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BOOK REVIEWS: How to write a book review There are two approaches to book reviewing: Descriptive reviews give the essential information about a book. This is done with description and exposition, by stating the perceived aims and purposes of the author, and by quoting striking passages from the text. Critical reviews describe and evaluate the book, in terms of accepted literary and historical standards, and supports this evaluation with evidence from the text. The following pointers are meant to be suggestions for writing a critical review. Basic requirements To write a critical review, the reviewer must know two things: Knowing the work under review: This demands not only attempting to understand the author's purpose and how the component parts of the work contribute to that purpose, but also knowledge of the author: his/her nationality, time period, other works etc. Requirements of the genre: This means understanding the art form and how it functions. Without such context, the reviewer has no historical or literary standard upon which to base an evaluation. Reviewing essentials Description of the book. Sufficient description should be given so that the reader will have some understanding of the author's thoughts. This account is not a summary. It can be woven into the critical remarks. Discuss the author. Biographical information should be relevant to the subject of the review and enhance the reader's understanding of the work under discussion. Appraise the book. A review must be a considered judgment that includes: a statement of the reviewer's understanding of the author's purpose how well the reviewer feels the author's purpose has been achieved evidence to support the reviewer's judgement of the author' achievement. While you read: Read the book with care. Highlight quotable passages. Note your impressions as you read. Allow time to assimilate what you read so that the book can be seen in perspective. Keep in mind the need for a single impression which must be clear to the reader. The review outline A review outline gives you an over-all grasp of the organization of the review, to determine the central point your review will make, to eliminate inessentials or irrelevancies, and to fill in gaps or omissions. Examine the notes you have made and eliminate those with no relationship to your central thesis. By organizing your discussion topics into groups, aspects of the book will emerge: e.g., theme, character, structure, etc. Write down all the major headings of the outline and fill in the subdivisions. All parts should support your thesis or central point. First draft Opening paragraphs set the tone of the paper. Possible introductions usually make a statement about the: Thesis Authorial purpose Topicality of the work or its significance Comparison of the work to others by the same author or within the same genre.
BOOK REVIEWS How to write a book review There are two .docx
BOOK REVIEWS How to write a book review There are two .docx
moirarandell
Book Review #3- “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down” Chapters 7-12 Do you believe removing Lia from her parent's care was the right choice for her overall wellbeing? Why or why not? How did the author find an interpreter that was successful in serving as a cultural broker between herself and the Lees? How did Jeanine Hilt advocate for the Lee family? Explain how Neil Ernst and the Lees may have differed culturally in their understanding of the value or perception of the Ernst's’ family vacation. Give three reasons why many Hmong may have resisted leaving the refugee camp (Ban Vanai) in Thailand. .
Book Review #3- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Ch.docx
Book Review #3- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Ch.docx
moirarandell
Book required: Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Barnet (Links to an external site.), Hugo Bedau (Links to an external site.), John O'Hara (Links to an external site.) ISBN 1319035477 which should be edition 11 REQUIREMENTS: · Organize ideas in well-developed, coherent, and stylistically sophisticated analytical essays. · Evaluate and improve his/her writing process by revising and editing his/her won essays · Apply logical reasoning to identify and evaluate authors’ use of rhetorical techniques, participate in critical thinking class discussions and activities, and compose clearly organized and effectively argued written analyses of those texts. · Identify, analyze, and question stated and unstated assumptions of texts and draw meaningful inferences about the intentions of authors in context. · Discuss a variety of argumentative and analytical assignments and demonstrate the effective use of rhetorical strategies and an awareness of style. · Use a variety of research skills to expand analysis of a primary source, evaluating and incorporating secondary source materials that encompass the social, historical, and critical aspects that provide context for the argument. About Myself: Name: James Greene Occupation: Senior Logistic Analyst/Lead For NAVSUP Fleet Logistic Center (FLC) San Dirgo In Support of Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) Major: AA In Business Administration this my last I need to achieve goal. Working toward a BA in Business Management from University Of Redlands. Retired Navy Veteran retired in Jun 2010 Married all three of my children attend Southwestern Ordain Pastor Hobbies: Live Concerts Bowling Movies Traveling Book required: Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Barnet (Links to an external site.) , Hugo Bedau (Links to an external site.) , John O'Hara (Links to an external site.) ISBN 1319035477 which should be edition 11 R EQUIREMENTS : · Organize ideas in well - developed, coherent, and stylistically sophisticated analytical essays. · Evaluate and improve his/her writing process by revising and editing his/her won essays · Apply logical reasoning to identify a nd evaluate authors’ use of rhetorical techniques, participate in critical thinking class discussions and activities, and compose clearly organized and effectively argued written analyses of those texts. · Identify, analyze, and question stated and unstated assumptions of texts and draw meaningful inferences about the intentions of authors in context. · Discuss a variety of argumentative and analytical assignments and demonstrate the effective use of rhetorical strategies and an awareness of style. · Use a variet y of research skills to expand analysis of a primary source, evaluating and incorporating secondary source materials that encompass the social, historical, and critical aspects that provide context for the argument. About Myself: Name: James Greene Occupation: Senior Logistic Analyst/Lead .
Book required Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Ba.docx
Book required Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Ba.docx
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Book Review #1- “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down” Chapters 1-3 Explain why Foua Yang’s birthdate may have been different in various locations in the medical charts? Describe how the history of the Hmong people as discussed in chapter two may have influenced Foua and Nao Kao’s perception of the physicians and nurses who appear to be in charge of their daughter’s care? How do you think to have an interpreter might have improved the outcomes of Lia’s numerous emergency room visits up to this point? Discuss the differences in conceptual frameworks that may have led Foua and Nao Kao and the caregivers at Merced County hospital to misunderstand one another during Lia’s admissions? How may have Foua and Nao Kao experienced cultural pain during the experience of Lia’s birth in the United States? Assignment File(s) NM 245 Book Review assignment overview [MSWord] Previous Next .
Book Review #1- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Chapte.docx
Book Review #1- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Chapte.docx
moirarandell
Book report Gringo viejo- Carlos Fuentes The written book report must include the following (5 paragraphs,3-4 pages, in spanish ). always include a bibliography with the name of the book and the author, publisher, and copyright date. A. introduction- name, author of the book and brief background of the author. Also, in the introduction there should be a summary of the storys main idea{theme}, or briefly describe what the book is about B.Body of the report - the body of the report is made up of several paragraphs. you can start with a paragraph about the main characters, this may or may not include a physical description of the characters, but it will definitively include a description of their personalities. c. Figure out which type of conflict or problem exists in the story, and explain it in another paragraph. no plagerism, double spaced, in spanish .
Book reportGringo viejo- Carlos FuentesThe written book repo.docx
Book reportGringo viejo- Carlos FuentesThe written book repo.docx
moirarandell
Book reference: Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership Challenge, 5th Ed. New Jersey: Jossey-Bass Inc., 2012. Using Kouzes and Posner's theory, complete a personal audit--The Leadership Challenge book. Answers questions such as: What is a leader? What is an effective? What are some different types of leadership? What are the Five Practices of Exemplary Leadership? What are characteristics/traits of a leader? Ex. honest, trustworthy, consistent, inspiring What kind of leader are you? Attitudes and styles of past managers or leaders you have had. What are contemporary leaders known for? (their style/traits) 2-3 pages APA Double spaced 12 font. 1 inch margins .
Book reference Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership.docx
Book reference Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership.docx
moirarandell
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapter 8 on the media, and discuss these issues: 1.Planned obsolescence: provide Examples that should not be in the book but from your own life experience) Fig. 8.7 in the textbook: Violence in the media, and video games. Examples should from your own life experience, Media globalization: Examples. Is it good or bad for the cultural values of the countries involved? China and the Internet censorship: Why China is doing what it is doing? .
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapt.docx
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapt.docx
moirarandell
Book List Becker, Ernest The Denial of Death Castaneda, Carlos The Journey to Ixlan Castaneda, Carlos The Active Side of Infinity Jung, C.G. Modern Man in Search of a Soul Moore, Thomas Care of the Soul May, Rollo The Cry for Myth Peck, M. Scott The Road Less Traveled Keen, Sam Inward Bound Huxley, Adlous The Doors of Perception Jaynes, Julian The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind Storr & Stevens Freud & Jung Singer, June Boundaries of the Soul Esters, Clarissa Pinkola Women Who Run With the Wolves Grof, Stanislav Spiritual Emergency Jung, C.G. Memories, Dreams, Reflections Hillman, James We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy And the World’s Getting Worse Hesse, Herman Steppenwolf Chodron, Pema The Places that Scare You Grof, Christina & Stan The Stormy Search for the Self Jung, C.G. Flying Saucers Jung, C.G. Psychology and the Occult Freud, Sigmund Civilization and its Discontents M. Scott Peck People of the Lie Baumeister, Roy Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty Frankl, Viktor Man’s Search for Meaning Storr, Anthony The Essential Jung Strassman, Rick DMT: The Spirit Molecule Watson, John B. Behaviorism Freud, Sigmund The Interpretation of Dreams Stevens, Jay Storming Heaven: LSD and the American Dream Fromm, Erich Escape from Freedom Jung, Carl Answer to Job Kubler-Ross, Elizabeth Death and Dying Skinner, B.F. Beyond Freedom and Dignity Amundsen, Christan Insights From the Secret Teachings of Jesus Ruiz, Don Miguel The Four Agreements Moody, Raymond Life After Life Jonas, Hans The Gnostic Religion Ellis, Albert The Myth of Self-Esteem: How Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy Can Change Your Life Forever. May, Rollo The Discovery of Being: Writings .
Book ListBecker, Ernest The Denial of D.docx
Book ListBecker, Ernest The Denial of D.docx
moirarandell
Recommended
BOOK REVIEWS: How to write a book review There are two approaches to book reviewing: Descriptive reviews give the essential information about a book. This is done with description and exposition, by stating the perceived aims and purposes of the author, and by quoting striking passages from the text. Critical reviews describe and evaluate the book, in terms of accepted literary and historical standards, and supports this evaluation with evidence from the text. The following pointers are meant to be suggestions for writing a critical review. Basic requirements To write a critical review, the reviewer must know two things: Knowing the work under review: This demands not only attempting to understand the author's purpose and how the component parts of the work contribute to that purpose, but also knowledge of the author: his/her nationality, time period, other works etc. Requirements of the genre: This means understanding the art form and how it functions. Without such context, the reviewer has no historical or literary standard upon which to base an evaluation. Reviewing essentials Description of the book. Sufficient description should be given so that the reader will have some understanding of the author's thoughts. This account is not a summary. It can be woven into the critical remarks. Discuss the author. Biographical information should be relevant to the subject of the review and enhance the reader's understanding of the work under discussion. Appraise the book. A review must be a considered judgment that includes: a statement of the reviewer's understanding of the author's purpose how well the reviewer feels the author's purpose has been achieved evidence to support the reviewer's judgement of the author' achievement. While you read: Read the book with care. Highlight quotable passages. Note your impressions as you read. Allow time to assimilate what you read so that the book can be seen in perspective. Keep in mind the need for a single impression which must be clear to the reader. The review outline A review outline gives you an over-all grasp of the organization of the review, to determine the central point your review will make, to eliminate inessentials or irrelevancies, and to fill in gaps or omissions. Examine the notes you have made and eliminate those with no relationship to your central thesis. By organizing your discussion topics into groups, aspects of the book will emerge: e.g., theme, character, structure, etc. Write down all the major headings of the outline and fill in the subdivisions. All parts should support your thesis or central point. First draft Opening paragraphs set the tone of the paper. Possible introductions usually make a statement about the: Thesis Authorial purpose Topicality of the work or its significance Comparison of the work to others by the same author or within the same genre.
