Want me to do it by proxy? I'll eventually be going home tonight.
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
OK, there is one university whose hiring process I really do not understand. I applied there. I got an interview. I didn't do very well at that interview, but I don't really think anybody would think they did well, interviewing with that guy. During the interview, he said that they hadn't even opened the application packets yet -- they were just interviewing everybody who'd requested an interview through the computer system. But I talked to someone else who'd requested an interview and not gotten one. Now, I just got an email from their department secretary that's obviously a form letter (it starts with "Dear Sir/Madam"), asking me about my citizen ship status. It says it won't affect the decision about my application, but they need to know so that my application will be complete.
I'm confused for several reasons. First, they seem to be doing all this in the wrong order. Second, the only places that have asked about citizenship status are the places where the job is funded through a grant from a government agency, and this one is not.
It's probably a data thing. They aren't thinking about you, per se, just their aggregate numbers for HR.
Second, the only places that have asked about citizenship status are the places where the job is funded through a grant from a government agency, and this one is not.
Couldn't they have asked about that on the application?
Couldn't they have asked about that on the application?
I would think so. Also, I sent that application in November. Interviewing and then reading the applications seems just weird. (The interview obviously knew absolutely nothing about me when I sat down at that interview. The first thing he did was ask for my CV, and then he clearly was just glancing down at it and asking about whatever his eyes happened to land on.)
This is interesting. One of my dad's cousins just called me, because someone had contacted her saying that he was her cousin, and she wanted to know what I knew about him. It took me a minute to figure out who he was, because he'd changed his name (kept his first name, but went from obviously Jewish last name to really common Anglo one that starts with the same letter), but I was able to put it together. Really, the only thing I knew about him was that he hadn't been in much contact with anybody in the family since sometime around 1945 or 1950, when he became Mormon. I wonder why he decided to email his first cousin's daughter all of a sudden.
Taking a snow shovel into your daughter's room, scooping a shovelful off the floor and saying "Go get me the trash can, okay?"
Congratulations, MM, you have turned into my Dad.
when he became Mormon. I wonder why he decided to email his first cousin's daughter all of a sudden.
Proselytizing. Or genealogy.
If he's going for either proselytizing or genealogy, he's hit the wrong cousin. She isn't even sure what her grandmother's maiden name was, and she spent a while on the phone with me yesterday telling me how weird Mormons are. Also, the man is about 85 years old, and he suddenly decides to google distant relatives and tell them about how he came to America? He does have several kids, so it's not like he's just trying to find somebody to listen to his stories.
GRRRR.
Am so about to go apeshit on my eyedoctor's office.
I went there on 06MAR09. I paid the $15 copay for an eye exam. I ordered contacts, which I was (I recall) told would be about $250 dollars. That seemed reasonable, since I had paid about $220 for them the previous time, about two years before. I was not sure how much my insurance would pay for them, nor was the receptionist, but she seemed to think a significant amount, possibly almost all.
I received the contacts a week or two later, in the mail. (NOTE: They clearly had my address)
I never heard anything more from them, so I kind of assumed that the insurance had paid for the contacts fully. Awesome!
A week ago, I go to buy glasses. I searched, but could not find the prescription the doctor had written for me, just his card. SO when I get to the glasses place, they call his office, and get my prescription.
TODAY, I get a bill in the mail for my contacts--saying that they were $370, and that insurance paid $80 (which, mind you, is less than insurance will pay for OUT OF NETWORK contacts!)
I AM SO READY TO FUCK SOMEONE UP--BUT THEY AREN"T ANSWERING THE PHONE.