Donors Choose!

Ok, Sci will admit she’s not doing Donor’s Choose this year. I really WANTED to, I really did. But there’s just crazy things going on. CRAZY THINGS. And I cannot do it. But I wanted to. And a lot of other people are doing it! You should visit them. You should donate things! A lot of people are promising prizes!!!
So what, you might ask, is Donor’s Choose? It’s a charity even that allows you to choose where your money goes, concentrating (in the Science case) on needy schools. It’s a great opportunity to help kids get materials to learn about science! And what some of these schools need, it’s just heartbreaking. Simple things, books, heck, construction paper, that they can’t afford otherwise. A small donation from you helps teachers have the materials to teach kids about science.
And for a sampling of those participating this year:
Uncertain Principles, where you can win free books for donating
Adventures in Ethics and Science, which promises fabulous prizes, including things like poetry and artwork
The geobloggers, including All my faults are stress related, Eruptions, and Highly Allocthonous, are teaming up for the challenge.
Dr. Pal, who is out to help kids in the impoverished schools in Michigan
Isis, who is even out to help donate frogs, which Sci thinks it an AWESOME choice (as I never got to dissect one of those when I was a kid, and I totally would).
Grrl Scientist will also be helping kids learn about physiology via dissection.
Drugmonkey will be offering prizes!
Razib’s in as well especially for the younger set.
And Sciencewomen are in! Concentrating specifically on science related books, and helped out by SciWo’s Storytime. And they will offer tshirts! I totally want one…
So click one, click all! Donate to some schools, and help science happen!!!

The Taming of the Shrew

*cough cough* This is not a post about science. You were warned. Science post tomorrow.
Sci went to see Taming of the Shrew this weekend. Mr. S brought her to the show as a semi-surprise, because he is generally awesome. πŸ™‚ And I highly recommend (the show! Not Mr. S! Mr. S is mine). It’s a free show put on every year by the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington. You have to sit in line for tickets, so Sci recommends bringing a picnic. But you can’t argue with free Shakespeare performed by one of the best Shakespeare companies in the nation. We sat in line for an hour and a half, but we got in! Sci has a long-standing love of Shakespeare, as well as most other theater, and has in fact been in a production of Taming of the Shrew. I very much enjoyed the interpretation they used (setting it in the age of the pin-up girls, with an interestingly versatile set, KILLER costumes for Bianca, and using the plot to talk about honesty in relationships between men and women).
But there’s always that last scene in Taming of the Shrew. It makes me shudder inwardly every time I see it, no matter how it is interpreted.
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(From the Shakespeare Free for All)

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Stopsilence

The Silence is the Enemy Campaign continues! Please take a look around the blogs that are participating, there’s some GREAT stuff going on. For a full list, check out the Intersection. And a good number (including this one) are donating their clicks to Doctors Without Borders in honor of Silence is the Enemy.

As far as individual posts, may Sci recommend the ones over at Mad Scientist, Jr. Toaster has a bunch of really good posts on the men involved, how society makes them into men who can belittle (and some who can rape) women, and how we might go about changing this. It’s a very thought-provoking series.
She also recommends some interesting posts (and conversations) going on at Almost Diamonds. Check them out.

And last, but not least, the talented Arikia has donated her time to create a website devoted to Silence is the Enemy!
http://www.stopsilence.com/
It’s great that this is picking up steam, and more in always better. Keep clicking, and keep reading!

The things Sci has seen…

Sci has learned something important today: Mini-moos SUCK. I know my regular brand of coffee. I know it in all its dark, rich, spicy deliciousness. But today, it tastes like…like…I don’t know how it’s possible for a creamer to make expensive, fair trade, delicious awesome into watery stuff you could buy from the 7-11.
I want my REAL creamer back. Call me old-fashioned, but…

The other thing you should know is that the animal research debate has resurfaced. It’s going on at Dr. Isis’ and at Dr. Free-Ride’s, both of whom can talk about this much better than I can.
All I can say is this:

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Your clicks should move it, move it

I don’t know why, but Sci has always really liked this song:
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Sci dances just like that hippo. The resemblance is uncanny.
You should move it move it. You should move it move it to these links. And you should click on them! Because for every click you do, money goes this month to Doctors Without Borders. We want to spread the word and help victims of rape throughout the world. Every little click helps. You know you like to move it move it:

The Intersection
On Becoming A Domestic And Laboratory Goddess
Aetiology
Neurotopia
Bioephemera
The Questionable Authority
Adventures in Ethics and Science
DrugMonkey
Blog Of The Moderate Left
Seattle Grassroots Examiner
the rugbyologist
Sciencewomen

An Odyssey with Animals

Usually, when I read a book for review, I come out firmly on one side or the other. Some pretty well suck, and don’t work well for the purpose they were written. Others, are just awesome, and appeal to a wide audience. Still more are awesome at appealing to exactly who they are supposed to appeal to.

And then there are some…like this one. It’s a good book. It’s a necessary book. But it left even Sci, someone who supports well-constructed and carefully performed animal research, very thoughtful. And this is a good thing.

“An Odyssey with Animals: A veterinarian’s reflections on the animal rights and welfare debate”
by Adrian R. Morrison.

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Links for Tuesday that Need your Clicks!

