General Business Questions and Answers

Anyone know teen summer job that aren't camp/retail but more secretarial/office job?

Would they even hire a 16-year old to do that characteristics of job? I'm looking for a nontraditional summer teen livelihood where I can if truth be told gain experience in the (preferably medical) workplace. No camp, lifeguarding or retail jobs, or anything along those lines of regular summer job. Something to look good on a university application, and something that would require actual skills, such as writing, office work (which I have experience in), doing anything as long as it's inwardly a professional setting. And not a volunteer job but something I would if truth be told get remunerated for. I'm getting desperate, I've searched copious many assignment sites but have found nought! Please please help me! Thanks :)


Answers: Try next to law firms and authentic estate companies. Many times they are look for people to do errands, brand name copies, etc. But don't contact them through the internet... actually GO speak beside them.

Network with your parents' friends or parents of friends.
Ask your arts school guidance counselor if your school have any internships. Go to hospitals, and ask if they have any internship positions. Apply to doctor's office.

It's not typical, but I managed to seize a job contained by an optometrist's office when I be 16. I literally was going office-to-office asking if they be hiring. This place was. I chock-full out an application. When they asked for experience, I put down that I'd been wearing specs since 4th grade. The doctor be surprised enough (having apparently never have someone claim personal experience with the product as experience on the brief application) that he hired me.

Just work at it, and don't be afraid to think outside the box on things approaching your experience . . . .
Hey! Try this! I think this have something about that. Alright?

Why isn't the minimum wage a living wage similar to 12.00 dollars an hour?

i work 3 part time job's and they adjectives pay minimum wage and i cant support my line on that


Answers: Go to the USPS and apply as a casual. It pays $10.00 an hour for free clerks or $13.62 an hour for casual carrier. It can also turn into full time employement. You must be 18, have a high-ranking school diploma and be capable of pass a drug question paper. You will proabably work anywhere from 40 to 60 hours a week.
how much do you think your work produces?
Should a company loose money for hiring bit timers?
Get some skills and you will be paid more....
Why not engineer it $75 an hour, if you feel that organization should set the rules for businesses?

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How are the presidents chosen for US currency?




Answers: http://www.moneyfactory.gov/document.cfm...


Selection of Portraits and Designs Appearing on Paper Currency

The Secretary of the Treasury is responsible for the selection of the designs, including the portraits, which appear on paper currency. The July 11, 1862 Act of Congress provided:

"That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and is hereby authorized, in case he shall think it expedient to procure said notes, or any part thereof, to be engraved, printed, and executed, in such form as he shall prescribe, at the Treasury Department in Washington, and under his direction; and he is hereby empowered to purchase and provide all machinery and materials, and to employ such persons and appoint such officers as may be necessary for this purpose."

The portraits currently appearing on the various denominations of paper currency were adopted in 1929 when the size of the notes was reduced. Prior to the adoption of this smaller sized currency, a special committee was appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury to study this aspect of the design. It was determined that portraits of Presidents of the United States have a more permanent familiarity in the minds of the public than any others. This decision was somewhat altered by the Secretary of the Treasury to include Alexander Hamilton, who was the first Secretary of the Treasury; Salmon P. Chase, who was Secretary of the Treasury during the Civil War and is credited with promoting our National Banking System; and Benjamin Franklin, who was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. All three of these statesmen were well known to the American public.

Treasury Department records do not reveal the reason that portraits of these particular statesmen were chosen in preference to those of other persons of equal importance and prominence. By law, only the portrait of a deceased individual may appear on U.S. currency and securities. Specifics concerning this law may be found under Unites States Code, Title 31, Section 5114(b).

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