In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Finding exactly what an employer is looking for will help cater your resume objective to the specific job that you're seeking. Look for traits that the company is looking for and try to relate it to skills that you possess. Instead of copying the exact wording of the job description, think of different ways that you can explain your positive traits using different words. For example, if the job listing is looking for an IT professional "with knowledge of multiple programming languages" you can write that you have "a full grasp on CSS, PHP, and Java." The introduction for your resume objective should explain who you are and why you are applying for the job. Start your objective by talking about your major in school or the experience that you have. For example, a good opening would be "Third-year law student with one year of experience working as a paralegal for Smith & Co." The next part of your resume objective should be a positive characteristic that you can bring to the position you're applying to. Relate the trait to the job listing and then cite the job title itself. Think of things that set you apart from the rest and that also relates to the duties that you'd have to do if you got the job.  You can say something like, "Looking to leverage my research and organizational skills as an associate researcher for your organization." Or you could say, "Seeking to leverage my customer service and PR skills to become a account executive with your organization." Locate keywords within the job listing and end your statement by emphasizing how your skills and traits match with the position. Keywords include adjectives like team player, organized, reliable, disciplined, hardworking, and dedicated.  You can say something like "I'm disciplined and hardworking and will go above and beyond on whatever I'm doing." The full resume objective would read, "Third-year law student with one year of experience working as a paralegal for Smith & Co. Looking to leverage my research and organizational skills as an associate researcher for your organization. I'm disciplined and hardworking and will go above and beyond the scope of the position." If you have little to no experience, you can write about how your experiences in school or clubs can translate to your new job. Think of your wok ethic or skills you gained at school, and write down a list of traits that might relate to the job.  For example, if you are academically excellent you can say you are "driven, organized, or a quick learner." If you were great in sports you can say that you're a "team player, disciplined, or strategic". If you were part of a community drama club, you can say that you're "creative or expressive".
Summary: Read the job description again. Start the resume objective with your experience or education. Include a positive trait and the job title. End the statement with what kind of value you bring the employer. Think of the skills that you gained in school.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: You know what can blow money all around a room and keep it flowing way more effectively than your own bare hands? A giant fan. Set it on a high level with enough room in front of it to add your stacks o' cash. Turn it to the on position when it's not plugged in. That way, when you go to plug it in, you're in front of it when it turns on, ready to get rained on and rained on and rained on as your dead presidents swirl through the air. Sure, you could make it rain by yourself. You could run around your room, spreading the dough, raining on your bed as part of your nighttime routine, and then go to sleep comfortably on your piles and piles of simoleons. Or -- OR -- you could take your stacks and liven up any party, a coffee date with a friend, or dinnertime with your parents. Think of the endless possibilities! You'll probably want to coordinate together beforehand. Springing it on them could result in them diving for your cash or thinking you're a money-grubbing materialist. And who knows? Maybe they'll want to make it rain with you -- talk about a flood of money! Go big or go home, right? If you're gonna make it rain, might as well make it rain. If a helicopter isn't readily available, find a high point you can drop it from. The rooftop, the Eiffel Tower, a mountain -- just be ready to make the news! For the record, with this, you won't be getting your bucks back. The wind can be a cruel, cruel mistress. Who says you have to make it rain in the comfort of your own home or outside in nature? Walk into your local Starbucks and get to precipitating! Or skip the Starbucks where everyone can afford $4 lattes and make it rain at your local homeless shelter or, well, Walmart. What better way to get active in your community? And then watch as people look around at each other, wondering who's going to make the first pounce. How long do you think it'll take? At first everyone will be convinced it's fake -- what happens when the first person realizes that you're making it rain certifiable ducats? ..Or just pick it back up. Because who has thousands of dollars to spend on strangers? Just know that if you do choose to make it rain at your local Burger King, you'll probably have some pretty stiff competition when it comes to recollecting your change. Finders keepers, losers weepers, you know? So maybe you should stick to your living room, bathtub, or at most, backyard. How much risk are you willing to take? If you're getting authentic with it, you'll want to pick it back up as discreetly as possible. And be careful with it! Crumply dollar bills don't roll off your stack as nicely as crisper ones. When you pick it all back up, smooth them out for reuse.
Summary: Use a fan. Make it rain over people. Drop it from a helicopter. Think of it as charity. .

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Hits (also called base hits) are simply the sum of singles, doubles, triples, and home runs. This statistic is easy to find online for professional players. You can use the statistics for a season, a whole career, or any other period of time you're interested in. Just make sure all your statistics come from the same time frame. This is the number of times the player has made an attempt at an hit. This does not include walks, hits by pitch, or sacrifices, since these do not reflect the batter's offensive skill. The answer tells you the battering average, or the fraction of the time that a batter turned an at-bat attempt into a successful hit.  For example, if a player had 70 Hits and 200 At-Bats, his Batting Average is 70 ÷ 200 = 0.350. You can read a batting average of 0.350 as "this player would expect to get 350 hits in 1000 at-bats." Batting averages are almost always rounded this way. When a baseball fan mentions a batting average of "three hundred," she means 0.300. You can calculate batting averages to four or more decimal places, but this doesn't have much use beyond breaking ties.
Summary:
Find the player's hits. Find the player's at-bats. Divide the number of hits by the number of at-bats. Round to the third decimal place.