Friday, February 23, 2007

And in other news......


I know there are more pressing things in the universe, but Christina Corrdimas' parents saw this on the news in New York, and it's pretty funny. click here to see the piano cat
I know it's not a monkey riding a dog, but for some reason animals doing human things is HILARIOUS. Now if only I could get Rocky to go get me a diet coke out of the fridge when I'm swamped with data coding. I must return to my Clinton School slavery. Karl Rove is coming on March 8th at 11am. If anyone wants to go, email publicprograms@clintonschool.uasys.edu.

I got some more info on Nepal this week. Here is the description of the I'm working with and what I'll be doing. I'm also staying with a Nepalese family! Here is the website for my placement www.cwish.org.np

  1. Hidden Child Domestic Workers (HCDWs) Advocacy program

CWISH has been involved with advocacy and rescue of hidden child domestic laborers since its inception. The dilemma is at once economic, political and cultural. There is a long standing tradition of having child domestic help within the households of the upper class/caste/nobility of Nepal. This is a common practice in the major towns, particularly in Kathmandu and Bhaktapur. Economic hardship has often pushed rural dwelling parents to send their children to town in search of work, food, and shelter. This has been particularly acute during the last decade of Maoist conflict as children were often sent to town, alone with an ‘uncle’ or trafficker, in order to escape Maoist induction into the armed conflict, which could occur as early as age 7.

The practice of child domestic labor, though officially declared illegal, was still widely condoned and practiced among the upper classes and among the King’s loyalists in particular. This is a complex issue as it has been considered by many as an act of charity/ care for children who would otherwise go without adequate food, shelter or security. The rights of these children are the central issue, with many cases of abuse within the employer family, inadequate or demoralizing living conditions, unregulated and unethical working hours and workload, no access to education, nor other basic human rights. Many of these children are lost to their families and do not know their home villages or last names. Others feel forced to continue their work in town in order to send money home to help their families. With the new democratically emergent government, the practice of child domestic labor may decrease, though economic hardship and firmly entrenched tradition assure that identification of these children and protection of their rights, including access to education and health care, is an ongoing critical need. The tasks of this placement may include the following.

A. Assess CWISH’s current informal education, employer intervention, and advocacy activities for child domestic laborers.

B. Assist in developing a strategy and implementation of programs in government schools, civic education, intervention, and advocacy on issues of child sexual abuse and child rights.

C. Expand the support program for child domestic workers who have been transitioned into government schools, including employer-intervention, counseling, and access to legal aide and health care.

D. Work to connect CWISHs research and advocacy programs with international organizations working in the fields of women’s and children’s rights, with particular focus on networking with other organizations involved in rescue and advocacy.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Ash Wednesday, the unfortunate day after Fat Tuesday


Yesterday I spent all day in Forrest City making strides toward our Practicum goal. I had to give a speech in which I called the hogs. It went really well. I must say, Regina and I have created one pristine freaking survey. I've finished all questions, a cover letter and the codebook and template for the dataset. I am freakin fabulous!
When I got back from the delta, there were hoards of people dressed up in crazy clothing all over downtown. Against my better judgement and the presence of my conservative business clothing David, Christina and I went to party downtown. It really made me miss New Orleans. It wasn't even close to the same thing, but there were people EVERYWHERE, which hardly ever happens, especially on a Tuesday. I ran into Jamie, and she and Ryan are getting married! We danced and sang and then David took us home.
I saw Blanche Lincoln talk about the Farm bill this morning. I think it would have been a lot better if I really liked farming. I really didn't understand a lot about what the farmers were talking about, bushels and limits and AGIs. I came home and turned on the TV. To my dismay, the only thing to watch during lunch was Jerry Springer "I married him so I could drink". After that I decided to post on my blog instead, so here it is.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Happy Valentines Day





Because my love-life is sub-par. I decided to celebrate true-fictional love with a happy valentines day post

Favorite Romance: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. I love this movie because it's about a believable couple, with real issues, in a completely unbelievable movie.

Favorite couple: I'm going to have to go with Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy.

Favorite Tragic Romance: I'm going to have to go with All the Real Girls. This movie is beautifully heartbreaking. I loooooooove it. I have a taste for romantic tragedy.

Please post your own favorites and I'll be in Non-profit financial management class during this valentines day, boooooooooo. Down with love, up with knowledge (that was not very convincing).

