Friday, August 24, 2007

Dating Contract


Well I just finished reading a book called "Love on the Dotted Line". In the book, a woman creates a dating contract for any potential mate to sign. The thought put the mouse on the wheel and started running. What if there is an actual contract that you can give to a guy (or a girl) dictating the rules of the relationship all the way down to what kind of sex that you can get and receive.

So I searched the world of Google and yes, there is a dating contract available for people to use! I looked over it and it was very vanilla.. very vague. So I am going to put my collective thoughts together and create a dating contract that everyone can use, and even tweak it to conform their situation.

I'll post the link to it once it is created. Give me the weekend to get a 'lil creative.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Scientist Who Tested Hubby's Undies Fired

Scientist Who Tested Hubby's Undies Fired
Woman Wanted To Know If Husband Was Cheating

POSTED: 3:00 pm EDT August 22, 2007

LANSING, Mich. -- A state forensics scientist who said she tested her husband's underwear for DNA to determine whether he was cheating on her has been fired.

Ann Chamberlain testified in a March 7 divorce hearing that she ran the test last September on the underwear of Charles Gordon Jr. Asked by his attorney what she found, she answered: "Another female. It wasn't me."

She said during another hearing that she ran the test on her own time with expired chemicals that were set to be thrown away.

The Michigan State Police, which oversees the Lansing forensics laboratory where Chamberlain worked, announced Tuesday that it had fired her effective Aug. 16 after conducting an internal investigation into violations of department administrative policy.

State police policies dealing with the care and use of property state that "department supplies, materials or equipment shall not be used for any non-duty or non-department purpose."

Chamberlain, 33, on Tuesday declined to comment immediately to The Associated Press.

An attorney for Gordon, Michael Maddaloni, said his client -- who court records show was a defensive back with the Canadian Football League from the early 1990s through 1997 -- disputed his wife's testimony that he acknowledged a sexual encounter with another woman after she found the female DNA on his underwear.

Chamberlain worked for the state police as a forensic scientist since 1999 and was interim supervisor of the biology unit in 2005, according to information posted on the Web site of Williamston-based Forensic Science Consultants Inc., where she began doing laboratory analysis last year.

She received an award for Outstanding Contribution to the Michigan State Police Biological Services in 2006 for her research and method development in embryonic/fetal DNA recovery, according to the Web site.