Word: typos
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...early. Whatever you do, don't leave the cover letter until 20 minutes before the OCS recruiting materials deadline. Inevitably, you will miss a typo, or worse, forget to change the name of the contact person or firm from the last cover letter you printed--believe me, it happens. Last year the firm where I work received 200 letters and resumes over the space of two weeks. The first screen we used was typos--if the applicant didn't care enough to proofread, they obviously weren't that interested...
COSTLIEST TYPO When Prudential took out a lien against eight ships owned by United States Lines, someone wrote down $92,885 instead of $92,885,000. So when the shipping firm went bankrupt and sold the liners for $67 million, it + technically owed Prudential only $92,885. The shipping company eventually agreed to give Prudential the proceeds, but deducted $11 million as the price of the errant decimal point...
...simple clerical error, but it could be the most expensive typo of all time. In 1978 Prudential, the largest insurance company in the U.S., lent $160 million to United States Lines, a shipping firm. As part of the deal, Prudential got a lien on eight ships. In 1986 United States Lines went into bankruptcy proceedings and started selling off assets. Prudential said it was owed nearly $93 million, the value of the lien, from the ships' sale...
...five years ago 93 percent of male students said that if 'they had the chance and were sure they would not get caught, they would consider forcing a woman to have sex without her consent,'" it said. I thought, no, it's not possible. That figure must be a typo! Probably the real percentage is only 73, or 43, or 13 percent. Then I thought, well, surveys are always questionable. Probably a lot of those guys were joking. Besides, since it would be caught, most of these guys probably won't try to realize this grotesque fantasy anyway. So maybe...
Then there was the case of Crimson middle-guard Tom McConnell. Because of a typo, McConnell was listed on the Holy Cross press notes at 2345 pounds. Thus, when McConnell made a tackle late in the first half, the WCHC guy said, "...and that hit is made by 2345-pound Tom McConnell. Man, that lineman out there is big. He must really have been hitting the weights this summer--imagine that, Harvard has a defensive lineman who actually weighs more than one ton. What do you think?" he said, turning to his color...