HIST 1302
This assignment has several documents for you to read and view in order to answer the five
required questions. Please follow any formatting guidelines and minimum length requirements as
set by your professor. Please take your time to analyze these documents and submit thoughtful
arguments supported by the evidence these documents provide.
Documents:
1. Excerpt of Theodore Roosevelt’s “Hyphenated Americans” Speech (October 12, 1915)
2. Excerpt of “Shut the Door” Speech (April 9, 1924)
3. Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land” (February 1940)
4. LOOK Magazine’s “How to Spot a Communist” (March 1947)
5. Political Cartoon “You read books, eh?” (April 24, 1949)
6. Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s “Enemies from Within” Speech (February 9, 1950)
7. Excerpt of Port Huron Statement (June 15, 1962)
8. Black Panther Ten-Point Program (October 1966)
9. Caesar Chavez “Letter from Delano” (April 4, 1969)
10. Equal Rights Amendment (1972)
11. Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (June 23, 1972)
12. George H.W. Bush on the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (July 26, 1990)
13. Maya Angelou “On the Pulse of the Morning” (January 20, 1993)
14. President-Elect Barack Obama’s Victory Speech (November 4, 2008)
Document 1: [excerpt] “Hyphenated Americans” Speech (1915)
Former President Theodore Roosevelt delivered the following speech to a meeting of the
Knights of Columbus in Carnegie Hall, New York City on October 12, 1915. With World
War I raging in Europe and across the globe, Roosevelt warned of the need for
preparedness amongst American citizens. Excerpts from this speech focus upon how
Roosevelt defined “Hyphenated Americans” and the importance of their
“Americanization” for the country’s strength and success in future conflicts.
FOUR centuries and a quarter have gone by since Columbus by discovering America opened the greatest era in
world history. Four centuries have passed since the Spaniards began that colonization on the main land which has
resulted in the growth of the nations of Latin-America. Three centuries have passed since, with the settlements on
the coasts of Virginia and Massachusetts, the real history of what is now the United States began. All this we
ultimately owe to the action of an Italian seaman in the service of a Spanish King and a Spanish Queen. It is
eminently fitting that one of the largest and most influential social organizations of this great Republic, a Republic in
which the tongue is English, and the blood derived from many sources, should, in its name, commemorate the great
Italian. It is eminently fitting to make an address on Americanism before this society.
DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES
We of the United States need above all things to remember that, while we are by blood and culture kin to each of the
nations of Europe, we are also separate from each of them. We are a new and -distinct nationality. We are
developing o ...
NameHIST1302The Atlanta Compromise Speech.docxherthaweston
Name
HIST1302
The Atlanta Compromise Speech
The Atlanta Compromise speech was given by Booker T. Washington in 1895. In this speech, which Washington gave at the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia, Washington asks for blacks to be given equal opportunities in terms of gaining economic rights. Washington, however, does not ask for any civil rights for blacks, and does not push the audience to accept blacks as their equals. Instead, Washington says blacks and whites “can be as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress.” Washington acknowledges that blacks had initially gotten rights after slavery but says that blacks did not know how to handle these rights. This speech is important because it shows Washington’s attitudes towards civil rights in the turn-of-the-century. It proves that Washington believed that economic progress was the best way for blacks to prove themselves to whites, and it also is important because it shows that Washington was concerned that the new immigrants, which we discussed in class, would be taking jobs away from blacks. This speech shows how bad conditions were for blacks during the Jim Crow era and how the black leadership was trying to make things better.
Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others
“Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others” was published as part of W.E.B. Du Bois’s 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk. In this essay, Du Bois comes out as extremely critical of Booker T. Washington, especially Washington’s Atlanta Compromise Speech. Instead of pushing only for economic rights, like Washington suggests, Du Bois argues that American blacks needed to have full citizenship. Du Bois suggests that Washington is no different than black leaders during the time of slavery and was willing to settle for less than what blacks deserved. Du Bois was against Washington’s program of industrial education and said “it startled the nation to hear a Negro advocating such a programme after many decades of bitter complaint; it startled and won the applause of the South, it interested and won the admiration of the North; and after a confused murmur of protest, it silenced if it did not convert the Negroes themselves.” This highlights a key difference between Washington and Du Bois because Du Bois did not believe blacks needed to be limited to industrial education. Throughout this document, Du Bois states why he thinks that Washington’s ideas were so dangerous for blacks. This document is important because it shows that not all blacks believed in Washington’s ideas, and that there were different methods put forth for helping blacks achieve their rights during the era of Jim Crow. Du Bois’s background and education led him to believe that blacks could- and should- do more than what Washington expected.
Word Count: 465
HIST1302: Spring 2020
Précis Guidelines
Guidelines for Précis: For each reading assigned for a week, you should ...
httpswww.azed.govoelaselpsUse this to see the English Lang.docxpooleavelina
https://www.azed.gov/oelas/elps/
Use this to see the English Language Proficiency Standards of Arizona-Pick a grade level
https://cms.azed.gov/home/GetDocumentFile?id=54de1d88aadebe14a87070f0
http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/introduction/how-to-read-the-standards/
how to read standards
Week 04
Acquisition and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/nbn-customers-face-higher-prices-or-poorer-internet-connection-audit-warns-20190813-p52go7.html
Customer Relationship Management?
CRM is the process of carefully managing detailed information about individual
customers and all customer touch points to maximize customer loyalty.
Now closely associated with data warehousing and mining
Relationship
Relationship
Identifying good customers: RFM Model
Recency
Frequency
Monetary Value
Time/purchase occasions since the last purchase
Number of purchase occasions since first purchase
Amount spent since the first purchase
R
F
M
Total RFM Score: R Score + F score + M Score
CASE: Database for BookBinders Book Club
Predict response to a mailing for the book, Art History of Florence, based on the
following variables accumulated in the database and the responses to a test mailing:
Gender
Amount purchased
Months since first purchase
Months since last purchase
Frequency of purchase
Past purchases of art books
Past purchases of children’s books
Past purchases of cook books
Past purchases of DIY books
Past purchases of youth books
Recency
Frequency
Monetary
Example: RFM Model Scoring Criteria
R
Months from last
purchase
13-max 10-12 7-9 3-6 0-2
Score 5pts 10 15 20 25
F
Frequency > 30 21-30 16-20 11-15 0-10
Score 25pts 20 15 10 5
M
Amount
purchased
> 400 301-400 201-300 101- 200 100
Score 50 45 30 15 10
Implement using Nested If statements in Excel
Decile Classification
• Standard Assessment Method
• Apply the results of approach and
calculate the “score” of each individual
• Order the customers based on “score”
from the highest to the lowest
• Divide into deciles
• Calculate profits per deciles
Customer 1 Score 1.00
Customer 2 Score 0.99
….
Customer 230 Score 0.92
Customer 2300 Score 0.00
Decile1
Decile10
…
..
…
..
Output for Bookbinders club
Decile Score RFM No. of Mailings Cost of mailing RFM Units sold RFM Profit
10 17.6% 5000 $3,250 783 $4,733
20 34.8% 10000 $6,500 1,543 $9,243
30 46.1% 15000 $9,750 2,043 $11,093
40 53.4% 20000 $13,000 2,370 $11,170
50 65.2% 25000 $16,250 2,891 $13,241
60 77.9% 30000 $19,500 3,457 $15,757
70 83.3% 35000 $22,750 3,696 $14,946
80 91.7% 40000 $26,000 4,065 $15,465
90 97.5% 45000 $29,250 4,326 $14,876
100 100.0% 50000 $32,500 4,435 $12,735
Note: Market Potential = 4435 units and margin = $10.20
Leaky bucket
New customer
acquisition
Purchase increase by
current customers
Purchase decrease by
current customers
Lost customers
Lost customers
Credit Card Rewards Program ...
httpfmx.sagepub.comField Methods DOI 10.117715258.docxpooleavelina
http://fmx.sagepub.com
Field Methods
DOI: 10.1177/1525822X04269550
2005; 17; 30 Field Methods
Don A. Dillman and Leah Melani Christian
Survey Mode as a Source of Instability in Responses across Surveys
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/17/1/30
The online version of this article can be found at:
Published by:
http://www.sagepublications.com
can be found at:Field Methods Additional services and information for
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Email Alerts:
http://fmx.sagepub.com/subscriptions Subscriptions:
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.navReprints:
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.navPermissions:
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/17/1/30 Citations
at SAGE Publications on September 9, 2009 http://fmx.sagepub.comDownloaded from
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts
http://fmx.sagepub.com/subscriptions
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/17/1/30
http://fmx.sagepub.com
10.1177/1525822X04269550FIELD METHODSDillman, Christian / SURVEY MODE AS SOURCE OF INSTABILITY
Survey Mode as a Source of Instability
in Responses across Surveys
DON A. DILLMAN
LEAH MELANI CHRISTIAN
Washington State University
Changes in survey mode for conducting panel surveys may contribute significantly to
survey error. This article explores the causes and consequences of such changes in
survey mode. The authors describe how and why the choice of survey mode often
causes changes to be made to the wording of questions, as well as the reasons that
identically worded questions often produce different answers when administered
through different modes. The authors provide evidence that answers may change as a
result of different visual layouts for otherwise identical questions and suggest ways
to keep measurement the same despite changes in survey mode.
Keywords: survey mode; questionnaire; panel survey; measurement; survey error
Most panel studies require measurement of the same variables at different
times. Often, participants are asked questions, several days, weeks, months,
or years apart to measure change in some characteristics of interest to the
investigation. These characteristics might include political attitudes, satis-
faction with a health care provider, frequency of a behavior, ownership of
financial resources, or level of educational attainment. Whatever the charac-
teristic of interest, it is important that the question used to ascertain it perform
the same across multiple data collections.
In addition, declining survey response rates, particularly for telephone
surveys, have encouraged researchers to use multiple modes of data collec-
tion during the administration of a single cross-sectional survey. Encouraged
by the availability of more survey modes than in the past and evidence that a
change in modes produces higher response rates (Dillman 2002), surveyors
This is a revision of a paper presented at t ...
https://iexaminer.org/fake-news-personal-responsibility-must-trump-intellectual-laziness/
Fake news: Personal responsibility must trump intellectual laziness
By Matt Chan January 4, 2017
Where do you get your news? That question has become incredibly important given the results of our Presidential Election. How many times have you heard, “I read a news story on Facebook and …” The problem: Facebook is not a news service; it’s a “social media” site whose purpose is to connect like-minded friends and family, to provide you with social connections, and online entertainment.
For Asian Americans social media provides an important and useful way of connecting socially and in some cases politically, but there is a downside. The downside is how social media actually works. These sites employ elaborate algorithms to track and analyze your posts, likes, and dislikes to provide you with a custom experience unique to you. The truth is you are being marketed to, not informed. What looks like news, is not really news, it’s personal validation. All in an attempt to keep you on the site longer, to click a few more things, to make you feel good about what you’re reading. It makes it seem like most people agree with you because you’re only fed information and stories that validate your worldview.
On the other hand, real news is hard work. Its fact-based information presented by people who have checked, researched, and documented what they are presenting as the truth. Real news can be verified.
“Fake News” is, well, fake, often times entirely made-up or containing a hint of truth. Social media was largely responsible for pushing “fake news” stories that were entirely made up to drive clicks on websites. These clicks in turn generated money for the people promoting the stories. The more outrageous the story, the more clicks, the more revenue. When you factor in the algorithms that feed you what you like, you can clearly see the more “fake news” you consume on social media, the more is pushed your way. There’s an abundance of pseudo news sites that merely re-post and curate existing stories, adding their bias to validate their audience’s beliefs, no matter how crazy or mainstream. It is curated solely for you. Now factor in that nearly 44% of Americans obtain some or most of their news from social media and you have a very toxic mix.
The mainstream news media has also fallen into this validation trap. You have one news network that solely reflects the right wing, others that take the view of the left-center leaning, and what is lost are the facts and context, the balance we need to evaluate, learn, and understand the world. People seeking fact-based journalism lose, because the more extreme the media becomes to entice consumers with provocative headlines and click-bait to earn more money, the less their news is fact-based and becomes more opinion driven.
There was a time when fact-based reporting was required of broadcast news. It was called “The Fairness Doctrin ...
http1500cms.comBECAUSE THIS FORM IS USED BY VARIOUS .docxpooleavelina
http://1500cms.com/
BECAUSE THIS FORM IS USED BY VARIOUS GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE HEALTH PROGRAMS, SEE SEPARATE INSTRUCTIONS ISSUED BY
APPLICABLE PROGRAMS.
NOTICE: Any person who knowingly files a statement of claim containing any misrepresentation or any false, incomplete or misleading information may
be guilty of a criminal act punishable under law and may be subject to civil penalties.
