dogjudge
dogjudge
dogjudge

Keep in mind very tall buildings. They are designed with flex in mind so they don't break.

The Standard Oil building in Chicago (now called something else) is the second tallest building in Chicago. I worked two floors from the top. We had a plumb bob in one of the doorways so we could see how much the building was

While your case is different, since you recently graduated, think about the reverse.

I work in the food ingredient industry. One of the things that I've sold is emulsions that are used to make carbonated beverages.

One of the things that is an issue for these folks is the quality of the water that they use to make these beverages. Keep in mind that these folks also have very sophisticated filtering

Let's see. I worked in sales, including at the Director level, for 25 years. I've been a recruiter for 8 years.

Two comments.

Talk to anyone who plays an electric guitar and buys different pedals for sounds.

I've tried rechargeable batteries a couple of times.

We've recently gotten into a very interesting situation.

Hard to tell, but the body looks to be rust free. In Kalamzoo that's an accomplishment.

You were correct in the odds being one in six. Same as with one die. So if you threw that one die 1,000 times, your chances of not throwing a six get to be very large. That was my point.

Random number generators do what they sound like they should do. They are complex computer program codes that attempt to have

So you're saying at the upper levels when you need wrapped candy, etc. that those don't appear more often than they do at levels under 10?

If that was true, no one would ever get to the upper levels.

Some time look up, and try to understand "random number generators".

While you are correct about 1 in 6, it's very evident

As a recruiter a couple of things.

- Companies typically tell us things that are generalized. Too many jobs in 10 years. Not enough experience. Etc.

Here's another idea for you to try along these lines. Foams.

Yeah. Like I value your opinion.

One of my early jobs was for Pullman in their corporate offices.

At one time in my career, I worked for the French. I traveled their a bit. One of the things that we'd all get a laugh at was idioms. The one I mainly remember is that we get "bags under our eyes" while the French get "suitcases under their eyes".

And then we get the British.

This has, for me, another chilling consequence.

One thing that some of you seem to be missing about publishers setting the price for books.

Some time ago the Supreme Court found that practice to be illegal. The case involved Harley Davidson vs. their dealers. If Harley found that a dealer was discounting the price of a motorcycle, they'd pull the dealership license.

It relates to other things also.

Can't remember the site. It's a travel site that people review hotel/motels, restaurants, etc.

I was on a business trip to Elkhorn, WI. Someone else made the reservations. The reviews were either very good and there were three that gave the motel the highest rating possible. I've

I don't know about Apple, but Amazon tends to state that the price on such and such book is set by the publisher.