alt_padma: (Earrings)
Lav, may I borrow your gold hairband for Wednesday? The one that sprinkles gold-dust all down the back?

You'll never guess what happened just before Defence today. We were coming in and the 4th years were leaving. And Page asked if I'd step aside with him for a minute.

He asked me to work with him on his Future Interrogators' project for next term, and he wanted to know if I'd meet him one night this week to go over the case study choices and pick one. He thought maybe tomorrow because he's got Astronomy late anyway, but I asked if it'd be okay to meet on Wednesday between History and our Astronomy lesson - because then I'd have time to get the ribbon from you if that's okay.

Grant Page! Asked me! To spend time with him! And not in Ravenclaw Corner or at the library - I mean, the library will basically be closed by the time History Club is done. And if we stay up all the way until Astronomy that's almost like a real date. Almost. I wonder if he'll walk me there?

I mean, I'm sure he doesn't think it's a date. It can't be a proper date, really, can it? But still. He asked me.

The only thing that's bad is that talking to him made me a tiny bit late for Defence. I wrote Su Li a note to tell her why I was late and then Belinda wanted to see it too. And when she wrote back to ask me something about Page, Professor Lestrange saw and burst the note into confetti. I think he was mostly just disappointed that we weren't completely riveted to his lecture, but honestly, he could've been talking about defeating Dumbledore and we would have been just as distracted. At least he didn't read it out loud, or give us a detention, though, so that's okay. (That's why I wrote to him, in case you're wondering.)

Anyway, if it's okay to borrow, could you bring the ribbon tomorrow and I'll get it from you? I promise I'll give it right back.
alt_padma: (History Club)
is utterly mad. I thought last year's was bad enough but - well, I suppose with the electives in, we were bound to have less free time.

Finnigan, I'm trying to figure out if Wednesday is still best for History Club. I think probably it's no worse than any other. We've got to be up anyway, right, for Astronomy. So perhaps we ought to go ahead now and say Wednesdays.

But I heard from Electra Bobolis that they're considering moving Young Interrogators to Wednesdays. Have you heard anything about that? Anyway, if it's true we'll have to change up, but I hope not. I'd rather not have to shift everything round.

Oh. And you can tell that Weasel you dorm with that I saw him at breakfast. Parvati and Lav did too, from down the table. It's not funny, and it's in horrid taste. I'd tell him myself but we've no lessons with you lot today. I don't fancy he's clever enough to be taking Arithmancy.
alt_padma: (Default)
for the last time this year. We talked about the Model Wizengamot from last week, what we thought should have happened and whether we would have made different arguments and what the Ministry people said we should have done. (They had a lot to say, too. There were four people who came, by the way: Ms Victoria Vaisey and Mr Lawrence Bletchley, who sit on the Wizengamot, Mr Tertius Rigg, one of the Interrogators, and Mr Crouch, Sr, who works with the defence teams.)

Anyway, we talked about what we want to do next year, and we've all got some ideas about things to read over the summer, and maybe when we go to the Ministry we'll see the real Wizengamot chambers. We talked about process and maybe more cases through the term next year. But I dunno how many people will really do it, especially with our new courses starting.

As it's mine and Parvati's birthday tomorrow, we got parcels from home today, too. Mum said she'll send a cake tomorrow and we can share it out after supper, since I don't think too many people go to the debating society, at least not who would come, anyway. I asked Professor Vector and she said we could play music in one of the attics again, and since OWLs and NEWTs are over, Troy and Dames said they'd be happy to run a round of Mind-Reader. If you've never seen them do it before it's really funny. So that's the plan. Parkinson, I don't know if you'll be in the mood, but it'd be really good if you came, I think.

It's hard to believe that exams are right round the corner, but at least we can have the party before really concentrating on revising.
alt_padma: (Hm)
and it's sort of hard to think that it's been that long. It doesn't feel that long at all.

Our birthday is coming up next week, but now all I can think of is it'll be a month after. I guess it'll always feel like that, now. A little. My aunt says her grandfather died on her mum's birthday, and ever since her mum could never be one hundred percent happy about her birthday, because she had to think about her father, too.

Lav, I know what you mean about things changing. But I guess that's what things do. And it'll be all right, you'll see. Trust me, you don't know her well because she's not in your common room all the time, but Lovegood's not that much bother. No one pays her much mind in Ravenclaw, that's for certain.

The Model Wizengamot is really interesting, though. And what's really amazing is, I think they had planned that we'd be doing it basically on our own, you know, because of the quarantine. But since it's been lifted they told us that some real Interrogators are going to watch later this week and tell us what they thought of how we did the job. Yesterday was opening statements (each side gets to make a speech). Today we're hearing testimony from the witnesses - and the Interrogators get to try to poke holes in their stories or make them remember details that help prove guilt. The defenders also have time to try, but they don't have the same kind of latitude that the Interrogators have. I know that in the model, we're switching sides - I mean, there are two cases, so in the next case, the people being Interrogators will be the defenders - but I think it's much better to be an Interrogator than a defender no matter what the case is. It just seems like most people who face Wizengamot charges are guilty, anyway.

Though there are different kinds of cases, of course. This one's a pretty simple one.

