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Popol Vuh: The Definitive Edition of the Mayan Book of the Dawn of Life and the Glories of Gods and Kings by Dennis Tedlock

This volume can be divided into two parts. First is the introduction of the Popol Vuh; second, the translation of the work itself. It is...

Monday, January 28, 2008

The Gambler -- MEDA 110 article

Inday struggles through the door with her groceries as her son Cedric, 3, clings to her and asks for a penny. She has to move fast if she doesn’t want her family to starve tonight. Her sister-in-law helps her prepare the dinner while she computes the previous results of last night’s lotto draw. For her, this routine is a must. “I do not know if this is effective, but I do it every night. For someone who relies on last-two for the daily expenses, I don’t see it as a gambling game anymore.”
Without a stable job to rely on, so many people have taken chances in gambling. Small-time betting like last-two is rampant. In this numbers game, the winning combination is derived from the last two numbers of the first prize of the Sweepstakes draw. Depending on the day of the week, the source of the winning combination varies from the 4-digit draw to the 6-digit draw. Like Jueteng, last two is an illegal numbers game listed under Republic Act No. 9287. Yet it still thrives in communities like the Juliville subdivision area where Inday and her family currently resides.
Besides being a regular bettor, she is also an “usher” or “kubrador”. She takes the bets and delivers them to the coordinator, who in turn remits to the financer. Ushers get 10 % of each bet and sometimes they get tips from winners. Her house is usually full of people every night. Discussions are inevitable. Everyday they make computations and comparisons. A regular commented that they do not need to study probability and permutation in school to learn how to use it in gambling. “Can’t read, can’t write, but can compute”, declared Mang Dodoy, who usually visits the Nodalo home and is also an usher.
“I know that it’s illegal and yet so many people like me make a living out of it somehow”, she said. Inday started “ushering” since 2003 when there was no way for her to find a decent job. She worked as as secretary before at Limso but decided that it was a waste of time and effort. “The kids need me more so I decided to just stay at home while my husband works.”
Like so many Filipinos, Inday Nodalo, 38 years old, is one of those college graduates who are jobless. Born and raised in Cateel, Davao Oriental, she went to Davao to try to find a better life.“I never regretted coming here to Davao. It has been tough for me but I’m happy that I have a good husband and great kids”, she adds, “Somehow through last two, I can send my kids to school and feed my family.” A mother of five, including the three-month old Dunler, she also sells food in the subdivision terminal every afternoon.
Even the kids work as part-time ushers, visiting nearby the nearby homes of the regulars. Danica, 10, and Jaida, 8, helps their mother collect the bets when they get home from school. The eldest, Jireh, 13 years old, serves as his father’s jeepney barker every weekend.
Despite the benefits, gambling has its setbacks. Once a raid was conducted by an undercover policeman. The local ushers were arrested and fined. “We do not know when the police will look into it again but we have somebody from their ranks who protects us”, she confided. “Some policemen are protectors, even financers and coordinators themselves. It is just a matter of bad timing and bad luck that we get caught or discovered.”
However Inday admits that sometimes she feels guilty of being involved in the activities yet she has no other option. Her husband objects to the kind of job she is into claiming that she spends more than the usual bet the other regulars put out. A previous incident three months ago led Danny to try and convince her to stop. While on labor and despite the pain, Inday had the feeling that she has to make a bet or else the birth will not be successful. She urged one of her kids to look for ushers or collectors in San Pedro Hospital. Before she gave birth to their youngest son, she made sure she placed a bet on her lucky number when Danica brought in the janitor. The neighbors find the story amusing and yet her husband Danny finds no humor in it. “She might have spent millions already. If she quit earlier, we could have been rich”, her husband Danny said jokingly. “I really don’t think it’s a bad choice, but then I don’t think that it is a good one too.”
Even the kids have mild complaints of their mother’s favorite hobby. “Sometimes she forgets to take a bath”, complained Jaida. “There are times when she neglects Cedric and he wanders in the neighborhood half-naked.”
Despite it all, Inday thinks she has been a good wife and mother. Danny and the kids agree. “Every mother should have an initiative. You should know how take advantage of things, no matter how small they are.”
“I’m happy with what I have. I cannot say I’m contented, but resorting to last two is the best way I can do to raise a decent family.” For Inday, gambling is not a crime at all. She said that if other mothers are looking for husbands from abroad, being an usher is not different. Mothers have to act or they will starve. “It helped some people I know. And it helped me.”