Monday, February 12, 2007

Joe betrays Arkansas, heads for New Zealand






Hey everyone,
I went home this weekend and had a really great time. Ashur and I drew a lot of pictures. He drew one of me where I'm giant, and yellow, and look like a pregnant alien. I guess I need to try harder to lose weight. I listened to 6 hours of a book on tape. I ate a lot of my mom's homemade pizza, and I got all my reading done for school. Jed is starting to talk. He can say papa, nana, mama, ball, bite, bottle, ashur, and uh-oh. He also is a regular bull-in-a-china closet. He currently has 4 knots on his forehead from running into walls, falling off chairs, bumping into table tops, and tripping straight into the floor.
David got me a nightstand for Valentines Day. This is good, because I was actually using a cardboard box labeled "books" for the past 5 months. Joe is heading to New Zealand tomorrow. I had a great time at his going away party on Friday. We'll miss you, Joe!

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Funny thing of the day

click here to laugh really hard

Snow Day.......I guess

This is how it looks outside my house on the "snow day"


Well it snowed less than 1 inch in Little Rock last night, but for some reason school is cancelled. I'm not complaining, it's just that I didn't have class today anyway, so all the work I was supposed to be doing today, I'm still supposed to be doing. It's also funny that all of the snow has already disappeared. It did free up my teacher friends for fun at Jamie's house, which was well worth the cold.

You know that Allstate commercial about multitasking? Mr. puts on his pants while driving? I'm miss flosses her teeth in the car. It's my worst habit, by far.

Ben Nichols and Cory Brannan are delighting not-so-snowbound Little Rock with their presence this evening. Hallelujah. It's also supposed to snow more tomorrow. Maybe I'll break a piece of furniture and use it as a sled. My dad used to tie a car hood to the back of his truck and pull us on it. It was the most fun thing on earth. I really wish I could be doing that right now.

My niece is trying to come into the world a little too soon. PJ is due April 1st, but she's already having contractions. It's not that great out here, stay in as long as you can, although I will definitely spoil the crap out of you.

I now have to get back to reading financial management and listening to Bonnie Raitt's "I can't make you love me" on repeat. Peace

Monday, January 29, 2007

What's New?

When did I become the kind of girl that likes to wear heels? I think I'm being molded to become some non-profit public service mogul. I have also become the kind of girl who doesn't mind white dog hair all over every coat she owns because it means Rocky has jumped all over her in loving adoration every time she comes home. I've been thinking about college lately, and I miss it. I know that we've grown up now, and we can't go lay on the grass at toadsuck and talk about boys, or run into the Donaghey house with pantyhose on our heads and steal Blue's chess game, or go to a safari/rockstar/halloween/Elvis has left the building party every week and once again proclaim that "THAT was the best party we've ever had." Even though those times are over, I did see 6 retired women do a cheerleading dance to Little John as the Nets' senior dance team on Good Morning America today, so...good times can be in our future.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Slacker


I have officially decided to be a slacker this semester. Last semester I earned a 3.92 and I've decided that this semester, I need not aim so high. I was so busy and tired. I could have been much happier with a 3.00. Anyway, school started last week and I'm taking Financial management for non-profits (boring boring boring, the book is almost 800 pages long, and yes, I need to read ALL of it: unfortunately, I need it), foundations of rehabilitation counseling (laws, rules, theories, and strategies for improving the lives of individuals with disabilities) and practicum. For practicum my group is headed to Forrest City at least once a week to develop a census of all organizations serving youth, and where they are on this obscure youth organizing scale. We have to develop surveys and run analysis. The weird thing is, I actually like that statistics stuff. Thank you Ms. Susie Booher for turning my hatred of math into a love for statistical data analysis. I like research; I'm a total dork. I'm sure I'll be busy; I'm sure I'll be tired, but I won't be trying so hard, so hold me to posting on this blog, hanging out with you, and attending various activities where having fun is the goal, not saving the world. Goodbye Debbie Downer Chandle, hello fantastico. Here is a picture of fantastico and beth from a happier time.

P.S. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BETH AND KRISTEN! I LOVE YOU LADIES.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

A little bit of 80's childhood nostalgia


So, I'm out of school until Tuesday and I've kinda run out of things to do to keep myself busy, since I'm done sulking about my broken engagement. For some reason or another I began thinking about this 80's movie I'd seen as a kid. All I could remember was that it was scary, and had a little baby unicorn and he saved a girl from an evil baron-type guy. Well, thank god for internet. After I searched this a little, I found that several other people were on a quest for said movie. It turns out that it is one of the first anime dubbed movies released in the US and for some weird reason the Disney channel picked it up and showed it a few times between 81 and 85. The fact that I remember this movie and could have been no more than 4 years old is quite astounding. It's called Unico, and after so many people looked for it for so long, some kind soul posted it on Youtube to bring a little tear to my eye.