REFERS TO GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS ONLY
MEDICARE AND CHAMPUS PAYMENTS: A patient’s signature requests that payment be made and authorizes release of any information necessary to process
the claim and certifies that the information provided in Blocks 1 through 12 is true, accurate and complete. In the case of a Medicare claim, the patient’s signature
authorizes any entity to release to Medicare medical and nonmedical information, including employment status, and whether the person has employer group health
insurance, liability, no-fault, worker’s compensation or other insurance which is responsible to pay for the services for which the Medicare claim is made. See 42
CFR 411.24(a). If item 9 is completed, the patient’s signature authorizes release of the information to the health plan or agency shown. In Medicare assigned or
CHAMPUS participation cases, the physician agrees to accept the charge determination of the Medicare carrier or CHAMPUS fiscal intermediary as the full charge,
and the patient is responsible only for the deductible, coinsurance and noncovered services. Coinsurance and the deductible are based upon the charge
determination of the Medicare carrier or CHAMPUS fiscal intermediary if this is less than the charge submitted. CHAMPUS is not a health insurance program but
makes payment for health benefits provided through certain affiliations with the Uniformed Services. Information on the patient’s sponsor should be provided in those
items captioned in “Insured”; i.e., items 1a, 4, 6, 7, 9, and 11.
BLACK LUNG AND FECA CLAIMS
The provider agrees to accept the amount paid by the Government as payment in full. See Black Lung and FECA instructions regarding required procedure and
diagnosis coding systems.
SIGNATURE OF PHYSICIAN OR SUPPLIER (MEDICARE, CHAMPUS, FECA AND BLACK LUNG)
I certify that the services shown on this form were medically indicated and necessary for the health of the patient and were personally furnished by me or were furnished
incident to my professional service by my employee under my immediate personal supervision, except as otherwise expressly permitted by Medicare or CHAMPUS
regulations.
For services to be considered as “incident” to a physician’s professional service, 1) they must be rendered under the physician’s immediate personal supervision
by his/her employee, 2) they must be an integral, although incidental part of a covered physician’s service, 3) they must be of kinds commonly furnished in physician’s
offices, and 4) the services of nonphysicians must be included on the physician’s bills.
For CHA ...
NameHIST1302The Atlanta Compromise Speech.docxherthaweston
Name
HIST1302
The Atlanta Compromise Speech
The Atlanta Compromise speech was given by Booker T. Washington in 1895. In this speech, which Washington gave at the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia, Washington asks for blacks to be given equal opportunities in terms of gaining economic rights. Washington, however, does not ask for any civil rights for blacks, and does not push the audience to accept blacks as their equals. Instead, Washington says blacks and whites “can be as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress.” Washington acknowledges that blacks had initially gotten rights after slavery but says that blacks did not know how to handle these rights. This speech is important because it shows Washington’s attitudes towards civil rights in the turn-of-the-century. It proves that Washington believed that economic progress was the best way for blacks to prove themselves to whites, and it also is important because it shows that Washington was concerned that the new immigrants, which we discussed in class, would be taking jobs away from blacks. This speech shows how bad conditions were for blacks during the Jim Crow era and how the black leadership was trying to make things better.
Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others
“Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others” was published as part of W.E.B. Du Bois’s 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk. In this essay, Du Bois comes out as extremely critical of Booker T. Washington, especially Washington’s Atlanta Compromise Speech. Instead of pushing only for economic rights, like Washington suggests, Du Bois argues that American blacks needed to have full citizenship. Du Bois suggests that Washington is no different than black leaders during the time of slavery and was willing to settle for less than what blacks deserved. Du Bois was against Washington’s program of industrial education and said “it startled the nation to hear a Negro advocating such a programme after many decades of bitter complaint; it startled and won the applause of the South, it interested and won the admiration of the North; and after a confused murmur of protest, it silenced if it did not convert the Negroes themselves.” This highlights a key difference between Washington and Du Bois because Du Bois did not believe blacks needed to be limited to industrial education. Throughout this document, Du Bois states why he thinks that Washington’s ideas were so dangerous for blacks. This document is important because it shows that not all blacks believed in Washington’s ideas, and that there were different methods put forth for helping blacks achieve their rights during the era of Jim Crow. Du Bois’s background and education led him to believe that blacks could- and should- do more than what Washington expected.
Word Count: 465
HIST1302: Spring 2020
Précis Guidelines
Guidelines for Précis: For each reading assigned for a week, you should ...
httpswww.azed.govoelaselpsUse this to see the English Lang.docxpooleavelina
https://www.azed.gov/oelas/elps/
Use this to see the English Language Proficiency Standards of Arizona-Pick a grade level
https://cms.azed.gov/home/GetDocumentFile?id=54de1d88aadebe14a87070f0
http://www.corestandards.org/ELA-Literacy/introduction/how-to-read-the-standards/
how to read standards
Week 04
Acquisition and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/nbn-customers-face-higher-prices-or-poorer-internet-connection-audit-warns-20190813-p52go7.html
Customer Relationship Management?
CRM is the process of carefully managing detailed information about individual
customers and all customer touch points to maximize customer loyalty.
Now closely associated with data warehousing and mining
Relationship
Relationship
Identifying good customers: RFM Model
Recency
Frequency
Monetary Value
Time/purchase occasions since the last purchase
Number of purchase occasions since first purchase
Amount spent since the first purchase
R
F
M
Total RFM Score: R Score + F score + M Score
CASE: Database for BookBinders Book Club
Predict response to a mailing for the book, Art History of Florence, based on the
following variables accumulated in the database and the responses to a test mailing:
Gender
Amount purchased
Months since first purchase
Months since last purchase
Frequency of purchase
Past purchases of art books
Past purchases of children’s books
Past purchases of cook books
Past purchases of DIY books
Past purchases of youth books
Recency
Frequency
Monetary
Example: RFM Model Scoring Criteria
R
Months from last
purchase
13-max 10-12 7-9 3-6 0-2
Score 5pts 10 15 20 25
F
Frequency > 30 21-30 16-20 11-15 0-10
Score 25pts 20 15 10 5
M
Amount
purchased
> 400 301-400 201-300 101- 200 100
Score 50 45 30 15 10
Implement using Nested If statements in Excel
Decile Classification
• Standard Assessment Method
• Apply the results of approach and
calculate the “score” of each individual
• Order the customers based on “score”
from the highest to the lowest
• Divide into deciles
• Calculate profits per deciles
Customer 1 Score 1.00
Customer 2 Score 0.99
….
Customer 230 Score 0.92
Customer 2300 Score 0.00
Decile1
Decile10
…
..
…
..
Output for Bookbinders club
Decile Score RFM No. of Mailings Cost of mailing RFM Units sold RFM Profit
10 17.6% 5000 $3,250 783 $4,733
20 34.8% 10000 $6,500 1,543 $9,243
30 46.1% 15000 $9,750 2,043 $11,093
40 53.4% 20000 $13,000 2,370 $11,170
50 65.2% 25000 $16,250 2,891 $13,241
60 77.9% 30000 $19,500 3,457 $15,757
70 83.3% 35000 $22,750 3,696 $14,946
80 91.7% 40000 $26,000 4,065 $15,465
90 97.5% 45000 $29,250 4,326 $14,876
100 100.0% 50000 $32,500 4,435 $12,735
Note: Market Potential = 4435 units and margin = $10.20
Leaky bucket
New customer
acquisition
Purchase increase by
current customers
Purchase decrease by
current customers
Lost customers
Lost customers
Credit Card Rewards Program ...
httpfmx.sagepub.comField Methods DOI 10.117715258.docxpooleavelina
http://fmx.sagepub.com
Field Methods
DOI: 10.1177/1525822X04269550
2005; 17; 30 Field Methods
Don A. Dillman and Leah Melani Christian
Survey Mode as a Source of Instability in Responses across Surveys
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/17/1/30
The online version of this article can be found at:
Published by:
http://www.sagepublications.com
can be found at:Field Methods Additional services and information for
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Email Alerts:
http://fmx.sagepub.com/subscriptions Subscriptions:
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.navReprints:
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.navPermissions:
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/17/1/30 Citations
at SAGE Publications on September 9, 2009 http://fmx.sagepub.comDownloaded from
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts
http://fmx.sagepub.com/subscriptions
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav
http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav
http://fmx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/17/1/30
http://fmx.sagepub.com
10.1177/1525822X04269550FIELD METHODSDillman, Christian / SURVEY MODE AS SOURCE OF INSTABILITY
Survey Mode as a Source of Instability
in Responses across Surveys
DON A. DILLMAN
LEAH MELANI CHRISTIAN
Washington State University
Changes in survey mode for conducting panel surveys may contribute significantly to
survey error. This article explores the causes and consequences of such changes in
survey mode. The authors describe how and why the choice of survey mode often
causes changes to be made to the wording of questions, as well as the reasons that
identically worded questions often produce different answers when administered
through different modes. The authors provide evidence that answers may change as a
result of different visual layouts for otherwise identical questions and suggest ways
to keep measurement the same despite changes in survey mode.
Keywords: survey mode; questionnaire; panel survey; measurement; survey error
Most panel studies require measurement of the same variables at different
times. Often, participants are asked questions, several days, weeks, months,
or years apart to measure change in some characteristics of interest to the
investigation. These characteristics might include political attitudes, satis-
faction with a health care provider, frequency of a behavior, ownership of
financial resources, or level of educational attainment. Whatever the charac-
teristic of interest, it is important that the question used to ascertain it perform
the same across multiple data collections.
In addition, declining survey response rates, particularly for telephone
surveys, have encouraged researchers to use multiple modes of data collec-
tion during the administration of a single cross-sectional survey. Encouraged
by the availability of more survey modes than in the past and evidence that a
change in modes produces higher response rates (Dillman 2002), surveyors
This is a revision of a paper presented at t ...
https://iexaminer.org/fake-news-personal-responsibility-must-trump-intellectual-laziness/
Fake news: Personal responsibility must trump intellectual laziness
By Matt Chan January 4, 2017
Where do you get your news? That question has become incredibly important given the results of our Presidential Election. How many times have you heard, “I read a news story on Facebook and …” The problem: Facebook is not a news service; it’s a “social media” site whose purpose is to connect like-minded friends and family, to provide you with social connections, and online entertainment.
For Asian Americans social media provides an important and useful way of connecting socially and in some cases politically, but there is a downside. The downside is how social media actually works. These sites employ elaborate algorithms to track and analyze your posts, likes, and dislikes to provide you with a custom experience unique to you. The truth is you are being marketed to, not informed. What looks like news, is not really news, it’s personal validation. All in an attempt to keep you on the site longer, to click a few more things, to make you feel good about what you’re reading. It makes it seem like most people agree with you because you’re only fed information and stories that validate your worldview.
On the other hand, real news is hard work. Its fact-based information presented by people who have checked, researched, and documented what they are presenting as the truth. Real news can be verified.
“Fake News” is, well, fake, often times entirely made-up or containing a hint of truth. Social media was largely responsible for pushing “fake news” stories that were entirely made up to drive clicks on websites. These clicks in turn generated money for the people promoting the stories. The more outrageous the story, the more clicks, the more revenue. When you factor in the algorithms that feed you what you like, you can clearly see the more “fake news” you consume on social media, the more is pushed your way. There’s an abundance of pseudo news sites that merely re-post and curate existing stories, adding their bias to validate their audience’s beliefs, no matter how crazy or mainstream. It is curated solely for you. Now factor in that nearly 44% of Americans obtain some or most of their news from social media and you have a very toxic mix.
The mainstream news media has also fallen into this validation trap. You have one news network that solely reflects the right wing, others that take the view of the left-center leaning, and what is lost are the facts and context, the balance we need to evaluate, learn, and understand the world. People seeking fact-based journalism lose, because the more extreme the media becomes to entice consumers with provocative headlines and click-bait to earn more money, the less their news is fact-based and becomes more opinion driven.
There was a time when fact-based reporting was required of broadcast news. It was called “The Fairness Doctrin ...
http1500cms.comBECAUSE THIS FORM IS USED BY VARIOUS .docxpooleavelina
http://1500cms.com/
BECAUSE THIS FORM IS USED BY VARIOUS GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE HEALTH PROGRAMS, SEE SEPARATE INSTRUCTIONS ISSUED BY
APPLICABLE PROGRAMS.
NOTICE: Any person who knowingly files a statement of claim containing any misrepresentation or any false, incomplete or misleading information may
be guilty of a criminal act punishable under law and may be subject to civil penalties.
REFERS TO GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS ONLY
MEDICARE AND CHAMPUS PAYMENTS: A patient’s signature requests that payment be made and authorizes release of any information necessary to process
the claim and certifies that the information provided in Blocks 1 through 12 is true, accurate and complete. In the case of a Medicare claim, the patient’s signature
authorizes any entity to release to Medicare medical and nonmedical information, including employment status, and whether the person has employer group health
insurance, liability, no-fault, worker’s compensation or other insurance which is responsible to pay for the services for which the Medicare claim is made. See 42
CFR 411.24(a). If item 9 is completed, the patient’s signature authorizes release of the information to the health plan or agency shown. In Medicare assigned or
CHAMPUS participation cases, the physician agrees to accept the charge determination of the Medicare carrier or CHAMPUS fiscal intermediary as the full charge,
and the patient is responsible only for the deductible, coinsurance and noncovered services. Coinsurance and the deductible are based upon the charge
determination of the Medicare carrier or CHAMPUS fiscal intermediary if this is less than the charge submitted. CHAMPUS is not a health insurance program but
makes payment for health benefits provided through certain affiliations with the Uniformed Services. Information on the patient’s sponsor should be provided in those
items captioned in “Insured”; i.e., items 1a, 4, 6, 7, 9, and 11.
