At least polio is curable; Jack Thomspon is like irritable bowl syndrome. Nobody wants to see it flair up. It's just nasty, leaves a foul stench, and in the wake there is a lot of shit work to be done to clean up after it.
Anyway, if drunk driving is a choice and I can choose to drive drunk in the game. At least I'd be in front of a TV driving drunk than behind the wheel, unless of course someone is drunk driving in the game while drunk driving then my friends we have a problem.
While I'm not an HR person I am a recent graduate of a liberal arts school receiving a BS in IT within the last year. In the months that followed my graduation I went on numerous interviews and was pleasantly surprised to realize I was receiving job offers from every company I applied to. In addition I was receiving phone calls from recruiters constantly from my Monster.com profile, and from companies who were interested in me from my senior design project.
I personally think that liberal arts colleges are fantastic especially if you get the small classroom environment where people actually learn who you are. The liberal arts school I went to turned out about forty students a year, and it was amazingly difficult. I think in the end as long as you learn the skill set and commit yourself to continuing your education, certifications, and on the job training you are not limited in any way compared to prestigious schools. Prestigious schools tend to be more expensive, mass indoctrinate students in large classrooms, and turn out about the same skill set of individuals. I should also mention liberal schools provide recruiters the sense of well-roundedness often emphasizing good communication, written, and professional skills.
At least polio is curable; Jack Thomspon is like irritable bowl syndrome. Nobody wants to see it flair up. It's just nasty, leaves a foul stench, and in the wake there is a lot of shit work to be done to clean up after it.
Anyway, if drunk driving is a choice and I can choose to drive drunk in the game. At least I'd be in front of a TV driving drunk than behind the wheel, unless of course someone is drunk driving in the game while drunk driving then my friends we have a problem.
While I'm not an HR person I am a recent graduate of a liberal arts school receiving a BS in IT within the last year. In the months that followed my graduation I went on numerous interviews and was pleasantly surprised to realize I was receiving job offers from every company I applied to. In addition I was receiving phone calls from recruiters constantly from my Monster.com profile, and from companies who were interested in me from my senior design project.
I personally think that liberal arts colleges are fantastic especially if you get the small classroom environment where people actually learn who you are. The liberal arts school I went to turned out about forty students a year, and it was amazingly difficult. I think in the end as long as you learn the skill set and commit yourself to continuing your education, certifications, and on the job training you are not limited in any way compared to prestigious schools. Prestigious schools tend to be more expensive, mass indoctrinate students in large classrooms, and turn out about the same skill set of individuals. I should also mention liberal schools provide recruiters the sense of well-roundedness often emphasizing good communication, written, and professional skills.