The EBL Dorm -- feature article for MEDA 110

For Doreen Mariz, a freshman BS Biology student, every morning is always a race to the bathroom. Armed with her blue pail and dipper, she wills herself to get up earlier than she usually does at home. "I have to get there first so I have enough water to use", she said. The finish line is not always a pretty sight to look at, however.

Who would have thought that my younger sister would experience the same dilemmas I had just to prepare for the day.

"It looks like any other public bathroom", she relates, "The only difference is that they do not have doodles on the walls, you have clothes hanging like bandiritas instead."

But is not all about the bandiritas that most students are concerned about. The first few lucky residents who get there in the morning are rewarded with ample amount of water and a fairly decent view of the dormitory in the morning. Scattered plastic wrappers, toilet papers, and - oh yes, sanitary napkins. Scattered artifacts and remains accentuate the dirty tiled floors of the Elias B. Lopez dormitory girls' bathroom. Every student here must have been greeted by such a sight.

Within that elusive appearance of the 25 million peso dormitory building, is what one student called "the proof that even UP students do not know how to use the bathroom properly".

Most facilities are either unnecessary or old and broken. Useless shower nozzles hang like dead branches in cubicles and are mostly used as clotheslines. Soap dishes are littered with empty soap and shampoo sachets, empty junk food wrappers and used pads. Cubicle doors barely hang from their hinges. Some have no doors at all. Lighting is bad as well. Sinks have long dried up because of lack of water. If it actually works, you have to turn it on through the pipe below the sink according to one resident. But the most horrid sight of all is the toilets. They overflow with familiar and some unidentifiable objects. Not to mention the stench that would greet every unsuspecting student.

"Some toilets are unserviceable. There is not enough water for flushing", complained a first year BS Food technology student named Aisha. Most female students I have interviewed expressed the same complaints. "Even if there is enough water, you still have to compete with other students in other cubicles for it.", she added.

Most students who have stayed in the dormitory opted to find other boarding houses nearby after their staying for a year in the EBL. Bianca chose to stay in a boarding house in Mintal because facilities there are much better. "Sometimes there are days when there is no water at all", the second year Architecture student complained.

There are others who chose to stay in the EBL for practical reasons. "I don't have to ride the habal-habal just to get there", said JB Tingzon, a third year Communication Arts student. "It's cheaper and nearer the school but we have to make do with the facilities here". JB, who cross-registered to Up Los Banos last semester, said that except for the additional signs posted on the walls, the dormitory girls' bathroom still looks the same. "They still make arinolas out of the toilet bowls", she continues, "I do not know if it is because there is no water or the students themselves are just lazy."

"The second floor bathroom at B-wing sometimes overflows with water from the students' morning rush to take a bath", JB confided. Unlike Doreen's statement above, JB commented that there are no sanitary napkins on the soap dishes anymore. But stray animals, mostly cats, can still get inside the building and excavate the trash cans, leaving the bathrooms even more unpleasant to look at.

"The weekends are even worse", she said. The janitors are usually away at that time." According to Quintina Calderon, a janitress in the dormitory, they usually get a lot of complaints from both the males and females on weekends. Calderon and most of the janitors usually work from 6 to 11 o'clock in the morning. She said that they could not possibly stand and guard the bathrooms just to keep them clean. They have to do the rest of the building besides dormitory.

"It is not our responsibility to keep everything squeaky clean", she commented on the complaints of the students," they come in here and use the toilets but never even bother to flush it. Even if there is plenty of water, they can't even make an effort to fetch." She added that they have to make time to clean the other rooms and facilities in the building including the ILC.

Calderon said the same opinions on the facilities but said that most of them still work. "It is only because of the people who do not know how to handle them that most fixtures become useless."

She added that the drainage is very complicated which is why sometimes the bathrooms become flooded with water. "Some students here do not turn off the faucets. Plus they come in here with their dirty shoes which makes our work even more difficult."

"I do not think that it is because of the janitors. You see proof that some residents here do not really know how to clean up what they leave behind", said Doreen as a conclusion to the interview. Most dormitory residents will say the same thing. Still, that does not solve anything and the showers still don't work.