Spike's Bitches 47: Someone Dangerous Could Get In
[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.
Wow le n, so you need to actually make recs for how to address the issue? Yeah, that's clearly impt, but I wouldn't know how to go about that as I am sure there are legal implications.
Because the faculty member in question has (in the past) retaliated against people (e.g. called up a former student's new employer to complain)
Seriously?! What the hell motivates some people, I do not understand.
So, I didn't *need* to make recommendations, but I'm the anal retentive sort who, when she brings in a serious complaint, she needs to be able to work on solutions to the problem as well. This is kind of up my alley in terms of research/background knowledge anyway, and I do care about the institution and program, so I was happy to do it.
I kind of knew what suggestions I would make anyway, I just had to meet with some other people on campus to add some details and outline what I thought the scope of the problem is. Although the faculty member in question is problematic, he is not the only problem. Not by a long shot.
Thing is, you actually can't assume people will do the right thing all the time. You have to be constantly vigilant. I don't think the sexual harassment training is the way to do it though. Every major decision-making arena (admissions, hiring, etc.) needs to have a formal discussion about these issues or it will go retrograde in 10 seconds flat.
Hey, I am curious -- my friend L, who lives in Seattle, gave a D in Seattle my business card and he said he knew me!
Now, there are a couple of "me's" out there, including a former beauty queen and a chemist, so I'm trying to figure out if it was a Buffista or Buffista-adjecent D! Because, OMG, funny!
Profile addy good if you don't want to say on-board.
ETA: Figured it out, and yes, was a DH of a Buffista! Small world!
Aldo, o-a, looks good! I'd go for hardwood every time, but I have a deep love for hardwood floors.
X-Post w/ Natter
Hardwood is nice--I quite like my current setup, which is hardwood in kitchen/dining/living room, carpet in bedrooms and on stairs. Though hardwood stairs would be easier to sweep.
Yay Omnis! Fwiw, I am STRONGLY in favor of Not!Carpet as carpet gets dirty easily, absorbs odors, attracts dust mites and other allergens, and is harder to clean. I recommend something like Pergo (fake wood) -- looks great, easy to clean, and lasts forever.
I'd also vote for getting rid of the carpet. Really don't like carpet, personally.
For color inspiration, I'm going to once again pimp Design Seeds - [link] See what colors appeal to you.
My arms hurt. Elliptical plus arms lifting is painful. Ow.
Is it shitty that I'm not interested in a guy because he's sixteen years older than I am? Should I meet up with him anyway? How would I politely turn him down if not?
These are the questions of our dating lives...
My date from Monday (to whom I accidently dropped the name of this board, whoops, so if you're lurking, HI!) apparently didn't feel sparks either, so. On to the next, maybe gained a geeky friend. ::shrugs::
Is it shitty that I'm not interested in a guy because he's sixteen years older than I am? Should I meet up with him anyway?
It is what it is. There's no point forcing it if you know it's not going to happen.
That said, why not? What do you have to lose? (I mean, I actively go out of my way to avoid dealing with people, but I figure since you're looking for people to date, that doesn't apply.)
Eh, I'd take a look at the profile of someone that much older than me, but unless they were both hot and super interesting, I don't think so. There are very few 50 year olds who I'd be interested in. I feel like we'd be in very different places in life. I mean, by the time in their age, they'd be looking to retire (and unless they're mad rich and planning to have me retire then too...)