Anonymous wrote:Short-term community service that you have to pay (sometime big-time) to do, like teaching reading for 5 days in an isolated village in an impoverished distant country or going on a Habitat for Humanity trip to a tropical realm. More subtractions in my mind if that paying community service doesn't obviously align with a serious, long-term interest that begins and continues at home. Less subtraction if it's done with a larger group or activity in which the student is already invested, like a church or a civic organization.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you draw the line at reporting something super-expensive (sailing, pilot's license, climbing internationally, equestrian)?
Or other things that just say "I'm rich" (unpaid internships, especially ones where you have to be connected -- banks, senators, etc.)?
Anonymous wrote:Where do you draw the line at reporting something super-expensive (sailing, pilot's license, climbing internationally, equestrian)?
Or other things that just say "I'm rich" (unpaid internships, especially ones where you have to be connected -- banks, senators, etc.)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting, I don't think of lacrosse as a rich people sport, but I'm from upstate NY where every public high school has a team.
It is viewed as a preppy sport full of "lax bros" by some.
Sigh. Only by people who don't understand the geography of lax. The DMV is the only area where lax is a private school thing. Everywhere else it is all public. Long Island, Atlanta, New York, etc, all publics. Some people in this area don't "get" that the DMV isn't on most people's horizon.
It’s a public school thing here too. It’s an east coast sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like there is a subtle or not so subtle troll on today.
Yes, probably the same one 'in tears about her daughter'.
Also, women in their 50s who think they look younger than they are are pathetic and delusional.
And, using mouldings on walls to make house it look nicer is hideous and people who do it are also delusional.
but they can spell moldings.
Spelling it moulding gives it that classy olde English craftsmanship vibe.
https://www.woodstairs.com/moulding-or-molding-what-is-molding/
It's spelled molding in the U.S. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molding_(decorative)
Anonymous wrote:NRA Assistant Instructor