Faculty Footprints
Professor Glynda Schaad
Yu Chung Sze Eric
Issue date: 2/17/10 Section: News
By Yu Chung Sze Eric
Editors note: This is a question and answer profile of PC faculty and staff, in an effort to provide another view of people you see around campus.
Q: If you could be any animal, which one would you, be?
A: An owl because in mythology it is associated with wisdom.
Q: What was the happiest moment of your life?
A: It was being asked to do a book signing and event at the
University of Washington (my alma mater) in 2008.
Q: What was the most embarrassing moment of your life?
A: It was my debut as the Whistler/Blackholm chairlift nerd. While I was exiting the chairlift my fanny pack got hung up on the lift. I couldn't get free and the chair didn't stop. It wasn't pretty and my children have never let me forget.
Q: What's your favorite movie?
A: 'Chariots of Fire'.
Q: What's your favorite book you've read?
A: 'Exodus' by Leon Uris and 'Across the Olympics Mountains' by Robert Wood.
Q: If you can have vocation to anywhere, where will you go and why?
A: I would love to return and visit New Zealand as well. After that, maybe Africa and South America and then China.
Editors note: This is a question and answer profile of PC faculty and staff, in an effort to provide another view of people you see around campus.
Q: If you could be any animal, which one would you, be?
A: An owl because in mythology it is associated with wisdom.
Q: What was the happiest moment of your life?
A: It was being asked to do a book signing and event at the
University of Washington (my alma mater) in 2008.
Q: What was the most embarrassing moment of your life?
A: It was my debut as the Whistler/Blackholm chairlift nerd. While I was exiting the chairlift my fanny pack got hung up on the lift. I couldn't get free and the chair didn't stop. It wasn't pretty and my children have never let me forget.
Q: What's your favorite movie?
A: 'Chariots of Fire'.
Q: What's your favorite book you've read?
A: 'Exodus' by Leon Uris and 'Across the Olympics Mountains' by Robert Wood.
Q: If you can have vocation to anywhere, where will you go and why?
A: I would love to return and visit New Zealand as well. After that, maybe Africa and South America and then China.

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