FeelingElephants’s Weblog

28 December, 2007

Article on Bubble Zones (Clinic Escorting)

Filed under: CMU news, Escorting, Judicial Branch, politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 9:22 pm

From a strictly non-legal perspective comes the article entitled Choice Words. It’s a personal opinion on the value and social use of Bubble zones. A Bubble zone is an ordinance (usually handled by individual cities) that declares some area out of bounds for protesting. At the Planned Parenthood clinic I volunteer at, the Bubble zone has two aspects.

PS: here is a more factual Post-Gazette article.

The simple sum-up of why I believe Ms Brown’s First Amendment Claim is erroneous is that 1) the statute she is seeking to overturn is content neutral 2) she is mistaking a Manner of speech restriction for a Speech restriction (the first is allowed [think bull-horns being banned in residential neighborhoods by nuisance ordinances] and the second is not).

1) protesters cannot stand within 15 feet of the clinic entrance. Since the clinic entrance is on an open city street this could theoretically get awkward if Planned Parenthood protester’s weren’t terribly easy to recognize (ie, because tons of ordinary people walk through that special semi-circle en-route to the bus or the bakery). However, as every protester I’ve seen has a) their hands full of literature or b) is carrying a truly large and/or disgusting sign it is fairly easy to enforce.

2) There is a 100 foot area (also measured from the clinic door) where advocates of any viewpoint must respond to requests to back up my moving back 8 feet from the person who asked. I was trained that all kinds of language could serve to ask a protester to move away, but the most common is probably “get away from me!”.

As an escort I could, but don’t, ask protesters to move away from me. See, if they’re focused on me, maybe some people will get into the clinic without being hassled. We never engage and we never ask for attention other than by standing out there in our Planned Parenthood Jerseys, but it is always nice to see people get into the clinic without our help. In fact on my last weekend, every single person came in without needing our help–they were empowered and did it themselves.

On the argument mentioned in the article that a protester (the one suing is Mary Kathryn Brown) is not able to access his or her intended audience I would question as an accurate assesment.

On the 15 foot painted line which mark where protesters can and cannot go, I know from personal experience it is absolutely possible to discern the messages of the protesters from just in front of the clinic doors. Though I am far from an expert, I remember no precedent which requires privately run organizations to allow all speech inside of their facilities. In fact, the very doctrine of designating a space a public forum seems to imply that, unless specifically designed as such, most spaces are not open to all messages and forms of dicussion.

On the 8 foot requestable personal space bubble, I believe that protesters are prevented from a method of distributing their speech rather than the act of speech by the 8 foot personal space bubble. The method which I assume Ms Brown is wishing to engage in is commonly called sidewalk counseling, where a protester walks very close to a patient and speaks to them in a low and hopefully sincere voice. It is this sense of private counsel which Ms Brown and her fellow protesters lose if they are asked to move back, not the ability to convey their messages.

The only other possibility is that Ms Brown is hoping to physically influence, ok, let’s just say it, intimidate, patients coming into the clinic. Protesters sometimes ring the 15 foot circle, forming a seemingly impassable wall (though they are legally banned from forming “human chains”) of yelling people and ugly signs. There are protesters whose choose to wear very disturbing jewelry (a fetus crucifix is one example) which I’m sure is quite upsetting in its detail (and the First Amendment absolutely protects all of the disturbing, upsetting and ugly signs. I am firmly of the belief that all content-based censures are violative of the most basic human right to speak and be heard). However physical intimidation is an action and no speech and therefore is not covered by the First Amendment, or any aspect of the United States Constitution.

The crucified fetus’s message may be most effective when viewed from within 8 feet; however is a speaker chooses a size (and in Ms Brown’s case, volume) of speech which is ineffective, it is not Constitutionally required that the Government support that speech.

On two anecdotal notes I would like to say something.

1) In my limited time at Planned Parenthood I have never heard or seen anyone invoke the 8 foot rule. I have seen protesters step between a woman and her companion to try and separate them, and I have seen protesters specifically set down outside of the 100 foot area where they may be asked to back up.

