Survey of Coffee Drinkers Will Jolt Your System
Nothing is certain except death and taxes...and our need for coffee.
Nothing is certain except death and taxes...and our need for coffee.
Sure, teachers may be underpaid, but there’s got to be a better way for them to make some extra money besides stealing.
From their students.
The job market is tough these days. Many people are coping with sudden layoffs, and others are struggling to find work after completing college or earning a new degree. Skilled professionals could wait months or years to find a job in the field of their expertise.
But if one of these descriptions matches you, that doesn't mean you can’t find exciting ways to earn money.
Who knew whistling could stir up so much emotion?
Laura Smith didn’t get a massage, but she was still rubbed the wrong way.
“Going postal” could soon be very fashionable.
If you’re great at networking, filling out online applications and following up, chances are, you’ve landed an interview or two. Good work. That’s not so easy these days. But your work isn’t over.
In fact, your work is just beginning. The interview is where your true job-getting skills will have to come out. In fact, compared to everything you did to get it, the interview is like doing open-heart and brain surgery while also teaching a child how to tie his shoes. Not the easiest thing in the world.
It's the kind of thing that, if you saw it in a movie, you'd call it implausible: international jewel thieves stole $50 million in diamonds at the airport.
Last month at the Adventure Aquarium in Camden, New Jersey, Casanova was born.
Here's a scary reminder about the importance of keeping an eye on little kids because you have no idea what they’ll put in their mouths.
February is American Heart Month, and a number of celebrities have gotten in on the message—in particular, Allison Janney. Janney is now the spokesperson for Go Red for Women, a campaign by the American Heart Association aimed at spreading awareness that the number one killer of women (and men) is heart disease.
Americans love their dogs. (We especially love this bulldog perpetually circling the table.) But is parading them around in front of everyone a sport?