The second day of orientation was less exciting than the first. The highlight was a mock class taught by a professor in the Academic Support Program. I asked a few questions in a class of around 80 students. It's not a parallel comparison between this class and, say, Civil Procedure, but I'm pleased to know that speaking up in a large lecture hall isn't all that scary.
The orientation sessions have no dress code (except for the business attire requirement for student directory photos that I mentioned previously) and so it was interesting to check out what other wunnelles were wearing.
I wore a skirt with a blouse and a nice sweater. Other students wore clothes that ranged from denim shorts and t-shirts to pencil skirts and heels. Conforming to a bothersome trend, the law building was teeming with flip-flops. I'm of a different generation than most of my fellow students, but even the flops with sequins on the straps or flowers on the thongs just don't seem like appropriate footwear for a professional school. The men had a better handle on this; those dressed in the business casual vein almost to a man wore appropriate (closed-toed) shoes. Women, though, wore dresses with matching flip-flops or skirts with matching flip-flops or slacks or blouses or sweaters with flip-flops. I'm far from a fashionista, but I think I know professional clothes when I see them. Aren't flip-flops beach wear? Aren't they a little chichi? Or am I just old?
Please see my original post here.
.
.
Rabbi Found Dead in Dubai in What Israel Calls Terrorist Act
40 minutes ago
Oh, ugh... I'm with you in this lost battle... Flip-flops are only ok at the beach!
ReplyDeletefyi, you're not ACTUALLY of a different generation than the 20-somethings with flipflops. The birth-year distinction between genx, geny, and millennials is just for the media to grab something. Anybody born within oh, say, 10-15 years of you is part of your generation. Just my .02.
ReplyDelete