2) I have stood inside the 15 foot circle and had protesters yell in their best stage voices from the full 15 feet away and I could hear them clearly. I could also hear them quietly saying the rosary and greeting each other good morning.

As I see the protesters have no First Amendment right to have their voices carry inside of the clinic (would the clinic be required to leave its doors open on 20 degree mornings and never install soundproof glass if this was held as true?) since their voices carry just fine to everyone inside of the 15 foot circle I see no First Amendment issue here.

Inspirational Quote:

Clover - Three leaf relates the holy trinity. Four leaf relates good luck. - Sinead Toolis Byrd

27 December, 2007

How to make your first website (4 of 3 How Tos)

Filed under: politics-tech — feelingelephants @ 2:40 pm

This, like many blog posts, came out of an excellent email discussion with a beloved relative who is setting up her first webpage. Just like the Blind Men and the Elephants I saw very large problem and tried to break it down a little. Therefore I came up with this series of questions which are designed to help the person answering them decide what kind of website they want.

  1. What will be the focus of the web page? Images? An Essay? Statistics?
  2. How often would you like to update it? A blog is updated daily while
    most small business websites and school websites are updated monthly
    or even yearly.
  3. Who do you want to find it? Will is be a resource for women in art? A
    family interest homepage complete with family stories? A blog for
    people who are interested in listening to what you have to say?

These are front end questions. The back end (admin) thoughts behind them are:

  1. How much memory will you need? Would it be better to create your own domain and host it yourself?
  2. What level of ephemerality should I (as an admin) expect? Blog posts are not always perfectly designed or edited because they are like newspapers and pamphlets–ephemera. However a page that is going to be written once and rarely revised, for example that of the Supreme Court of the United States, had better be exactly what the author wants from the get-go.
  3. This question has a lot to do with how a webpage is marketed. The title will influence who looks at it. If it is a family site, does it even need to be public? If it is a resource for a particular group, they perhaps some simple notifications to relevant groups that the website exists might help the author’s information get out.

Here’s the result at eleanordickinson.wordpress.com

Inspirational Quote:

Saying what we think gives us a wider conversational range than saying what we know. - Cullen Hightower

25 December, 2007

Facebook takedown notice for overpopulation (”Attention all Facebook membeRs.”)

Filed under: news, open source, politics-tech — feelingelephants @ 4:15 pm

I recently received this Facebook message from a conscientious friend:

Subject: dont want to be deleted but ill feel like a loser if its a fake

Attention all Facebook membeRs.
Facebook is recently becoming very overpopulated,
There have been many members complaining that Facebook
is becoming very slow.Record shows that the reason is
that there are too many non-active Facebook members
And on the other side too many new Facebook members.
We will be sending this messages around to see if the
Members are active or not,If you’re active please send
to other users using Copy Paste to show that you are active
Those who do not send this message within 2 weeks,
The user will be deleted without hesitation to create more space,
If Facebook is still overpopulated we kindly ask for donations but until then send this message to all your friends and make sure you send
this message to show me that your active and not deleted.

Founder of Facebook
Mark Zuckerberg

This is a scam. Here are one, two and three blog posts about it.

A cheap and easy way to see if something like this is a scam is to analyze the writing. There are capitalization errors, spacing errors, grammar errors and paragraphing errors. Also, and this is more fiddly, chief executives do not sign their emails this way. Generally the format for professional email is:

Name of Professional
Name of Organization
Position in Organization
Phone Number and Extension

To use an example from someone I know. “Founder of Facebook” is not nearly formal enough. Also, have you ever received a message posted to your wall from Facebook? The wall, as I understand it, is for Friend to Friend communications. Facebook the company would email us–it certainly has the capability.

Again fiddly, but think about this message from a technical viewpoint. Facebook is run on servers. What do you do when you need more space on servers? You buy more servers! Google and MySpace use signifigantly more memory than Facebook and it would be a silly business decision for Facebook to start alienating its members by threatening them with take down notices.

