Week 698: Let's Get Personnel Willingly or not, many of us have found ourselves in the job market of late, the luckier ones finally cadging an invitation into that little chair on the other side of the big desk for the sweat-buckets ritual of the job interview. Often, interviewers pull out some favorite questions they offer to every applicant, in hopes of revealing some undiscovered corners of the job-seeker's personality, or maybe just to make him squirm. This week: Send us some humorously creative questions that a job interviewer would ask an applicant. Or conversely, send some questions it might be fun to ask the interviewer. Winner gets the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. First runner-up receives one of the stupidest gadgets we've ever come across: a battery-powered pink plastic fan in the shape of a pig that uses virtually all its power to make noise, because you literally can't feel the air blow on your neck if you hold it up to your chin. Other runners-up win a coveted Style Invitational Loser T-shirt. Honorable Mentions (or whatever they're called that week) get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational Magnets. One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail to losers@washpost.com or by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, Jan. 29. Put "Week 698" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with your entry. Contests are judged on the basis of humor and originality. All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be edited for taste or content. Results will be published Feb. 18. No purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries will be disqualified. This week's Honorable Mentions name is by Dave Prevar. The revised title for next week's contest is by Kevin Dopart. Report From Week 694, in which we asked readers to supply a downbeat interpretation of a not especially downbeat piece of writing. Elizabeth Kolbert of the New Yorker, who inspired this contest by lamenting the tragic fatalism of "Goodnight Moon," eat your heart out, dear. 4 "If You're Happy and You Know It" is an unconscionably thoughtless insult to toddlers around the world who have neither hands nor feet. (David Kleinbard, Jersey City) 3 "The Secret Garden": Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, but not always: Anyone with a moral compass must agree that young Colin should not be messing around in his mother's "secret garden," symbolically or otherwise. (Jeff Brechlin, Eagan, Minn.) 2 the winner of "The Ultimate Guide to Prank University," a book of juvenile practical jokes: In the nihilist world of Peter Rabbit, McGregor's garden is the anti-Eden -- where food equals death. McGregor is the wrathful God who, having expelled his children from the garden, would destroy any who attempt to return. Peter enters the garden clothed and exits naked in a symbolic unbirthing, but there is no salvation for him, nor for any of us. (Brendan Beary, Great Mills) And the Winner of the Inker Yes, Annie, the sun will come out tomorrow. And tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time. Duh-uh! And all our yesterdays have lighted fools the way to dusty death. Thanks for reminding me, you chirpy little pisher. (Cy Gardner, Arlington) The Bummer Crop "The Sound of Music": In this tragic tale, the church is deprived of the services of a musically gifted nun who could have brought more people to God, all because an oversexed man made her hear the call of the flesh and the allure of the stage. (Stephen Dudzik, Olney) A Cinderella story, indeed! A mentally abused woman finally is able to escape the sadistic whims of her stepfamily and marry a wealthy man -- a man who, after hours of intimate contact, by the next morning has no idea what she looks like. Their relationship is destined to be as fragile as a glass slipper. (Allison Bucca, Beltsville) What mother would sing death threats to her baby? Yet how many moms -- night after night, in deceptively soothing tones -- threaten to stick their infants in a tree, and then casually hint of the impending doom from the dangerously overloaded bough? It's no wonder that the lyricist wishes to remain anonymous. (Jeffrey Martin, Rockville) We used to cluck indulgently about Henny Penny's frantic doomsaying. But it was all too prophetic: Now the ocean is rising four feet every year -- so the sky IS falling! (Marty McCullen, Gettysburg, Pa.) It is obvious that Mike Mulligan and his steam shovel are digging their own graves. And yet they live on, serving the world above while trapped perpetually underground. What is life? What is death? This book leaves these enigmas unanswered, observing only that one's work is merely a march to the tomb. (Brendan Beary) But in the end, it is all an illusion: George Bailey isn't saved; his inevitable end is only delayed. For where is George now? Dead. Mary? Dead. Uncle Billy? Dead. Mr. Potter? Dead. Harry? Dead. The men on the ship Harry saved? Dead. Marty, Bert, Ernie? Dead, dead, dead. Violet Bick, dead, too. Life is only a brief spark that separates two dark abysses. Merry Christmas. There's the bridge, right over there. (Phil Battey, Alexandria) "Little House on the Prairie" books: Impelled by the arrogant mentality of Manifest Destiny, a family leaves behind a swath of death and destruction: slaughtering the wildlife, trampling the prairies and displacing indigenous peoples. (Lois Bagniolo and Melissa Yorks, Gaithersburg) Paddington Bear illustrates the trouble with the British immigration system. Not only in the United States, it seems, can an illegal Hispanic immigrant be taken in by a local family, remain unemployed, survive on handouts, cause local destruction, and still avoid deportation. -- Lou Dobbs (Richard Wong, Derwood; Martin Bancroft, Rochester, N.Y.) "The Gift of the Magi": These young marrieds, despite their financial woes, are unable to control their frivolous spending habits, and also fail to communicate effectively. They should seek counseling immediately. -- Amy Dickinson (Peter Metrinko, Chantilly) The decision in "The Joy of Sex" to depict only heterosexual acts conveys a simmering contempt for the gay lifestyle and is a slap in the face of tolerance and diversity. Consigning it to a separate volume demonstrates that to the author, gay sex is not true sex, but something inferior -- joyless. Hatred is NOT sexy. (Jon Milstein, Falls Church) Euclidean geometry describes a soulless world bereft of the milk of human kindness, a world devoid of a Creator's presence. It should not be taught in our public schools. -- Kansas State Board of Education (Wilson Varga, Alexandria) "Norma Rae": An aging textile factory, already faced with foreign sweatshop competition, struggles to stay in business despite an attempt at union organizing that could send it under and ruin the town. Sure, let's applaud once again at that big scene. (Russell Beland, Springfield) "The Cat in the Hat": An apparently single mother abandons her small children for hours. (Scoring drugs? Fornicating?) The children immediately admit a pandering pleasure-seeker into the home, supervised only by a weak Conscience-figure -- a fish, the symbol of Christ! -- who can barely inspire the children to engage in a massive coverup moments before Mother's return. The narration concludes by suggesting the option of lying to her about the day's events. Pure Satan-inspired trash, and I do not like it, not one little bit. (Combined from entries by Bob Dalton, Arlington; Michael Levy, Silver Spring; Brendan Beary) "As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end." And you thought religion would offer you a way out of your bleak, dark, miserably hopeless existence? Amen to that. (Kevin Dopart, Washington) Next Week: Dead Letters, or Decompoesy