First off, Silence is the Enemy is growing by leaps and bounds.
But we still needs your clicks! We needs them, precious. After all, if we don’t have clicks, no money goes to Doctors Without Borders! Clickity, precious, clickity. With every click, we raise both money and awareness.

In the realm of other things that you should click on, there’s good posts out there on publishing and authorship, for those of you in the pipeline. Good advice.
Other interesting things around the blogsphere:
JLK’s got a good post up on the “tipping point” of smoking. I think I need to read this book.
DuWayne has a good post up on the spiritualization of sexuality.
Some good stuff up on whether or not people who don’t vaccinate their kids are free-loaders, from…Dr. Free-Ride.
And a good piece from Laelaps on ID.
There is also an interesting post from Chad on pseudonymity. I guess I consider myself pseudonymous, and I hope that none of you really care enough to try and figure out who’s behind the keys. I’m a relatively inoffensive little blogger, and I hope that that usually saves me from people outing me out of nasty.

The reality is that there is a large, very fat Siamese behind these keys. Siameses are not all ill-tempered, thank you.
And Encephalon is up at Cognitive Daily! We’re in it, and they’ve done an awesome job with the new iCephalon edition. Everything is better when there’s an “i” in front of it. Am iRight?
And of course, your daily dose of sex: Creative and crazy advertisements to promote safe sex!

Let your clicks ring loud

As you all might have noticed yesterday, Silence is the Enemy is spreading like…only something on the internet can spread. It’s even made the NY Times! It’s wonderful to see something like this capturing so much attention.

But this is not just a single day initiative. This is an ongoing, month-long drive to raise as much money as we can for Doctors Without Borders. If you are a poor grad student or post-doc, you don’t have to starve. All you have to do is click. Click on the Intersection, on Aetiology, and Isis. Click here! For this month, all donations from the above blogs, and several others (listed on the Intersection) will go to Doctors Without Borders. We may be poor, but we can all use a mouse. Sure, you can pass on the latest LOL, or you can pass on help to millions of women.
Or, on this blog, you can do both.

cordless mouse.jpg
The latest LOL for a good cause. Get clickin’!

In which Sci gets Active: Silence is the Enemy

Grad school and academia can be kind of a bubble sometimes. Even with the wide world of blogging open to me, Sci doesn’t get out much. At least, not outside the Science section of the New York Times.
But the other day, Sheril of The Intersection slipped this Op-Ed into Sci’s inbox. It’s time to wake up.

A lot of my friends around the blogsphere speak on the subject of feminism (Sci sometimes makes forays into that herself), of making sure that women have equal rights, particularly in the world of academia, which is no care bear’s tea party. We’ve all faced discrimination based on our sex, our appearance, our personality. And we get caught up in these things. And these things NEED to be addressed. But at the same time, we should think, sometimes, about how lucky we are.

There are women and girls out there who, aside from often living in grinding poverty, lack basic human rights. They are not people, they are property to be bought and sold. Property that any man can take and use, horribly and callously, because war has taught these men that rape is a trapping of power. During the most recent civil war in Liberia, 3/4 of the female population was raped. 75% Stand in a group of 4 women and think about what that means.
Now that the war is over, numbers have dropped substantially. But, to many men in Liberia, it’s become clear that if you want sex, all you have to do is find the nearest female and overpower her.
And these are not always young women, they are often not women at all, they are children. Children as young as three years old being raped by fully grown men. 28% of sexual violence cases were children under the age of four. The numbers, and what those numbers mean, are mind-numbing. And the implications are worse.
As someone who knows her physiology, I can’t even begin to tell you what something like that can do to a young girl’s body. Hemorrhaging, fistulas, not to mention the possibility of AIDS and other STDs which are so common in some of these countries. And in these countries, where women are often too poor or live in areas too rural to even have c-sections for birthing complications, the vaginal repair of a seven-year-old girl is often far beyond the capabilities of those around her. And the physical problems are only part of the terror and horror that these girls live with every day, knowing what happened, and knowing that it could happen again, very easily.
So today is an awareness day. Many bloggers around the science blogosphere and abroad are spreading the word about what’s going on. We are not powerless, and we should not sit by and say “it’s half a world away”. In the age of the internet, that’s not so far.
The Op-Ed article mentioned above recommends Doctors Without Borders as an excellent spot for donation. I know many of my bloggy pals, including this one right here, will be donating their bloggy earnings to them this month. So if you’re poor, all you have to do is click. Every dollar you raise helps a doctor travel to places like Liberia to help women and children. Every bit of awareness you raise increases pressure for countries like this to change.
Should you like to get more active, Sheril at the Intersection has a letter which you can send to your congressperson. Check her sidebar.
Edit: Bioephemera has a great post up with many links which you should check if you are interested in getting more active!
Also, there’s a Facebook group!!! Already we are so famous. Join up!

The Letters to Our Daughters Project

Sci here, reporting in from sunburn hell. This is what I get for doing my speed workouts without reapplication of sunblock. Be good little runners, peeps! Slather on the SPF 30! We shall not suffer both runner’s knee AND moles for removal.
Also, aloe is great. May not medically DO anything, but it feels lovely…
As an aside, Encephalon is up! Check us out (Two entries, ya’ll!) at Sharp Brains!
Anyway, today I want to direct all of you who are not already reading it (though I’m sure you are) to Dr. Isis’ Letters to our Daughters project. It’s a fantastic scheme of hers to give us lady scientists some equally lady scientist mentors.

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