BLACK LUNG AND FECA CLAIMS
The provider agrees to accept the amount paid by the Government as payment in full. See Black Lung and FECA instructions regarding required procedure and
diagnosis coding systems.
SIGNATURE OF PHYSICIAN OR SUPPLIER (MEDICARE, CHAMPUS, FECA AND BLACK LUNG)
I certify that the services shown on this form were medically indicated and necessary for the health of the patient and were personally furnished by me or were furnished
incident to my professional service by my employee under my immediate personal supervision, except as otherwise expressly permitted by Medicare or CHAMPUS
regulations.
For services to be considered as “incident” to a physician’s professional service, 1) they must be rendered under the physician’s immediate personal supervision
by his/her employee, 2) they must be an integral, although incidental part of a covered physician’s service, 3) they must be of kinds commonly furnished in physician’s
offices, and 4) the services of nonphysicians must be included on the physician’s bills.
For CHA ...
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/323444.php
https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.2008.16.0333
https://journals.lww.com/co-hematology/Abstract/2007/03000/Influence_of_new_molecular_prognostic_markers_in.5.aspx
Influence of new molecular prognostic markers in patients with karyotypically normal acute myeloid leukemia: recent advances
Mrózek, Krzysztofa; Döhner, Hartmutb; Bloomfield, Clara Da
Current Opinion in Hematology: March 2007 - Volume 14 - Issue 2 - p 106–114
doi: 10.1097/MOH.0b013e32801684c7
Myeloid disease
Purpose of review Molecular study of cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia is among the most active areas of leukemia research. Despite having the same normal karyotype, adults with de-novo cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia who constitute the largest cytogenetic group of acute myeloid leukemia, are very diverse with respect to acquired gene mutations and gene expression changes. These genetic alterations affect clinical outcome and may assist in selection of proper treatment. Herein we critically summarize recent clinically relevant molecular genetic studies of cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia.
Recent findings NPM1 gene mutations causing aberrant cytoplasmic localization of nucleophosmin have been demonstrated to be the most frequent submicroscopic alterations in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia and to confer improved prognosis, especially in patients without a concomitant FLT3 gene internal tandem duplication. Overexpressed BAALC, ERG and MN1 genes and expression of breast cancer resistance protein have been shown to confer poor prognosis. A gene-expression signature previously suggested to separate cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia patients into prognostic subgroups has been validated on a different microarray platform, although gene-expression signature-based classifiers predicting outcome for individual patients with greater accuracy are still needed.
Summary The discovery of new prognostic markers has increased our understanding of leukemogenesis and may lead to improved prognostication and generation of novel risk-adapted therapies.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/127/1/53?sso-checked=true
An update of current treatments for adult acute myeloid leukemia
Hervé Dombret and Claude Gardin
Abstract
Recent advances in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) biology and its genetic landscape should ultimately lead to more subset-specific AML therapies, ideally tailored to each patient's disease. Although a growing number of distinct AML subsets have been increasingly characterized, patient management has remained disappointingly uniform. If one excludes acute promyelocytic leukemia, current AML management still relies largely on intensive chemotherapy and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), at least in younger patients who can tolerate such intensive treatments. Nevertheless, progress has been made, notably in terms of standard drug dose in ...
httpstheater.nytimes.com mem theater treview.htmlres=9902e6.docxpooleavelina
https://theater.nytimes.com/ mem/ theater/ treview.html?res=9902e6db1639f931a25753c1a962948260
THEATER: WILSON'S 'MA RAINEY'S' OPENS
By FRANK RICH
Published: October 12, 1984, Friday
LATE in Act I of ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom,'' a somber, aging band trombonist (Joe Seneca) tilts his head heavenward to sing the blues. The setting is a dilapidated Chicago recording studio of 1927, and the song sounds as old as time. ''If I had my way,'' goes the lyric, ''I would tear this old building down.''
Once the play has ended, that lyric has almost become a prophecy. In ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom,'' the writer August Wilson sends the entire history of black America crashing down upon our heads. This play is a searing inside account of what white racism does to its victims - and it floats on the same authentic artistry as the blues music it celebrates. Harrowing as ''Ma Rainey's'' can be, it is also funny, salty, carnal and lyrical. Like his real-life heroine, the legendary singer Gertrude (Ma) Rainey, Mr. Wilson articulates a legacy of unspeakable agony and rage in a spellbinding voice.
The play is Mr. Wilson's first to arrive in New York, and it reached here, via the Yale Repertory Theater, under the sensitive hand of the man who was born to direct it, Lloyd Richards. On Broadway, Mr. Richards has honed ''Ma Rainey's'' to its finest form. What's more, the director brings us an exciting young actor - Charles S. Dutton - along with his extraordinary dramatist. One wonders if the electricity at the Cort is the same that audiences felt when Mr. Richards, Lorraine Hansberry and Sidney Poitier stormed into Broadway with ''A Raisin in the Sun'' a quarter-century ago.
As ''Ma Rainey's'' shares its director and Chicago setting with ''Raisin,'' so it builds on Hansberry's themes: Mr. Wilson's characters want to make it in white America. And, to a degree, they have. Ma Rainey (1886-1939) was among the first black singers to get a recording contract - albeit with a white company's ''race'' division. Mr. Wilson gives us Ma (Theresa Merritt) at the height of her fame. A mountain of glitter and feathers, she has become a despotic, temperamental star, complete with a retinue of flunkies, a fancy car and a kept young lesbian lover.
The evening's framework is a Paramount-label recording session that actually happened, but whose details and supporting players have been invented by the author. As the action swings between the studio and the band's warm-up room - designed by Charles Henry McClennahan as if they might be the festering last- chance saloon of ''The Iceman Cometh'' - Ma and her four accompanying musicians overcome various mishaps to record ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom'' and other songs. During the delays, the band members smoke reefers, joke around and reminisce about past gigs on a well-traveled road stretching through whorehouses and church socials from New Orleans to Fat Back, Ark.
The musicians' speeches are like improvised band solos - variously fiz ...
https://fitsmallbusiness.com/employee-compensation-plan/
The puzzle of motivation | Dan Pink [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrkrvAUbU9Y
Refining the total rewards package through employee input at MillerCoors [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_I7nv0B4_NU&feature=youtu.be
How to design an employee compensation plan [SlideShare slides]. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/FitSmallBusiness/how-to-design-a-compensation-plan-dave?ref=http://fitsmallbusiness.com/how-to-pay-employees/
Compensation strategies [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/U2wjvBigs7w
· Expectations for Power Point Presentations in Units IV and V
I would like to provide information about what needs to be included in presentations. Please review the rubric prior to submitting any assignment. If you don't know where to find this, please contact me.
1. You need a title slide.
2. You need an overview of the presentation slide (slide after the title slide). This is how you would organize a presentation if you were presenting it at work.
3. You need a summary slide (before the reference slide); same reason as above.
4. Please do not forget to cite on slides where you are writing about something related to what you have read. Please consider each slide a paragraph. You can cite on the slides or in the notes. If you do not cite, you will not get credit for the slide.
- Direct quotes should not be used in this presentation as they are not analysis.
5. Remember, all I can evaluate is what you submit, so please consider using notes to explain what you are writing in further detail. Bullets are great and you can use these but then provide more detail in the notes.
6. Graphics - Please include graphics/charts/graphs as this is evaluated in the rubric (quality of the presentation).
7. References - For all references, you need citations. For all citations, you need references. They must match. All must be formatted using APA requirements. Please review the Quick Reference Guide that was posted in the announcements.
Please never hesitate to email me with any questions. If you need further clarification about feedback or if you do not agree with any of the feedback, please contact me. My door is always open.
Assignment 1
Positioning Statement and Motto
Use the provided information, as well as your own research, to assess one (1) of the stated brands (Tesla, SmoothieKing, Suave, or Nintendo) by completing the questions below with an ORIGINAL response to each. At the end of the worksheet, be sure to develop a new ORIGINAL positioning statement and motto for the brand you selected. Submit the completed template in the Week 4 assignment submission link.
Name:
Professor’s Name:
Course Title:
Date:
Company/Brand Selected (Tesla, SmoothieKing, Suave or Nintendo):
1. Target Customers/Users
Who are the target customers for the company/brand? Make sure you tell why you selected each item that you did. (NOTE: DO NO ...
http://hps.org/documents/pregnancy_fact_sheet.pdf
https://www.asge.org/docs/default-source/education/practice_guidelines/doc-5c7150fd-910a-4181-89bf-bc697b369103.pdf?sfvrsn=6
http://hps.org/hpspublications/articles/pregnancyandradiationexposureinfosheet.html
Data Science
and
Big Data Analytics
Chapter 12: The Endgame, or Putting It All Together
1
Chapter Contents
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Developing core material for multiple audiences, project goals, main findings, approach, model description, key points supported with data, model details, recommendations, tips on final presentation, providing technical specifications and code
12.3 Data Visualization Basics
Key points supported with data, evolution of a graph, common representation methods, how to clean up a graphic, additional considerations
Summary
2
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
3
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
Deliverables and Stakeholders
4
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
Deliverables
General Deliverables – from Textbook
Presentation for Project Sponsors
Presentation for Analysts
Code
Technical Specifications
Deliverables For This Course
Presentation for Analysts – half hour per team, next week
Technical Paper for Research Day Conference
Submit CD – Presentation, Paper, Data or URL, Code
5
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Churn Prediction
This section describes a scenario of a fictional bank and a churn prediction model of its customers
The analytic plan contains components that can be used as inputs for writing the final presentations
scope
underlying assumptions
modeling techniques
initial hypotheses
and key findings
6
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Churn Prediction
7
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Analytics Plan
8
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.1 Developing Core Material for Multiple Audiences
Some project components have dual use
Create core materials used for both analyst and business audiences
Three areas on the next slide used for both audiences
Sections after the following overview slide
12.2.2 – Project Goals
12.2.3 – Key Findings
12.2.4 – Approach
12.2.5 – Model Description
12.2.6 – Key Points Supported by Data
12.2.7 – Model Details
12.2.8 – Recommendations
12.2.9 – Additional Tips on the Final Presentation
12.2.10 – Providing Technical Specifications and Code
9
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.1 Developing Core Material for Multiple Audiences
10
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.2 Project Goals
The project goals portion of the final presentation is generally the same for sponsors and analysts
The project goals are described first to lay the groundwork for the solution and recommendations
Generally, the goals are agreed on earl ...
https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/vietnam/overview
-------------- Context ----------------
Vietnam’s development over the past 30 years has been remarkable. Economic and political reforms under Đổi Mới, launched in 1986, have spurred rapid economic growth, transforming what was then one of the world’s poorest nations into a lower middle-income country. Between 2002 and 2018, more than 45 million people were lifted out of poverty. Poverty rates declined sharply from over 70% to below 6% (US$3.2/day PPP), and GDP per capita increased by 2.5 times, standing over US$2,500 in 2018.
In the medium-term, Vietnam’s economic outlook is positive, despite signs of cyclical moderation in growth. After peaking at 7.1% in 2018, real GDP growth in 2019 is projected to slightly decelerate in 2019, led by weaker external demand and continued tightening of credit and fiscal policies. Real GDP growth is projected to remain robust at around 6.5% in 2020 and 2021. Annual headline inflation has been stable for the seven consecutive years – at single digits, trending towards 4% and below in recent years. The external balance remains under control and should continue to be financed by strong FDI inflows which reached almost US$18 billion in 2018 – accounting for almost 24% of total investment in the economy.
Vietnam is experiencing rapid demographic and social change. Its population reached 97 million in 2018 (up from about 60 million in 1986) and is expected to expand to 120 million before moderating around 2050. Today, 70% of the population is under 35 years of age, with a life expectancy of 76 years, the highest among countries in the region at similar income levels. But the population is rapidly aging. And an emerging middle class, currently accounting for 13% of the population, is expected to reach 26% by 2026.
Vietnam ranks 48 out of 157 countries on the human capital index (HCI), second in ASEAN behind Singapore. A Vietnamese child born today will be 67% as productive when she grows up as she could be if she enjoyed complete education and full health. Vietnam’s HCI is highest among middle-income countries, but there are some disparities within the country, especially for ethnic minorities. There would also be a need to upgrade the skill of the workforce to create productive jobs at a large scale in the future.
Over the last thirty years, the provision of basic services has significantly improved. Access of households to modern infrastructure services has increased dramatically. As of 2016, 99% of the population used electricity as their main source of lighting, up from 14 % in 1993. Access to clean water in rural areas has also improved, up from 17% in 1993 to 70% in 2016, while that figure for urban areas is above 95%.
Vietnam performs well on general education. Coverage and learning outcomes are high and equitably achieved in primary schools — evidenced by remarkably high scores in the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) in 2012 and 2015, ...
