Answer:this job is not the best. It stinks and almost plugs my nose. When i come home for the day, I am pretty sure I am nose blind. The garbage bags are hard on my back and I think I will need to go to the chiropractor after I take a quick nap. If I don't do this job, I will not be able to pay for this month's rent. I have to keep going. It takes up most of my homework time too. I barely get any time to sneak in some studying. The only bright side of this job is that my best friend Bono is doing this with me. He has to get out of the way of his parents sometimes. Especially when they take up almost all of his house with their jobs. Half the time they are not there and they leave a mess. Most days Bono just lives with me. I have to keep this job if I want to keep on staying under a roof.
(there you go)
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<span> Curie, a two-time Nobel Prize recipient and physics professor at the Sorbonne (a college of the University of Paris), presented this speech at Vassar College in Housekeeping, New York, on May 14, 1921. The speech, preserved in print as no. 2 of Vassar's Ellen S. Richards Monographs series, centers on what Curie called "the somewhat peculiar conditions of the discovery of radium" and her view that "the scientific history of radium is beautiful." The speech is provided online at the Gifts of Speech Web site, by Liz Linton, site director; and electronic resources and serials librarian in Cochran Library, Sweet Briar College, Virginia.</span>
She listens to classical music for relax