Finally, the line “If Facebook is still overpopulated we kindly ask for donations” should tip you off. This is not how major companies solicit funds. Make no mistake, Facebook is a for-profit company and makes loads of money off of the adds it puts on your pages. Wikipedia can ask for money because it’s not a for profit company. Facebook employees and Mark Zuckerberg are making tons of money off of us–and since we like their service, that’s ok. However there is no circumstance when Facebook would ask for money by posting on your Wall.

Hope you have a great Solstice!

Inspirational Quote:

Beer is living proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. -Benjamin Franklin

24 December, 2007

How to plan a party fast (3 of 3 How Tos)

Filed under: Uncategorized — feelingelephants @ 9:49 pm

Implicit here are a few assumptions.

1) You have people to invite. My rule of thumb is every person I invite should know at least 2 other people who I am inviting. Therefore I don’t spend my entire party taking care of someone, and if one person they know is having a snit, no one person is left by themselves.

2) You have a space to have a party in. This is serious. Though parks may work during the summer, a space for the party should fit the people. My parties are always more like LAN parties than American Pie Parties. But since my friends are a mix of tech geeks and other kinds of geeks, if there is going to be gaming I have a separate non-gaming room. I am in my parent’s house and use the kitchen to make popcorn and the fridge to keep sodas cold. The gaming room is also a TV room for movie watching. If it is a sleepover (ie, for New Years) you must have a quiet room for people to go to sleep in if they want. Depending on the ownership of your space (ie, if you have parents who like sleep) you should discuss *at least a week before hand* the hours of the party, the hours people will be awake, and the acceptable behavior of guests.

3) You have a day. If you have the set up and 1) own your own house or 2) have very accommodating parents and 3) friends who don’t schedule things far in advance you can do a nice party with only a day or two’s notice.

Understanding these assumptions, here’s your time line and shopping list for a fictional birthday party.

A day or two before the party:

Set up an Evite. You can do a version of this using Ruby on Rails or any other scheduling website, but I have Evite to be unobtrusive and low maintenance. You will need all of your invitees emails (note, keep these for future parties. Having one central list will save you time next party around). Use the map option on the Evite; also, take some time to figure out how to get to your house/space by public transit and with a car. It may be obvious to you, but if your friends don’t come over often, help them out.

Ask a friend to co-host. Having a friend to bounce ideas off of will help (also s/he can show up and help 1) keep you calm 2) help you finish setting up food before the party starts.

Buying supplies.

First check out what you have at home–however never underestimate how much your friends will eat. This time of year there should be cookies, fruit cake and candy. Put them out in decorative bowls when the time comes and voila! pretty food.

Shopping list:
    Cake: (bake at home or buy in grocery store)Chips: (1-2 big bags)Salsa: 2 jars, 1 spicy and 1 mild

    Vegi or fruit platter: (they sell the entire thing at the grocery. Just buy it. Chopping carrots as the guests come in is a bore.)

    Soda: I figure 1-1.5 sodas per person. So for a party with 20 people coming, get 4 six-packs of soda and 1 six-pack of root beer.

    Popcorn (buy the bottles full of kernals and pop them on the stove if you have time. If I remember right, 2 tablespoons of butter or oil per 1/4 cup unpopped kernals. You can also shake up 1 tsp of cayenne pepper or 1 tsp of cinnamon with the popped popcorn to make it more interesting).

    Ice cream. Buy about 2 quarts. If you have toppings at home (chocolate sauce, honey, Maraschino cherries) use them. They are extremely optional.

Pack everything into the fridge. All sodas do not need to go in now, you can do 2 six packs at a time to always have cold sodas on hand.

The night before the party.

Double check with co-host and space owner (if that’s you, check with yourself). See who rsvped, call people you really want to attend who have not, answer last minute questions from intivees. If you have any messages (ie, can someone please bring a Wii, mine is in China) send them out before about 7pm the night before. Friends will answer a call late, but try to avoid imposing (this one’s hard because sometimes issues are only discovered late. That’s why being flexible is important).

