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Funny2 months ago This Girl Forgot To Change The Template Photo In Her Resume, Sent It Out To Her Employer 51Kviews Pro member Life can be quite unfair sometimes and we all know that. There comes a time when we mess up really badly and regret it immediately. Maybe we say something wrong at the wrong time, or do something really embarrassing. That’s exactly the life lesson Marissa Sidwell had to learn after she did an oopsie. Marissa just finished university and started to send out job applications. After sending one out, she quickly realized the mistake she’d made. Marissa forgot to change the picture in the application template to her own. So she ended up sending out an application with a photo that looks nothing like her. She filmed this whole endeavor and looked in complete shock. ....
This Girl Forgot To Change The Template Photo In Her Resume, Sent It Out To Her Employer boredpanda.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boredpanda.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Print Sandi Dolbee, formerly the religion and ethics editor for The San Diego Union-Tribune, had already been retired for a long time when Arts & Entertainment Editor Michael James Rocha approached her about returning to the pages of this newspaper as a columnist for the Arts+Culture section. Last spring, the Sunday section had undergone a major change as a result of the pandemic, with the return of faith coverage as one of the priorities. Since then, Dolbee has been writing about faith, spirituality and ethics every two weeks. Today, she returns to the front page with a story that explores how a nation, wounded by partisanship and cultural division, heals. ....
After four years of angry tweets and deepening partisanship, of two presidential impeachments and an election that ignited a siege, it sounds almost too naive to suggest that the road to healing these Divided States of America is as simple and as complicated as this: It begins with one conversation at a time. That is the sentiment voiced by an array of faith leaders, political scientists, community organizers and ethicists, when asked how to resume the pursuit of a more perfect union. “It sounds really silly, but I think we just have to spend more time listening to one another than talking at one another, ” said Marisa Abrajano, a political science professor and provost of the Earl Warren College at UC San Diego. ....