BOOK REVIEWS How to write a book review There are two .docx
BOOK REVIEWS How to write a book review There are two .docx
moirarandell
Book Review #3- “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down” Chapters 7-12 Do you believe removing Lia from her parent's care was the right choice for her overall wellbeing? Why or why not? How did the author find an interpreter that was successful in serving as a cultural broker between herself and the Lees? How did Jeanine Hilt advocate for the Lee family? Explain how Neil Ernst and the Lees may have differed culturally in their understanding of the value or perception of the Ernst's’ family vacation. Give three reasons why many Hmong may have resisted leaving the refugee camp (Ban Vanai) in Thailand. .
Book Review #3- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Ch.docx
Book Review #3- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Ch.docx
moirarandell
Book required: Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Barnet (Links to an external site.), Hugo Bedau (Links to an external site.), John O'Hara (Links to an external site.) ISBN 1319035477 which should be edition 11 REQUIREMENTS: · Organize ideas in well-developed, coherent, and stylistically sophisticated analytical essays. · Evaluate and improve his/her writing process by revising and editing his/her won essays · Apply logical reasoning to identify and evaluate authors’ use of rhetorical techniques, participate in critical thinking class discussions and activities, and compose clearly organized and effectively argued written analyses of those texts. · Identify, analyze, and question stated and unstated assumptions of texts and draw meaningful inferences about the intentions of authors in context. · Discuss a variety of argumentative and analytical assignments and demonstrate the effective use of rhetorical strategies and an awareness of style. · Use a variety of research skills to expand analysis of a primary source, evaluating and incorporating secondary source materials that encompass the social, historical, and critical aspects that provide context for the argument. About Myself: Name: James Greene Occupation: Senior Logistic Analyst/Lead For NAVSUP Fleet Logistic Center (FLC) San Dirgo In Support of Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) Major: AA In Business Administration this my last I need to achieve goal. Working toward a BA in Business Management from University Of Redlands. Retired Navy Veteran retired in Jun 2010 Married all three of my children attend Southwestern Ordain Pastor Hobbies: Live Concerts Bowling Movies Traveling Book required: Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Barnet (Links to an external site.) , Hugo Bedau (Links to an external site.) , John O'Hara (Links to an external site.) ISBN 1319035477 which should be edition 11 R EQUIREMENTS : · Organize ideas in well - developed, coherent, and stylistically sophisticated analytical essays. · Evaluate and improve his/her writing process by revising and editing his/her won essays · Apply logical reasoning to identify a nd evaluate authors’ use of rhetorical techniques, participate in critical thinking class discussions and activities, and compose clearly organized and effectively argued written analyses of those texts. · Identify, analyze, and question stated and unstated assumptions of texts and draw meaningful inferences about the intentions of authors in context. · Discuss a variety of argumentative and analytical assignments and demonstrate the effective use of rhetorical strategies and an awareness of style. · Use a variet y of research skills to expand analysis of a primary source, evaluating and incorporating secondary source materials that encompass the social, historical, and critical aspects that provide context for the argument. About Myself: Name: James Greene Occupation: Senior Logistic Analyst/Lead .
Book required Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Ba.docx
Book required Current Issues and Enduring Questions, by Sylvan Ba.docx
moirarandell
Book Review #1- “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down” Chapters 1-3 Explain why Foua Yang’s birthdate may have been different in various locations in the medical charts? Describe how the history of the Hmong people as discussed in chapter two may have influenced Foua and Nao Kao’s perception of the physicians and nurses who appear to be in charge of their daughter’s care? How do you think to have an interpreter might have improved the outcomes of Lia’s numerous emergency room visits up to this point? Discuss the differences in conceptual frameworks that may have led Foua and Nao Kao and the caregivers at Merced County hospital to misunderstand one another during Lia’s admissions? How may have Foua and Nao Kao experienced cultural pain during the experience of Lia’s birth in the United States? Assignment File(s) NM 245 Book Review assignment overview [MSWord] Previous Next .
Book Review #1- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Chapte.docx
Book Review #1- The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down”Chapte.docx
moirarandell
Book report Gringo viejo- Carlos Fuentes The written book report must include the following (5 paragraphs,3-4 pages, in spanish ). always include a bibliography with the name of the book and the author, publisher, and copyright date. A. introduction- name, author of the book and brief background of the author. Also, in the introduction there should be a summary of the storys main idea{theme}, or briefly describe what the book is about B.Body of the report - the body of the report is made up of several paragraphs. you can start with a paragraph about the main characters, this may or may not include a physical description of the characters, but it will definitively include a description of their personalities. c. Figure out which type of conflict or problem exists in the story, and explain it in another paragraph. no plagerism, double spaced, in spanish .
Book reportGringo viejo- Carlos FuentesThe written book repo.docx
Book reportGringo viejo- Carlos FuentesThe written book repo.docx
moirarandell
Book reference: Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership Challenge, 5th Ed. New Jersey: Jossey-Bass Inc., 2012. Using Kouzes and Posner's theory, complete a personal audit--The Leadership Challenge book. Answers questions such as: What is a leader? What is an effective? What are some different types of leadership? What are the Five Practices of Exemplary Leadership? What are characteristics/traits of a leader? Ex. honest, trustworthy, consistent, inspiring What kind of leader are you? Attitudes and styles of past managers or leaders you have had. What are contemporary leaders known for? (their style/traits) 2-3 pages APA Double spaced 12 font. 1 inch margins .
Book reference Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership.docx
Book reference Kouzes, James M. and Posner, Barry Z. The Leadership.docx
moirarandell
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapter 8 on the media, and discuss these issues: 1.Planned obsolescence: provide Examples that should not be in the book but from your own life experience) Fig. 8.7 in the textbook: Violence in the media, and video games. Examples should from your own life experience, Media globalization: Examples. Is it good or bad for the cultural values of the countries involved? China and the Internet censorship: Why China is doing what it is doing? .
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapt.docx
BOOK PICTURE I POSTED TOO. Go to the the textbook, study chapt.docx
moirarandell
Book List Becker, Ernest The Denial of Death Castaneda, Carlos The Journey to Ixlan Castaneda, Carlos The Active Side of Infinity Jung, C.G. Modern Man in Search of a Soul Moore, Thomas Care of the Soul May, Rollo The Cry for Myth Peck, M. Scott The Road Less Traveled Keen, Sam Inward Bound Huxley, Adlous The Doors of Perception Jaynes, Julian The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind Storr & Stevens Freud & Jung Singer, June Boundaries of the Soul Esters, Clarissa Pinkola Women Who Run With the Wolves Grof, Stanislav Spiritual Emergency Jung, C.G. Memories, Dreams, Reflections Hillman, James We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy And the World’s Getting Worse Hesse, Herman Steppenwolf Chodron, Pema The Places that Scare You Grof, Christina & Stan The Stormy Search for the Self Jung, C.G. Flying Saucers Jung, C.G. Psychology and the Occult Freud, Sigmund Civilization and its Discontents M. Scott Peck People of the Lie Baumeister, Roy Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty Frankl, Viktor Man’s Search for Meaning Storr, Anthony The Essential Jung Strassman, Rick DMT: The Spirit Molecule Watson, John B. Behaviorism Freud, Sigmund The Interpretation of Dreams Stevens, Jay Storming Heaven: LSD and the American Dream Fromm, Erich Escape from Freedom Jung, Carl Answer to Job Kubler-Ross, Elizabeth Death and Dying Skinner, B.F. Beyond Freedom and Dignity Amundsen, Christan Insights From the Secret Teachings of Jesus Ruiz, Don Miguel The Four Agreements Moody, Raymond Life After Life Jonas, Hans The Gnostic Religion Ellis, Albert The Myth of Self-Esteem: How Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy Can Change Your Life Forever. May, Rollo The Discovery of Being: Writings .
Book ListBecker, Ernest The Denial of D.docx
Book ListBecker, Ernest The Denial of D.docx
moirarandell
Book is Media Literacy. Eighth Edition W. James Potter University of California, Santa Barbara Respond to the following in a minimum of 175 words: Describe the process of creating meaning. Provide an example of how you might assign meaning to a media message you have encountered. .
Book is Media Literacy. Eighth EditionW.JamesPotte.docx
Book is Media Literacy. Eighth EditionW.JamesPotte.docx
moirarandell
Book: Forensic and Investigative Accounting Please answer the questions listed below and submit in a word document. Exercise 41. What are Howard M. Schilit’s seven financial shenanigans? Exercise 71. Go to the FBI internet site or search other sources and prepare a report as to the fraudulent activities in these companies. How did the people pull off the fraud? a. Quest Communication. b. AmeriFunding. .
Book Forensic and Investigative AccountingPlease answer t.docx
Book Forensic and Investigative AccountingPlease answer t.docx
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Book "Criminoloy Second Edition " Read Chapter 6. Please submit your responses to the following questions via the drop box: 1. What is social disorganization ? How does it contribute to crime? What were Shaw and McKay's findings with regards to the Concentric Zone model? 2. Define anomie. How does this "cause" crime. 3. Briefly explain Robert K. Merton's Mean/Ends Theory (Modes of Adaptation). 4. According to Robert Agnew, what are the 3 major types of negative relationships which cause strain ? 5. What would Albert Cohen say caused crime? What are middle-class measuring rods ? 6. How do Sykes and Matza differ from Cohen in their belief of crime causation? 7. Briefly explain the violent subculture theory of Marvin Wolfgang. .
Book Criminoloy Second EditionRead Chapter 6. Please submit .docx
Book Criminoloy Second EditionRead Chapter 6. Please submit .docx
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Book Discussion #2 Ideas (may select 1 or more to respond to) submit to Discussion Drop Box by 3/1 at 11:59 pm : 1. Write on contrasting Kant's approach to ethics with consequentialism. Which do you think is better, and why? 2. Explain Kant's principle of universalizability and the principle of humanity. Do they ever give conflicting advice? If so, which do you think is a better guide to our moral obligations? 3. Kant claims that humans have a special kind of value not possessed by anything else on earth. How does he justify this claim? What are the implications of this view regarding the moral status of non-human animals? Do you find this view plausible? 4. What gives actions moral worth , according to Kant? Compare Kant's view on this subject with the view of the utilitarian. Which view do you think is preferable, and why? See RUBRIC and Example tabs (Maximum 30% similarity). Submit in Discussion Drop Box. No late assignments. .
