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Archive for the ‘Careers’ Category

Feel So Good – Mase (WideScreen/Classic)

Saturday, July 31st, 2010


Feel So Good – Mase (WideScreen/Classic)

What types of careers would be best to be able to support a family, and yet be home enough for kids?

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

What are some really good careers that allow enough time to spend at home with family. Since my father was gone all the time, I always wanted a job that would make it to where I would be home for my children. But I thought of teaching, and yet so many people tell me that it takes away alot of time.

Any suggestions?

Matt & Luke Goss – Xclusive catch up on their careers

Friday, July 30th, 2010


Just as Luke was about to hit the cinema’s in the fantastic Blade II, Xclusive catch up on the twins careers.

Defining America’s CPAs – Maryland

Friday, July 30th, 2010


Want to know what CPAs do? This video captures four days of interviews with CPAs all across Maryland to find out about the different roles that CPAs perform. Is your accountant a Certified Public Accountant? Produced by the AICPA & MACPA in 2007

Office Courtesy: Meeting The Public (1952) Part 1

Friday, July 30th, 2010


A “bad” receptionist learns from her “good” receptionist roommate how improving her attitude can make her job more enjoyable. In a dream sequence the “bad” receptionist is stuck in a hellish office with an equally bad receptionist behind the desk — herself!!! The bad girl reforms and becomes lovely and happy. Offices have the reputation of being clean, placid environments, and for most of us office work seems preferable to labor in factories, kitchens, or parking lots. At the same time, there’s a downside: offices are also a perfect breeding ground for abnormal psychology. White-collar work has always been associated with a strong emphasis on manners, conduct, etiquette, and propriety. Perhaps this relates to its mystique as a more genteel alternative to the factory, or maybe the perceived need to regulate the behavior of large numbers of lower-paid women. But the focus on “doing the right thing” that permeates almost all office training films renders them key artifacts of social control. Historically, the office has been the place where young workers (primarily women) have been socialized and taught appropriate behavior, which in America equals training in “middle-classness.” Films like Office Courtesy, Office Etiquette, Duties of a Secretary, Take a Letter From A to Z and I Want to Be a Secretary position the office as a place where young workers (mostly women) are socialized and taught appropriate behavior, and where social hierarchies learned elsewhere are reinforced