It's based on the trial of a wizard named Stalk who was found guilty of imbe embezl embezzling a lot of gold from the Daily Prophet in the 1850's. And it was really clear that he did it, once he got caught.

But the case we're starting tomorrow is a little more complicated. It's about a witch who used to lure muggles to her cottage and then made them work for her. And when she was done, she used them for potions ingredients and things. And when she was caught by a bunch of muggles, they wanted to burn her, but she got away, but then the Aurors told her she had to stop because it was making all the muggles hunt for the rest of us. Well, obviously, that part's not a problem anymore. But then this all happened for real in 1690, so we've updated the case a little. Now she's stealing muggles from the camps, you see, and there's a part of the case where - well, I don't want to give it away. You'll have to come on Thursday and see.

Meanwhile, Ravenclaw Corner is mostly back. There aren't many fifth-years and the ones who do go there have been keeping themselves scarce this week, with OWLs. I guess Sandoval feels pretty good about her NEWTs, though, but she's probably just more relieved that it's over. Johns says she never wants to go through that again.

Oh, and Orion Sandoval says he's heard that they are allowing the Apparition instructors from the Ministry to come up next week, after the Wizengamot is over, to teach the sixth-years who are eligible for their tests. Troy says he reckons Sandoval's worried he'll splinch himself, but Dames thinks he's just excited.
alt_padma: (concentrating)
Monday we divided up into teams in Future Interrogators and practised the rules of order. In the Wizengamot you can't just speak up whenever you want, but it's not like in lessons, either, when the teacher asks a question and you raise your hands. The Mugwump (that's the head of the Wizengamot) asks the questions and the witness has to answer. There's also a time when they can make statements, and when the other side gets to examine. That means ask questions and try to prove that the witness is lying.

So we practised the things you can and can't say, ways to examine witnesses. We used the records from old cases, including this one called Ministry v Hooper. It was held in 1760 and it concerned a wizard who wanted to go about catching Muggles who were trying to burn witches (and wizards, but mostly witches). Of course, back then, the Code of Secrecy was in place, so the Ministry wasn't as strong as it is now, because they were sort of stuck pandering to the Muggles, which was ridiculous, of course. So Hooper was brought up on charges of vigilantism and performing magic in front of Muggles (since he would stupefy them and Obliviate them and everything else when he was capturing them).

We talked about the case and the laws as they were at the time, but then we turned it round and defended Hooper based on today's standards. It's no surprise that the Ministry lost, but of course, that was the point, wasn't it. They were wrong back then, but now that we have the Lord Protector and we've put Muggles in their proper places, we don't need to worry about doing magic in front of them. Today Hooper would have been a hero, and he should have been then, too, but things were ever so backward.

Anyway, I really like Future Interrogators. It's just that it's on Mondays, which are really long. But Mondays won't be so bad next year.

Oh, History Club this week was St Patrick's day, so Finnigan told us stories about St Patrick and how he cast all sorts of dead useful spells, including one that drove the snakes out of Ireland. It was nift.

Last owls

Mar. 4th, 2010 10:19 am
alt_padma: (concentrating)
Well, it seems like half of Hogwarts got a last owl this morning. You could barely see the Slytherin table for all the feathers.

And everyone's talking about the purebloods, of course. Mr Coote, the first one who was brought to St Mungo's, he's Olive Coote's father, so naturally she's a wreck. Sandoval said MacAvoy and Bundy are going to mind her prefect duties for a while - Coote's, that is - while she pulls herself together about it. It's got to be really hard not to be able to go see him. But I guess Electra Bobolis told her that it'd be that way whether or not she were home. I mean, they've locked the ward, so no visitors. But at least if she were home she'd be with her mum. It's really sad. We're all hoping for the best, really.

I guess everything rests on whether Mr Rookwood can fix the cure so it works on everyone, not just Muggles and mudbloods. But one thing I don't understand is if Black's Poison changed so that it could infect half-bloods (and now purebloods), then how can we be sure it needs the same kind of cure? I mean, the disease was in the water, right? And the food? But then when it started to hurt half-bloods it was in the air, right? So doesn't the cure need to change, too?

Well, I guess that's what Mr Rookwood is trying to figure out. Lucky he's much more clever than that Black, or we'd be in a lot more danger.

And of course, everyone's not looking forward to not getting more owls. It was bad enough not getting care parcels, but now?

It's a good thing we've got the journals. I suppose there's a lesson in that, sort of like Smith said. It's important to keep the journals handy so we can all stay closer together. Of course, I'd never leave mine behind, it's like having my friends and family with me, all the time. But some people don't seem to feel that way and they'd do almost anything to get rid of their journals. Even flush them down the toilet. I wonder if it's illegal to--what's the word?--deface, that's it--to deface one's journal?

I'm reading 'Ministry v Bloxam' for the model Wizengamot and there's a discussion in the court report about the things people did to her books to keep from being able to read them. Of course, in that case, it was upheld that it was a reasonable precaution, but then it was used as a precedent for 'Ministry v Diggle', but it didn't work. Because Diggle was trying to work a spell that would scratch out the Ministry seal on all official documents, because he didn't like Minsiter Spavin, and everyone knows that not liking a Minister isn't enough reason to try to make all his official parchments look like ordinary ones.

Anyway. It's interesting, how people use one law to make another one.

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Padma Patil

September 2015

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