Book Discussion #2 Ideas(may select 1 or more to respond to).docx
Book Discussion #2 Ideas(may select 1 or more to respond to).docx
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BOOK 1984 MiniProject: What makes a human being? One of the themes of 1984 is human dignity. In Part Two, Winston’s dreams and memories of his mother lead him to an appreciation of the proles and to the realization that “the proles had stayed human” (165). In Part Three, O’Brien refers to Winston as “the last man...the guardian of the human spirit” (270). Step 1: Write to analyze and explain your perspective on what it means to be human. Your writing should be 1-2 pages typed and printed. Think about all of the qualities that make a person “human” according to Winston—qualities that Winston says the Party has taken away and that Winston has had to “relearn by conscious effort” (165). Consider those qualities in your analysis and emphasize and/or add the qualities that you feel are most important to being human. Be sure to reflect the importance of each of the qualities both within the novel as well as importance to the human experience. Step 2: Choose from the options below or create your own (must be approved) to present/ illustrate your analysis: 2. Create a “recipe” that contains all of the essential “ingredients” that make up a human being. 3. Write your own lyrics to a song that explains what it means to be human. 4. Reflect key events from Winston or Julia’s point of view (ex. diary, social media account, video). 5. Make a written, audio, video, visual recording of Winston’s diary throughout the novel. 6. Create an interview with one of the characters (ex. News broadcast, talk show). 10. Create your own original ending for the novel. Conflict Resolution Strategies Outline Conflict Resolution Strategies – FH (Cultural Clashes in Workplace) I. Understanding the conflict · Identify contributing factors to conflicts in work environment. · Identify the parties involved in the conflict. · Approach towards achieving resolution. II. Goals · The short-term goal of conflict resolution. · The long-term goals of conflict resolution. III. The actual practice of conflict · Theoretical information which is the description of conflict resolutions that is to be used. · Inventive practices that show why this initiative is unique in resolving conflict. · The step by step instructions of resolving conflict in the workplace. IV. Conclusion · The guidebook towards achieving conflict resolution. · Resources necessary for establishing better conflict resolution. · Contact information for conflict management groups. GYPSYLOXX™ Conflict resolution Training ManualWelcome to the GLX Team The GLX mission is to start a movement to inspire the youth to become their own person; to create a distinctive look that is modern, upscale and versatile; as well as doing our best to assure ultimate Customer satisfaction. As a member of the GLX team, you are responsible for creating a friendly work environment by exhibiting the positive traits listed in this manual. We were very impressed with your experience and/or skill set and we think you w.
BOOK 1984 MiniProject What makes a human beingOne .docx
BOOK 1984 MiniProject What makes a human beingOne .docx
moirarandell
Bonnie Morgen: First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Dilemma Case Author: Barbara Lamberton Online Pub Date: January 02, 2019 | Original Pub. Date: 2018 Subject: Financial Reporting, Business Ethics Level: Intermediate | Type: Experience case | Length: 1120 words Copyright: © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. Organization: fictional/disguised | Organization size: Region: Global | State: Industry: Manufacturing Originally Published in: Lamberton, B. (2018). Bonnie Morgen: First day on the job and facing an ethical dilemma. IMA Education Case Journal, 11(1), Article 2. Publisher: Institute of Management Accountants DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 | Online ISBN: 9781526490650 javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. This case was prepared for inclusion in SAGE Business Cases primarily as a basis for classroom discussion or self-study, and is not meant to illustrate either effective or ineffective management styles. Nothing herein shall be deemed to be an endorsement of any kind. This case is for scholarly, educational, or personal use only within your university, and cannot be forwarded outside the university or used for other commercial purposes. 2020 SAGE Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved. This content may only be distributed for use within Colorado State Univ Global. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 SAGE © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. SAGE Business Cases Page 2 of 5 Bonnie Morgen: First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Dilemma http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 Abstract The case presents an accounting ethical dilemma where the controller of a business unit that produces and sells industrial components must decide what to do when her boss misrepresents orders as sales to meet sales budgets and thus overstates revenues by one and a half million dollars. Case Introduction Today is Bonnie Morgen’s first day on the job as controller of a business unit that produces and sells industrial components. She has been with the company for a number of years and most recently worked at headquar- ters, working directly for CFO Ed Judsen. Bonnie is replacing Jerry Mayfare, who recently left the company for another opportunity. Jerry’s previous work experience included 10 years of working at an entrepreneurial venture. Bonnie had heard that Jerry prided himself on not having a lot of formal accounting training. Starting today, Bonnie will work directly for Bill Ridgefield, the division general manager (GM), but she will still have responsibility to Ed. Although company policy dictates that both the GM and CFO have input in the con- troller’s performance evaluation, the GM’s input has greater weight for both the annual review and pay raises. Bill has a reputation as a personable and .
Bonnie Morgen First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Di.docx
Bonnie Morgen First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Di.docx
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Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corporations of all types. In this discussion forum, you will have the opportunity to discuss possible sources of risks from the investors’ perspective. For your initial post, assess what you think are the top three biggest risks for investors associated in bond investments, and explain why. Support your claims with references to at least one recent relevant news article from a credible financial media source (i.e., Bloomberg Business Week, Wall Street Journal, Yahoo Finance, etc.) .
Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corpora.docx
Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corpora.docx
moirarandell
Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on January 1, 2013. In applying the LIFO method, Bond uses internal cost indexes and the multiple-pools approach. The following data were available for Inventory Pool No. 3 for the two years following the adoption of LIFO: Ending Inventory At Current At Base Year Cost Year Cost Cost index 1/1/13 $305,000 $305,000 1.00 12/31/13 334,360 321,500 1.04 12/31/14 441,440 356,000 1.24 Under the dollar-value LIFO method the inventory at December 31, 2014, should be .
Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on Janua.docx
Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on Janua.docx
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Boley: A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The community of Boley, in the Creek Nation of Indian Territory, or what is now Oklahoma, was one of thirty black towns founded in the West after the Civil War and settled by immigrants from the South and Middle West. Blacks first arrived in Oklahoma as the slaves of Cherokees and Creeks. The Indians had been displaced from the Carolinas and Georgia during the 1830s and forced to relocate by foot along the "Trail of Tears" to new lands in Oklahoma. In 1908, a year after Oklahoma was granted statehood, Booker T. Washington described the town's development. The large proportions of the northward and westward movement of the negro population recall the Kansas exodus of thirty years ago, when within a few months more than forty thousand helpless and destitute negroes from the country districts of Arkansas and Mississippi poured into eastern Kansas in search of "better homes, larger opportunities, and kindlier treatment." It is a striking evidence of the progress made in thirty years that the present northward and westward movement of the negro people has brought into these new lands, not a helpless and ignorant horde of black people--but land-seekers and home-builders, men who have come prepared to build up the country. In the thirty years since the Kansas exodus the southern negroes have learned to build schools, to establish banks and conduct newspapers. They have recovered something of the knack for trade that their foreparents in Africa were famous for. They have learned through their churches and their secret orders the art of corporate and united action. This experience has enabled them to set up and maintain in a raw western community, numbering 2,500, an orderly and self-respecting government. In the fall of 1905 I spent a week in the Territories of Oklahoma and Indian Territory. During the course of my visit I had an opportunity for the first time to see the three races--the negro, the Indian, and the white man--living side by side, each in sufficient numbers to make their influence felt in the communities of which they were a part, and in the Territory as a whole. . . . One cannot escape the impression, in traveling through Indian Territory, that the Indians, who own practically all the lands, and until recently had the local government largely in their own hands, are to a very large extent regarded by the white settlers, who are rapidly filling up the country, as almost a negligible quantity. To such an extent is this true that the Constitution of Oklahoma, as I understand it, takes no account of the Indians in drawing its distinctions among the races. For the Constitution there exist only the negro and the white man. The reason seems to be that the Indians have either receded--"gone back," as the saying in that region is on the advance of the white race, or they have intermarried with and become absorbed with it. Indeed, so rapidly has this interma.
Boley A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The commu.docx
Boley A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The commu.docx
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Bolsonaro and Brazil's Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timothy J. Power Journal of Democracy, Volume 30, Number 1, January 2019, pp. 68-82 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: For additional information about this article Access provided at 11 Apr 2019 16:33 GMT from University of Toronto Library https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2019.0005 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/713723 https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2019.0005 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/713723 Bolsonaro and Brazil’s illiBeral Backlash Wendy Hunter and Timothy J. Power Wendy Hunter is professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin. Her works include The Transformation of the Workers’ Party in Brazil, 1989–2009 (2010). Timothy J. Power is head of the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies and professor of Latin American politics at the University of Oxford. Most recently, he is coauthor of Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective: Minority Presi- dents in Multiparty Systems (2018). On 28 October 2018, Brazilian voters delivered a sweeping victory to presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro, putting the far-right populist at the helm of the world’s fourth-largest democracy. After a raucous campaign in which the former army captain demonized his political op- ponents and promised to save the country from total ruin, Bolsonaro handed a stinging defeat to the left-leaning Workers’ Party (PT), which had governed Brazil from 2003 to 2016. Social media, along with net- works of Pentecostal churches, helped to disseminate Bolsonaro’s in- cendiary messages and organize his broad multiclass following. After nearly clinching the presidency in the October 7 first round with over 46 percent of valid votes, Bolsonaro received 55.13 percent of the vote in the runoff (see Table on p. 70). The remaining 44.87 percent went to PT candidate Fernando Haddad—a last-minute substitute during the first round for popular former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who had been imprisoned since April 2018 on corruption charges linked to Brazil’s mammoth Operaç~ao Lava Jato (Operation Car Wash) scandal. In keeping with the polarizing tone of the campaign, the share of voters who cast ballots for each candidate closely approximated the share who expressed a strong antipathy toward the opposing candidate. Concurrent elections for the 513-member Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the bicameral National Congress, saw a surge by Bolsonaro’s hitherto minuscule Social Liberal Party (PSL): This party went from winning only a single seat in 2014 to claiming 52 seats and the highest share of Journal of Democracy Volume 30, Number 1 January 2019 © 2019 National Endowment for Democracy and Johns Hopkins University Press 69Wendy Hunter and Timothy J. Power popular votes in 2018. Bolsonaro had joined the PSL—previously one of the nondescript “parties for rent” that help to populate Brazil’s fluid system—in 2018 merely to qualify for a.
