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The men of TA and the stuff they wear (From head to toe, underwear included) (pg. 16)
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| Sushipunk |
| It's hot as balls here in the summer, sandles are awesome :o |
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| Amduscias |
i agree on the hatred towards glad sandals, not such a fan, i was more focused on everything else lol
:gsmile: :gsmile: :gsmile: |
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| enydo |
| go back to the chick stuff thread amduscias |
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| VDub |
| quote: | Originally posted by chimera66
ah bloody nipples are what you get when you run a marathon or something while wearing a cotton shirt. one year i volunteered at the nyc marathon and saw my fair share of bloody nipples, that must hurt a lot. that on his shirt is straight up blood and sweat. |
Jesus that nasty...
Is not something the can wear to protect against that??
Titty tape ffs... |
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| Fledz |
| quote: | Originally posted by srussell0018
That is indeed the question. People can wear whatever they please, and anybody who has a problem with that should move to North Korea. I hear they have a dress code there. Ya know the Nazis had a dress code for the Jews during WWII too.
There are certain occasions where the wearing of gym shorts or sweatpants is iffy at most. College classes are certainly not one of them. |
There's a way of looking at the world through hopeful eyes of how it should be, and then another of how the world actually is.
People, organisations, companies and so on do care what you look like a lot of the time. So no, you can't wear whatever you please if you want to get ahead 99/100 times. |
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| srussell0018 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Fledz
There's a way of looking at the world through hopeful eyes of how it should be, and then another of how the world actually is.
People, organisations, companies and so on do care what you look like a lot of the time. So no, you can't wear whatever you please if you want to get ahead 99/100 times. |
I'd agree with that, but I think a college lecture is most certainly one of the times you can get away with it, especially in a larger class where the professor doesn't know your name. That's also a slippery slope you're getting on if you start judging people for the clothes they wear. College professors should know better than that. |
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| Fledz |
| People do still judge though, and remember a lot of the students will be in positions of power as well. You might as well start with good habits early. |
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| srussell0018 |
| College? Good habits? Does not compute. |
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| Tasty Onions |
Professors worth their salt care more about substance than style.
The ones who are concerned that people look spiffy for class are probably teaching douchebag subjects anyway (business, marketing, and other such bilge). A helpful hint for avoiding them is to pursue a non-douchebag course of study! |
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| Silky Johnson |
| quote: | Originally posted by srussell0018
I'd agree with that, but I think a college lecture is most certainly one of the times you can get away with it, especially in a larger class where the professor doesn't know your name. That's also a slippery slope you're getting on if you start judging people for the clothes they wear. College professors should know better than that. |
Ah, but the professor WILL remember "that slob who always wore his pyjamas to class".
Professional demeanor, including dress, gets noticed whether you think so or not. Too many heads nowadays have the "it shouldn't matter/they should know better" attitude. You're wrong if you don't think professors appreciate some ing respect and professionalism. Especially if you want a reference later on.
ing kids these days. |
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| srussell0018 |
Any professor with half a brain and without an over-inflated ego would know that how a student dresses has absolutely nothing to do with their character or aptitude. If someone is a good student, but a poor dresser, they're not going to be torpedoing their chances of getting a reference from a professor. At least not one who matters. The only college professors who care how their students dress are more concerned with themselves than their students, which is the antithesis of what a college professor should be.
I'm not saying I dressed like that to class often, but if I had a long night and an early class, sometimes it's just more comfortable/convenient to throw on a pair of shorts or something that wouldn't exactly be appropriate in a different situation. I never had any problem getting references from professors, because the references that I got were mostly from professors in smaller lectures who I actually had built a personal relationship with through office hours or more discussion based classes. If the professor knows you and knows your work, your dress doesn't really affect their opinion of you. |
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| Silky Johnson |
Yeah but you work in IT. People like you ARE a dime a dozen.
For more serious/professional degrees, it does matter to an extent. |
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