Nick Corcodilos answers job seekers' questions, including how to get a job when moving to a new city, finding work as a project-based consultant and why traditional resume and references don't work for everyone.
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Republicans are certain to explore past statements by former Sen. Chuck Hagel on Israel and his votes against imposing unilateral sanctions on Iran when he comes before the Senate for his nomination hearing.
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The achievement gap between low-income and high-income students has been a persistent problem in the U.S. A public school in Washington, D.C., is trying to change all that. McKinley Technology High School offers a science and technology curriculum that hopes to inspire students to achieve in the classroom and in the workforce.
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Judy Woodruff reports on President Obama's nominations of Chuck Hagel for defense secretary and John Brennan for CIA director. Gwen Ifill talks to Jessica Tuchman Mathews of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and Reuel Marc Gerecht of Foundation for Defense of Democracies about the president's picks.
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As birds go, vultures fare poorly in popularity contests. But the powerful stomachs of these often misunderstood creatures play an important role in preventing disease spread.
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Social security expert Larry Kotlikoff answers readers' questions about how and when to collect benefits when married, widowed, separated or divorced.
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DOUBLEHEADER | Jan. 4
Syndicated columnist Mark Shields and New York Times columnist David Brooks join us for the first Doubleheader of 2013.
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Ohio is one of 14 states to put in place a retention rule that holds back students who are not reading at grade level. Special correspondent John Tulenko reports on the "reading guarantee," and whether it actually ensures educational success.
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Next week, the Department of Agriculture will use fireworks, lasers and a chase car to drive out a colony of vultures from a suburban Virginia neighborhood.
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