Bolsonaro and Brazils Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timo.docx
Bolsonaro and Brazils Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timo.docx
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BoF Professional Member Exclusive: articles & analysis available only to you. View the archive. lg Professional ! CEO TALK Burberry Stops Destroying Product and Bans Real Fur A PR backlash enveloped Burberry following the revelation that it destroyed £28.6 million worth of unsold product last year. Now, the company is ending the practice and banning animal fur. In a global exclusive interview, BoF's Imran Amed sits down with Burberry CEO Marco Gobbetti to decode the thinking behind the move. BY IMRAN AMED SEPTEMBER 6, 2018 05:28 ACTION REQUIRED: You are currently missing out on important BoF Professional membership beneNts. Click here to rectify. LONDON, United Kingdom — Burberry is stopping its longstanding practice of destroying unsold product after a firestorm of negative press and social media posts in July. That month, it emerged that the British brand had destroyed £28.6 million ($36.8 million) worth of product — including clothing, accessories and perfume — in fiscal 2017/2018. The company has destroyed £105 million ($135 million) of unsold product in the last five years, a practice it has previously disclosed in its annual reports. Alongside the shift, Burberry is also banning the use of animal fur — including rabbit, fox, mink and Asiatic raccoon, as well as angora — in its runway collections, beginning with new chief creative officer Riccardo Tisci’s highly anticipated debut collection set to be unveiled on September 17 at London Fashion Week. Existing fur products will be phased out over time, however the brand will continue to sell products made with shearling. “Modern luxury means being socially and environmentally responsible. This belief is core to us at Burberry and key to our long-term success,” said chief executive Marco Gobbetti in a statement. But clearly, the negative publicity was a wake-up call for the British luxury behemoth. “We are in the midst of an environmental crisis exacerbated by the fashion industry,” read an open letter to Burberry from second-hand retailer ThredUp, which captured the sentiment of the backlash. “Fashion is now responsible for 10 percent of global carbon emissions and is projected to drain a quarter of the world’s carbon budget by 2050. We respect the desire to protect your brand image but discounting your product shouldn’t be scarier than setting it on fire.” Burberry is not the only fashion or luxury brand to have destroyed product. Last November, H&M was reported to have burned unsold products. According to the New York Times, Nike slashes its unsold sneakers. And, Richemont has reportedly destroyed more than £400 million worth of watches from high-end brands including Cartier and Jaeger-LeCoultre. Indeed, it is one of the industry’s dirty secrets that brands regularly destroy product to protect their intellectual property from counterfeiters and to limit the diminished brand perception that comes with disposing of excess stock through heavy discounting. Burberry says its new.
BoF Professional Member Exclusive articles & analysis availa.docx
BoF Professional Member Exclusive articles & analysis availa.docx
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Bogdan Salacki ECON - 420 R-Script for HW 4 library(readxl) Growth_1_ <- read_excel("~/Downloads/Growth (1).xlsx") View(Growth_1_) #a. In preparation a scatter plot, the columns growth and trade share have to be secluded growth<-Growth_1_$growth tradeshare<-Growth_1_$tradeshare # When you see the values, the plot function can be put into effect plot(growth,tradeshare) #Based on the scatter plot, the data looks like to have a positive correaltion/relationship. #b. Yes, Malta looks like detached because it is the only plot with the largest tradeshare compared with the rest of the data. #c. To find regression of the data use code below: reg1<-lm(growth~tradeshare) #Then, summarize the data using: summary(reg1) #slope for tradeshare= 2.3064 #estimated intercept for growth= 0.6403 #When tradeshare = 0.5 the regression equation is: 0.6403 + 2.3064 (0.5)= 1.7935 #When tradeshare = 1, the regression equation is: 0.6403 +2.3064 (1)= 2.9467 #e. To plot the regression line on the scatter plot, use the code abline(Reg1), and it will reveal a line for the data. #f. Malta is shown in the scatter plot to the right, farthest away from the remaining data. A reason for Malta having such a large tradeshare could be that it's imports/exports are very different from the other countries in the data thus, affecting the size or amount of it. Malta's import/exports could be of the goods that are transported a lot faster or a lot slower than the rest of the countries being analyzed. Because of that, and also because Malta was determined to be differing from all other members, it cannot be included in the analysis. Sheet1Content meets or exceeds criteria, is accurate and shows an extraordinary understanding through rich examples and explanations. Content meets criteria with minimal errors, is accurate and shows a clear understanding through appropriate examples and explanations. Content shows a basic understanding of key ideas, yet includes some inaccuracies.Content was not included or incomplete, and/or extremely inaccurate CriteriaPoints PossibleEarned PointsA+AA-B+BB-C+CC-D+DD-FOther100%95%91%87%85%81%77%75%71%67%65%61%0%TOTAL1000ExemplaryCompetentProgressingInsufficient/Not Evident>0% & <61%12002250335041005100N/AN/AAssignment Title:Module 06 Course Project - Final Project Proposal and Project PresentationPage Length Required:5-9 Pages (required APA components e.g. cover page, swot chart, direct quotes and reference page do not count toward page requirement)Rubric CriteriaPointsDescription120Completes Final Written Project Proposal on how the Annual Convention should be be planned and delivered using the modules from previous weeks. Follows the suggested Project outline: Project Selection, WBS, Scope statement, Communications plan, Risk analysis, Project Budget, Project Schedule, Resource Plan 225The final report is a minimum of 5 pages and significantly emphasizes project management. Included appendixes, charts, and tables. Note: Unreasonably sized app.
Bogdan SalackiECON - 420R-Script for HW 4library(readxl).docx
Bogdan SalackiECON - 420R-Script for HW 4library(readxl).docx
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body { text-align: center; font-family: sans-serif; } canvas { background-color: black; } styles.css body { text-align: center; font-family: sans-serif; } canvas { background-color: black; } __MACOSX/._styles.css // Draw stuff // Time-stamp: <2019-01-21 20:08:33 Chuck Siska> // ------------------------------------------------------------ // FUN. Draw filled rect. function draw_rect( ctx, stroke, fill ) { stroke = stroke || 'lightgrey'; fill = fill || 'dimgrey'; ctx.save( ); ctx.strokeStyle = stroke; ctx.fillStyle = fill; ctx.lineWidth = 5; ctx.rect(75, 50, canvas.width - 150, canvas.height - 100); ctx.stroke(); ctx.fill(); ctx.restore( ); } // ===================================================== draw_grid ==== function draw_grid( rctx, rminor, rmajor, rstroke, rfill ) { rctx.save( ); rctx.strokeStyle = rstroke; rctx.fillStyle = rfill; let width = rctx.canvas.width; let height = rctx.canvas.height; for ( var ix = 0; ix < width; ix += rminor ) { rctx.beginPath( ); rctx.moveTo( ix, 0 ); rctx.lineTo( ix, height ); rctx.lineWidth = ( ix % rmajor == 0 ) ? 0.5 : 0.25; rctx.stroke( ); if ( ix % rmajor == 0 ) { rctx.fillText( ix, ix, 10 ); } } for ( var iy = 0; iy < height; iy += rminor ) { rctx.beginPath( ); rctx.moveTo( 0, iy ); rctx.lineTo( width, iy ); rctx.lineWidth = ( iy % rmajor == 0 ) ? 0.5 : 0.25; rctx.stroke( ); if ( iy % rmajor == 0 ) {rctx.fillText( iy, 0, iy + 10 );} } rctx.restore( ); } 335 — Algorithm Engineering — Cella Rule 90 Project #1 – Cella Rule 90 Introduction This project is to write a program to display the generational progress of Wolfram's Rule-90 cellular automaton. The program will be written in Javascript with an HTML web page for display. The cella "growth generations" will be shown in a 2D grid of black and white cells. Each row after the top will show the next generation. Rule-90 Wolfram's Rule-90 (from his 2002 book "A New Kind of Science") is based on a 1D array where each cell is "active". What happens to it depends on its current binary state (1 or 0, white or black) and the states of its two neighbors; 3 cells in all. With 3 binary cells, there are 8 possible configurations. A Rule needs to specify what happens to a cell with each of those 8 neighborly configurations. Rule-90 looks like this: This Rule format is interpreted as follows: leftmost is a cell containing all black (1's, or filled cells). If the center cell and its two neighbors are in state 1, then in the next generation, the cell will change to state 0 (white, clear). Put differently, if the binary number represented by the 3 cells is 111 = 7; then the middle cell will be changes to state 0 in the next generation. A similar analysis is used for the other 7 tri.
body { text-align center; font-family sans-serif;}.docx
body { text-align center; font-family sans-serif;}.docx
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Body Paragraphs Outline Introduction: “Auto-pilot cars also referred to as driverless cars are vehicles that are capable of moving with no human involvement or little input by sensing the environment.” These cars combine several sensors that perceive the surrounding such as GPS, radar, Odometer, and computer vision. Their advanced control systems then interpret the sensory data to recognize the appropriate navigation path. Thesis: “Auto-pilot cars have various benefits to human, environment, and economy.” Body Paragraph #1: Topic sentence: Self-drive cars increase safety. The safety benefits that are anticipated from these cars include reducing the number of traffic collisions that results in injuries and additional costs. Besides, these cars will provide increased traffic flow to avoid rush among motorists that have always resulted in accidents. Body Paragraph #2: Topic sentence: Self-drive cars increase mobility for the children, disabled, and the elderly. Majorly, the automated driving feature is critical for assisting people with special needs during driving to travel and navigate without barriers. These cars thus are helpful for these groups of people as they will just sit and reach their destinations. Body Paragraph #3: Topic sentence: Auto-pilot cars reduce costs. These cars adequately reduce the need of parking space and fees, reduce crime rates, and increases fuel efficiency. Besides, they reduce costs through reducing insurance rates since they are usually accident free and do not necessitate insurance. Body Paragraph #4: Topic sentence: Self-drive vehicles are fast and have little breakdown time. Since they are automated, these cars identify and inform the owners on the potential mechanical issues and suggest potential solution. Therefore, the user can fix the problem without having to manually identify and correct the problem. Conclusion: In summary, auto-pilot cars are beneficial in many aspects. They increase mobility rates among humans as well as safety. Besides, they reduce costs and have little mechanical breakdown concerns. 1 Sexual Offenses and Offenders There are few groups of individuals who are more reviled than sexual offenders. Though this has been true for more than a century, the past two decades have brought forth intense scrutiny from the public, politicians, and policymakers. Several emotionally-charged cases of child sexual abuse were highly publicized in the 1980s and 1990s, reigniting public intolerance for sexual offenders. And although the incidence of sexual offenses has been decreasing, sanctions for sex offenders have been constantly increasing over the last two decades. Unfortunately, empirical research does not show that such sanctions significantly deter offenders or reduce recidivism, and yet this legislation creates significant financial strain for local jurisdictions and states that must implement the policies (Zgoba et al., 2008). Despite the questionable efficacy of these laws, there .