Figure out where you’re ordering pizza from. They should deliver and you should like their pizza. NOTE: if you have any celiac, dieting or diabetic friends take this into account. For celiacs (no wheat orother gluten grains) offer to make them a great salad, or if some canned soup would be ok. Dieting, maybe order salad with the pizza or make the party a potluck (this works less well with teenagers). For diabetics, check with them, but make sure you have a supply of diet and caffeine-free soda.

Before you go to sleep, pick out your outfit of the party. It’s easy to get over stressed about how you will visually present yourself at a party and it’s better to plan it out before hand.

The day of the party (party goes from 5pm-11pm).

9am.

Clean your space and decorate. Move furniture (more chairs where you think they’ll be needed). Move things with a eye to how you want patterns of movement to exist. If you want everyone to sit around a room, place the chairs in the circle. If you want a few people to game, put a few chairs in the room near the console/tv and more around the edges of the room. If you are doing any cooking, so it in the morning so you can be clean for the party.

12pm.

Eat lunch. This is your party and you will need all of your strength to be a kind, courteous and graceful host.

1pm.

Co-host comes over, helps final clean-up and decorating.
With or without co-host. Get an idea of what kinds of games and movies you would like to have going on at the party–however remember to be flexible. Just because your dream date is watching Firefly, doesn’t mean all of your friends don’t want to watch Family Guy. By putting some thought into what you want to watch before hand, you avoid watching something you don’t like. How does a successful dictator stay in power? If democracy cannot be avoided, only allow those candidates on the ballot who you like. Same goes for party planning.

4pm.

Everything for the party should be done by now. Take a quick shower (if more relaxing is needed, start at 3 or 3:30pm with a bath or a good novel) to get all of the cleaning and cooking feeling off of your skin. Get dressed in the outfit you picked out the night before.

4:30pm.

Get out dishes for popcorn, chips and salsa. Fill them up with snacks. Place them in your snack area (where pets do not have access to it). Make sure your sodas are chillin’ and your tv/gaming console plugged in. You can take vegis out of the plastic container if you want them to be pretty (my family has a large supply of serving container. Feel free to leave things in plastics and bags if that’s not your style).

NOTE: here’s some social engineering advice. If a bowl looks over flowing people will eat more out of it. If cookies are perfectly arranged no one will want to disturb them. People eat more out of large serving utensils. Any be green conscious: soda cans can be recycles but the plastic cups you will use with large soda bottles cannot. Use real plastic plates and cups instead of disposable ones. Bike to the store. Whatever it takes.

5pm.

Guests arrive. I’m always a little off schedule so I’ve developed a great ice-breaker/social save. The penalty for guests who show up early or exactly on time is they get to help me finish setting up. This gives us all something to do with our hands while we talk and makes guests feel part of the party. This is also a good way to get help with cleanup, because a guest who knows your kitchen will come in handy when it’s time to serve food.

6pm.

Most every body should be there (they will straggle in with regularity for about an hour and a half after the official starting time of the party). Round everyone up and ask them about pizza preferences and order the pizza (for 20 people I would plan 3 larges. This is a good size because it allows for 1 all vegi, 1 all meat and 2 1/2s whatever random combos my friends will like this time).

7pm.

Start a movie and eat pizza. This can be tv episodes and fairly short, or feature length. Leave it up to the guests–be flexible. If guests don’t want to watch, make sure there are cartoon books or other coffee table books in another room to keep them occupied.

NOTE: instead of a movie you can play games, Risk, Cranium or Wheel and Deal (a family favorite) or video games. I think it’s generally good to not force everyone into conversation for the entire 6 hours. Movies let people rest a bit in between socializing.

9pm.

Movie’s over, time for cake and presents (if its a birthday party). If not, time for ice cream. There’s time for another movie or for people to break into smaller gaming and non-gaming groups. Let the guests dictate how it goes from here.

10-11pm.

People will start getting picked up by their parents or driving off. Have a movie or something non-committal (ie, not Lord of the Rings Risk) going on if possible. See everyone to the door and make sure they are getting picked up by the right people.

11-12pm.

