Is it gonna make me look like a fat cow? Or are halter tops good for the girls?
Spike's Bitches 35: We Got a History
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Halter top s- good for the girls.
And unless you put on a fat cow costume, you won't look like one.
Somedays, I really hate BMW owners.
Last night DH and I watched an episode of Entourage where a guest character played by Martin Landau called E's BMW a "Nazi sled."
Awww...you're so sweet! (that was to Aimee...not about the Nazi sled!)
ETA: HOw are you feeling, Cash?
"Nazi sled."
Bwahahahahaha!
vw, I like halter tops.
I'm ok. Tired, a little achy and the rash is driving me sorta crazy. I'm not very good at not scratching or picking at itchy things. When I had chickenpox at 8 years old, my mother threatened to tape socks on my hands so I couldn't scratch. I'm using calamine lotion and that seems to help the itch but not the pain. It's tingly, with the occasional sharp needle like pain. It'll pass, though.
Thank you for asking.
Think a soak and a drink would help any? Maybe some Aveeno? Or gin? Worked for Ms. Hannigan....
Oh, that sounds miserable. I'm so sorry.
Cash, I had chicken pox at age 17 that verged on shingles, and soaking in epson salts helped me. Might be worth a try?
GC, I think that gets a lot closer. A couple of things:
- You may touch on this already, but I think it's probably important to deal with subscription databases in some way. While Google is probably insufficient even for undergraduate work in most fields, access quality subscription databases, which are usually available remotely for academic users, may be enough for graduate or other researchers, especially in scientific fields. This doesn't negate at all the need for libraries or librarians (as some unfortunate outcomes of insufficiently researched medical studies have shown), but
- I would probably include some different examples of those for whom browsing in a library as a place is likely continue to be more important in the foreseeable future. While doctors and lawyers certainly shouldn't be relying on Google, they are two groups that rely extensively on (very expensive) databases that can often be accessed remotely. The medical field especially has focused on making journals and books alike available in electronic format, a great boon to clinicians without easy access to a medical library. Even if you aren't focusing on database users, I think that using those examples without including others may dilute your arguement as stated. My understanding is that the groups who are most likely to remain on-site users of the library are students and researchers in the humanities and social sciences. They are more likely to need materials that are not digitized and to use citation-only or citation-and-abstract databases rather than full text ones.
This may sound like I am sounding a death-knell for libraries. I certainly don't intend that. Neither do I mean to minimize at all the very real need for quality cataloging. Academic and research libraries with forward-thinking management are thriving, and I think that they will continue to do so. I think that public libraries will continue to thrive as well, although they face somewhat different issues. But I think that in order to thrive, successful libraries have shown an eagerness to embrace new ways of reaching their users, making more materials and services available remotely. Likewise, they have drawn users to their physical locations by adding new or expanded services on-site. It's a hard balance, determining what to add, and more importantly what can be taken away since there's almost never funding, time or space to have it all (drat!).
Three final things. First is that I may totally be misreading your arguments, especially since I haven't read your whole paper nor the whole speech it's based on. If so, please accept my apologies and feel free to disregard any or all that I've written here. Second is that I hope I haven't been talking down to you at all. That is certainly not my intent, and if it sounds that way it's just because I don't have a good feel for your background and I get passionate about this subject. Third and final is a heartfelt thank you!! I've been getting kind of burnt out at work, and have thoroughly enjoying thinking theoretically on such an important issue. It's been reinvorgating for me. I hope it's also helpful for you!!