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LibriVox. Doc Film. Welcome to Open Library (Open Library) Make Games - Finishing a Game. Informational Interviews. An informational interview is brief meeting with someone in a profession or an organization you want to explore. (Note that it's NOT an interview in which you seek a job.) Informational interviews can be extremely valuable. 1. How to Find People to Interview 2. An informational interview allows you to do the following: Explore a specific industry, field, organization and/or position. If you aren't able to do a face-to-face interview, you can also do an informational interview by phone or by email, but this isn't ideal. 1. People are usually very willing to talk to you. You can also call the main phone number at an organization you're interested in. 2.

After you've found someone you want to talk to, contact that person to request a brief interview. IF THE INTERVIEW IS FOR CAREER EXPLORATION: Hello Ms. IF THE INTERVIEW IS TO NETWORK: Hello Ms. 3. 4. Below are a few sample questions. Questions about the Organization/Company: How would you summarize what your organization does? Video explains the world's most important 6-sec drum loop. War Plan Red. Joint Army and Navy Basic War Plan Red was a war plan created by the United States Army and Navy in the late 1920s and early 1930s to estimate the requirements for a hypothetical war with Great Britain (the "Red" forces).[1] War Plan Red discussed the potential for fighting a war with Britain and its Empire and outlined those steps necessary to defend the Atlantic coast against any attempted mainland invasion of the United States.

It further discussed fighting a two-front war with both Japan and Britain simultaneously (as envisioned in War Plan Red-Orange). War Plan Red was not operationalized and did not have presidential or Congressional approval. Only the Congress can declare war, and in this period of U.S. history, it made no war plans. President Herbert Hoover was known as a pacifist.[2] War Plan Red was developed by the United States Army following the 1927 Geneva Naval Conference and approved in May 1930 by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of Navy and updated in 1934–35.