Body Paragraphs OutlineIntroduction Auto-pilot cars also refer.docx
Body Paragraphs OutlineIntroduction Auto-pilot cars also refer.docx
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Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for retirement and consider the $2,000 annual contribution a must. First, consider Lisa's savings. She began working at age 20 and began making an annual contribution of $2,000 at the first of the year beginning with her first year. She makes 13 contributions. She worked until she was 32 and then left full time work to have children and be a stay at home mom. She left her IRA invested and plans to begin drawing from her IRA when she is 65. Bob started his IRA at age 32. The first 12 years of his working career, he used his discretionary income to buy a home, upgrade the family cars, take vacations, and pursue his golfing hobby. At age 32, he made his first $2,000 contribution to an IRA, and contributed $2,000 every year up until age 65, a total of 33 years / contributions. He plans to retire at age 65 and make withdrawals from his IRA. Both IRA accounts grow at a 7% annual rate. Do not consider any tax effect. Write a two to three (2-3) paragraph summary in which you: Create a chart summarizing the details of the investment for both Bob and Lisa. Explain the results in terms of time value of money. .
Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for re.docx
Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for re.docx
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Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent African American Girls: The Moderating Influence of Family Racial Socialization Ellen M. Granberg, Department of Sociology & Anthropology 132 Brackett Hall Clemson University Clemson SC 29634 864-656-3812 [email protected] Leslie Gordon Simons, and Department of Child and Family Development 204 403 Sanford Drive University of Georgia Athens GA 30602 [email protected] Ronald L. Simons Department of Sociology 116 Baldwin Hall University of Georgia Athens GA 30602 706-542-3232 [email protected] Abstract Social psychologists have amassed a large body of work demonstrating that overweight African American adolescent girls have generally positive self-images, particularly when compared with overweight females from other racial and ethnic groups. Some scholars have proposed that elements of African American social experience may contribute to the maintenance of these positive self- views. In this paper, we evaluate these arguments using data drawn from a panel study of socio- economically diverse African American adolescent girls living in Iowa and Georgia. We analyze the relationship between body size and social self-image over three waves of data, starting when the girls were 10 years of age and concluding when they were approximately 14. We find that heavier respondents hold less positive social self-images but also find that being raised in a family that practices racial socialization moderates this relationship. Keywords obesity; adolescence; racial socialization The relationship between body weight and self-image among African American adolescent girls has been the topic of considerable study (Ge, Elder, Regnerus, & Cox, 2001; Lovejoy, 2001; Smolak & Levine, 2001). Overall, the results of this work show that, while African American girls are more likely to be overweight than females of other racial groups, they also feel good about their bodies and exhibit a relatively weak association between body size and outcomes such as self-esteem, self-evaluation, and psychological health (Berkowitz & Stunkard, 2002; Neumark-Sztainer, Story, Hannan, & Croll, 2002). These patterns have led scholars to suggest that elements of African American life may serve a protective function, limiting the negative influence of body size on self-image (Roberts, Cash, Feingold, & Johnson, 2006). In this paper, we explore these arguments by assessing the association between body size and social self-image within a sample of adolescent African American girls. We then Direct all correspondence to Dr. Ellen Granberg, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, 132 Brackett Hall, Clemson University, Clemson SC 29634 ([email protected]).. NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Youth Soc. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 December 1. Published in final edited form as: Youth Soc. 2009 December 1; 41(2): 256–277. doi:10.1177/0044118X09338505. N IH -P A A uthor M anuscript N IH -P A A uthor M anuscript N IH -P A .
Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent AfricanAmer.docx
Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent AfricanAmer.docx
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Body Modification Is a Sign of Cultural Depravity Self-Mutilation, 2008 From Opposing Viewpoints in Context "Body mutilation is the decoration of choice for an age which has turned violence into a modish cult." In the following viewpoint, British columnist and author Melanie Phillips decries the trendiness of body modifications such as tattooing, piercing, and cosmetic surgery. She equates these fashion statements with self-mutilation and sees their popularity as a sign of a morally corrupt, shallow, and spiritually empty culture. Moreover, she asserts, body modification reflects low self-esteem and a hatred of the body rooted in a desire to evade reality. As you read, consider the following questions: What do Botox injections do, according to Phillips?1. In what ways do tattoos expose a "hollowness of character," according to the author?2. What is self-mutilation an outward sign of, in Phillips' opinion?3. There was a time when sentimentality meant wearing your heart on your sleeve. Now it's more likely to be carved into the nape of your neck. [English professional footballer] David Beckham has revealed a startling tattoo below his hair line depicting a green cross with wings extending almost from ear to ear. This enigmatic example of neck art has occasioned wonderment and disgust in equal measure. At the same time, the quiz show host Anne Robinson has come clean about her recent face-lift, which she had done because she didn't want a 'face like a road map'. Now, there's nothing like the boast of yet another celebrity about having her face lifted to cause the faces of everyone else to fall. But surely, something more than mere vanity is at work here. A Fortune on Blemishes? After all, isn't it somewhat strange that while people like Anne Robinson spend a fortune having blemishes removed from their physiognomy, people like David Beckham are busy putting fresh ones indelibly on? The Beckham winged cross has hardly enhanced its owner's natural beauty. It is, in short, thuggish and repellent. It is also very large, permanent and, since it is so visible on the back of his neck, in your face (so to speak). Even the tattooist expressed concern about using such a prominent location. So what does its appearance mean? Amateur psychologists speculate it is some kind of tough-guy # # # statement to counter the recent torrid allegations about the state of his marriage. But this is the ninth tattoo to adorn the Beckham torso. Others sport his wife's name spelled out in Hindi, his son's name in inch-high Gothic lettering, his iconic shirt number 7, and a Michelangelo angel on his right arm. Designer Wounds This goes beyond one silly footballer dreaming up new ways to make himelf the centre of attention. For what was once the adornment of choice for sailors or skinheads has now become high fashion—particularly for women, who sport tattoos on their shoulders or in more discreet places. Such tattoos are considered sexy. But however femini.
Body Modification Is a Sign of CulturalDepravitySelf-Mutil.docx
Body Modification Is a Sign of CulturalDepravitySelf-Mutil.docx
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Body of the paper: (Panera Bread Bakery company) 1-Stakeholders and the Corporate Mission 2-Stakeholder impact analysis 3-Corporate social responsibility 4- Industry’s dominant economic characteristics/traits (include table) 5- Current summary of the company (current location, number of employees, earnings, etc.) DOCUMENTATION Correct use of APA Style (documentation, spacing, headings, tables, figures, etc.) Use Times New Roman in Font 12, double spaced. Works Cited Page (use APA format) at least 6 sources. DUE IN 31 OCT .
Body of the paper(Panera Bread Bakery company)1-Stakehold.docx
Body of the paper(Panera Bread Bakery company)1-Stakehold.docx
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Body Image Watch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an external site.) and then respond to the following items in your discussion post: Does this video encourage eating disorders? How has media shaped the way women view themselves? 2 paragraphs .
Body ImageWatch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an externa.docx
Body ImageWatch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an externa.docx
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Bob is a hard-working guy who lives in Smallville, USA. Bob is getting ready for work one day and listening to the national news at the same time. He hears a report from the director of the FBI that Osama Bin Laden is now in the United States and is hiding out somewhere near Smallville, USA. The FBI director advised the people of Smallville to be on the lookout for Bin Laden, that he is armed and dangerous and is planning a terrorist attack. The FBI director said they have intelligence information that Bin Laden was spotted in a brown Pontiac 2 door vehicle and had vowed to blow up an innocent person’s house as a show of his power in the USA. Bob looks out the window of his house as this news report is still happening. Bob has been watching the news for the last 24 hours because of the attack on the World Trade Centers in New York, and Osama Bin Laden was reported to be responsible for those attacks. Bob sees a brown 2 door Pontiac pull up in front of his neighbor’s house. An Arab man with a long beard gets out of the car carrying a large black package and begins walking up to his neighbor’s door. Bob realizes this man is Osama Bin Laden and he fears he is going to blow up his neighbor’s house. He grabs his gun and runs out the front door. He yells at the man firing his gun at the same time. Bob kills the man. His neighbor comes running out of the house as Bob is walking up to the man. His neighbor asked Bob what he had done. Bob said, “I just killed Osama Bin Laden! He was going to blow up your house!” Bob’s neighbor then said, “That’s not Osama Bin Laden! That is the pizza delivery man and that is the pizza I just ordered! Bob looked down and could see the Pizza Hut logo on the man’s shirt and could see a corner of the pizza box sticking out of the large black package. The man he killed was not Osama Bin Laden. John is not a hard-working guy. John also lives in Smallville. John has been in trouble his entire life and has been arrested many times. John was sitting at his house the same day the FBI warned the public that Osama Bin Laden was in the area. John did not hear this warning because his electricity had been shut off the week before. John called the electric company (Superior Energy) and after they refused to turn his electricity back on, he threatened to kill someone from Superior Energy. John was angry and bitter at Superior Energy. John told his friends and family he would get revenge against Superior Energy. John is sitting on his couch with a gun in his hand plotting his revenge and trying to figure out what he is going to do to Superior Energy. While John is sitting on the couch, he notices a Superior Energy electric company truck pull up in front the elementary school next to his house. The two men in the Superior Energy truck get out and begin unloading some equipment. John sees this as his opportunity to teach Superior Energy a lesson. He runs out his door and shoots both men whil.
Bob is a hard-working guy who lives in Smallville, USA. Bob.docx
Bob is a hard-working guy who lives in Smallville, USA. Bob.docx
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https://app.box.com/s/7hlvjxjalkrik7fb082xx3jk7xd7liz3
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
Students will get the knowledge of the following- meaning of the pricing, its importance, objectives, methods of pricing, factors affecting the price of products, An overview of DPCO (Drug Price Control Order) and NPPA (National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority)
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
VishalSingh1417
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Book is Media Literacy. Eighth Edition W. James Potter University of California, Santa Barbara Respond to the following in a minimum of 175 words: Describe the process of creating meaning. Provide an example of how you might assign meaning to a media message you have encountered. .
Book is Media Literacy. Eighth EditionW.JamesPotte.docx
Book is Media Literacy. Eighth EditionW.JamesPotte.docx
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Book: Forensic and Investigative Accounting Please answer the questions listed below and submit in a word document. Exercise 41. What are Howard M. Schilit’s seven financial shenanigans? Exercise 71. Go to the FBI internet site or search other sources and prepare a report as to the fraudulent activities in these companies. How did the people pull off the fraud? a. Quest Communication. b. AmeriFunding. .