HTML WEB Page solutionAbout.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAbou.docxpooleavelina
HTML WEB Page solution/About.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAboutContact Me
This website gives a detail inward look in quantam physics as it is a evolving field now-a-days and has many upcoming changes that is going to leave the world in shock. There has been a lot of confusion lately related to this topics in people so it is encourage that people visit this website and get to know more about this field and explore the horizons there is yet to come.
HTML WEB Page solution/FirstLastHomePage.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAboutContact Me
Definition
Quantum mechanics is the part of material science identifying with the little.
It brings about what may have all the earmarks of being some extremely peculiar decisions about the physical world. At the size of particles and electrons, a significant number of the conditions of old style mechanics, which depict how things move at ordinary sizes and speeds, stop to be helpful. In traditional mechanics, objects exist in a particular spot at a particular time. Be that as it may, in quantum mechanics, protests rather exist in a fog of likelihood; they have a specific possibility of being at point An, another possibility of being at point B, etc.Three revolutionary principles
Quantum mechanics (QM) created over numerous decades, starting as a lot of questionable scientific clarifications of tests that the math of old style mechanics couldn't clarify. It started at the turn of the twentieth century, around a similar time that Albert Einstein distributed his hypothesis of relativity, a different numerical unrest in material science that portrays the movement of things at high speeds. In contrast to relativity, nonetheless, the sources of QM can't be credited to any one researcher. Or maybe, various researchers added to an establishment of three progressive rules that bit by bit picked up acknowledgment and exploratory confirmation somewhere in the range of 1900 and 1930. They are:
Quantized properties:
Certain properties, for example, position, speed and shading, can once in a while just happen in explicit, set sums, much like a dial that "clicks" from number to number. This tested a crucial presumption of old style mechanics, which said that such properties should exist on a smooth, ceaseless range. To portray the possibility that a few properties "clicked" like a dial with explicit settings, researchers begat the word "quantized".
Particles of light:
Light can now and again act as a molecule. This was at first met with unforgiving analysis, as it negated 200 years of trials indicating that light acted as a wave; much like waves on the outside of a quiet lake. Light acts comparatively in that it ricochets off dividers and twists around corners, and that the peaks and troughs of the wave can include or counteract. Included wave peaks bring about more splendid light, while waves that counterbalance produce obscurity. A light source can be thought of ...
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/online-dating-vs-offline_b_4037867
For your initial post, provide a sentence to share which article you are referring to so that you can best communicate with your peers. Include a link to your selection.
· Explain how the argument contains or avoids bias.
i. Provide specific examples to support your explanation.
ii. What assumptions does it make?
· Discuss the credibility of the overall argument.
i. Were the resources the argument was built upon credible?
ii. Does the credibility support or undermine the article’s claims in any important ways?
In response to your peers, provide an additional resource to support or refute the argument your peer makes. Do you agree with their claims of credibility? Are there any other possible bias not identified?
Response #1
Allysa Tantala posted Sep 22, 2019 10:17 PM
Subscribe
The article that I am looking at is Online Dating Vs. Offline Dating: Pros and Cons.It was written by Julie Spira, an online dating expert, bestselling author, and CEO of Cyber-Dating Expert. The name of the article is spot on in describing what it is about. The author goes through the pros and cons of dating online and offline in today’s day and age. The author avoids bias because she looks at both options in both their positive and negative attributes. She comes at the issues from both angles and I believe she does a very good job at remaining unbiased. She states that “if you're serious about meeting someone special, you must include a combination of both online and offline dating in your routine” (Spira, 2013, par. 18). She’s stating that both options have their pros and cons and that really a combination of both is needed to find someone. The only bias I could see anyone pointing out would be that she is a woman, so you do not get the male perspective on these things. That being said, I one hundred percent think she covers all of the questions people may have about online and offline dating in today’s world. The only assumption being made here is that the reader wants to be out in the dating world and they need to know what is best. But, the title of the article is pretty self-explanatory so if someone did not want to know these things, they would not have to waste their time reading it all because they could tell what it would be about by the title.
The resource that she used was herself, and like I stated above, she is an online dating expert, bestselling author, and CEO of Cyber-Dating Expert; so she is more than qualified to give her perspective on these issues. I find her to be credible and thought provoking. Her credibility supports everything the article says and makes the reader feel like they are being told the truth by someone who completely understands all of the pros and cons.
Resource:
Spira, J. (2013, December 3). Online Dating Vs. Offline Dating: Pros and Cons. Retrieved from https://www.huffpost.com/entry/online-dating-vs-offline_b_4037867
Response #2
Jennifer Caforio posted Se ...
https://www.vitalsource.com/products/comparative-criminal-justice-systems-harry-r-dammer-jay-s-v9781285630779
THE ASSIGNMENT IS BASED ON CHAPTER 1 (ONE)
Login : [email protected]
Password: Greekyogurt13!
1
3Defining the Problem
Rigina CochranMPA/593
August 19, 2019
Peter ReevesDefining the Problem
The health care system in Colorado is a composition of medical professionals providing services such as diagnosis, treatment, as well as preventive measures to mental illness and injuries ("Healthcare policy in Colorado - Ballotpedia," 2019). Health care policy involves the establishment and implementation of legislation and other regulations that the states use to manage its health care system effectively. Further, this sector consists of other participants, such as insurance and health information technology. The cost citizens pay for medical care and also the access to quality care influence the overall health care providers in Colorado. Therefore, the need for the creation and implementation of laws that help the state maintain efficiency in the health sector in Colorado.
Problem Statement
The declining standards of medical care within the United States has caused significant concern in the world. Due to these rising concerns, there have been various policies implemented, leading to mixed reactions among the different states. Some of the active policies implemented offer a long-term solution to this problem including Medicaid and Medicare. After acquiring state control, the Republicans dismissed the idea to expand and create medical insurance for Medicaid in Colorado. Sustaining the structure of the health care payroll calls for the deductions from the employees and the employers, which may lead to loss of jobs and increased burden of expenditure (Garcia, 2019).
Identify the Methodology
The main objective of this policy plan is to investigate the role of legislation in the management of the health care sector in the United States. Due to the need for achieving in-depth exploration, this paper uses a combination of both qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection by addressing both practical and theoretical aspects of the research. Based on the answers that the policy requires, choosing survey as the research design. This method involves collecting and analyzing data from a few people who represent the principal group within health care. However, the survey method faces some challenges such as attitudes and perception of the health workers leading to the delimitation of the study. The target population for the study includes the nurses within the health sectors in Colorado. The selection of the participants involved in the use of stratified random sampling.
Identify your Stakeholders
The major stakeholders in the creation and implementation of the policy plan include the legislatures, local government, patients, and other private parties such as the insurance companies. Collectively, these bodies are involved in the makin ...
https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/arfid
AVOIDANT RESTRICTIVE FOOD INTAKE DISORDER (ARFID)
Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) is a new diagnosis in the DSM-5, and was previously referred to as “Selective Eating Disorder.” ARFID is similar to anorexia in that both disorders involve limitations in the amount and/or types of food consumed, but unlike anorexia, ARFID does not involve any distress about body shape or size, or fears of fatness.
Although many children go through phases of picky or selective eating, a person with ARFID does not consume enough calories to grow and develop properly and, in adults, to maintain basic body function. In children, this results in stalled weight gain and vertical growth; in adults, this results in weight loss. ARFID can also result in problems at school or work, due to difficulties eating with others and extended times needed to eat.
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA
According to the DSM-5, ARFID is diagnosed when:
· An eating or feeding disturbance (e.g., apparent lack of interest in eating or food; avoidance based on the sensory characteristics of food; concern about aversive consequences of eating) as manifested by persistent failure to meet appropriate nutritional and/or energy needs associated with one (or more) of the following:
· Significant weight loss (or failure to achieve expected weight gain or faltering growth in children).
· Significant nutritional deficiency.
· Dependence on enteral feeding or oral nutritional supplements.
· Marked interference with psychosocial functioning.
· The disturbance is not better explained by lack of available food or by an associated culturally sanctioned practice.
· The eating disturbance does not occur exclusively during the course of anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa, and there is no evidence of a disturbance in the way in which one’s body weight or shape is experienced.
· The eating disturbance is not attributable to a concurrent medical condition or not better explained by another mental disorder. When the eating disturbance occurs in the context of another condition or disorder, the severity of the eating disturbance exceeds that routinely associated with the condition or disorder and warrants additional clinical attention.
RISK FACTORS
As with all eating disorders, the risk factors for ARFID involve a range of biological, psychological, and sociocultural issues. These factors may interact differently in different people, which means two people with the same eating disorder can have very diverse perspectives, experiences, and symptoms. Researchers know much less about what puts someone at risk of developing ARFID, but here’s what they do know:
· People with autism spectrum conditions are much more likely to develop ARFID, as are those with ADHD and intellectual disabilities.
· Children who don’t outgrow normal picky eating, or in whom picky eating is severe, appear to be more likely to develop ARFID.
· Many children with ARFID ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=59&v=Bh_oEYX1zNM&feature=emb_logo
BA 325 Pivot Table Assignment Answer Sheet
Name:
Before you do anything fill out your name on the assignment and save your file as BA325 Firstname Lastname (use your actual name).
The table has all of the questions from the DuPont Assignment. Fill in your answers to the questions in the corresponding cell in the Answer column. Below the table there is a spot for the Screen Clippings from both the Practice Assignment, and the DuPont Assignment.
After you have filled out all of the answers and Screen Clippings submit the file to the Assignments folder in D2L.
Q Number
Question
Answer
Q1
How much was American Airlines’ Net Revenues in 2013?
Q2
What was the Return on Equity for Apple in 2015?
Q3
Which company had the highest Net Income and in which year? What was the value?
Q4
Which company had the lowest Net Income and in which year? What was the value?
Q5
How many unique companies in your sample had Net Losses exceeding one billion dollars? Which companies, and what years?
Q6
What was the Sum of the Net Income for all companies in the sample for 2015?
Q7
Which company had the highest total Net Income over the three year period? What was the value?
Q8
Which company had the lowest total Net Income over the three year period? What was the value?
Q9
Which industry had the highest Average Profit Margin over the three year period? What was the value?
Q10
In which year was the Average Profit Margin the highest for the entire sample? What was the value?
Q11
For how many companies do you have Profit Margin ratio data in 2013?
Q12
For what Industry do you have the most Profit Margin ratio data in the sample? What was the value? For that Industry what year was the highest? What was the value?
Q13
Which Industry has the highest Average Asset Turnover over the three year period? What was the value?
Q14
Which of the remaining Industries has the highest Asset Turnover in 2014? What was the value?
Q15
Which Industry has the highest Average Financial Leverage over the three year period? What was the value?
Q16
Which Industry has the lowest Average Financial Leverage that does not include negative numbers in any year? What was the value?
Q17
What is the Average Financial Leverage for the Transportation Industry in 2013?
Note: The answer is odd. You will have to use Data Cleaning to resolve the issue.
Q18
Which Industry has the highest Average Return on Equity over the three year period and which company is the highest within that Industry? What are the values?
Q19
Which two companies in the Public Utilities Industry have the highest Average Return on Equity during the period? What are the values?
Q20
Which Industry had the largest decrease in Average Return on Equity between 2013 and 2014? What was the value?
Q21
Which Industry had the largest increase in Average Return on Equity between 2014 and 2015? What was the value?
Q22
Bonus Question 1: How many industrie ...
https://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/fbi-expects-a-rise-in-scams-involving-cryptocurrency-related-to-the-covid-19-pandemic
https://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-bulls-trillions-coronavirus-aid
https://www.forbes.com/sites/walterpavlo/2020/02/25/crime-and-punishment-in-the-cryptocurrency-world/#62232a6748fe
Running head: Bitcoin as a cryptocurrency 1
Bitcoin as a cryptocurrency 8Bitcoin as a Cryptocurrency of Misconduct
Roger F. Lewis
Miami Dade College-North Campus
June 5, 2019
Bitcoin as a Cryptocurrency of Misconduct
In the expansion of cryptocurrencies in particular bitcoins have resulted in providing clients with exceptional advantages, the advantages in this matter have not had their hazards and struggles. In the peculiar free mode in the cryptocurrency arcade, it has been in constant misuse and linked to several illegal activities. Lawmakers globally repetitively stumble upon this very position (Anon,2019). The tendency on allowing a market to settle on its fosters this activity as the lawmakers tend to abstain from events of the market. They cannot also sit by and enable misconduct behaviors to foster in the markets. Tracking the cryptocurrency action has proved to be much more complicated than the standard plugged-in transactions. The bottom line is that these transactions occur globally has established a headache to try and monitor this particular field. The release of the bitcoin in the year two thousand and nine as the world’s pioneer and most profound mode of cryptocurrency was a breakthrough in the industry. Cryptocurrency, on the other hand, is the mode of exchange that occurs only in the digital dimension. Cryptocurrency uses complex codes as a skill of protecting data. Thus, monetary transactions are carried out most safely (Anon,2019). A public ledger is used to know the actual owner of a particular cryptocurrency.
