Your loft is adorable! It looks so comfy and cozy! I have my two cats, a bird, and a mouse all squeezed into a tiny little room that I'm paying out of my ears for. =P
lol. I recognize three of those textbooks! The Guide to the Dissection of the Dog-- or Little Millers, as we call it, is my new Bible. I take it with me everywhere I go. Plus with some colored pencils, the muscle diagrams really help!
Thanks! It is very comfy/cozy, which I couldn't say about some of the other places I looked at. I'm paying out the ears for it, too... but I figure it's worth it for a nice, quiet place with great roommates. I'm jealous that you get to have pets, though... I would gladly take a smaller space in exchange for the right to have pets. Unfortunately, that wasn't even an option :-(
I love Little Millers... we actually got free copies as a class gift from the Alumni Association. However, I appreciate it much more as a work of art than as a reference. (Plus, I'm not sure why they gave us nice brand new copies of a book that we're supposed to take to nasty/stinky/wet lab. ??) For a reference, I prefer Done/Goody's atlas of vet anatomy, mostly because they have photos alongside diagrams.
Thanks for the link!! As noted in the previous entry, I am *terrible* at learning from dissections, so having an at-home version will be a big help!
You got it for free?? That's awesome! I wish my school had... well... alumni. =P Luckily Western has copies to Little Millers plus a few other in Anatomy lab. So if we show up early enough to snag it, then we don't have to get our own copies all icky. Our dog is a little... juicy.
Wow, I can't believe you're home this early! Do you have class tomorrow? (I guess I still think it's Saturday, since we have tomorrow off.)
I wouldn't know if there's anything fun to do yet, as I have no friends and no time, haha. No, seriously, I'm sure there's about a million bars between Worcester (20min west) and Boston (~45min east). Hopefully the next few months will give me some time to explore. You should definitely come up for New Years :-)
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lol. I recognize three of those textbooks! The Guide to the Dissection of the Dog-- or Little Millers, as we call it, is my new Bible. I take it with me everywhere I go. Plus with some colored pencils, the muscle diagrams really help!
Oh, and just because... here's a link to a good online dissection guide. http://vanat.cvm.umn.edu/carnLabs/Lab01/Lab01.html#Contents
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I love Little Millers... we actually got free copies as a class gift from the Alumni Association. However, I appreciate it much more as a work of art than as a reference. (Plus, I'm not sure why they gave us nice brand new copies of a book that we're supposed to take to nasty/stinky/wet lab. ??) For a reference, I prefer Done/Goody's atlas of vet anatomy, mostly because they have photos alongside diagrams.
Thanks for the link!! As noted in the previous entry, I am *terrible* at learning from dissections, so having an at-home version will be a big help!
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Hope the link helps! I've been using it a lot.
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I wouldn't know if there's anything fun to do yet, as I have no friends and no time, haha. No, seriously, I'm sure there's about a million bars between Worcester (20min west) and Boston (~45min east). Hopefully the next few months will give me some time to explore. You should definitely come up for New Years :-)
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