Book Forensic and Investigative AccountingPlease answer t.docx
Book Forensic and Investigative AccountingPlease answer t.docx
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Book "Criminoloy Second Edition " Read Chapter 6. Please submit your responses to the following questions via the drop box: 1. What is social disorganization ? How does it contribute to crime? What were Shaw and McKay's findings with regards to the Concentric Zone model? 2. Define anomie. How does this "cause" crime. 3. Briefly explain Robert K. Merton's Mean/Ends Theory (Modes of Adaptation). 4. According to Robert Agnew, what are the 3 major types of negative relationships which cause strain ? 5. What would Albert Cohen say caused crime? What are middle-class measuring rods ? 6. How do Sykes and Matza differ from Cohen in their belief of crime causation? 7. Briefly explain the violent subculture theory of Marvin Wolfgang. .
Book Criminoloy Second EditionRead Chapter 6. Please submit .docx
Book Criminoloy Second EditionRead Chapter 6. Please submit .docx
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Book Discussion #2 Ideas (may select 1 or more to respond to) submit to Discussion Drop Box by 3/1 at 11:59 pm : 1. Write on contrasting Kant's approach to ethics with consequentialism. Which do you think is better, and why? 2. Explain Kant's principle of universalizability and the principle of humanity. Do they ever give conflicting advice? If so, which do you think is a better guide to our moral obligations? 3. Kant claims that humans have a special kind of value not possessed by anything else on earth. How does he justify this claim? What are the implications of this view regarding the moral status of non-human animals? Do you find this view plausible? 4. What gives actions moral worth , according to Kant? Compare Kant's view on this subject with the view of the utilitarian. Which view do you think is preferable, and why? See RUBRIC and Example tabs (Maximum 30% similarity). Submit in Discussion Drop Box. No late assignments. .
Book Discussion #2 Ideas(may select 1 or more to respond to).docx
Book Discussion #2 Ideas(may select 1 or more to respond to).docx
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BOOK 1984 MiniProject: What makes a human being? One of the themes of 1984 is human dignity. In Part Two, Winston’s dreams and memories of his mother lead him to an appreciation of the proles and to the realization that “the proles had stayed human” (165). In Part Three, O’Brien refers to Winston as “the last man...the guardian of the human spirit” (270). Step 1: Write to analyze and explain your perspective on what it means to be human. Your writing should be 1-2 pages typed and printed. Think about all of the qualities that make a person “human” according to Winston—qualities that Winston says the Party has taken away and that Winston has had to “relearn by conscious effort” (165). Consider those qualities in your analysis and emphasize and/or add the qualities that you feel are most important to being human. Be sure to reflect the importance of each of the qualities both within the novel as well as importance to the human experience. Step 2: Choose from the options below or create your own (must be approved) to present/ illustrate your analysis: 2. Create a “recipe” that contains all of the essential “ingredients” that make up a human being. 3. Write your own lyrics to a song that explains what it means to be human. 4. Reflect key events from Winston or Julia’s point of view (ex. diary, social media account, video). 5. Make a written, audio, video, visual recording of Winston’s diary throughout the novel. 6. Create an interview with one of the characters (ex. News broadcast, talk show). 10. Create your own original ending for the novel. Conflict Resolution Strategies Outline Conflict Resolution Strategies – FH (Cultural Clashes in Workplace) I. Understanding the conflict · Identify contributing factors to conflicts in work environment. · Identify the parties involved in the conflict. · Approach towards achieving resolution. II. Goals · The short-term goal of conflict resolution. · The long-term goals of conflict resolution. III. The actual practice of conflict · Theoretical information which is the description of conflict resolutions that is to be used. · Inventive practices that show why this initiative is unique in resolving conflict. · The step by step instructions of resolving conflict in the workplace. IV. Conclusion · The guidebook towards achieving conflict resolution. · Resources necessary for establishing better conflict resolution. · Contact information for conflict management groups. GYPSYLOXX™ Conflict resolution Training ManualWelcome to the GLX Team The GLX mission is to start a movement to inspire the youth to become their own person; to create a distinctive look that is modern, upscale and versatile; as well as doing our best to assure ultimate Customer satisfaction. As a member of the GLX team, you are responsible for creating a friendly work environment by exhibiting the positive traits listed in this manual. We were very impressed with your experience and/or skill set and we think you w.
BOOK 1984 MiniProject What makes a human beingOne .docx
BOOK 1984 MiniProject What makes a human beingOne .docx
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Bonnie Morgen: First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Dilemma Case Author: Barbara Lamberton Online Pub Date: January 02, 2019 | Original Pub. Date: 2018 Subject: Financial Reporting, Business Ethics Level: Intermediate | Type: Experience case | Length: 1120 words Copyright: © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. Organization: fictional/disguised | Organization size: Region: Global | State: Industry: Manufacturing Originally Published in: Lamberton, B. (2018). Bonnie Morgen: First day on the job and facing an ethical dilemma. IMA Education Case Journal, 11(1), Article 2. Publisher: Institute of Management Accountants DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 | Online ISBN: 9781526490650 javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); javascript: void(0); http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. This case was prepared for inclusion in SAGE Business Cases primarily as a basis for classroom discussion or self-study, and is not meant to illustrate either effective or ineffective management styles. Nothing herein shall be deemed to be an endorsement of any kind. This case is for scholarly, educational, or personal use only within your university, and cannot be forwarded outside the university or used for other commercial purposes. 2020 SAGE Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved. This content may only be distributed for use within Colorado State Univ Global. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 SAGE © 2018 IMA Educational Case Journal. All rights reserved. SAGE Business Cases Page 2 of 5 Bonnie Morgen: First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Dilemma http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781526490650 Abstract The case presents an accounting ethical dilemma where the controller of a business unit that produces and sells industrial components must decide what to do when her boss misrepresents orders as sales to meet sales budgets and thus overstates revenues by one and a half million dollars. Case Introduction Today is Bonnie Morgen’s first day on the job as controller of a business unit that produces and sells industrial components. She has been with the company for a number of years and most recently worked at headquar- ters, working directly for CFO Ed Judsen. Bonnie is replacing Jerry Mayfare, who recently left the company for another opportunity. Jerry’s previous work experience included 10 years of working at an entrepreneurial venture. Bonnie had heard that Jerry prided himself on not having a lot of formal accounting training. Starting today, Bonnie will work directly for Bill Ridgefield, the division general manager (GM), but she will still have responsibility to Ed. Although company policy dictates that both the GM and CFO have input in the con- troller’s performance evaluation, the GM’s input has greater weight for both the annual review and pay raises. Bill has a reputation as a personable and .
Bonnie Morgen First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Di.docx
Bonnie Morgen First Day on the Job and Facing an Ethical Di.docx
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Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corporations of all types. In this discussion forum, you will have the opportunity to discuss possible sources of risks from the investors’ perspective. For your initial post, assess what you think are the top three biggest risks for investors associated in bond investments, and explain why. Support your claims with references to at least one recent relevant news article from a credible financial media source (i.e., Bloomberg Business Week, Wall Street Journal, Yahoo Finance, etc.) .
Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corpora.docx
Bonds are a vital source of financing to governments and corpora.docx
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Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on January 1, 2013. In applying the LIFO method, Bond uses internal cost indexes and the multiple-pools approach. The following data were available for Inventory Pool No. 3 for the two years following the adoption of LIFO: Ending Inventory At Current At Base Year Cost Year Cost Cost index 1/1/13 $305,000 $305,000 1.00 12/31/13 334,360 321,500 1.04 12/31/14 441,440 356,000 1.24 Under the dollar-value LIFO method the inventory at December 31, 2014, should be .
Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on Janua.docx
Bond Company adopted the dollar-value LIFO inventory method on Janua.docx
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Boley: A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The community of Boley, in the Creek Nation of Indian Territory, or what is now Oklahoma, was one of thirty black towns founded in the West after the Civil War and settled by immigrants from the South and Middle West. Blacks first arrived in Oklahoma as the slaves of Cherokees and Creeks. The Indians had been displaced from the Carolinas and Georgia during the 1830s and forced to relocate by foot along the "Trail of Tears" to new lands in Oklahoma. In 1908, a year after Oklahoma was granted statehood, Booker T. Washington described the town's development. The large proportions of the northward and westward movement of the negro population recall the Kansas exodus of thirty years ago, when within a few months more than forty thousand helpless and destitute negroes from the country districts of Arkansas and Mississippi poured into eastern Kansas in search of "better homes, larger opportunities, and kindlier treatment." It is a striking evidence of the progress made in thirty years that the present northward and westward movement of the negro people has brought into these new lands, not a helpless and ignorant horde of black people--but land-seekers and home-builders, men who have come prepared to build up the country. In the thirty years since the Kansas exodus the southern negroes have learned to build schools, to establish banks and conduct newspapers. They have recovered something of the knack for trade that their foreparents in Africa were famous for. They have learned through their churches and their secret orders the art of corporate and united action. This experience has enabled them to set up and maintain in a raw western community, numbering 2,500, an orderly and self-respecting government. In the fall of 1905 I spent a week in the Territories of Oklahoma and Indian Territory. During the course of my visit I had an opportunity for the first time to see the three races--the negro, the Indian, and the white man--living side by side, each in sufficient numbers to make their influence felt in the communities of which they were a part, and in the Territory as a whole. . . . One cannot escape the impression, in traveling through Indian Territory, that the Indians, who own practically all the lands, and until recently had the local government largely in their own hands, are to a very large extent regarded by the white settlers, who are rapidly filling up the country, as almost a negligible quantity. To such an extent is this true that the Constitution of Oklahoma, as I understand it, takes no account of the Indians in drawing its distinctions among the races. For the Constitution there exist only the negro and the white man. The reason seems to be that the Indians have either receded--"gone back," as the saying in that region is on the advance of the white race, or they have intermarried with and become absorbed with it. Indeed, so rapidly has this interma.
Boley A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The commu.docx
Boley A Negro Town in the American West (1908) The commu.docx
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Bolsonaro and Brazil's Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timothy J. Power Journal of Democracy, Volume 30, Number 1, January 2019, pp. 68-82 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: For additional information about this article Access provided at 11 Apr 2019 16:33 GMT from University of Toronto Library https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2019.0005 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/713723 https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2019.0005 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/713723 Bolsonaro and Brazil’s illiBeral Backlash Wendy Hunter and Timothy J. Power Wendy Hunter is professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin. Her works include The Transformation of the Workers’ Party in Brazil, 1989–2009 (2010). Timothy J. Power is head of the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies and professor of Latin American politics at the University of Oxford. Most recently, he is coauthor of Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective: Minority Presi- dents in Multiparty Systems (2018). On 28 October 2018, Brazilian voters delivered a sweeping victory to presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro, putting the far-right populist at the helm of the world’s fourth-largest democracy. After a raucous campaign in which the former army captain demonized his political op- ponents and promised to save the country from total ruin, Bolsonaro handed a stinging defeat to the left-leaning Workers’ Party (PT), which had governed Brazil from 2003 to 2016. Social media, along with net- works of Pentecostal churches, helped to disseminate Bolsonaro’s in- cendiary messages and organize his broad multiclass following. After nearly clinching the presidency in the October 7 first round with over 46 percent of valid votes, Bolsonaro received 55.13 percent of the vote in the runoff (see Table on p. 70). The remaining 44.87 percent went to PT candidate Fernando Haddad—a last-minute substitute during the first round for popular former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who had been imprisoned since April 2018 on corruption charges linked to Brazil’s mammoth Operaç~ao Lava Jato (Operation Car Wash) scandal. In keeping with the polarizing tone of the campaign, the share of voters who cast ballots for each candidate closely approximated the share who expressed a strong antipathy toward the opposing candidate. Concurrent elections for the 513-member Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the bicameral National Congress, saw a surge by Bolsonaro’s hitherto minuscule Social Liberal Party (PSL): This party went from winning only a single seat in 2014 to claiming 52 seats and the highest share of Journal of Democracy Volume 30, Number 1 January 2019 © 2019 National Endowment for Democracy and Johns Hopkins University Press 69Wendy Hunter and Timothy J. Power popular votes in 2018. Bolsonaro had joined the PSL—previously one of the nondescript “parties for rent” that help to populate Brazil’s fluid system—in 2018 merely to qualify for a.
