In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: After pulling clothes out of the dryer, pile the clothes on your bed so you can easily get to them and fold them one by one. You'll need a space on your bed big enough to lay pants out flat. This way there's plenty of room to fold each pair of pants properly.
Summary: Start by putting all of your clothes laid out or in a pile to get started. Have a space cleared so you can fold them well.

This is known as the point-slope formula. The point-slope formula uses the slope and the coordinates of a point along the line to find the y-intercept. Use the slope in place of m in y-y1 = m(x-x1). For example, if you know the slope of the line is 2, then your formula will look like this: y-y1 = 2(x-x1). Use the coordinates you’re given as (x1, y1). Put the numbers in the corresponding spot on your formula before you start solving the equation. Follow the mathematical order of operations and the distributive property to remove the x-term from parenthesis.  In our example, first you’d use the distributive property to get y-3=2x-8. Then, add 3 to each side so y is by itself. The final equation for a line in slope-intercept form with a slope of 2 that contains the point (4, 3) is y = 2x-5.
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One-sentence summary -- Plug the slope in for m in the formula y-y1 = m(x-x1). Replace x1 and y1 with the coordinates of the point. Solve the formula for y to get the final slope-intercept formula.

Q: To avoid cluttering your resume, only include positions from the past 10-15 years since recruiters generally care most about this more recent experience. Additionally, listing anything more than 15 years in the past can make it difficult to stick to the appropriate resume length and can also put you at risk for age discrimination. An important exception to this rule of thumb: if the job posting calls for more than 15 years of experience, then, by all means, include more than 15 years on your resume. Include only roles that are clearly related to the position you’re trying to fill in order to make it easier for employers to find your main selling points. Remember: a resume is not a comprehensive list of your work history.  For example, if you’re applying for a job in IT support and have 10 years of experience in the field, don’t waste space on your resume by including a lifeguarding position you held in college. One exception is for those new to the workforce. If you’re applying for your first job, feel free to include as many experiences as you can in your resume (including education, club leadership roles, and volunteer positions) to demonstrate your work ethic.  If you’re completely new to a certain field but have had unrelated jobs in the past, you could include abbreviated listings including your company, title, and dates of employment. This way, potential employers will understand what you were doing previously (and why you don’t have a ton of experience) but you’ll save space for more relevant clubs, activities, and education. If you picked up particularly valuable skills or relevant experience in a short-term position, you can certainly include that role in your resume. However, if you had a job for fewer than 3 months and it isn’t particularly relevant to the role you’re applying for, it can take up valuable real estate on your resume and potentially make you look uncommitted. Again, it’s more acceptable for students and entry-level position seekers to include short-term roles in their resumes in order to bulk up their experience section. If you’re further along in your career, recruiters will be more interested in your full time work history than your past internships. After your first or second job, the only internships you should keep on your resume are ones that are particularly impressive (an internship with the White House, for example) or add immediate value to your candidacy (such as an internship managing a specific and relevant database). If you are a student, new to the workforce, or switching careers, you may have a limited professional work history in the field you’re applying to. In these cases, it’s fine to include relevant internships. While you don’t need to (and generally should not) include your reasons for leaving former positions on your resume, you should be aware that potential employers may contact your previous companies to ask about you. If you left a previous role on particularly bad terms or have other reasons to suspect your former boss may bad mouth you if given the chance, it’s perfectly fine to leave that job off your resume.  If you spent less than a year in the role you’d rather not include, you can remove it from your resume and “hide” the gap by listing the dates for all jobs by year only, rather than month (ex. 2012-2014). If you spent more than a year at a job, however it can be tricky to take it off your resume without leaving a noticeable gap in employment. In these cases, it may be better to leave the role on your resume and have an interview story ready to go about how you learned from the experience.
A: Leave off work history more than 15 years in the past. Omit jobs that aren’t at all related to the role you’re applying for. Exclude short term roles that don’t speak to your accomplishments. Remove most internships after you’ve held a few jobs in the field. Think carefully about including roles you left on poor terms.

Problem: Article: Use a trapezoid shape with softer edges for the head, and mark a cross inside that same shape. Use a rectangle for the body. Notice that kittens have bigger heads in proportion to the body as compared to a full grown cat.  The cross in the face should help you determine where the eyes, nose, and mouth go. The middle point of the cross should be at the approximate middle of the face. Note that the head should overlap the body. The top line of the body should roughly match the horizontal cross-line of the face. Sketch a draft of the kitten’s limbs. Each limb should be a rounded triangle coming off the bottom of the body rectangle. Note that the legs on the "far" side of the kitten should be slightly smaller than those on the "near" side. Similarly, draw two large triangles over the top corners of the head. For a cartoonish look, these triangles should be bigger than those made for the legs. You can draw a wavy, rounded tail or a more angled one depending on personal preference. Either way, the tail should have at least one bend in it; do not draw the tail perfectly straight. Using the cross inside the square as guide, draw two small circles for the eyes, placing them evenly on either side of the vertical center and just above the horizontal center. Add the nose and mouth. The nose should land on the vertical center and rest below the horizontal center. The mouth should look like a rounded "W" with the center attached to the bottom of the nose. You can draw slim curved lines for a furry effect. Add three straight whiskers on each of the kitten’s cheeks. Many cats have striped fur, so you can add this detail if you want. Draw a few triangular stripes on the kitten's back and tail. This includes overlapping lines and the cross-lines of the face. You can use any colors desired. Consider giving the kitten light brown fur. If you added stripes, make the stripes a slightly different shade.
Summary:
Make an outline of the kitten’s head and body. Add cat ears and limbs. Sketch a rough outline of the kitten’s tail. Draw the face. Darken desired lines of the head and body from the outline you made earlier. Consider adding patterns to the coat. Erase unnecessary lines. Color the drawing.