how.

Besides, Alessa couldn't fault Rachel at all for wanting to be one of the pureblood elite. It was always what her family told her was important. Though she also knew how exhausting it could be. Always remembering to use the right fork and look her best. What if there was only one fork at the table like it was here? Alessa had to use the same fork for everything then. Which was kind of gross. She didn't especially like using the same one for multiple dishes.

Still, the fourth year was grateful for her upbringing. Without her years of ettiquette lessons, Alessa would be lost. She would never know what to do in social situations. There were still people she felt very uncomfortable interacting with. Like the Pecari girls. They seemed to live by different social norms than the Aladren. They weren't at all what Alessa was used to, though she found Delilah pleasant enough and Nina must have had some proper training, it would be scandulous if she didn't. Still,the fourth was much more comfortable interacting with Rachel and Veronica.

"Yes." Alessa agreed. "Still not really my kind of thing, this subject rarely is but at least hippogriffs aren't disgusting." She hadn't cared too much about it rejecting her bow though she didn't know why it had. It wasn't as if it were a member of proper society, it was just an animal. It was people that her mother told her were important to impress, though Alessa could get away with a little bit more. She was a Hinckley, after all.
11 Alessa It really is. 150 Alessa 0 5


Rachel

March 02, 2011 2:30 PM
Alessa’s reply didn’t surprise Rachel, though it did occur to her – uneasily, as such thoughts often did – that it still wasn’t one she would have thought to give herself, if Alessa had been the one to initiate the conversation. It didn’t occur to her, most of the time, to be disgusted by the things she should have been, instead of just accepting them as part of the curriculum and being more interested in what she was doing than what she was doing it with.

Sometimes she wondered if something were wrong with her, something intrinsically wrong that she couldn’t do anything about. If some of the views she’d heard expressed – views which had given her a very unladylike desire to punch someone in the face – were right, and it was because she was a half-blood and that alone was enough to ever keep her from being quite like the people she associated with. Or if other views, which made marginally more sense, were right and she’d just been too old to really change when Alma took her in hand after her mother’s second marriage. Alicia was just as half-blooded as she was, after all, even looked a lot like Daddy, but if she had any problems, she didn’t let on about them. Alicia was perfect.

Well, no one was perfect. Rachel knew that. But Alicia behaved perfectly almost all of the time, and always seemed to know what the right thing to say, that everyone else important would want to hear, was, and she didn’t complain about it even in private, so she might as well have been. It was demoralizing, feeling inferior to someone who wouldn’t even come to school until the year after next.

“They are much more dangerous than the things we usually study, though,” she said. There. That was better. She was on a roll, handling the situation, all that stuff. “I’m really surprised that it’s allowed. Can you imagine what they must have to deal with in the Advanced class?”
16 Rachel But yet, here we are. 154 Rachel 0 5

Alessa

March 11, 2011 5:46 AM
"True." Alessa agreed. Hippogriffs were not too horrible really, she just wasn't that interested in animals. She kind of felt conflicted sometime. What kind of Aladren was she not to be interested in absolutely every subject but yet, as a pureblood girl, she wasn't supposed to be interested in certain things either. Most of them fortunately being things Alessa didn't care about anyway, such as Quidditch.

She really did wonder about her Sorting sometimes. Alessa supposed that she was intelligent enough, she had a rather amazing memory for things she was interested in but on the other hand there were some subjects she just didn't care for. Granted, in the case of Defense it was more that she disliked doing anything remotely athletic. And history was a very Aladren-ish subject to like, even though-much to Alessa's annoyance-it was no longer being taught at Sonora. She basically had rather a limited range of interests and tended to be obsessively good at those she did have.

Nor was Alessa as ambitious as some Aladrens seemed to be. Since she was old enough to understand, the fourth year knew what her life held. She would never work, and would automatically be married off to a respectable pureblood man. Alessa would never have to plot and scrape to get anything she wanted. Wally would see to that, as her parents always had.

She wasn't sure what House would have suited her better anyway. Certainly not Pecari. Alessa would have gone crazy in a matter of moments there. She could pretty much understand Tawny's...irritance at the girls in her house and why her cousin was always scowling. Alessa's desire to yell at Demelza Eagle, in particular, to shut up and sit still was probably what had kept her out of Teppenpaw as well.

Then there was Crotalus. Alessa could certainly have seen herself there. She viewed herself as respectable more than she did independent and loving to learn. The fourth year really only cared to learn about stuff that she was interested in. But she was in Aladren and that was that. It wasn't so bad anyway. Alessa had figured out that Aladren tended to have the second best rate of purebloods anyway.

"The things that are allowed at this school sometimes are pretty...unusual. Sometimes, I don't think the professors really think things through very well and somehow, they get away with it. The school board doesn't seem to go through things like they should." Alessa replied. "They probably do something really dangerous like dragons in the advanced classes. I don't really plan to find out as I've never been much of an animal person."
11 Alessa Yup 150 Alessa 0 5


Rachel

March 13, 2011 7:54 PM
Rachel grimaced her acceptance of the idea that sometimes, it seemed like the professors did not always think about the potential ramifications of lessons. Kate had been nearly crying after her first Transfiguration class of the year, talking about how they’d been asked to do animate-to-inanimate transfigurations on a creature with an exoskeleton. Rachel had already loathed Crosby, and her opinion of the woman had not been helped by the way Kate seemed to almost like her sometimes since Kate’s tastes had always been a little suspect, but she’d been hard-pressed not to find a way to slip something foul into some personal possession of the Transfiguration professor’s after that. She had a problem with people who upset her little sisters.

She knew that was a little hypocritical, since she and Kate hadn’t done much besides fight since their parents got divorced, but that didn’t change how she felt about it. She was the eldest. It was her responsibility to take care of the younger ones. There were times when she didn’t remotely like Kate or Alicia, but that changed nothing, either. They were her little sisters, which meant she was the only person allowed to be a jerk to them.

“I think I heard they did, once,” she said, referring to the dragons. “With Dakin.” She said that name only slightly more warmly than she would have Crosby’s. It was Dakin who’d gotten her high in class one time. Rachel didn’t like – well, no, that was a lie. She did like the idea of losing control completely, just being whatever it was she was without thinking, without pretending. But she didn’t like the thought of what the consequences of that would be, so she didn’t voluntarily engage in activities that would put her in a pre-rational state. And she certainly did not do drugs, or do things that could, if she turned out to be more allergic than the average guy to something normally only found in Australia, end with her permanently floating in the air. Only stupid people did things like that.

“But I don’t think I’ll be continuing this class, either. Transfiguration and Potions are going to be hard enough if Crosby and Fawcett are still here, and I don’t expect Defense and Charms to be all that easy, either.” Levy took her Defense seriously – not that Rachel disapproved of this, it was just how it was – and while McKindy was nice, that didn’t mean a lot of what they studied with him even now was easy. “Have you decided which subjects to continue yet?”
16 Rachel And moving along just fine. 154 Rachel 0 5