Last stragglers are leaving, co-host will help start cleanup. Finish cleanup before you go to bed–it won’t be any prettier in the morning. Let any locked up pets out.

The biggest rule to party planning is Be Flexible. If all of the food went bad because of a power outage, well, you will have popcorn. Ask a few select unaffected friends to bring unspoilt goodies and have a party by candle-light. If an ex-shows up who you can’t deal with, tell your cohost and s/he will keep him/her occupied and out of your hair.

The only thing a party cannot recover from is a stressed out host. It makes the party no fun for anyone, least of all you. If you’re getting stressed, take a break. Go to the bathroom, go get a cold drink of water, even lie down for five minutes. Just stay cool and everything will be fine.

For more party stuff, see How to be a party girl by Pat Montandon. I read it in middle school and it has shaped how I run my parties. Great advice from a cool lady.

And have fun!

Inspirational Quote:

When Solomon said there was a time and a place for everything he had not encountered the problem of parking his automobile. - Bob Edwards

21 December, 2007

Sunshine’s Killer Zebra recipe (unendorsed!)

Filed under: Recipes — feelingelephants @ 3:10 am

Hey all,

I’m in the midst of planning my birthday party and decided that I wanted to make my own cake. Really, I thought of all of the things I was getting for the party (chips, salsa, vegi/fruit plate, pizza ordered during party, popcorn with cayenne pepper, sugar or cinnamon, sodas) and felt there was a hole in my preparation. I wasn’t making anything. So it came to me I could do one of my very own recipes: Sunshine’s Killer Zebras. They are Sunshine’s because of one of the best books I have ever read (over and over again) Sunshine by Robin McKinley. You may know Ms McKinley from Beauty or Rose Daughter fame, or maybe from her two books (The Hero and the Crown and The Blue Sword) in Damar (though it can be argued all of her books are in Damar. The evidence is there.

However Sunshine is something special. Written in the first person, from the get go Sunshine (the main character’s name/nick-name) is individual, perfectly herself and enviable in her unique world. Anyway, there are tons of places to get good reviews about Sunshine, I’ll skip to the chase: last year after/in the middle of reading Sunshine, I was running Shrove Tuesday pancake supper for my parent’s church. I had a wonderful group of people working with me, many of whom were younger than me and therefore always hungry. Wanting to reward and encourage them as they worked to help make the supper a success (which it was) I make them Sunshine’s Killer Zebras.

That’s sort of the wrong way to expalin it. I had one of those mad creative flashes that leave you surrounded by new drapes at 10:30pm at night, or covered with dirt from the new border you just laid in the garden, or with a new and interesting excel sheet to organize the classes you’ll take for the next four years. Well, this particular mad creative flash left me with this recipe, which is duly written in the blank pages at the end of my hardback copy of Sunshine (ever wonder what those were for? Well, now you know.)

Enough stalling, here’s the recipe:

Sunshine’s Killer Zebras (unendorsed recipe)

Black: Icing

1/4 cup butter
2/3 cup Hershey’s coco
3 cup powdered sugar
1/3 cup milk
1 tsp vanilla

White: Icing

1/4 cup butter
3 2/3 cup powdered sugar
1/3 cup milk
1 tsp vanilla

Instructions

Melt butter in pot. (Add coco). Add in powdered sugar and milk (alternating). Stir until smooth. Do Not Overheat.

Black: Cake

Yellow Cake Mix
add 2/3 cup coco powder
heat water for cake mix (amount as on back of box)
add coco to hot water, stir until smooth. Add to other ingredients as instructed by cake mix.

White: Cake

White cake mix
prepare using milk instead of water

Instructions

Once batter is prepared, pour batter in small amounts into baking pans from measuring pitchers, swirling as pleases. Bake according to instructions on mix box. Let cool to room temperature. Prepare icing,
Ice cake like zebra. I make two two layer cakes this way. They cut really prettily.
Eat.

Inspirational Quotes:

“The table was a depressed-looking maiden in a very tight swath of material with no visible means of support, holding the carrying surface at an implausible angle between her neck and one shoulder. Even more implausible was the angle of her breasts, which I don’t think even cosmetic surgery could achieve” Sunshine, by Robin McKinley, hardback, page 245.