Assets in the digital market portray distinctive characteristics –delegation, simple connections between members as well as the relative use of modern technology, many have the thought or mindset that in time bitcoins will be used as a forthcoming currency. To understand the illegal uses of bitcoins we must first address the non-illegal activities in this field. As earlier stated, there is a possibility that the bitcoins will indeed replace the current custom. One can lawfully use bid coins in the following areas; travels, to pay tuition fee for institutions and can be used as an alternative where the standards of payment are online. The above depicts numerous ways can use bitcoins to settle their bills. The difference in value between the bitcoins and the traditional currency leads to individuals opting to use the bitcoins for exchange in cases or scenarios where a high exchange rate is noted, and alternatively, the opposite is exact. Chargebacks risk is reduced in the event of using bitcoins, therefore easing access to the broader market for traders. In the event of unlawful trades, both ends to ...
HTM301 – Food Science & Production Final Project Guidelines .docxpooleavelina
HTM301 – Food Science & Production Final Project Guidelines
Page 1 of 5 Last Revised: 10/31/2019 1:49 PM
FINAL PROJECT GUIDELINES
(20% of Semester Grade)
Completed Report Due 12/17/19, Uploaded to iLearn by 500pm
Assignment Purpose:
The final project is your opportunity to demonstrate that you can apply the principles of food science taught
over the course of the semester to successfully modify a recipe to achieve new plan and execute a formal
experiment based on the scientific method. So essentially, you’ll practice two things that will help you later
in life: 1) applying the food science principles and knowledge taught in this course, and 2) practice applying
the scientific method so you can experience how a good experiment should be run (so you can critically
evaluate whether experiments that you encounter are sound, and so you can create future experiments to
test your own theories in the future). Your final project, has seven (7) components:
1. Identify an area of inquiry: Choose an existing recipe, with the aim to improve that recipe in a
way of your choosing.
2. Conduct a literature review: Research the scientific principles involved with achieving the desired
improvement of your chosen recipe.
3. Form a hypothesis: Based on your research, modify the original recipe, to achieve the desired
outcome that you have chosen.
4. Conduct your experiment: Make the original recipe once. Then also execute your modified recipe.
5. Report your results: Document the process and output of your attempts to execute on the original
and modified recipes.
6. Analyze your experiment results: Evaluate whether, and explain why your modified recipe (did
not) achieve your desired outcome.
7. Discuss your learnings and advise future researchers: Discuss the weakness and flaws of your
experiment and make suggestions on how others can use your experience to help make their own
recipe changes in the future.
Project Component Guidelines and Details:
The following is more detail on each of the components of your final project. This is not a comprehensive,
yes/no list of what you are/not allowed to do for your project. These guidelines and details exist so that you
can explore what is interesting to you and still meet the learning objectives of this assignment. If after
reading this section, you still have questions, please contact Sybil.
1. Identify an area of inquiry – You have a lot of latitude here. Ask yourself what in the world of
food do you want to find out more about? What have you always been curious about?
Maybe you want to find a way to make a healthier version of your favorite recipe.
A fluffier version of your mom’s favorite cake?
A way to make a favorite treat gluten- or dairy-free?
Choose an area of food science that you are genuinely interested in, and that relates to some of the
scientific principles discussed in the course.
2. Conduct a literature review – Now it’s tim ...
https://www.aljazeera.net/news/cultureandart/2019/2/16/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%82-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%88%D8%A8%D9%8A-%D8%B1%D9%82%D8%B5%D8%A9-%D9%81%D9%84%D9%88%D9%83%D9%84%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%85%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%AA
"Folklore" .. Dance of Iraqi folklore
16/2/2019
Print font size
The answer is usually dressed in the dishdasha (thobe) while playing Joby (Al Jazeera Net)
The answer is usually dressed in the dishdasha (thobe) while playing Joby (Al Jazeera Net)
Marwan al-Jubouri-Baghdad
With the bustle of weddings and social events gathering, flying around each other, the hands and shoulders converge to "play" one of the oldest folkloric dances in Iraq, "Gobi" - which resembles Dabke in other countries - with unmistakable songs and melodies, which they inherited from their ancestors.
In Iraq, which is rich in societal and cultural diversity, many folk arts are associated with certain regions and cities, where they grew up and flourished, and became a registered trademark in its name, including the famous "Jubi" dance (and the name is spoken between the gym and the Shin).
Throughout the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, starting from Baghdad and its environs towards northern and western Iraq, the local people celebrate this dance and practice it in their joys and social occasions, and they see it as an expression of their ancestral heritage with the songs, melodies and poems associated with their councils and forums.
Many consider that the "Jobi" is not limited to that dance, but also includes the associated melodies and songs and Mawwil.
Iraqis prefer to use the word "play" instead of "dance", a reference to those who practice the job.
Thus, the Gobi players - or the “answer” - have become permanent guests at every occasion or social gathering.
The dance includes high jumps in the air on drum and oboe rhythms.
The dance includes high jumps in the air on drum and oboe rhythms.
Specialized teams
For decades, most of the artists in Iraq have included at least one song of this color in their albums.
This dance is often practiced by a group of between 10 and 20 people, dressed mostly in the traditional "dashdasha" (garment), forming a semi-circle led by a person holding a rosary or handkerchief to control the rhythm, and perhaps one or two people from this group to perform a special dance In front of her, the same rhythm but in different movements.
Different age groups participate in the dance Aljoubi (Al Jazeera Net)
Different age groups participate in the dance Aljoubi (Al Jazeera Net)
Al-Joubi Square includes different age groups, from childhood to sometimes advanced ages.
Being a popular dance familiar to Iraqis, many young people are making up teams for the Gobi, to commemorate events and sometimes compete between different regions and provinces.
Omar Al Thiabi is a young man who has been fascinated by this folklore from an early age.
He tells Al Jazeera Net that their group was founded in 2010 in Ba ...
HSM Discussion Board and examplesBriefly summarize the five huma.docxpooleavelina
HSM Discussion Board and examples
Briefly summarize the five human services values presented in this week’s readings. Then describe a situation in which you would have difficulty using one of those values as a guiding principle for your actions. Why is the human services value you selected difficult to practice? Propose solutions that address these difficulties.
Example 1:
Class,
In our textbook Woodside and McClam (2019) describe the 5 values important to the practice of human services. They are:
1. Acceptance: the ability of the helper to be receptive regardless of behavior or dress.
2. Tolerance: ability of the helper to be fair and patient toward each client, and not to judge, blame, or punish for prior behaviors.
3. Individuality: Recognizing and treating each person individually and not based off of stereotypes such as lifestyle, problems, assets, and previous life experiences.
4. Self-determination: Allows the client to make up their own mind when it comes to decision-making and actions to be taken.
5. Confidentiality: Helper will not discuss client’s cases with others, nor will they use what they discuss with clients as conversation fodder with friends and family.
I would have a hard time exercising tolerance if my client was a repeat offender for domestic and/ or child abuse. It would be very difficult not to judge that behavior or to want to help that client. I would feel torn between wanting to get them the help they needed in order to hopefully stop the cycle of violence, but in my heart I would want to be helping ensure the child or domestic partner was out of that situation and never had to see my client again, unless they chose to. On the flip side, if my client was the abuse victim and continuously kept an abuser in their life, and those of their children, it would be equally difficult to be tolerant of that behavior. I would definitely feel the urge to throw the value of self-determination out the window as well and make decisions for my client...which I know is not an option.
Tolerance can be hard to practice when other's actions go against your own moral and ethical values. You pretty much need to shut your own emotions up in a box and try and connect people to services no matter what. I think with proper training and confidence in the services you are providing, one can practice the 5 values. If I come to believe in a program that I think may help an abuser learn to reverse their behavior in future, maybe I would have more tolerance when working with them.
Woodside, M., & McClam, T. (2019). An introduction to human services (9th ed.). Boston, MA:
Cengage.
Example 2:
Hi everyone,
The follow are the top five human service values discussed in our book, Introduction to Human Services (Woodside & McClam, 2019)
1. Acceptance is the ability of the helper to be receptive to another person regardless of dress or behavior
2. Tolerance is the helper’s ability to be patient and fair toward each client rather than judging, blamin ...
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/323444.php
https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.2008.16.0333
https://journals.lww.com/co-hematology/Abstract/2007/03000/Influence_of_new_molecular_prognostic_markers_in.5.aspx
Influence of new molecular prognostic markers in patients with karyotypically normal acute myeloid leukemia: recent advances
Mrózek, Krzysztofa; Döhner, Hartmutb; Bloomfield, Clara Da
Current Opinion in Hematology: March 2007 - Volume 14 - Issue 2 - p 106–114
doi: 10.1097/MOH.0b013e32801684c7
Myeloid disease
Purpose of review Molecular study of cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia is among the most active areas of leukemia research. Despite having the same normal karyotype, adults with de-novo cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia who constitute the largest cytogenetic group of acute myeloid leukemia, are very diverse with respect to acquired gene mutations and gene expression changes. These genetic alterations affect clinical outcome and may assist in selection of proper treatment. Herein we critically summarize recent clinically relevant molecular genetic studies of cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia.
Recent findings NPM1 gene mutations causing aberrant cytoplasmic localization of nucleophosmin have been demonstrated to be the most frequent submicroscopic alterations in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia and to confer improved prognosis, especially in patients without a concomitant FLT3 gene internal tandem duplication. Overexpressed BAALC, ERG and MN1 genes and expression of breast cancer resistance protein have been shown to confer poor prognosis. A gene-expression signature previously suggested to separate cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia patients into prognostic subgroups has been validated on a different microarray platform, although gene-expression signature-based classifiers predicting outcome for individual patients with greater accuracy are still needed.
Summary The discovery of new prognostic markers has increased our understanding of leukemogenesis and may lead to improved prognostication and generation of novel risk-adapted therapies.
http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/127/1/53?sso-checked=true
An update of current treatments for adult acute myeloid leukemia
Hervé Dombret and Claude Gardin
Abstract
Recent advances in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) biology and its genetic landscape should ultimately lead to more subset-specific AML therapies, ideally tailored to each patient's disease. Although a growing number of distinct AML subsets have been increasingly characterized, patient management has remained disappointingly uniform. If one excludes acute promyelocytic leukemia, current AML management still relies largely on intensive chemotherapy and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), at least in younger patients who can tolerate such intensive treatments. Nevertheless, progress has been made, notably in terms of standard drug dose in ...
httpstheater.nytimes.com mem theater treview.htmlres=9902e6.docxpooleavelina
https://theater.nytimes.com/ mem/ theater/ treview.html?res=9902e6db1639f931a25753c1a962948260
THEATER: WILSON'S 'MA RAINEY'S' OPENS
By FRANK RICH
Published: October 12, 1984, Friday
LATE in Act I of ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom,'' a somber, aging band trombonist (Joe Seneca) tilts his head heavenward to sing the blues. The setting is a dilapidated Chicago recording studio of 1927, and the song sounds as old as time. ''If I had my way,'' goes the lyric, ''I would tear this old building down.''
Once the play has ended, that lyric has almost become a prophecy. In ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom,'' the writer August Wilson sends the entire history of black America crashing down upon our heads. This play is a searing inside account of what white racism does to its victims - and it floats on the same authentic artistry as the blues music it celebrates. Harrowing as ''Ma Rainey's'' can be, it is also funny, salty, carnal and lyrical. Like his real-life heroine, the legendary singer Gertrude (Ma) Rainey, Mr. Wilson articulates a legacy of unspeakable agony and rage in a spellbinding voice.
The play is Mr. Wilson's first to arrive in New York, and it reached here, via the Yale Repertory Theater, under the sensitive hand of the man who was born to direct it, Lloyd Richards. On Broadway, Mr. Richards has honed ''Ma Rainey's'' to its finest form. What's more, the director brings us an exciting young actor - Charles S. Dutton - along with his extraordinary dramatist. One wonders if the electricity at the Cort is the same that audiences felt when Mr. Richards, Lorraine Hansberry and Sidney Poitier stormed into Broadway with ''A Raisin in the Sun'' a quarter-century ago.
As ''Ma Rainey's'' shares its director and Chicago setting with ''Raisin,'' so it builds on Hansberry's themes: Mr. Wilson's characters want to make it in white America. And, to a degree, they have. Ma Rainey (1886-1939) was among the first black singers to get a recording contract - albeit with a white company's ''race'' division. Mr. Wilson gives us Ma (Theresa Merritt) at the height of her fame. A mountain of glitter and feathers, she has become a despotic, temperamental star, complete with a retinue of flunkies, a fancy car and a kept young lesbian lover.
The evening's framework is a Paramount-label recording session that actually happened, but whose details and supporting players have been invented by the author. As the action swings between the studio and the band's warm-up room - designed by Charles Henry McClennahan as if they might be the festering last- chance saloon of ''The Iceman Cometh'' - Ma and her four accompanying musicians overcome various mishaps to record ''Ma Rainey's Black Bottom'' and other songs. During the delays, the band members smoke reefers, joke around and reminisce about past gigs on a well-traveled road stretching through whorehouses and church socials from New Orleans to Fat Back, Ark.
