Oh, I love it! It smells great
Oh, good! Buying fragranced stuff for people is always something of a crapshoot.
I miss my bathtub in my old apartment. :sniff: This one is an old, shallow pink thing, and I hates it. No Lush bombs for me here; it would be a travesty.
Pix, -ma to your friend.
Sympathies to Tina and her family.
Much job~ma for questor, and Fern.
Peace~ma for Tina and her family.
Oh Pix, much ~ma to your friend and her family.
Pix, I am so sorry.
Aims, the MAC Disney Villains collection is all yours. I'm probably not going to get any of it.
waits while the entire thread recovers from the shock.
Okay, yes, I'm probably feverish right now, what with possibly having the flu, but I made this decision earlier. I like Aromaleigh eye shadows far better than MAC, and I don't trust MAC anymore to do deep, saturated-color lipsticks that don't have have a brown tone to them.
~ma for your friend and her family, Pix. That's so sad.
Feel better soon, Jilli.
Laga, I'm glad your dad is doing ok. Hope the new medication does the job.
You know how when you cook something that you have added bay leaves to, you count how many you put in, and then count how many you take out (if you don't tie them all into a bundle to make it easier because that makes too much sense)? I'd like it if take-away Chinese food came with a count of how many chili pods are in it. Just because I like Szechuan pork doesn't mean I want to chew on a pepper pod.
Pix, I am obviously not a lawyer, but a teacher friend of mine who may be laid off this year did mention to me that all of her lesson plans are considered property of the school. I think it is in her contract.
~ma for your friend, Pix.
After several rounds of editing and comments from five people (including three Buffistas), I've just sent my latest introduction draft to my advisor. Maybe this time it will be good enough that he doesn't need to throw it aside in frustration after reading one paragraph, which is what he said he did with the last draft.
Pix, I am obviously not a lawyer, but a teacher friend of mine who may be laid off this year did mention to me that all of her lesson plans are considered property of the school. I think it is in her contract.
I saw an article a few months ago about teachers selling lesson plans online (for like $2 or $3 each), and some schools were claiming that they couldn't do that, because the lesson plans were school property. The article made it seem like there wasn't any definite answer -- it depended on the school and the state and a bunch of other stuff.