Unico is a young unicorn who has the ability to make people around him happy. Whether it's because of his personality or the power in his horn, it angers the gods, who think only they should decide whether people are happy. They tell the West Wind to take Unico and abandon him on the Hill of Oblivion, but instead she tries to hide him from the gods. Realizing the betrayal, they send the Night Wind to finish the job, forcing the West Wind to continually hide him.

She hides him in places where he comes into contact with a child-devil, a cat that wants to become a girl so she can become a witch, and an evil baron guy that rules the forest and tries to kill the ex-cat-girl-wanna-be-witch by getting her drunk and tying her to a rooftop. Unico tries to stop him but the baron turns into a giant evil jackal skeleton after Unico knocks him off to roof only to be impaled on another roof. It's a thrilling bit of the creepy cinematic experience I know all of us had growing up in the 80's. If you would like to watch the entirety of the Fantastic Adventures of Unico click here

Now that you all know my favorite childhood movie, Please list your most memorable creepy movie so I can attempt to find it and watch it on Youtube.

P.S. If you like movies about disturbing fairytales, you should all go see Pan's Labyrinth. It is a foreign film about a strange little girl. It's playing at Marketstreet on the 26th. Here's the website.

Friday, January 05, 2007

Speakers for 2007

Here is the list for Clinton School speakers in the spring. I do not have the dates yet, but they are in order from January to May. You can email publicprograms@clintonschool.uasys.edu, or call 501-683-5232 if you want to go.

Brian Atwood, dean of Humphrey School at University of Minnesota and former director of USAID

Tyra Banks, model, actress and host of The Tyra Banks Show

Helaine Barnett, President of the Legal Services Corporation, a federal nonprofit equal justice organization

Mary Berry, University of Pennsylvania professor and former chair of the United States Civil Rights Commission

Myles Brand, president of the NCAA and past president of Indiana University

President Fernando Cardoso, former President of Brazil

Senator Saxby Chambliss (R, Ga.)

Patrick Cook-Deegan, senior at Brown University and co-founder of the Cycle for Schools project.

Richard Dawkins, Oxford University Professor and best-selling author of The God Delusion

Mauro DeLorenzo, fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank

Alan Dershowitz, Harvard law professor (video conference)

Roger Dow, CEO of Travel Industry Association

Alan Eastham, US ambassador to Malawi

Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D, Ill.), Chair of the 2006 Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee

Sharon Farmer, former White House photographer

Deborah Fiser, dean of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

Lori Gates-Schuyler, University of Virginia professor and women’s rights expert

Dan Gediman, NPR’s This I Believe senior producer

Dan Glickman, President and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America

and former secretary of Agriculture

Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation and past president of Brown University

Senator Chuck Hagel (R, Neb.)

Richard Holbrooke, former US ambassador to the United Nations

Sandra Hubbard, filmmaker of The Lost Year of 1958-59, a documentary on the closing of the Little Rock public high schools following the 1957 integration of Little Rock Central High School

Betsy Jacoway, author of Turn Away Thy Son: Little Rock, the Crisis that Shocked a Nation

Chris Johns, editor of National Geographic magazine

Joel Klein, chancellor of the New York City Public School System

Nick Kotz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Judgment Days: Lyndon Baines Johnson, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Laws that Changed America

Senator Blanche Lincoln (D, Ark.)

Matt Miller, Fortune Magazine columnist

Cynthia Nance, dean of the University of Arkansas School of Law

John Podesta, President and CEO of the Center for American Progress and former White House chief of staff

John Prendergast, head of the International Crisis Group currently co-authoring a book with actor Don Cheadle, star of Hotel Rwanda

Mayor Luke Ravenstahl, 26-year-old Mayor of Pittsburgh

Wendell Rawls, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and director of the National Center for Public Integrity

Karl Rove, top advisor to President George W. Bush

The Most Rev. Katherine Schori, first female bishop of the United States Episcopal Church

Steve Scully, senior executive producer and political editor for C-Span

Donna Shalala, president of the University of Miami and former secretary of Health and Human Services

Will Shortz, crossword puzzle editor for the New York Times

Jeff Smith, Missouri state senator and subject of the documentary, Can Mr. Smith Still Go to Washington?

Gene Sparling, “In Search of the Ivory Billed Woodpecker”

David Steiner, CEO of Waste Management

Thomas Stewart, editor of the Harvard Business Review

Renee Sotile and Mary Jo Godges, filmmakers of Christa McAuliffe – Reach for the Stars, a film about the teacher who died on the Space Shuttle Challenger

Larry Summers, former Treasury Secretary and past president of Harvard University

David Wilhelm, president of Woodland Venture Management and past chairman of the Democratic National Committee