Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!

Jack's Sudoku

RecycleJack Marine's picture
Date Time Thoughts
 7/13  14:29  That was more fun than I anticipated!
 7/13  10:47  Wow
 7/13  xx  Screwed up somewhere
 7/15  8:38  Felt fun
 7/15  8:27  Getting a better handle...
 7/15  9:15  Thought I got this done fastest, but it lied about the time!
 7/19  00

 Must have guessed...

7-21 13:11 It was frustrating, but still fun
7-21  9:40 Because it was a lot faster than the one before, it felt even MUCH faster than it actually was.
7-23 7:50 This was really fun, it started making sense!
7-23 7:55

This was even more fun, but I am disappointed it was five seconds slower!!

lol

Index Page

Comments

RecycleJack Marine's picture

My New Introduction to Jacob (Jack) Marine

My name is Jack Marine. I was born in the early hours on December 2nd, 1955 at the Albert Einstein Medical Center on Broad Street in Philadelphia. My mother had a difficult pregnancy, but she survived the ordeal! In another part of the Philadelphia area, another woman named Renee Ingber Stein gave birth to her baby several hours later on the same day: That was the birth of my wife, Shelley Robin Stein Marine.

When I was born, my parents lived at 1307 Paper Mill Road in Erdenheim, Pennsylvania. Erdenheim is a suburb of Philadelphia in Eastern Montgomery County. I do not know the name of my preschool, but I attended Erdenheim Elementary for my first year of kindergarten. I say first year because the following year I attended kindergarten again at the Oak Lane Day School, located in Glenside on Easton Road. That school moved to Blue Bell in 1963, when I was entering third grade and has coincidentlly shut down after this school year. I stayed at Oak Lane through fifth grade. My family moved into Philadelphia the same year. We moved from a spacious ranch to a spacious mansion. It was the largest house of anyone I knew and I had my own floor! My living area consisted of two bedrooms and a private full bathroom- all on the third floor of the house.

After leaving Oak Lane after completing fifth grade, I began attending Akiba Hebrew Academy in Merion. I stayed at Akiba through twefth grade, in 1974. I could write a book about my adventures in both schools. Looking back on my experiences in these twelve years, I know that a lot of the environmental part of "who I am" was created in these two schools. But I couldn't possibly begin to record these comments here.

After graduating high school, I attendec Boston University for two years and I completed my final two undergraduate years at The Philadelphia College of Textiles and Science, now Philadelphia University. After graduating college I lived in Tennessee for nine months, working for a clothing manuafcturer as an industrial engineer. I followed this position by going to work for my family's women's jeans business. I worked for Capital Pants Company from 1979 through 1997.  In 1985, I married my wife, Shelley and later had my son Maximilian in 1990 and my daughter Dakota in 1992.

In 1997, after our family business was liquidated and shut down, I went back to school at Cabrini College and earned my PA K-6 Certification, and later my Masters in Education. In 1998, I worked as a Teacher Assistant at The Shipley School. In 1999, I began teaching in the School District of Philadelphia. After three years, I resigned and began working at an area charter school. I taught in charter schools through this year. This fall I am starting a new job teaching at the Pen Ryn School in Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania.

I live with my wife and daughter in Bala Cynwyd. My hobbies include backyard organic farming, junk and antique collecting, and recycling. Our son Max, who will be twenty in September, is starting his junior year at Temple in the fall. Our daughter Koty will be a senior at Lower Merion High School. I have five turtles and several Madagascarian hissing cockroaches as pets.

RecycleJack Marine's picture

Sudoku

That Sudoku exercise was very invigorating. It just goes to show how sometimes we can be easily put-off by something that intimidates us. But after practice, many of these same things tend to produce the opposite effect- they actually create pathways (in the brain) that allow us to feel good!