29 July 2006

iowa to the city


thank you.


ahoy matey! this movie swabbed the pooop decks.


knock rummy. new roomie in blue.


kris and chris. the bearded ones.

kris, sharing with my camera holder.


sophie. new family dog. i had a fun day with her.

then she bit my face, so she had to go back to the humane society.

so it's been fun in iowa. i got a new apartment, saw my old peeps, played a lot-o-cards, and met with my department. best story from the weekend:

i have never taken any speech path classes in my whole entire life. therefore, one of my required classes for the fall is "introduction to speech and hearing sciences." instead of having me take the class though, they're just going to have me be the teaching assistant. kill two birds, you know. that's crazy i say. crazy. and it confirms what i once suspected about teaching assistants.

off to arkansas for the family reunion tonight. boy howdy, i'll have some good photos for you on monday. :)

5 replies:

At 9:20 AM KST, Blogger Ã†milius says...

You have relatives in Arkansas? Does that mean you have cousins that are also your uncles? :)

(I hope you weren't serious about the dog going back the humane society...)

 
At 10:48 PM KST, Blogger erin says...

no uncle cousins . . . i don't think . . . i'm still single though, so there's always hope for me. mwahahaha!

and yeah, the dog had to go back. it bit lots of other people, too. it's sad. she was an awesome dog. other than the fact that she tried to take everyone's face off.

 
At 4:42 AM KST, Blogger Bubbles says...

Wow wow wow - you're all settled in in Iowa City already? Boy howdy. I need your new address then. ^_^

...Did you get my postcard at your parents' place? ^_^

 
At 12:33 AM KST, Blogger Syngirl says...

Happy Birthday Erin!!!! Where did you go???? I miss your blogoliciousness.

 
At 6:34 AM KST, Anonymous Anonymous says...

In the wake of North Korea's first successful nuclear test, The Washington Post's PostGlobal and Oxford International Review are sponsoring exclusive blog responses to a question posed by former South Korean President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kim Dae-Jung:
Why do you think the current US Administration has refused direct negotiations with North Korea, despite North Korea's proposal to do so?

OIR posed this question to a panel of students from the United States and Asia gathered at Hong Kong University to participate in the Asia Institute for Political Economy, a program conducted by The Fund for American Studies. Click here to read their commentary, in light of recent events: http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/debate/korea/

Because of your interest in the region, you are invited to join the conversation and pose questions to our panel. OIR and PostGlobal would love your input.
http://www.oir.org.uk
blog.washingtonpost.com/postglobal

 

Post a Comment

<< Home