Oh, me, too. Dur. THAT Rush.
I just posted a further clarification.
I ain't gonna lie, it helped that I knew going in who he was. But I've been cautious about tone and sarcasm since I ended up in that monster debate over gay marriage with the high school chem teacher of an acquaintance of mine.
Shir, ALA (the American Library Association) accredits library science programs in the US; there's a list of schools here. [link] In my experience, however, you would not be very happy in a library science degree program, at least at the Master's level. It is very much a "practical" degree rather than a theoretical one at most schools, and there is very little emphasis on theoretical approaches of any kind (much less anthropological). Most of the people I know, including myself, who have done a master's degree in other disciplines (Classics, Russian Literature, History) felt that the library master's was not nearly as intellectually or theoretically rigorous.
Thank you, flea, for the information and the warning - I am a fairly theoretical person.
ION: I have no idea where I picked that up from, but I have a new grammar mistake in English which is driving me crazy. I began adding s/es to verbs which relates to subjects in plural form. I can see why, theoretically speaking, I'm doing so: it's how you do it in Hebrew and in Arabic - all adjectives and verbs get the suffix in agreement to the subject(s)'s sex and number (except for plural which doesn't stand for people in Arabic, which gets the same grammatical treatment as singular feminine). I just can't see why I began to do it practically speaking - I never had that specific mistake before.
Thank doG there were so many who also thought sj meant the band Rush.
Heh.
Being a Buffista means never having to say "Am I the only one who misread that?"
sj, I'm afraid I had to chime in, too. I got a little long-winded, but I felt I had relevant experience to speak from.
Sigh. So the plumber is supposed to come at 11AM. Or between 11-1. And they called at 8:30 and said "Can we come NOW?" and I had to say no, cause I was just about to get on a super important conference call, and wouldn't be able let him in or tell him the problem or whatever. And now I'm afraid I've jinxed it...
Being a Buffista means never having to say "Am I the only one who misread that?"
And yet, saying it anyway.
Being a Buffista means never having to say "Am I the only one who misread that?"
And yet, saying it anyway.
True, but the feeling of lonely foolishness generally evaporates with the chorus of "No, that's what it looked like to me, too," replies.