My roommate, who works in a library, commented that Rob actually knows how to stack books the right way, and also push them on the carrier also correctly -- I think he even had Amber walking in front of him, to clear the sidewalk. Does anybody know what he's done for a living, we were speculating that he's worked for Casey & Hayes or Gentle Giant, two of the better moving companies here in Boston.
He said he worked in construction, and that's how he knew how to stack things.
I heard this about the University of Waterloo.
NU's library claims the same thing.
It didn't really bother me, because I'm sorry, what were they upset about?
He paid the guard to lie to them. I think that's worth getting upset about. It may be a naive reaction, but I don't think it's a surprising or unworthy one.
Does anybody know what he's done for a living, we were speculating that he's worked for Casey & Hayes or Gentle Giant, two of the better moving companies here in Boston.
He used to work in construction. (Currently, they're living off their Survivor winnings.)
This auditorium was a test-run for the Lincoln Center (true) and the moron architect didn't design the roof to cope with snow runoff, even though the building is in New Hampshire (also true) and he forgot to put in a greenroom, even though the building is the performing-arts center (also also true).
I heard this about the University of Waterloo.
According to Snopes, it's a standard collegiate legend, [link] . However, the library at UConn apparently did have a problem with bricks falling out of it's facade, but that was just bad workmanship.
I think it was mostly wishful thinking at Northwestern, our library being one of the ugliest buildings in existance. (Plus, it let the tour guides segue into a joke about the theatre building constructors neglecting to take into account the weight of the theatre majors' egos, ba dum dum CHING.)
snopes on the dorm/riot thing [link]
The shiny new Disney Concert Hall in downtown LA is a little too shiny and has to hand-sand some of the shinier bits which were torching people. Well, not torching exactly, but making unpleasantly hot.