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Resume writing could be one of the most tedious part during job search. There are so many resume writing methods and models available, where as there are certain essentials that a resume should contain. Her are few tips for those who are trying to writing a fresh resume and also for those who want to update their resume.
Follow simple and neat English for writing your explain. Simple English with proper grammar is more suitable. This makes your resume simple and neat.
Write your resume details using small sentences. Avoid writing your details in paragraph. Use appropriate keywords to match the job and your area of interest. This will make your resume more appealing for those who read your resume.
Provide only the important details that are really required in your resume. Avoid giving details like your parents name, spouse name, members of family etc. For those who are applying for international jobs, then mention your nationality. Minimize your personal column in your resume and give more importance to your professional details
Provide a clear communication address in your resume. Provide with postal address, mobile number, telephone number and also email addresses for easy communication.
Support your resume with few references. Two references can be sufficient for your resume.
Provide all your professional details including your qualification, work experience, co-curricular activities like seminar and workshops attended. Provide details about your area of interest and also check whether it matches with your job search.
At last check once again in your resume to see whether you have missed any important details. If any extra information is added and you feel like avoiding them, then do all possible editing works before finalizing your resume. Always keep updating your resume.
It's nearly a month before all of Hollywood breaks out the tuxedos and gowns and descends on the Kodak Theater for the annual glitterfest known as the Academy Awards. And you can already start engraving a shiny gold 8½-pound statue for Heath Ledger, the late actor who gave such a tortured, on-the-edge-of-mania performance as the Joker in the Batman flick The Dark Knight.
But the big question: Can anyone beat Slumdog Millionaire, the (British-made) Indian tale of love, loss, and victory-over-the-odds that won this month's Golden Globes award and has captured the Hollywood buzz as the flick that's all but certain to waltz off with the Best Picture hardware? Probably not. It's a darn good film. But I can't shake the feeling that there's an upset lurking somewhere in the film world's annual office pool game. Let's just call it a hunch that it could be the riveting political flick Frost/Nixon or The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, perhaps the weirdest film to ever grace Oscar-land, that may just pull off the unthinkable.
Don't get me wrong. I'm not rushing to Vegas to bet this one. I liked Slumdog Millionaire. I liked the other two as well. But here are some salient facts. The Golden Globes, a gathering of foreign journalists that annually starts the near endless awards process, is a pretty awful predictor of which flick wins the Oscar. Only four of the last 10 Golden Globe winners have repeated on Academy Award night. As for last year's winner—the British drama Atonement—it got one Oscar, for its original score. Why are the Globes so hopeless as a barometer? Well, its voters include foreign journalists, who give way too much love to foreign flicks. And after years of seeming to vote only for foreign films, the Academy has gone American the past four years, with films like Million Dollar Baby, Crash, The Departed, and No Country for Old Men.
Then, there's the fact that the Golden Globe members make up such a tiny number of Oscar's more than 6,000 Academy voters. So who makes up the biggest share of the voters? The actors. And No Country for Old Men, which featured Javier Bardem's terrifying portrayal of a bowl-haircut murderer without a conscience and Tommy Lee Jones as the dogged country lawman on his tail, won the Screen Actors Guild top prize as well as one for Bardem. Jones was nominated against Bardem.
So, it may well be instructive to see who the actors (and for that matter the other guilds) put on their ballots. Yup, Slumdog has been nominated for best picture not only by the actors but also by guilds that represent the directors, the producers, and the writers.
Using the ESO's Very Large Telescope, astronomers observed a new swarm of stellar nurseries in the spiral galaxy NGC 253. Researchers identified 37 bright regions packed into the core of the galaxy that are popping out new stars at an intense pace. Each bright spot could contain as many as one hundred thousand massive stars.
"We now think that these are probably very active nurseries that contain many stars bursting from their dusty cocoons," said astronomer Jose Antonio Acosta-Pulido of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias in Spain, in a press release.
Based on the new observations, scientists think the center of NGC 253 hosts a supermassive black hole matching the one in the middle of our own Milky Way.
"We have thus discovered what could be a twin of our galaxy's center," said co-author Almudena Prieto.
The new pictures, taken in near-infrared light, are significantly more detailed than previous views of this area. The extra-sharp resolution was achieved with adaptive optics, a technique that uses flexible mirrors on the telescope to counteract the blurring effect of Earth's atmospheric turbulence on light.
"Our observations provide us with so much spatially resolved detail that we can, for the first time, compare them with the finest radio maps for this galaxy — maps that have existed for more than a
decade," said Juan Antonio Fernández-Ontiveros, lead author of a paper reporting the group's results in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Citation: Fernandez-Ontiveros J.A., Prieto M.A. & Acosta-Pulido J.A., The nucleus of NGC 253 and its massive stellar clusters at parsec scales, MNRAS letters, 2009, 392, L16, DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-3933.2008.00575.x
The six words or phrases described in the post include:
BADGOOD
- Responsible for writing user guides on deadline.
- Wrote six user guides for 15,000 users two weeks before deadline.
Head to the post for more details on how you can spin your resume no-no into a strong addition. If you're resume-reading employer or just an expert at constructing a great CV, let's hear your biggest resume pet peeves in the comments.
Barack Obama became the 44th U.S. president Tuesday, shattering American racial barriers as the first black leader of the nation he promised to free from the grip of its profound economic troubles and steer away from wars in two distant lands. The swearing in ceremony was watched by a vast sea of humanity, numbering over two million. The 47-year-old Obama assumed power over a country longing for change after former President George W. Bush's eight divisive years in the White House, an era that witnessed the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks, the beginning of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and an economic collapse not seen since the 1930s Great Depression. In a moving speech after the oath-taking, Obama promised the world a new America that listens to all voices.
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