The musicians' speeches are like improvised band solos - variously fiz ...
https://fitsmallbusiness.com/employee-compensation-plan/
The puzzle of motivation | Dan Pink [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrkrvAUbU9Y
Refining the total rewards package through employee input at MillerCoors [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_I7nv0B4_NU&feature=youtu.be
How to design an employee compensation plan [SlideShare slides]. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/FitSmallBusiness/how-to-design-a-compensation-plan-dave?ref=http://fitsmallbusiness.com/how-to-pay-employees/
Compensation strategies [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/U2wjvBigs7w
· Expectations for Power Point Presentations in Units IV and V
I would like to provide information about what needs to be included in presentations. Please review the rubric prior to submitting any assignment. If you don't know where to find this, please contact me.
1. You need a title slide.
2. You need an overview of the presentation slide (slide after the title slide). This is how you would organize a presentation if you were presenting it at work.
3. You need a summary slide (before the reference slide); same reason as above.
4. Please do not forget to cite on slides where you are writing about something related to what you have read. Please consider each slide a paragraph. You can cite on the slides or in the notes. If you do not cite, you will not get credit for the slide.
- Direct quotes should not be used in this presentation as they are not analysis.
5. Remember, all I can evaluate is what you submit, so please consider using notes to explain what you are writing in further detail. Bullets are great and you can use these but then provide more detail in the notes.
6. Graphics - Please include graphics/charts/graphs as this is evaluated in the rubric (quality of the presentation).
7. References - For all references, you need citations. For all citations, you need references. They must match. All must be formatted using APA requirements. Please review the Quick Reference Guide that was posted in the announcements.
Please never hesitate to email me with any questions. If you need further clarification about feedback or if you do not agree with any of the feedback, please contact me. My door is always open.
Assignment 1
Positioning Statement and Motto
Use the provided information, as well as your own research, to assess one (1) of the stated brands (Tesla, SmoothieKing, Suave, or Nintendo) by completing the questions below with an ORIGINAL response to each. At the end of the worksheet, be sure to develop a new ORIGINAL positioning statement and motto for the brand you selected. Submit the completed template in the Week 4 assignment submission link.
Name:
Professor’s Name:
Course Title:
Date:
Company/Brand Selected (Tesla, SmoothieKing, Suave or Nintendo):
1. Target Customers/Users
Who are the target customers for the company/brand? Make sure you tell why you selected each item that you did. (NOTE: DO NO ...
http://hps.org/documents/pregnancy_fact_sheet.pdf
https://www.asge.org/docs/default-source/education/practice_guidelines/doc-5c7150fd-910a-4181-89bf-bc697b369103.pdf?sfvrsn=6
http://hps.org/hpspublications/articles/pregnancyandradiationexposureinfosheet.html
Data Science
and
Big Data Analytics
Chapter 12: The Endgame, or Putting It All Together
1
Chapter Contents
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Developing core material for multiple audiences, project goals, main findings, approach, model description, key points supported with data, model details, recommendations, tips on final presentation, providing technical specifications and code
12.3 Data Visualization Basics
Key points supported with data, evolution of a graph, common representation methods, how to clean up a graphic, additional considerations
Summary
2
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
3
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
Deliverables and Stakeholders
4
12.1 Communicating and Operationalizing an Analytics Project
Deliverables
General Deliverables – from Textbook
Presentation for Project Sponsors
Presentation for Analysts
Code
Technical Specifications
Deliverables For This Course
Presentation for Analysts – half hour per team, next week
Technical Paper for Research Day Conference
Submit CD – Presentation, Paper, Data or URL, Code
5
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Churn Prediction
This section describes a scenario of a fictional bank and a churn prediction model of its customers
The analytic plan contains components that can be used as inputs for writing the final presentations
scope
underlying assumptions
modeling techniques
initial hypotheses
and key findings
6
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Churn Prediction
7
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
Case Study – Fictional Bank Analytics Plan
8
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.1 Developing Core Material for Multiple Audiences
Some project components have dual use
Create core materials used for both analyst and business audiences
Three areas on the next slide used for both audiences
Sections after the following overview slide
12.2.2 – Project Goals
12.2.3 – Key Findings
12.2.4 – Approach
12.2.5 – Model Description
12.2.6 – Key Points Supported by Data
12.2.7 – Model Details
12.2.8 – Recommendations
12.2.9 – Additional Tips on the Final Presentation
12.2.10 – Providing Technical Specifications and Code
9
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.1 Developing Core Material for Multiple Audiences
10
12.2 Creating the Final Deliverables
12.2.2 Project Goals
The project goals portion of the final presentation is generally the same for sponsors and analysts
The project goals are described first to lay the groundwork for the solution and recommendations
Generally, the goals are agreed on earl ...
https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/vietnam/overview
-------------- Context ----------------
Vietnam’s development over the past 30 years has been remarkable. Economic and political reforms under Đổi Mới, launched in 1986, have spurred rapid economic growth, transforming what was then one of the world’s poorest nations into a lower middle-income country. Between 2002 and 2018, more than 45 million people were lifted out of poverty. Poverty rates declined sharply from over 70% to below 6% (US$3.2/day PPP), and GDP per capita increased by 2.5 times, standing over US$2,500 in 2018.
In the medium-term, Vietnam’s economic outlook is positive, despite signs of cyclical moderation in growth. After peaking at 7.1% in 2018, real GDP growth in 2019 is projected to slightly decelerate in 2019, led by weaker external demand and continued tightening of credit and fiscal policies. Real GDP growth is projected to remain robust at around 6.5% in 2020 and 2021. Annual headline inflation has been stable for the seven consecutive years – at single digits, trending towards 4% and below in recent years. The external balance remains under control and should continue to be financed by strong FDI inflows which reached almost US$18 billion in 2018 – accounting for almost 24% of total investment in the economy.
Vietnam is experiencing rapid demographic and social change. Its population reached 97 million in 2018 (up from about 60 million in 1986) and is expected to expand to 120 million before moderating around 2050. Today, 70% of the population is under 35 years of age, with a life expectancy of 76 years, the highest among countries in the region at similar income levels. But the population is rapidly aging. And an emerging middle class, currently accounting for 13% of the population, is expected to reach 26% by 2026.
Vietnam ranks 48 out of 157 countries on the human capital index (HCI), second in ASEAN behind Singapore. A Vietnamese child born today will be 67% as productive when she grows up as she could be if she enjoyed complete education and full health. Vietnam’s HCI is highest among middle-income countries, but there are some disparities within the country, especially for ethnic minorities. There would also be a need to upgrade the skill of the workforce to create productive jobs at a large scale in the future.
Over the last thirty years, the provision of basic services has significantly improved. Access of households to modern infrastructure services has increased dramatically. As of 2016, 99% of the population used electricity as their main source of lighting, up from 14 % in 1993. Access to clean water in rural areas has also improved, up from 17% in 1993 to 70% in 2016, while that figure for urban areas is above 95%.
Vietnam performs well on general education. Coverage and learning outcomes are high and equitably achieved in primary schools — evidenced by remarkably high scores in the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) in 2012 and 2015, ...
HTML WEB Page solutionAbout.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAbou.docxpooleavelina
HTML WEB Page solution/About.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAboutContact Me
This website gives a detail inward look in quantam physics as it is a evolving field now-a-days and has many upcoming changes that is going to leave the world in shock. There has been a lot of confusion lately related to this topics in people so it is encourage that people visit this website and get to know more about this field and explore the horizons there is yet to come.
HTML WEB Page solution/FirstLastHomePage.htmlQuantum PhysicsHomeServicesAboutContact Me
Definition
Quantum mechanics is the part of material science identifying with the little.
It brings about what may have all the earmarks of being some extremely peculiar decisions about the physical world. At the size of particles and electrons, a significant number of the conditions of old style mechanics, which depict how things move at ordinary sizes and speeds, stop to be helpful. In traditional mechanics, objects exist in a particular spot at a particular time. Be that as it may, in quantum mechanics, protests rather exist in a fog of likelihood; they have a specific possibility of being at point An, another possibility of being at point B, etc.Three revolutionary principles
Quantum mechanics (QM) created over numerous decades, starting as a lot of questionable scientific clarifications of tests that the math of old style mechanics couldn't clarify. It started at the turn of the twentieth century, around a similar time that Albert Einstein distributed his hypothesis of relativity, a different numerical unrest in material science that portrays the movement of things at high speeds. In contrast to relativity, nonetheless, the sources of QM can't be credited to any one researcher. Or maybe, various researchers added to an establishment of three progressive rules that bit by bit picked up acknowledgment and exploratory confirmation somewhere in the range of 1900 and 1930. They are:
Quantized properties:
Certain properties, for example, position, speed and shading, can once in a while just happen in explicit, set sums, much like a dial that "clicks" from number to number. This tested a crucial presumption of old style mechanics, which said that such properties should exist on a smooth, ceaseless range. To portray the possibility that a few properties "clicked" like a dial with explicit settings, researchers begat the word "quantized".
Particles of light:
Light can now and again act as a molecule. This was at first met with unforgiving analysis, as it negated 200 years of trials indicating that light acted as a wave; much like waves on the outside of a quiet lake. Light acts comparatively in that it ricochets off dividers and twists around corners, and that the peaks and troughs of the wave can include or counteract. Included wave peaks bring about more splendid light, while waves that counterbalance produce obscurity. A light source can be thought of ...
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/online-dating-vs-offline_b_4037867
For your initial post, provide a sentence to share which article you are referring to so that you can best communicate with your peers. Include a link to your selection.
· Explain how the argument contains or avoids bias.
i. Provide specific examples to support your explanation.
ii. What assumptions does it make?
· Discuss the credibility of the overall argument.
i. Were the resources the argument was built upon credible?
ii. Does the credibility support or undermine the article’s claims in any important ways?
In response to your peers, provide an additional resource to support or refute the argument your peer makes. Do you agree with their claims of credibility? Are there any other possible bias not identified?
Response #1
Allysa Tantala posted Sep 22, 2019 10:17 PM
Subscribe
The article that I am looking at is Online Dating Vs. Offline Dating: Pros and Cons.It was written by Julie Spira, an online dating expert, bestselling author, and CEO of Cyber-Dating Expert. The name of the article is spot on in describing what it is about. The author goes through the pros and cons of dating online and offline in today’s day and age. The author avoids bias because she looks at both options in both their positive and negative attributes. She comes at the issues from both angles and I believe she does a very good job at remaining unbiased. She states that “if you're serious about meeting someone special, you must include a combination of both online and offline dating in your routine” (Spira, 2013, par. 18). She’s stating that both options have their pros and cons and that really a combination of both is needed to find someone. The only bias I could see anyone pointing out would be that she is a woman, so you do not get the male perspective on these things. That being said, I one hundred percent think she covers all of the questions people may have about online and offline dating in today’s world. The only assumption being made here is that the reader wants to be out in the dating world and they need to know what is best. But, the title of the article is pretty self-explanatory so if someone did not want to know these things, they would not have to waste their time reading it all because they could tell what it would be about by the title.
The resource that she used was herself, and like I stated above, she is an online dating expert, bestselling author, and CEO of Cyber-Dating Expert; so she is more than qualified to give her perspective on these issues. I find her to be credible and thought provoking. Her credibility supports everything the article says and makes the reader feel like they are being told the truth by someone who completely understands all of the pros and cons.
Resource:
Spira, J. (2013, December 3). Online Dating Vs. Offline Dating: Pros and Cons. Retrieved from https://www.huffpost.com/entry/online-dating-vs-offline_b_4037867
Response #2
Jennifer Caforio posted Se ...
https://www.vitalsource.com/products/comparative-criminal-justice-systems-harry-r-dammer-jay-s-v9781285630779
THE ASSIGNMENT IS BASED ON CHAPTER 1 (ONE)
Login : [email protected]
Password: Greekyogurt13!
1
3Defining the Problem
Rigina CochranMPA/593
August 19, 2019
Peter ReevesDefining the Problem
The health care system in Colorado is a composition of medical professionals providing services such as diagnosis, treatment, as well as preventive measures to mental illness and injuries ("Healthcare policy in Colorado - Ballotpedia," 2019). Health care policy involves the establishment and implementation of legislation and other regulations that the states use to manage its health care system effectively. Further, this sector consists of other participants, such as insurance and health information technology. The cost citizens pay for medical care and also the access to quality care influence the overall health care providers in Colorado. Therefore, the need for the creation and implementation of laws that help the state maintain efficiency in the health sector in Colorado.
Problem Statement
The declining standards of medical care within the United States has caused significant concern in the world. Due to these rising concerns, there have been various policies implemented, leading to mixed reactions among the different states. Some of the active policies implemented offer a long-term solution to this problem including Medicaid and Medicare. After acquiring state control, the Republicans dismissed the idea to expand and create medical insurance for Medicaid in Colorado. Sustaining the structure of the health care payroll calls for the deductions from the employees and the employers, which may lead to loss of jobs and increased burden of expenditure (Garcia, 2019).
Identify the Methodology
The main objective of this policy plan is to investigate the role of legislation in the management of the health care sector in the United States. Due to the need for achieving in-depth exploration, this paper uses a combination of both qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection by addressing both practical and theoretical aspects of the research. Based on the answers that the policy requires, choosing survey as the research design. This method involves collecting and analyzing data from a few people who represent the principal group within health care. However, the survey method faces some challenges such as attitudes and perception of the health workers leading to the delimitation of the study. The target population for the study includes the nurses within the health sectors in Colorado. The selection of the participants involved in the use of stratified random sampling.