Bolsonaro and Brazils Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timo.docx
Bolsonaro and Brazils Illiberal Backlash Wendy Hunter, Timo.docx
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BoF Professional Member Exclusive: articles & analysis available only to you. View the archive. lg Professional ! CEO TALK Burberry Stops Destroying Product and Bans Real Fur A PR backlash enveloped Burberry following the revelation that it destroyed £28.6 million worth of unsold product last year. Now, the company is ending the practice and banning animal fur. In a global exclusive interview, BoF's Imran Amed sits down with Burberry CEO Marco Gobbetti to decode the thinking behind the move. BY IMRAN AMED SEPTEMBER 6, 2018 05:28 ACTION REQUIRED: You are currently missing out on important BoF Professional membership beneNts. Click here to rectify. LONDON, United Kingdom — Burberry is stopping its longstanding practice of destroying unsold product after a firestorm of negative press and social media posts in July. That month, it emerged that the British brand had destroyed £28.6 million ($36.8 million) worth of product — including clothing, accessories and perfume — in fiscal 2017/2018. The company has destroyed £105 million ($135 million) of unsold product in the last five years, a practice it has previously disclosed in its annual reports. Alongside the shift, Burberry is also banning the use of animal fur — including rabbit, fox, mink and Asiatic raccoon, as well as angora — in its runway collections, beginning with new chief creative officer Riccardo Tisci’s highly anticipated debut collection set to be unveiled on September 17 at London Fashion Week. Existing fur products will be phased out over time, however the brand will continue to sell products made with shearling. “Modern luxury means being socially and environmentally responsible. This belief is core to us at Burberry and key to our long-term success,” said chief executive Marco Gobbetti in a statement. But clearly, the negative publicity was a wake-up call for the British luxury behemoth. “We are in the midst of an environmental crisis exacerbated by the fashion industry,” read an open letter to Burberry from second-hand retailer ThredUp, which captured the sentiment of the backlash. “Fashion is now responsible for 10 percent of global carbon emissions and is projected to drain a quarter of the world’s carbon budget by 2050. We respect the desire to protect your brand image but discounting your product shouldn’t be scarier than setting it on fire.” Burberry is not the only fashion or luxury brand to have destroyed product. Last November, H&M was reported to have burned unsold products. According to the New York Times, Nike slashes its unsold sneakers. And, Richemont has reportedly destroyed more than £400 million worth of watches from high-end brands including Cartier and Jaeger-LeCoultre. Indeed, it is one of the industry’s dirty secrets that brands regularly destroy product to protect their intellectual property from counterfeiters and to limit the diminished brand perception that comes with disposing of excess stock through heavy discounting. Burberry says its new.
BoF Professional Member Exclusive articles & analysis availa.docx
BoF Professional Member Exclusive articles & analysis availa.docx
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Bogdan Salacki ECON - 420 R-Script for HW 4 library(readxl) Growth_1_ <- read_excel("~/Downloads/Growth (1).xlsx") View(Growth_1_) #a. In preparation a scatter plot, the columns growth and trade share have to be secluded growth<-Growth_1_$growth tradeshare<-Growth_1_$tradeshare # When you see the values, the plot function can be put into effect plot(growth,tradeshare) #Based on the scatter plot, the data looks like to have a positive correaltion/relationship. #b. Yes, Malta looks like detached because it is the only plot with the largest tradeshare compared with the rest of the data. #c. To find regression of the data use code below: reg1<-lm(growth~tradeshare) #Then, summarize the data using: summary(reg1) #slope for tradeshare= 2.3064 #estimated intercept for growth= 0.6403 #When tradeshare = 0.5 the regression equation is: 0.6403 + 2.3064 (0.5)= 1.7935 #When tradeshare = 1, the regression equation is: 0.6403 +2.3064 (1)= 2.9467 #e. To plot the regression line on the scatter plot, use the code abline(Reg1), and it will reveal a line for the data. #f. Malta is shown in the scatter plot to the right, farthest away from the remaining data. A reason for Malta having such a large tradeshare could be that it's imports/exports are very different from the other countries in the data thus, affecting the size or amount of it. Malta's import/exports could be of the goods that are transported a lot faster or a lot slower than the rest of the countries being analyzed. Because of that, and also because Malta was determined to be differing from all other members, it cannot be included in the analysis. Sheet1Content meets or exceeds criteria, is accurate and shows an extraordinary understanding through rich examples and explanations. Content meets criteria with minimal errors, is accurate and shows a clear understanding through appropriate examples and explanations. Content shows a basic understanding of key ideas, yet includes some inaccuracies.Content was not included or incomplete, and/or extremely inaccurate CriteriaPoints PossibleEarned PointsA+AA-B+BB-C+CC-D+DD-FOther100%95%91%87%85%81%77%75%71%67%65%61%0%TOTAL1000ExemplaryCompetentProgressingInsufficient/Not Evident>0% & <61%12002250335041005100N/AN/AAssignment Title:Module 06 Course Project - Final Project Proposal and Project PresentationPage Length Required:5-9 Pages (required APA components e.g. cover page, swot chart, direct quotes and reference page do not count toward page requirement)Rubric CriteriaPointsDescription120Completes Final Written Project Proposal on how the Annual Convention should be be planned and delivered using the modules from previous weeks. Follows the suggested Project outline: Project Selection, WBS, Scope statement, Communications plan, Risk analysis, Project Budget, Project Schedule, Resource Plan 225The final report is a minimum of 5 pages and significantly emphasizes project management. Included appendixes, charts, and tables. Note: Unreasonably sized app.
Bogdan SalackiECON - 420R-Script for HW 4library(readxl).docx
Bogdan SalackiECON - 420R-Script for HW 4library(readxl).docx
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body { text-align: center; font-family: sans-serif; } canvas { background-color: black; } styles.css body { text-align: center; font-family: sans-serif; } canvas { background-color: black; } __MACOSX/._styles.css // Draw stuff // Time-stamp: <2019-01-21 20:08:33 Chuck Siska> // ------------------------------------------------------------ // FUN. Draw filled rect. function draw_rect( ctx, stroke, fill ) { stroke = stroke || 'lightgrey'; fill = fill || 'dimgrey'; ctx.save( ); ctx.strokeStyle = stroke; ctx.fillStyle = fill; ctx.lineWidth = 5; ctx.rect(75, 50, canvas.width - 150, canvas.height - 100); ctx.stroke(); ctx.fill(); ctx.restore( ); } // ===================================================== draw_grid ==== function draw_grid( rctx, rminor, rmajor, rstroke, rfill ) { rctx.save( ); rctx.strokeStyle = rstroke; rctx.fillStyle = rfill; let width = rctx.canvas.width; let height = rctx.canvas.height; for ( var ix = 0; ix < width; ix += rminor ) { rctx.beginPath( ); rctx.moveTo( ix, 0 ); rctx.lineTo( ix, height ); rctx.lineWidth = ( ix % rmajor == 0 ) ? 0.5 : 0.25; rctx.stroke( ); if ( ix % rmajor == 0 ) { rctx.fillText( ix, ix, 10 ); } } for ( var iy = 0; iy < height; iy += rminor ) { rctx.beginPath( ); rctx.moveTo( 0, iy ); rctx.lineTo( width, iy ); rctx.lineWidth = ( iy % rmajor == 0 ) ? 0.5 : 0.25; rctx.stroke( ); if ( iy % rmajor == 0 ) {rctx.fillText( iy, 0, iy + 10 );} } rctx.restore( ); } 335 — Algorithm Engineering — Cella Rule 90 Project #1 – Cella Rule 90 Introduction This project is to write a program to display the generational progress of Wolfram's Rule-90 cellular automaton. The program will be written in Javascript with an HTML web page for display. The cella "growth generations" will be shown in a 2D grid of black and white cells. Each row after the top will show the next generation. Rule-90 Wolfram's Rule-90 (from his 2002 book "A New Kind of Science") is based on a 1D array where each cell is "active". What happens to it depends on its current binary state (1 or 0, white or black) and the states of its two neighbors; 3 cells in all. With 3 binary cells, there are 8 possible configurations. A Rule needs to specify what happens to a cell with each of those 8 neighborly configurations. Rule-90 looks like this: This Rule format is interpreted as follows: leftmost is a cell containing all black (1's, or filled cells). If the center cell and its two neighbors are in state 1, then in the next generation, the cell will change to state 0 (white, clear). Put differently, if the binary number represented by the 3 cells is 111 = 7; then the middle cell will be changes to state 0 in the next generation. A similar analysis is used for the other 7 tri.
body { text-align center; font-family sans-serif;}.docx
body { text-align center; font-family sans-serif;}.docx
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Body Paragraphs Outline Introduction: “Auto-pilot cars also referred to as driverless cars are vehicles that are capable of moving with no human involvement or little input by sensing the environment.” These cars combine several sensors that perceive the surrounding such as GPS, radar, Odometer, and computer vision. Their advanced control systems then interpret the sensory data to recognize the appropriate navigation path. Thesis: “Auto-pilot cars have various benefits to human, environment, and economy.” Body Paragraph #1: Topic sentence: Self-drive cars increase safety. The safety benefits that are anticipated from these cars include reducing the number of traffic collisions that results in injuries and additional costs. Besides, these cars will provide increased traffic flow to avoid rush among motorists that have always resulted in accidents. Body Paragraph #2: Topic sentence: Self-drive cars increase mobility for the children, disabled, and the elderly. Majorly, the automated driving feature is critical for assisting people with special needs during driving to travel and navigate without barriers. These cars thus are helpful for these groups of people as they will just sit and reach their destinations. Body Paragraph #3: Topic sentence: Auto-pilot cars reduce costs. These cars adequately reduce the need of parking space and fees, reduce crime rates, and increases fuel efficiency. Besides, they reduce costs through reducing insurance rates since they are usually accident free and do not necessitate insurance. Body Paragraph #4: Topic sentence: Self-drive vehicles are fast and have little breakdown time. Since they are automated, these cars identify and inform the owners on the potential mechanical issues and suggest potential solution. Therefore, the user can fix the problem without having to manually identify and correct the problem. Conclusion: In summary, auto-pilot cars are beneficial in many aspects. They increase mobility rates among humans as well as safety. Besides, they reduce costs and have little mechanical breakdown concerns. 1 Sexual Offenses and Offenders There are few groups of individuals who are more reviled than sexual offenders. Though this has been true for more than a century, the past two decades have brought forth intense scrutiny from the public, politicians, and policymakers. Several emotionally-charged cases of child sexual abuse were highly publicized in the 1980s and 1990s, reigniting public intolerance for sexual offenders. And although the incidence of sexual offenses has been decreasing, sanctions for sex offenders have been constantly increasing over the last two decades. Unfortunately, empirical research does not show that such sanctions significantly deter offenders or reduce recidivism, and yet this legislation creates significant financial strain for local jurisdictions and states that must implement the policies (Zgoba et al., 2008). Despite the questionable efficacy of these laws, there .
