Faboulous smart/classy people help please?
I'm editing a letter a co-worker is writing to an official in Canada (where he is evidently trying to emigrate) and I don't know how he should phrase the greeting. The person to whom he is writing is named Robin . No indication if this person is male or female (so Dear Madame or Dear Sir would be inappropriate). But he is writing directly to this person (so To Whom it Concerns or Dear Sir or Madame would be inappropriate). And he should be fairly formal in his address (that is, Dear Robin would be inappropriate).
I don't know what to tell him to use! And I'm feeling a lot of pressure because he's appealing a decision they made about him not being an acceptable émigré because he has not demonstrate a sufficient command of English.
That's right! Congrats, -t!!
Congratulations, -t! There will be plenty of Buffista babies to take over the world now!
Various forms of warmth~ma to Deena, Plei, and Jen.
I *think* I ended up with a 1490 on my SATs, with verbal being higher than math. When I took the PSATs I did well enough to be named a National Merit Finalist. It was enough for a hell of a scholarship from my alma mater. Don't even ask what I scored on the LSATs. I just know it was good enough to get me into law school.
I want every last one of those cakes.
t /sugar junkie
P-C, you write so beautifully. This should be a travel piece. In, like, a major magazine. The "between squalor and luxury" line was perfect.
I'm editing a letter a co-worker is writing to an official in Canada (where he is evidently trying to emigrate) and I don't know how he should phrase the greeting. The person to whom he is writing is named Robin . No indication if this person is male or female (so Dear Madame or Dear Sir would be inappropriate). But he is writing directly to this person (so To Whom it Concerns or Dear Sir or Madame would be inappropriate). And he should be fairly formal in his address (that is, Dear Robin would be inappropriate).
Does he have the full name? Dear Robin Lastname would work, I think, even without the honorific.
::gets a bigger box for all these congratulations::
Lisah, I ran into that problem a lot when working for ISI in London; a lot of government officials with names where I had no clue what gender they were, and where screwing it up would have given grave offense.
I finally said, screw it, and actually developed the policy of spending the money and calling the office, to ask for the official's designation.
I got a 1330 on my SAT, 800 verbal, 530 math.
Funny part is, when the college I eventually ended up going to got ahold of my records those scores were somehow reversed.
Made for an interesting counsellor visit.
"What are you thinking of for your major?"
"Theater or communications, probably."
"Whuh?"
"'Whuh?' whuh?"
"But...with your SAT scores...maybe engineering? Physics?"
"What the HELL are you talking about?"
So she showed me. I laughed and laughed and laughed. "Lady, I never got around to taking calculus. I stopped at geometry. Best re-check your facts."
I am enjoying the P-C travelogue very much.
I can't remember my SAT scores. It was enough to get me a free ride at the state school. Likewise on the LSAT. Library school, however, I had to borrow a large sum to attend.
A friend of mine was accepted at Princeton. In her first meeting with whatever counselor, she realized that her recommendation letters had been mixed up with a woman who had the same name. She never figured out if that woman had also been accepted or not, just knew that she wasn't attending Princeton.