That is some awesome procrastination.
That is an awesome duck.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
That is some awesome procrastination.
That is an awesome duck.
Kat - I hope you told the student - ?!?!?
people and their wacked out sense of entitlement.
speaking of - OMG do not want to work!
I think they might be out having drinks with mine.
Time for them all to be cut off.
people and their wacked out sense of entitlement.
Total. I was so pissed last year when we had to write a 30 page journal article for one of my classes and some fool had his sister's wedding to attend right after the class was over (which he knew before the class even began) and used it as an excuse for not finishing on time. And he got the extension! That is so not on. My fellow classmates and I worked our asses off to get that paper done and turned in on the due date and this jerk got like weeks of extra time to finish his. NOT ON!
people and their wacked out sense of entitlement.
Well, I laughed long and loud in his face. Then said, "seriously?" Then I laughed some more.
Be careful when wearing a thong - it could put your eye out.
Like many moms, Macrida Patterson's mother may have warned her when she was growing up about all the things that had to be handled carefully because "it could put your eye out."
Maybe she should have added thongs to that list.
Patterson is the 52-year-old Los Angeles traffic cop who's made news by suing Victoria's Secret for an eye injury she said she suffered because of what she alleges to be a defective thong. The offending garment is a blue bit of fabric with a rhinestone heart forming part of the waistband, connected to the fabric by metal links.
"I was putting on my underwear from Victoria's Secret, and the metal popped into my eye," Patterson told TODAY's Meredith Vieira Thursday from Los Angeles. "It happened really quickly. I was in excruciating pain. I screamed. That's what happened."
people and their wacked out sense of entitlement
In my history class last night, this girl went to the Prof to say that she has to be in Buffalo the first week of every month because her grandfather is ailing and she's trying to balance spending time with him and school. Prof doesn't allow make-up tests and she'd miss two with that time schedule. He told her they'd revisit it another day and she said thanks and left. As she walked past me she said, "Hate to play that dead grandfather card." I looked at her, snapped my fingers and said, "Gee. I'm two years too late to play. Darn it!"
Eff you, stupid bint.
"Hate to play that dead grandfather card." I looked at her, snapped my fingers and said, "Gee. I'm two years too late to play. Darn it!"
Eff you, stupid bint.
I have a student who was in a similar situation. basically, her grandfather died the first semester. She lost her scholarship at the end of the year. One of the reasons that we reconsider is a major loss in the family. Basically, she was saying that it didn't affect her that much, but if she said it did, could she get her scholarship back? @@
I get being far away when a grandparent is seriously ill. It was hell not being near my grandfather while he was sick. And she probably should get some sort of allowances so she can attend her family, but with this chick being all flip about it like that ... and her tone wasn't like a gallows humor-trying-to-get-through-this tone, it was "ha ha - played dead gandfather card". And it bugged.