Body Paragraphs OutlineIntroduction Auto-pilot cars also refer.docx
Body Paragraphs OutlineIntroduction Auto-pilot cars also refer.docx
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Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for retirement and consider the $2,000 annual contribution a must. First, consider Lisa's savings. She began working at age 20 and began making an annual contribution of $2,000 at the first of the year beginning with her first year. She makes 13 contributions. She worked until she was 32 and then left full time work to have children and be a stay at home mom. She left her IRA invested and plans to begin drawing from her IRA when she is 65. Bob started his IRA at age 32. The first 12 years of his working career, he used his discretionary income to buy a home, upgrade the family cars, take vacations, and pursue his golfing hobby. At age 32, he made his first $2,000 contribution to an IRA, and contributed $2,000 every year up until age 65, a total of 33 years / contributions. He plans to retire at age 65 and make withdrawals from his IRA. Both IRA accounts grow at a 7% annual rate. Do not consider any tax effect. Write a two to three (2-3) paragraph summary in which you: Create a chart summarizing the details of the investment for both Bob and Lisa. Explain the results in terms of time value of money. .
Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for re.docx
Bob and Lisa are both married, working adults. They both plan for re.docx
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Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent African American Girls: The Moderating Influence of Family Racial Socialization Ellen M. Granberg, Department of Sociology & Anthropology 132 Brackett Hall Clemson University Clemson SC 29634 864-656-3812 [email protected] Leslie Gordon Simons, and Department of Child and Family Development 204 403 Sanford Drive University of Georgia Athens GA 30602 [email protected] Ronald L. Simons Department of Sociology 116 Baldwin Hall University of Georgia Athens GA 30602 706-542-3232 [email protected] Abstract Social psychologists have amassed a large body of work demonstrating that overweight African American adolescent girls have generally positive self-images, particularly when compared with overweight females from other racial and ethnic groups. Some scholars have proposed that elements of African American social experience may contribute to the maintenance of these positive self- views. In this paper, we evaluate these arguments using data drawn from a panel study of socio- economically diverse African American adolescent girls living in Iowa and Georgia. We analyze the relationship between body size and social self-image over three waves of data, starting when the girls were 10 years of age and concluding when they were approximately 14. We find that heavier respondents hold less positive social self-images but also find that being raised in a family that practices racial socialization moderates this relationship. Keywords obesity; adolescence; racial socialization The relationship between body weight and self-image among African American adolescent girls has been the topic of considerable study (Ge, Elder, Regnerus, & Cox, 2001; Lovejoy, 2001; Smolak & Levine, 2001). Overall, the results of this work show that, while African American girls are more likely to be overweight than females of other racial groups, they also feel good about their bodies and exhibit a relatively weak association between body size and outcomes such as self-esteem, self-evaluation, and psychological health (Berkowitz & Stunkard, 2002; Neumark-Sztainer, Story, Hannan, & Croll, 2002). These patterns have led scholars to suggest that elements of African American life may serve a protective function, limiting the negative influence of body size on self-image (Roberts, Cash, Feingold, & Johnson, 2006). In this paper, we explore these arguments by assessing the association between body size and social self-image within a sample of adolescent African American girls. We then Direct all correspondence to Dr. Ellen Granberg, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, 132 Brackett Hall, Clemson University, Clemson SC 29634 ([email protected]).. NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Youth Soc. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 December 1. Published in final edited form as: Youth Soc. 2009 December 1; 41(2): 256–277. doi:10.1177/0044118X09338505. N IH -P A A uthor M anuscript N IH -P A A uthor M anuscript N IH -P A .
Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent AfricanAmer.docx
Body Size and Social Self-Image among Adolescent AfricanAmer.docx
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Body Modification Is a Sign of Cultural Depravity Self-Mutilation, 2008 From Opposing Viewpoints in Context "Body mutilation is the decoration of choice for an age which has turned violence into a modish cult." In the following viewpoint, British columnist and author Melanie Phillips decries the trendiness of body modifications such as tattooing, piercing, and cosmetic surgery. She equates these fashion statements with self-mutilation and sees their popularity as a sign of a morally corrupt, shallow, and spiritually empty culture. Moreover, she asserts, body modification reflects low self-esteem and a hatred of the body rooted in a desire to evade reality. As you read, consider the following questions: What do Botox injections do, according to Phillips?1. In what ways do tattoos expose a "hollowness of character," according to the author?2. What is self-mutilation an outward sign of, in Phillips' opinion?3. There was a time when sentimentality meant wearing your heart on your sleeve. Now it's more likely to be carved into the nape of your neck. [English professional footballer] David Beckham has revealed a startling tattoo below his hair line depicting a green cross with wings extending almost from ear to ear. This enigmatic example of neck art has occasioned wonderment and disgust in equal measure. At the same time, the quiz show host Anne Robinson has come clean about her recent face-lift, which she had done because she didn't want a 'face like a road map'. Now, there's nothing like the boast of yet another celebrity about having her face lifted to cause the faces of everyone else to fall. But surely, something more than mere vanity is at work here. A Fortune on Blemishes? After all, isn't it somewhat strange that while people like Anne Robinson spend a fortune having blemishes removed from their physiognomy, people like David Beckham are busy putting fresh ones indelibly on? The Beckham winged cross has hardly enhanced its owner's natural beauty. It is, in short, thuggish and repellent. It is also very large, permanent and, since it is so visible on the back of his neck, in your face (so to speak). Even the tattooist expressed concern about using such a prominent location. So what does its appearance mean? Amateur psychologists speculate it is some kind of tough-guy # # # statement to counter the recent torrid allegations about the state of his marriage. But this is the ninth tattoo to adorn the Beckham torso. Others sport his wife's name spelled out in Hindi, his son's name in inch-high Gothic lettering, his iconic shirt number 7, and a Michelangelo angel on his right arm. Designer Wounds This goes beyond one silly footballer dreaming up new ways to make himelf the centre of attention. For what was once the adornment of choice for sailors or skinheads has now become high fashion—particularly for women, who sport tattoos on their shoulders or in more discreet places. Such tattoos are considered sexy. But however femini.
Body Modification Is a Sign of CulturalDepravitySelf-Mutil.docx
Body Modification Is a Sign of CulturalDepravitySelf-Mutil.docx
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Body of the paper: (Panera Bread Bakery company) 1-Stakeholders and the Corporate Mission 2-Stakeholder impact analysis 3-Corporate social responsibility 4- Industry’s dominant economic characteristics/traits (include table) 5- Current summary of the company (current location, number of employees, earnings, etc.) DOCUMENTATION Correct use of APA Style (documentation, spacing, headings, tables, figures, etc.) Use Times New Roman in Font 12, double spaced. Works Cited Page (use APA format) at least 6 sources. DUE IN 31 OCT .
Body of the paper(Panera Bread Bakery company)1-Stakehold.docx
Body of the paper(Panera Bread Bakery company)1-Stakehold.docx
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Body Image Watch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an external site.) and then respond to the following items in your discussion post: Does this video encourage eating disorders? How has media shaped the way women view themselves? 2 paragraphs .
Body ImageWatch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an externa.docx
Body ImageWatch this Yoplait commercial (Links to an externa.docx
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Bob is a hard-working guy who lives in Smallville, USA. Bob is getting ready for work one day and listening to the national news at the same time. He hears a report from the director of the FBI that Osama Bin Laden is now in the United States and is hiding out somewhere near Smallville, USA. The FBI director advised the people of Smallville to be on the lookout for Bin Laden, that he is armed and dangerous and is planning a terrorist attack. The FBI director said they have intelligence information that Bin Laden was spotted in a brown Pontiac 2 door vehicle and had vowed to blow up an innocent person’s house as a show of his power in the USA. Bob looks out the window of his house as this news report is still happening. Bob has been watching the news for the last 24 hours because of the attack on the World Trade Centers in New York, and Osama Bin Laden was reported to be responsible for those attacks. Bob sees a brown 2 door Pontiac pull up in front of his neighbor’s house. An Arab man with a long beard gets out of the car carrying a large black package and begins walking up to his neighbor’s door. Bob realizes this man is Osama Bin Laden and he fears he is going to blow up his neighbor’s house. He grabs his gun and runs out the front door. He yells at the man firing his gun at the same time. Bob kills the man. His neighbor comes running out of the house as Bob is walking up to the man. His neighbor asked Bob what he had done. Bob said, “I just killed Osama Bin Laden! He was going to blow up your house!” Bob’s neighbor then said, “That’s not Osama Bin Laden! That is the pizza delivery man and that is the pizza I just ordered! Bob looked down and could see the Pizza Hut logo on the man’s shirt and could see a corner of the pizza box sticking out of the large black package. The man he killed was not Osama Bin Laden. John is not a hard-working guy. John also lives in Smallville. John has been in trouble his entire life and has been arrested many times. John was sitting at his house the same day the FBI warned the public that Osama Bin Laden was in the area. John did not hear this warning because his electricity had been shut off the week before. John called the electric company (Superior Energy) and after they refused to turn his electricity back on, he threatened to kill someone from Superior Energy. John was angry and bitter at Superior Energy. John told his friends and family he would get revenge against Superior Energy. John is sitting on his couch with a gun in his hand plotting his revenge and trying to figure out what he is going to do to Superior Energy. While John is sitting on the couch, he notices a Superior Energy electric company truck pull up in front the elementary school next to his house. The two men in the Superior Energy truck get out and begin unloading some equipment. John sees this as his opportunity to teach Superior Energy a lesson. He runs out his door and shoots both men whil.
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