Add the Internet to the list of fundamentals for job searching after college.A resume, a dynamic cover letter, contacts, networking and surfing the net are all important parts of a job search, said Pamela Park-Curry, director of Arts and Sciences Career Services. Jobtrak is an Internet search program in Brown Hall Room 05 that offers on-campus interviews, job postings and weekly newsletters.Jobtrak is partners with more than 500 colleges and student employment centers that posts jobs for more than 250,000 employers.Park-Curry said while many students use Jobtrak to get job listings the program has much more to offer, including offers resume tips, a guide for graduate students, and information on company profiles.Kellie Schlosser, a student assistant at the center, said she has done career research on the Internet and would recommend it to other students.The Internet is not hard to use when looking for job lists, said Doug Rudasill, a senior majoring in natural resources.’There are hundreds of different job postings,’ he said. ‘I look on the EPA job line.’Another Internet job finder is based on the resource book, ‘College Grad Job Hunter,’ by Brian Krueger.The site provides more than 350 pages of text and navigational tools for moving within the book. It also gives links to other sites.None of the other job sites on the web come close to providing the type of detail in job searching that this site provides, Krueger said.Krueger, author and webmaster of the site, doesn’t mind providing the contents of his book for free via the Internet.’If someone comes away from the site and has learned something, I’m glad,’ Krueger said.With over 60,000 visitors per day, the site has become popular with many job hunters.Personal contact and networking are still very important though, because the Internet can be very impersonal, Park-Curry said.