Identify your Stakeholders
The major stakeholders in the creation and implementation of the policy plan include the legislatures, local government, patients, and other private parties such as the insurance companies. Collectively, these bodies are involved in the makin ...
https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/learn/by-eating-disorder/arfid
AVOIDANT RESTRICTIVE FOOD INTAKE DISORDER (ARFID)
Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) is a new diagnosis in the DSM-5, and was previously referred to as “Selective Eating Disorder.” ARFID is similar to anorexia in that both disorders involve limitations in the amount and/or types of food consumed, but unlike anorexia, ARFID does not involve any distress about body shape or size, or fears of fatness.
Although many children go through phases of picky or selective eating, a person with ARFID does not consume enough calories to grow and develop properly and, in adults, to maintain basic body function. In children, this results in stalled weight gain and vertical growth; in adults, this results in weight loss. ARFID can also result in problems at school or work, due to difficulties eating with others and extended times needed to eat.
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA
According to the DSM-5, ARFID is diagnosed when:
· An eating or feeding disturbance (e.g., apparent lack of interest in eating or food; avoidance based on the sensory characteristics of food; concern about aversive consequences of eating) as manifested by persistent failure to meet appropriate nutritional and/or energy needs associated with one (or more) of the following:
· Significant weight loss (or failure to achieve expected weight gain or faltering growth in children).
· Significant nutritional deficiency.
· Dependence on enteral feeding or oral nutritional supplements.
· Marked interference with psychosocial functioning.
· The disturbance is not better explained by lack of available food or by an associated culturally sanctioned practice.
· The eating disturbance does not occur exclusively during the course of anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa, and there is no evidence of a disturbance in the way in which one’s body weight or shape is experienced.
· The eating disturbance is not attributable to a concurrent medical condition or not better explained by another mental disorder. When the eating disturbance occurs in the context of another condition or disorder, the severity of the eating disturbance exceeds that routinely associated with the condition or disorder and warrants additional clinical attention.
RISK FACTORS
As with all eating disorders, the risk factors for ARFID involve a range of biological, psychological, and sociocultural issues. These factors may interact differently in different people, which means two people with the same eating disorder can have very diverse perspectives, experiences, and symptoms. Researchers know much less about what puts someone at risk of developing ARFID, but here’s what they do know:
· People with autism spectrum conditions are much more likely to develop ARFID, as are those with ADHD and intellectual disabilities.
· Children who don’t outgrow normal picky eating, or in whom picky eating is severe, appear to be more likely to develop ARFID.
· Many children with ARFID ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=59&v=Bh_oEYX1zNM&feature=emb_logo
BA 325 Pivot Table Assignment Answer Sheet
Name:
Before you do anything fill out your name on the assignment and save your file as BA325 Firstname Lastname (use your actual name).
The table has all of the questions from the DuPont Assignment. Fill in your answers to the questions in the corresponding cell in the Answer column. Below the table there is a spot for the Screen Clippings from both the Practice Assignment, and the DuPont Assignment.
After you have filled out all of the answers and Screen Clippings submit the file to the Assignments folder in D2L.
Q Number
Question
Answer
Q1
How much was American Airlines’ Net Revenues in 2013?
Q2
What was the Return on Equity for Apple in 2015?
Q3
Which company had the highest Net Income and in which year? What was the value?
Q4
Which company had the lowest Net Income and in which year? What was the value?
Q5
How many unique companies in your sample had Net Losses exceeding one billion dollars? Which companies, and what years?
Q6
What was the Sum of the Net Income for all companies in the sample for 2015?
Q7
Which company had the highest total Net Income over the three year period? What was the value?
Q8
Which company had the lowest total Net Income over the three year period? What was the value?
Q9
Which industry had the highest Average Profit Margin over the three year period? What was the value?
Q10
In which year was the Average Profit Margin the highest for the entire sample? What was the value?
Q11
For how many companies do you have Profit Margin ratio data in 2013?
Q12
For what Industry do you have the most Profit Margin ratio data in the sample? What was the value? For that Industry what year was the highest? What was the value?
Q13
Which Industry has the highest Average Asset Turnover over the three year period? What was the value?
Q14
Which of the remaining Industries has the highest Asset Turnover in 2014? What was the value?
Q15
Which Industry has the highest Average Financial Leverage over the three year period? What was the value?
Q16
Which Industry has the lowest Average Financial Leverage that does not include negative numbers in any year? What was the value?
Q17
What is the Average Financial Leverage for the Transportation Industry in 2013?
Note: The answer is odd. You will have to use Data Cleaning to resolve the issue.
Q18
Which Industry has the highest Average Return on Equity over the three year period and which company is the highest within that Industry? What are the values?
Q19
Which two companies in the Public Utilities Industry have the highest Average Return on Equity during the period? What are the values?
Q20
Which Industry had the largest decrease in Average Return on Equity between 2013 and 2014? What was the value?
Q21
Which Industry had the largest increase in Average Return on Equity between 2014 and 2015? What was the value?
Q22
Bonus Question 1: How many industrie ...
https://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/fbi-expects-a-rise-in-scams-involving-cryptocurrency-related-to-the-covid-19-pandemic
https://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-bulls-trillions-coronavirus-aid
https://www.forbes.com/sites/walterpavlo/2020/02/25/crime-and-punishment-in-the-cryptocurrency-world/#62232a6748fe
Running head: Bitcoin as a cryptocurrency 1
Bitcoin as a cryptocurrency 8Bitcoin as a Cryptocurrency of Misconduct
Roger F. Lewis
Miami Dade College-North Campus
June 5, 2019
Bitcoin as a Cryptocurrency of Misconduct
In the expansion of cryptocurrencies in particular bitcoins have resulted in providing clients with exceptional advantages, the advantages in this matter have not had their hazards and struggles. In the peculiar free mode in the cryptocurrency arcade, it has been in constant misuse and linked to several illegal activities. Lawmakers globally repetitively stumble upon this very position (Anon,2019). The tendency on allowing a market to settle on its fosters this activity as the lawmakers tend to abstain from events of the market. They cannot also sit by and enable misconduct behaviors to foster in the markets. Tracking the cryptocurrency action has proved to be much more complicated than the standard plugged-in transactions. The bottom line is that these transactions occur globally has established a headache to try and monitor this particular field. The release of the bitcoin in the year two thousand and nine as the world’s pioneer and most profound mode of cryptocurrency was a breakthrough in the industry. Cryptocurrency, on the other hand, is the mode of exchange that occurs only in the digital dimension. Cryptocurrency uses complex codes as a skill of protecting data. Thus, monetary transactions are carried out most safely (Anon,2019). A public ledger is used to know the actual owner of a particular cryptocurrency.
Assets in the digital market portray distinctive characteristics –delegation, simple connections between members as well as the relative use of modern technology, many have the thought or mindset that in time bitcoins will be used as a forthcoming currency. To understand the illegal uses of bitcoins we must first address the non-illegal activities in this field. As earlier stated, there is a possibility that the bitcoins will indeed replace the current custom. One can lawfully use bid coins in the following areas; travels, to pay tuition fee for institutions and can be used as an alternative where the standards of payment are online. The above depicts numerous ways can use bitcoins to settle their bills. The difference in value between the bitcoins and the traditional currency leads to individuals opting to use the bitcoins for exchange in cases or scenarios where a high exchange rate is noted, and alternatively, the opposite is exact. Chargebacks risk is reduced in the event of using bitcoins, therefore easing access to the broader market for traders. In the event of unlawful trades, both ends to ...
HTM301 – Food Science & Production Final Project Guidelines .docxpooleavelina
HTM301 – Food Science & Production Final Project Guidelines
Page 1 of 5 Last Revised: 10/31/2019 1:49 PM
FINAL PROJECT GUIDELINES
(20% of Semester Grade)
Completed Report Due 12/17/19, Uploaded to iLearn by 500pm
Assignment Purpose:
The final project is your opportunity to demonstrate that you can apply the principles of food science taught
over the course of the semester to successfully modify a recipe to achieve new plan and execute a formal
experiment based on the scientific method. So essentially, you’ll practice two things that will help you later
in life: 1) applying the food science principles and knowledge taught in this course, and 2) practice applying
the scientific method so you can experience how a good experiment should be run (so you can critically
evaluate whether experiments that you encounter are sound, and so you can create future experiments to
test your own theories in the future). Your final project, has seven (7) components:
1. Identify an area of inquiry: Choose an existing recipe, with the aim to improve that recipe in a
way of your choosing.
2. Conduct a literature review: Research the scientific principles involved with achieving the desired
improvement of your chosen recipe.
3. Form a hypothesis: Based on your research, modify the original recipe, to achieve the desired
outcome that you have chosen.
4. Conduct your experiment: Make the original recipe once. Then also execute your modified recipe.
5. Report your results: Document the process and output of your attempts to execute on the original
and modified recipes.
6. Analyze your experiment results: Evaluate whether, and explain why your modified recipe (did
not) achieve your desired outcome.
7. Discuss your learnings and advise future researchers: Discuss the weakness and flaws of your
experiment and make suggestions on how others can use your experience to help make their own
recipe changes in the future.
Project Component Guidelines and Details:
The following is more detail on each of the components of your final project. This is not a comprehensive,
yes/no list of what you are/not allowed to do for your project. These guidelines and details exist so that you
can explore what is interesting to you and still meet the learning objectives of this assignment. If after
reading this section, you still have questions, please contact Sybil.
1. Identify an area of inquiry – You have a lot of latitude here. Ask yourself what in the world of
food do you want to find out more about? What have you always been curious about?
Maybe you want to find a way to make a healthier version of your favorite recipe.
A fluffier version of your mom’s favorite cake?
A way to make a favorite treat gluten- or dairy-free?
Choose an area of food science that you are genuinely interested in, and that relates to some of the
scientific principles discussed in the course.
2. Conduct a literature review – Now it’s tim ...
https://www.aljazeera.net/news/cultureandart/2019/2/16/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%82-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%88%D8%A8%D9%8A-%D8%B1%D9%82%D8%B5%D8%A9-%D9%81%D9%84%D9%88%D9%83%D9%84%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%85%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%AA
"Folklore" .. Dance of Iraqi folklore
16/2/2019
Print font size
The answer is usually dressed in the dishdasha (thobe) while playing Joby (Al Jazeera Net)
The answer is usually dressed in the dishdasha (thobe) while playing Joby (Al Jazeera Net)
Marwan al-Jubouri-Baghdad
With the bustle of weddings and social events gathering, flying around each other, the hands and shoulders converge to "play" one of the oldest folkloric dances in Iraq, "Gobi" - which resembles Dabke in other countries - with unmistakable songs and melodies, which they inherited from their ancestors.
In Iraq, which is rich in societal and cultural diversity, many folk arts are associated with certain regions and cities, where they grew up and flourished, and became a registered trademark in its name, including the famous "Jubi" dance (and the name is spoken between the gym and the Shin).
Throughout the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, starting from Baghdad and its environs towards northern and western Iraq, the local people celebrate this dance and practice it in their joys and social occasions, and they see it as an expression of their ancestral heritage with the songs, melodies and poems associated with their councils and forums.
Many consider that the "Jobi" is not limited to that dance, but also includes the associated melodies and songs and Mawwil.
Iraqis prefer to use the word "play" instead of "dance", a reference to those who practice the job.
Thus, the Gobi players - or the “answer” - have become permanent guests at every occasion or social gathering.
The dance includes high jumps in the air on drum and oboe rhythms.
The dance includes high jumps in the air on drum and oboe rhythms.
Specialized teams
For decades, most of the artists in Iraq have included at least one song of this color in their albums.
This dance is often practiced by a group of between 10 and 20 people, dressed mostly in the traditional "dashdasha" (garment), forming a semi-circle led by a person holding a rosary or handkerchief to control the rhythm, and perhaps one or two people from this group to perform a special dance In front of her, the same rhythm but in different movements.
Different age groups participate in the dance Aljoubi (Al Jazeera Net)
Different age groups participate in the dance Aljoubi (Al Jazeera Net)
Al-Joubi Square includes different age groups, from childhood to sometimes advanced ages.
Being a popular dance familiar to Iraqis, many young people are making up teams for the Gobi, to commemorate events and sometimes compete between different regions and provinces.
Omar Al Thiabi is a young man who has been fascinated by this folklore from an early age.
He tells Al Jazeera Net that their group was founded in 2010 in Ba ...
HSM Discussion Board and examplesBriefly summarize the five huma.docxpooleavelina
HSM Discussion Board and examples
Briefly summarize the five human services values presented in this week’s readings. Then describe a situation in which you would have difficulty using one of those values as a guiding principle for your actions. Why is the human services value you selected difficult to practice? Propose solutions that address these difficulties.
Example 1:
Class,
In our textbook Woodside and McClam (2019) describe the 5 values important to the practice of human services. They are:
1. Acceptance: the ability of the helper to be receptive regardless of behavior or dress.
2. Tolerance: ability of the helper to be fair and patient toward each client, and not to judge, blame, or punish for prior behaviors.
