pangsiyan's Articles

  • Manage Your Career Successfully
    Despite a low unemployment rate and dizzying array of career titles in bookstores

    — "Making Your Way to the Top", "Get the Job You Love" and "Manage Your Career

    Suecessfully"—many hardworking job seekers struggle through their job searches.
    An effective search campaign starts with a researched plan.
  • The Biggest Animal on Land — Elephant
    Elephants are the biggest animals that live on land. (Some whales are bigger than elephants but whales live in the sea.) When born a baby elephant weighs about 91 kilo?grams. That is the weight of a grown man. It is about 91 BH centimeters high. When it reaches the age of six years, it is about 183 centimeters high.
  • My Imprints
    Four out of my parents' five children were afflicted from 1 with a rare genetic disorder called osteogenesis imperfecta otherwise known as "brittle bones. " As a result of multiple tures, OI in its extreme form causes dwarf ism, severe deformit the victim's limbs and even death. But our family is among fortunate few as we have a very mild form of the disease.
  • The Credit Card Economy
    If you have a credit card, you can buy a car, eat a dinner, take a trip, and even get a haircut by charging the cost to your account. In this way you can pay for purchases a month or two later, without any extra charge. Or you may choose to spread out your payments over several months and pay only part of the total amount each month. This is credir card economy.
  • Telecommunications for the 21st Century
    Pace-based telecommunications system will change ot lives over the next two decades, providing rapid access to information of all types. Mass virtual-reality entertainment, videos on demand and expanded telehealth and teleducation services are just some of the developments we can expect to arrive with this torrent of data along with mounting information overload and the 1 68-hour work week.
  • Language as a Symbol of Power and Authority
    In addition to tone and behavior, language is an indicator of authority in most cultures. Japan provides a good example of the way language is used to establish authority. In Japan power becomes obvious through nonverbal symbols such as bowing, as was pointed out earlier, but vocabulary is also an indicator of power.
  • The Dog a Member of our family
    One of the best friends our family has is our dog. He is just like a member of the family. We are all very fond of him. This article narrated a story about a family and a dog.
    One of the best friends our family has is our dog. He is just like a member of the family. We are all very fond of him. This article narrated a story about a family and a dog.
  • CCIE R&S 4.0 Blueprint Announced
    The 4.0 version of the CCIE R&S Lab Blueprint is instilling a sense of reality into the world. Part of this came from the CCIE Program’s self-analysis. When asked about the impact on the WAN we have all become used to seeing on the CCIE labs, Gorito says“We are not replacing Frame-Relay with MPLS. We are introducing MPLS.”
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)
    The World Trade Organization (WTO), established on January 1, 1995, is an open, non-discriminatory trading system. As a successor to the GATT, established in the wake of the Second World War, it is to help world trade flow freely, fairly and predictably. Members of the WTO follow three most important principles.
  • Recent History of British Economy
    Britain was the first industrialized nation in the world and has remained an economic giant for the past two centuries. By the 1880s, the British economy had achieved global dominance, producing one third of the world's manufactured goods, half its coal, iron, and cotton. The quantity of goods transported in Britain's shipping industry was greater than that of the rest of the world put toget
  • For the want of a Telephone call
    For more than half an hour 38 respectable Brooklyn, New York citizens watched a man attack and stab a woman three separate times. Twice their talk and the sudden glow of their bedroom lights frightened him off. Each time he returned and stabbed her again. Not one person telephoned the police during the attack; one person called after the woman was dead.
  • Holidays and Festivals of Britain
    Throughout the year the British celebrate many holidays which reflect the religious, historical, social and cultural diversity of their country. Some holidays are celebrated throughout the nation and mark important events in the Christian calendar. Other holidays are based on local customs and traditions.
  • Examinations Exert a Bad Influence on Education
    We might marvel at the progress made in every field of study, but the methods of testing a person' s knowledge and ability remain as primitive as ever they were. It really is extraordinary that after all these years, educationists have still failed to devise anything more efficient and reliable than examinations. For all the pious claim that examinations test what you know, it is common knowledge that they more often do the exact opposite.
  • One child policy suited to current social situation
    The one child policy can only guarantee China' s healthy development on the basis of a controlled population in a provisional period, not in the long term. As the social-economic circumstances develop and become ripe, China should consider a larger family model.
  • The rich city -Hong Kong
    Hong Kong, a fast-paced city of luxurious hotels, custom suits and endless jewelry shops, whose 5.9 million residents own the highest number of Rolls Royces per capita and drink the most cognac per capita of any culture in the world.
  • Lusions of pastoral peace
    There is something comforting about the warm shed by advertisements on cold wet winter nights. Few things could be more impressive than the peace descends on deserted city streets at weekends when the thousands that travel to work every day are turn away in their homes in the country.
  • AN A+ PANTRY
    You've decided to take steps to eat better in 2010, but where to start? With the brownies, soda and potato chips banished from the pantry, it's time to restock with healthier fare. Here's a helpful guide for building a foundation for good eating.
  • Standardized Tests in college
    When U.S. Secretary ‘of Education Margaret Spellings suggested a year ago that American colleges and universities consider using standardized tests to measure performance, the outrage^ in academia was loud. Private universities, which rely less on public funding, aren't rushing to embrace standardized tests for their students either.
  • YOUR BEST BODY
    You through the ups and downs of any new workout routine, fitness experts share six stick-with-it strategies for success. Be realistic about your abilities, begin at a comfortable level, chart your activities, plan to beat post workout munchies, find ways to stay motivated, factor in some time off, If a workout bores you, don't do it.
  • flame of love
    Life without love is just like body without soul. Love gives meaning to life as without love life is meaningless. Most people do not give importance to their love life as they give importance to their professional life. Love your life and love the person who is in your life. Keep the flames of love burning to live a great, great love life.


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