Ok, guys! Many of us staffing and executive search firms differentiate
between cv and resume this way: curators, scholars, academics usually have
a cv -- it emphasizes degrees, lectures, scholarly publications and the
like. Resumes can contain this information, too, but we would probably use
resume for most other positions -- Development Director, Public Relations
Coordinator, Registrar, etc. Amen. Cheers!
Geri Thomas, President
Thomas & Associates, Inc.
www.artstaffing.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "David E. Haberstich" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, September 28, 2001 12:39 AM
Subject: Re: Resume(s) and Curriculum Vita(e)
> In a message dated 01-09-26 11:09:28 EDT, Jay wrote:
>
> << Please try to lighten up. The question of "vita" or "vitae"
> is not the end of the world. That I was wrong is hardly
> something worth bashing me. >>
>
> Let's see now, who first said "lighten up"? Was it Emerson, Pliny, or
Jenny
> Craig? It certainly didn't originate with Jay. Socrates, probably. No,
the
> question of "vita" or "vitae" isn't the "end of the world". Gosh, where
did
> I say that? And I didn't think I was "bashing" you, Jay, but if I did, it
> was over the Emersonian rejoinder to Peter, not the Latin, which Peter and
> Julia had addressed. If you feel abashed, I apologize. But since Peter
has
> graciously admitted that he was prompted more by your <smirk> than your
> Latin, that takes the wind out of my sails (yet another cliche for your
> collection). On the other hand, bad Latin certainly was symptomatic of
the
> end of the Roman world, wasn't it? ;-)
>
> Apparently I confused you, Jay, by inserting extra blather about the
> declension of "vita" and meanings of "vitae"--I just wanted to be complete
> while we're at it. But I thought I did it matter-of-factly and
> dispassionately. After all, I'm on firm ground with a "dead" language
like
> Latin. I don't have to get all exercised the way I do when people tell me
> the English language suddenly changed over the weekend while I wasn't
> looking. E.g., a lawyer told me "copyrighted" is "no longer a word"
because
> you don't have to register copyrights any more: I mustered a passionate
but
> well-reasoned argument that knocked him out of his briefs and sent him
> skulking silently away, thereby single-handedly saving the world from a
> linguistic cataclysm. Now THAT was important enough to get, well, heavy
> about. I don't have to lighten up about Latin. It just is.
>
> But I digress (as usual), and the grammar lecture in my previous post was
a
> digression. My main point, which I thought I made clear, was to object to
> ridiculing Peter with Emerson. I don't think Peter's apology was
necessary,
> since he merely stated facts, and his admonition not to make wild guesses
> about things that can be checked easily was, I thought, mild albeit firm.
I
> thought a simple "thanks" from you was in order. I appreciate Peter's
> diplomacy, as well as your apology to him.
>
> So now we can all have a Miller Lite (or something) and laugh about our
> foibles. I hope this case (double pun intended) is closed. Cheerio, and
my
> apologies to all for extending this madness. I now return to my regularly
> scheduled program: the eleventh challenge to museums--making them safe for
> elitists.
>
> David Haberstich
>
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