“There is a legion of little old ladies (or assorted ages and sexes) who manage to believe that Others are mostly small and cute and harmless, and live under toadstools, and wear harebells as hats. A lot of them ring up their local SOF div to report sightings, because that is the citizenly thing to do, and since there are a few ill-tempered Others who sometimes pretend to be small and cute and harmless—I’d never heard of any of them wearing harebells, however—these have to be checked out. But it is not a popular job.” Sunshine, by Robin McKinley, pg 369, Hardback.

“I had a Sensurround Dolby flash of The Ten Seconds That Didn’t go anywhere, but hit the mental censor button and it went poof.” Sunshine

“Good. I don’t want to spend the rest of my life being careful not to remember” Sunshine, by Robin McKinley, pg 347, Hardback.

“Maybe my medulla oblongata was refusing to take any crap from my cerebrum again.  Shut up and get on with the reconstruction. If you can’t find the right piece, use the wrong one.” Sunshine, by Robin McKinley, pg 374, Hardback.

PS: in case you’re wondering where all of these came from, I have a personal quotes files I’ve been maintaining for years and years and these live in that (it has much better citations than most of my posts do). I go through other manic phases of accurately pulling up all of my favorite quotes. My family just puts check-marks by the passages they like. One of my favorite experiences is going through a book my mom or even a stranger has read and marked up: used books have the smell and feel of the people who have used them and those things give them a context and a love not found in other mediums (for an excellent explanation of this, see my quote of Giles from Buffy the Vampire Slayer on the comparitive smelliness of books and computers).

17 December, 2007

Good post on Peninsula School, Menlo Park (My middle school)

Filed under: news — feelingelephants @ 8:01 pm

Hey all,

Speaking of different kinds of thinking differently (for first article see Dyslexia’s uses), my mom wrote a very cool post about my middle school, Peninsula School. I loved and still love Peninsula and believe it is a great experience and environment for many of my friends. Here is her post on Peninsula. Peninsula’s website is pretty low key–however, contrary to popular perception, one of the best places in my entire educational experience and a very powerful place does exist even without a strong web presence. I can’t wait to see the friends (including those I chilled with on my Thanksgiving trip) I still hangout with from Peninsula.

Inspirational Quote:

“Think wrongly, if you please, but in all cases think for yourself.” - Doris Lessing

Dyslexia’s uses

Filed under: news — feelingelephants @ 7:47 pm

The best description of what trying to read is like for someone with Dyslexia I have found is this. Imagine sitting at a school desk, a big textbook in front of you, with music blaring in your ears through headphones, you can’t remember what the acronyms mean and the words don’t always fit together so they make sense. And there’s a teacher standing in front of you, asking why you aren’t reading faster, telling you your behind the rest of the class. This is not the experience of every Dyslexic and, like in this Business Week story, many people with Dyslexia learn workarounds, and find benefits in how they see differently. Having trouble learning to read (in our lock-step educational system) forces a student to learn to work around to keep up. There are a large number of great ways to teach someone with Dyslexia how to read and work within a school system, in fact all of the people I know with Dyslexia are voracious readers–but may also like video games and books on tape. It is a great thing to have articles like this which make so clear the benefits of growing up different. It is important for all people who are family and friends of people who think differently to see the benefits–good job on Business Week for this article!

Inspirational Quote:

“If you just set out to be liked, you would be prepared to compromise on anything at any time, and you would achieve nothing.” - Margaret Thatcher

