SC - Appropriate notice?
Jenne Heise
jenne at mail.browser.net
Wed Mar 7 12:39:39 PST 2001
> Courtesy, of course, requires as much notice as possible. I'm going to
> assume that the lack of notice lay in either a) the steward didn't
> know*about the feast/dayboard until the last minute and/or b) the head cook
> broke his/her ankle.
Um... no.
I suspect that the person who provoked this question is confusing the
amount of time it takes to DO a meal, with the amount of notice required
to the cook.
Your estimates of how much time it takes jive about with mine, though.
*grin* in a completely unrelated situation, a friend of mine was working
with someone on a feast. The other person gave her the recipes a week and
a half before the feast; 3 days before the feast, the other person ran
into a family emergency and had to bail. Everything came out pretty well,
considering.
--
Jadwiga Zajaczkowa, mka Jennifer Heise jenne at tulgey.browser.net
disclaimer: i speak for no-one and no-one speaks for me.
"Are you finished? If you're finished, you have to put down the spoon."
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