What if she had scars on her face? Would she have to wear a mask so you would not have to look at them? Or what if it were a male breast cancer survivor? Would he have to cover up?
True but that wasn't what I had at the time. A note from the parent and telling the children not to share the sunblock should be sufficient to prevent allergic reactions.
I remember when I was in third grade and got in trouble for bringing sunscreen to school. They would not let me apply it and confiscated it. I applied sunscreen in the morning but you have to reapply it several times during the day for it to be effective. It's ridiculously stupid to require a doctors note.
Sounder train stops in Tukwila. There is plenty of parking there within a few minutes walk of the station. It's how I commute to Seattle daily. Also it's much faster than Light Rail which takes twice as long.
Yeah I know that it is possible. I've been driving a manual for years now but I don't text because I don't want to. Also depends on the type of phone you have.
Teens should drive cars with manual transmissions. Really hard to text while driving one of those since you often need to use both of your hands. The people I see texting behind the wheel are usually well past their teenage years. I've even seen someone reading a Kindle while driving down I-5.
Maybe they told all the students that they had to tell their families not to cheer and the consequences if they didn't follow the rules. I doubt that the diploma-withholding was a surprise. I think my school held your diploma for an extra week but no community service. The school considered it our job to convince our families to follow the rules, which exist for a reason.
At my graduation in '10, there were 500+ grads and two name readers on opposite sides of the stage which alternated. There were no pauses for any students and you walked across the stage, shook hands and posed for your picture, and then walked down the middle aisle. It was quick because there were other schools booked at the center after us.
Students were told at the rehearsal that the parents should not cheer during this time, it was also on the school's handout about the ceremony, and they were asked at least once during the ceremony before the names were read. It IS disruptive if you were repeatedly warned not to cheer and it can turn into a cheering contest between groups who want to prove that they love their kid more. Cheering at the end of all the names also makes things more equal for all the students. Some students had no families to cheer for them while others had groups of 20.
I don't think they should have withheld his diploma, but his family and friends should have been much more respectful of other people and to wait until the end to cheer, like they were asked. If it was like my high school graduation ceremony, then the names were read in quick succession because there were hundreds of graduates. Loud and prolonged cheering results in the next person's name not being heard. Parents were asked before the ceremony and during the ceremony to be respectful and quiet, but there were several families who just unable to handle that.
Kentucky Grilled Chicken. They have KFC and KGC on the same cup