14 December, 2007

Packing for home

Filed under: CMU news — feelingelephants @ 11:24 pm

It is a very odd experience packing for home. I am not going straight home, but visiting certain important personages along the way, however the fact remains: I just packed a large bag to go home. Shouldn’t home be where all of my stuff is? Where I leave from, not go to? It seems distorted to consider how many pairs on pants I will need staying at home–it has never before seemed a temporary situation. I guess, like for the past 18 years, I have many homes. It’s just the ones my parents live in feel more home-y–have more history and background–than my current home at Carnegie Mellon. It feels even odder to package gifts to take home. Gosh, shouldn’t I be irresponsible and not buy them until too late? I am a college student. I guess I’m too late to do that either–I will make due with what I have (ya’ll will like it!). It will be interesting coming home, using a laundry machine with more than 6 buttons, not sharing the bathroom with 4 other girls, eating not-Underground spaghetti for dinner (truth to tell, I am terrifically glad I have another month *not* to eat Underground spaghetti) and of course seeing my family, whom I have missed greatly. I’m sure I will loose 1/2 of my readership in the next month, because as we all know, this blog is for my family, but that’s ok, because they’ll be getting to hear my stories first hand.

Seasons Greetings but really, happy Solstice–Winter is coming, but Spring is after that. Enjoy both!

Inspirational Quote:

“By the time a man realizes that maybe his father was right, he usually has a son who thinks he’s wrong.” - Charles Wadsworth

11 December, 2007

Cultural Differences (Shakira in Spanish and English, Hips don’t lie)

Filed under: Music, politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 9:00 pm

One of the artists whose music I listen to intermediately is Shakira–I first really started listening two summers ago while taking Spanish at UC Santa Cruz. What is fun about her is that most of her music can be found in Spanish and is dancible and unique. However one interesting analysis, now possible through YouTube and other media distributors, is to contrast how she (and other artists) perform with different crowds.

Here Shakira is performing “Hips Don’t Lie” feat. Wyclef Jean for the Latin Billboard Awards in 2006. The crowds are yelling, she is dressed colorfully but relatively simply and her hair is pulled back into a pony-tail.

Now see her perform the exact same song for the 2007 Grammy Awards. She dressed in a flashy cloth of gold top and skirt. Her hair is teased unto its own death and she is surrounded by backup dancers. This entire performance shows a lot more money–see expensive lighting, staging and set.

I like the first version much better. I guess this is the trouble of crossing over between genres–Latin pop and American pop music seem to have very different expectations. I like artists who look like they did their own makeup :-D. But as she says at the beginning of Underneath Your Clothes, in the music video:

“well I think that when music penetrates people’s heart, something like a connection is produced between the audience and the performer, isn’t it?… poetry, concerts and even dancing… not any kind of dancing, but DANCING” (warning: user translation. This is from the YouTube commenter uanmabcn87, however this translation follows what I understood her to say :-D)

Inspirational Quote:

In journalism, there has always been a tension between getting it first and getting it right. - Ellen Goodman

10 December, 2007

The Supreme Court Punted in BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, PETITIONER v. TOM F., ON BEHALF OF GILBERT F., A MINOR CHILD

Filed under: Judicial Branch, news, politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 11:37 pm

The Supreme Court punted in the case of BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, PETITIONER v. TOM F., ON BEHALF OF GILBERT F., A MINOR CHILD

Here is the entirety of their Opinion:

PER CURIAM.

The judgment is affirmed by an equally divided Court.

[*2] JUSTICE KENNEDY took no part in the decision of this case.

That’s it.

Here is the entirety of the Court of Appeals Opinion:

UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the judgment of district court be, and it hereby is, VACATED and REMANDED for further proceedings in light of this Court’s decision in Frank G. v. Bd. of Educ., No. 04-4981,459 F.3d 356, 2006 WL 2077009, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 19029 (July 27, 2006) [**2] .

And all that means: a parent who has a child with disabilities and must choose between a public and a private school for that child must know that before the public school will compensate the parent for the cost of the private schooling the child must have been enrolled in the public school. For more, please see the Lexis/Nexis link.

Inspirational Quote:

People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use. - Soren Kierkegaard

PS:
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, PETITIONER v. TOM F., ON BEHALF OF GILBERT F., A MINOR CHILD
No. 06-637
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
128 S. Ct. 1; 169 L. Ed. 2d 1; 2007 U.S. LEXIS 11481; 76 U.S.L.W. 3197; 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. S 1
October 10, 2007, Decided

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