June 2009 Archive

Weekly Twitter Updates

June 29th, 2009
  • Very happy visa application for my in-laws to visit US approved today in Beijing! Look out America, here they come! Henry & Mom thankful too #
  • Reeling from the thousands of little decisions involved in trying to translate a book chapter from Chinese into English. #
  • It's maddening how imprecise Chinese can be, both the language itself & the styles of writers using it. Plus no perfect cognates for some 子. #
  • For example, si fa 司法 encompasses courts, prosecutors, some admin depts. It's used re Mini of Justice OR to refer to 5 law-related depts. #
  • Don't get me started on 规范 or 法制/法治. Ugh. Wondering what possessed me when I agreed to do this project. 真麻烦! #
  • In addition to my blog, I've posted about my negative experience w/ OZ Fitness on CitySearch, YahooLocal, Merchant Circle, Yelp & My3Cents. #
  • Just registered OzFitnessSucks.com. #
  • An unofficial directory of universities on iTunes: http://itunesu.pbworks.com/ (thanks, @AimeesBlog!) #
  • Maria Kalman on Thomas Jefferson: http://bit.ly/13gkZy #
  • Wash. state trade/goodwill mission in China. Lt. Gov. blogging @ http://www.overseaswithbrad.blogspot.com/ #

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Ripoff Alert: OZ Fitness in Spokane, Washington

June 26th, 2009

OZ Fitness in Spokane, Washington sold me two long-term membership to a 24 hour gym, then cut the hours of the gym by a third, eliminating the very reason I bought the expensive memberships. I asked for a refund. They refused. They claim that their form contract language allows them to do whatever they want, with impunity. I disagree.

Besides it being grossly unethical for OZ Fitness to sell a service, collect payment for that service, then cancel the service without providing even partial refunds, the language of their form contract does not in fact allow them to do that. It might allow them to cancel an occasional yoga class, take a piece of equipment offline for repairs or slightly adjust pool hours, but it certainly does not allow them to wipe out vast amounts of services they have sold in advance.

Even if OZ Fitness’ little adhesion contract did say that, I don’t think it would be enforceable. If it was, under OZ Fitness’ theory, they could sell 24-hour gym memberships, then after collecting payments announce that OZ Fitness will be open for only two minutes a day once a year, give no refunds yet suffer no consequences. That sounds more like fraud than a “contract.”

Besides publicizing OZ Fitness’ atrocious behavior, I am going to sue them. Interested parties, including aggressive plaintiff’s attorneys wishing to bring a class action, feel free to be in touch. Others, I suggest you stay away from OZ Fitness, unless you are willing to give OZ Fitness money for services they feel no obligation to provide.

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Update:

Created website to inform public about this merchant’s behavior. See Avoid OZ Fitness!

Weekly Twitter Updates

June 22nd, 2009

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FedEx: The World on Time but Only in “English”

June 16th, 2009

I’m a FedEX fan, but today I’m annoyed that they returned an international package to me because the “entire” address was not “in English.”

I wrote “Beijing, China” in English and gave them the appropriate numeric postal code (Chinese zip code), but the specific street address was in Chinese characters. That would of course be much more helpful once it gets to Beijing!

I did not just write the address on the form and dump it in a box; I handed it to an employee at Kinko’s who was able to figure the charges and accept the package using the city/province, country and postal code I provided. He noticed the Chinese characters on the other address lines (we chatted about him sending stuff to the Philippines), but he raised no concerns. FedEX does not charge different rates depending on where in Beijing a package is going. But nonetheless the next day a FedEX driver returned the package to me. Someone at FedEx had scrawled “void” on the air bill and taped a handwritten note on the package indicating the entire address must be in English.

When I called to inquire/complain/explain the rep tried to say all their agents in China are “bilingual” (which was NOT my experience during the five years I lived in Beijing!) so they can use the “English” address. She confirmed it is company policy to require that the entire address be written on the air bill “in English.”

Well, besides the fact that in China they do read Chinese most easily (hello?), putting an address in “English” can create ambiguity (and therefore potentially delays) even if their agents are indeed bilingual. Do they mean I should put the Chinese street address in pinyin, as in “Fu Hua Da Sha,” (or should it be Fuhua Dasha? And however one parses it, the problem remains that identical pinyin Romanizations can mean quite different things in Chinese). Or do they mean I should literally translate the address into Enlish, as in “Affluent/Rich/Prosperous (which?) China Building/Mansion (again, which?).”

Arghhh.

The US Postal Service can route a package to the right country and then let the local language address take over; how odd FedEx cannot or will not. They are inflicting on themselves and their customers an increased chance of confusion and delay, not it seems making things more efficient. The entire world does not use our alphabet. Deal.

I did confirm that one may write BOTH the “English” and Chinese address on a FedEX air bill, but having already gotten my parcel bounced back once, I opted to just put in the “English” version to avoid any more inane delays on this end. I can only hope there are none on the China side. I did what I could to avoid that.

I presume they will not try to charge me $78 twice.

This is one more reason to rely on email whenever possible!

Weekly Twitter Updates

June 15th, 2009
  • U Alabama in trouble w/NCAA for 4th time since 1995: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/06/12/alabama #
  • Calvin College in Michigan has semester-long program in China each fall: http://bit.ly/OGXn #
  • Someone’s family photo becomes ad, in Czechoslovakia, w/o family’s knowledge: http://bit.ly/f7kit #
  • Drafted proposal for creation of a minor in legal studies, sent it to colleagues for comment. #
  • Finished A.J. Jacobs’ Year of Living Biblically. Funny, insightful book, tho like the Bible itself, hard to finish cover to cover w/o breaks #

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Weekly Twitter Updates

June 8th, 2009

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