3. Individuality: Recognizing and treating each person individually and not based off of stereotypes such as lifestyle, problems, assets, and previous life experiences.
4. Self-determination: Allows the client to make up their own mind when it comes to decision-making and actions to be taken.
5. Confidentiality: Helper will not discuss client’s cases with others, nor will they use what they discuss with clients as conversation fodder with friends and family.
I would have a hard time exercising tolerance if my client was a repeat offender for domestic and/ or child abuse. It would be very difficult not to judge that behavior or to want to help that client. I would feel torn between wanting to get them the help they needed in order to hopefully stop the cycle of violence, but in my heart I would want to be helping ensure the child or domestic partner was out of that situation and never had to see my client again, unless they chose to. On the flip side, if my client was the abuse victim and continuously kept an abuser in their life, and those of their children, it would be equally difficult to be tolerant of that behavior. I would definitely feel the urge to throw the value of self-determination out the window as well and make decisions for my client...which I know is not an option.
Tolerance can be hard to practice when other's actions go against your own moral and ethical values. You pretty much need to shut your own emotions up in a box and try and connect people to services no matter what. I think with proper training and confidence in the services you are providing, one can practice the 5 values. If I come to believe in a program that I think may help an abuser learn to reverse their behavior in future, maybe I would have more tolerance when working with them.
Woodside, M., & McClam, T. (2019). An introduction to human services (9th ed.). Boston, MA:
Cengage.
Example 2:
Hi everyone,
The follow are the top five human service values discussed in our book, Introduction to Human Services (Woodside & McClam, 2019)
1. Acceptance is the ability of the helper to be receptive to another person regardless of dress or behavior
2. Tolerance is the helper’s ability to be patient and fair toward each client rather than judging, blamin ...
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
HIST 1302 This assignment has several documents for you .docx
1. HIST 1302
This assignment has several documents for you to read and view
in order to answer the five
required questions. Please follow any formatting guidelines and
minimum length requirements as
set by your professor. Please take your time to analyze these
documents and submit thoughtful
arguments supported by the evidence these documents provide.
Documents:
1. Excerpt of Theodore Roosevelt’s “Hyphenated Americans”
Speech (October 12, 1915)
2. Excerpt of “Shut the Door” Speech (April 9, 1924)
3. Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land” (February 1940)
4. LOOK Magazine’s “How to Spot a Communist” (March 1947)
5. Political Cartoon “You read books, eh?” (April 24, 1949)
6. Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s “Enemies from Within”
Speech (February 9, 1950)
7. Excerpt of Port Huron Statement (June 15, 1962)
2. 8. Black Panther Ten-Point Program (October 1966)
9. Caesar Chavez “Letter from Delano” (April 4, 1969)
10. Equal Rights Amendment (1972)
11. Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (June 23,
1972)
12. George H.W. Bush on the signing of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (July 26, 1990)
13. Maya Angelou “On the Pulse of the Morning” (January 20,
1993)
14. President-Elect Barack Obama’s Victory Speech (November
4, 2008)
Document 1: [excerpt] “Hyphenated Americans” Speech (1915)
Former President Theodore Roosevelt delivered the following
speech to a meeting of the
Knights of Columbus in Carnegie Hall, New York City on
October 12, 1915. With World
War I raging in Europe and across the globe, Roosevelt warned
of the need for
preparedness amongst American citizens. Excerpts from this
speech focus upon how
Roosevelt defined “Hyphenated Americans” and the importance
3. of their
“Americanization” for the country’s strength and success in
future conflicts.
FOUR centuries and a quarter have gone by since Columbus by
discovering America opened the greatest era in
world history. Four centuries have passed since the Spaniards
began that colonization on the main land which has
resulted in the growth of the nations of Latin-America. Three
centuries have passed since, with the settlements on
the coasts of Virginia and Massachusetts, the real history of
what is now the United States began. All this we
ultimately owe to the action of an Italian seaman in the service
of a Spanish King and a Spanish Queen. It is
eminently fitting that one of the largest and most influential
social organizations of this great Republic, a Republic in
which the tongue is English, and the blood derived from many
sources, should, in its name, commemorate the great
Italian. It is eminently fitting to make an address on
Americanism before this society.
DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES
We of the United States need above all things to remember that,
while we are by blood and culture kin to each of the
4. nations of Europe, we are also separate from each of them. We
are a new and -distinct nationality. We are
developing our own distinctive culture and civilization, and the
worth of this civilization will largely depend upon
our determination to keep it distinctively our own. Our sons and
daughters should be educated here and not abroad.
We should freely take from every other nation whatever we can
make of use, but we should adopt and develop to
our own peculiar needs what we thus take, and never be content
merely to copy.
Our nation was founded to perpetuate democratic principles.
These principles are that each man is to be treated on
his worth as a man without regard to the land from which his
forefathers came and without regard to the creed which
he professes. If the United States proves false to these
principles of civil and religious liberty, it will have inflicted
the greatest blow on the system of free popular government that
has ever been inflicted. Here we have had a virgin
continent on which to try the experiment of making out of
divers race stocks a new nation and of treating all the
citizens of that nation in such a fashion as to preserve them
equality of opportunity in industrial, civil, and/ political
life. Our duty is to secure each man against any injustice by his
fellows….
5. HYPHENATED AMERICANS
What is true of creed is no less true of nationality. There is no
room in this country for hyphenated Americanism.
When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to
naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I
have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born
abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an
American at all. This is just as true of the man who puts
“native” before the hyphen as of the man who puts German
or Irish or English or French before the hyphen. Americanism is
a matter of the spirit and of the soul. Our allegiance
must be purely to the United States. We must unsparingly
condemn any man who holds any other allegiance. But if
he is heartily and singly loyal to this Republic, then no matter
where he was born, he is just as good an American as
any one else.
The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin,
of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a
nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of
squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-
Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-
Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-
Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at
6. heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that
nationality, than with the other citizens of the American
Republic. The men who do not become Americans and
nothing else are hyphenated Americans; and there ought to be
no room for them in this country. The man who calls
himself an American citizen and who yet shows by his actions
that he is primarily the citizen of a foreign land, plays
a thoroughly mischievous part in the life of our body politic. He
has no place here; and the sooner he returns to the
land to which he feels his real heart-allegiance, the better it will
be for every good American. There is no such thing
as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only
man who is a good American is the man who is an
American and nothing else….
For an American citizen to vote as a German-American, an
Irish- American, or an English-American, is to be a
traitor to American institutions; and those hyphenated
Americans who terrorize American politicians by threats of
the foreign vote are engaged in treason to the American
Republic.
PRINCIPLES OF AMERICANISM
Now this is a declaration of principles. How are we in practical
fashion to secure the making of these principles part
7. of the very fiber of our national life? First and foremost let us
all resolve that in this country hereafter we shall place
far less emphasis upon the question of right and much greater
emphasis upon the matter of duty. A republic can`t
succeed and won`t succeed in the tremendous international
stress of the modern world unless its citizens possess that
form of high-minded patriotism which consists in putting
devotion to duty before the question of individual rights.
This must be done in our family relations or the family will go
to pieces….
What is true of the family, the foundation stone of our national
life, is not less true of the entire superstructure. I am,
as you know, a most ardent believer in national preparedness
against war as a means of securing that honorable and
self-respecting peace which is the only peace desired by all
high-spirited people. But it is an absolute impossibility
to secure such preparedness in full and proper form if it is an
isolated feature of our policy… But it is equally true
that there cannot be this preparation in advance for military
strength unless there is a social basis of civil and social
life behind it. There must be social, economic, and military
preparedness all alike, all harmoniously developed; and
above all there must be spiritual and mental preparedness….
RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS
8. We should meet this situation by on the one hand seeing that
these immigrants get all their rights as American
citizens, and on the other hand insisting that they live up to
their duties as American citizens. Any discrimination
against aliens is a wrong, for it tends to put the immigrant at a
disadvantage and to cause him to feel bitterness and
resentment during the very years when he should be preparing
himself for American citizenship. If an immigrant is
not fit to become a citizen, he should not be allowed to come
here. If he is fit, he should be given all the rights to
earn his own livelihood, and to better himself, that any man can
have. Take such a matter as the illiteracy test; I
entirely agree with those who feel that many very excellent
possible citizens would be barred improperly by an
illiteracy test. But why do you not admit aliens under a bond to
learn to read and write within a certain time? It
would then be a duty to see that they were given ample
opportunity to learn to read and write and that they were
deported if they failed to take advantage of the opportunity.
No man can be a good citizen if he is not at least in process of
learning to speak the language of his fellow-citizens.
And an alien who remains here without learning to speak
9. English for more than a certain number of years should at
the end of that time be treated as having refused to take the
preliminary steps necessary to complete Americanization
and should be deported. But there should be no denial or
limitation of the alien`s opportunity to work, to own
property, and to take advantage of civic opportunities. Special
legislation should deal with the aliens who do not
come here to be made citizens. But the alien who comes here
intending to become a citizen should be helped in
every way to advance himself, should be removed from every
possible disadvantage, and in return should be
required under penalty of being sent back to the country from
which he came, to prove that he is in good faith fitting
himself to be an American citizen.
PREPARATIVES TO PREPAREDNESS
Therefore, we should devote ourselves as a preparative to
preparedness, alike in peace and war, to secure the three
elemental things: one, a common language, the English
language; two, the increase in our social loyalty citizenship
absolutely undivided, a citizenship which acknowledges no flag
except the flag of the United States and which
emphatically repudiates all duality of intention or national
loyalty; and third, an intelligent and resolute effort for the
10. removal of industrial and social unrest, an effort which shall
aim equally at securing every man his rights and to
make every man understand that unless he in good faith
performs his duties he is not entitled to any rights at all.
The American people should itself do these things for the
immigrants. If we leave the immigrant to be helped by
representatives of foreign governments, by foreign societies, by
a press and institutions conducted in a foreign
language and in the interest of foreign governments, and if we
permit the immigrants to exist as alien groups, each
group sundered from the rest of the citizens of the country, we
shall store up for ourselves bitter trouble in the
future….
AMERICANIZATION
The foreign-born population of this country must be an
Americanized population no other kind can fight the battles
of America either in war or peace. It must talk the language of
its native-born fellow-citizens, it must possess
American citizenship and American ideals. It must stand firm by
its oath of allegiance in word and deed and must
show that in very fact it has renounced allegiance to every
prince, potentate, or foreign government. It must be
maintained on an American standard of living so as to prevent
labor disturbances in important plants and at critical
11. times. None of these objects can be secured as long as we have
immigrant colonies, ghettos, and immigrant sections,
and above all they cannot be assured so long as we consider the
immigrant only as an industrial asset. The
immigrant must not be allowed to drift or to be put at the mercy
of the exploiter. Our object is not to imitate one of
the older racial types, but to maintain a new American type and
then to secure loyalty to this type. We cannot secure
such loyalty unless we make this a country where men shall feel
that they have justice and also where they shall feel
that they are required to perform the duties imposed upon them.
The policy of “Let alone” which we have hitherto
pursued is thoroughly vicious from two standpoints. By this
policy we have permitted the immigrants, and too often
the native-born laborers as well, to suffer injustice. Moreover,
by this policy we have failed to impress upon the
immigrant and upon the native-born as well that they are
expected to do justice as well as to receive justice, that they
are expected to be heartily and actively and single-mindedly
loyal to the flag no less than to benefit by living under
it.
We cannot afford to continue to use hundreds of thousands of
immigrants merely as industrial assets while they
12. remain social outcasts and menaces any more than fifty years
ago we could afford to keep the black man merely as
an industrial asset and not as a human being. We cannot afford
to build a big industrial plant and herd men and
women about it without care for their welfare. We cannot afford
to permit squalid overcrowding or the kind of living
system which makes impossible the decencies and necessities of
life. We cannot afford the low wage rates and the
merely seasonal industries which mean the sacrifice of both
individual and family life and morals to the industrial
machinery. We cannot afford to leave American mines,
munitions plants, and general resources in the hands of alien
workmen, alien to America and even likely to be made hostile to
America by machinations such as have recently
been provided in the case of the two foreign embassies in
Washington. We cannot afford to run the risk of having in
time of war men working on our railways or working in our
munition plants who would in the name of duty to their
own foreign countries bring destruction to us... What would be
done to us in the name of war if these things are done
to us in the name of neutrality?
… I ask you to make a special effort to deal with
Americanization, the fusing into one nation, a nation
necessarily
13. different from all other nations, of all who come to our shores.
Pay heed to the three principal essentials: (i) the need
of a common language, with a minimum amount of illiteracy;
(2) the need of a common civil standard, similar
ideals, beliefs, and customs symbolized by the oath of
allegiance to America; and (3) the need of a high standard of
living, of reasonable equality of opportunity and of social and
industrial justice. In every great crisis in our history,
in the Revolution and in the Civil War, and in the lesser crises,
like the Spanish war, all factions and races have been
forgotten in the common spirit of Americanism. Protestant and
Catholic, men of English or of French, of Irish or of
German, descent have joined with a single-minded purpose to
secure for the country what only can be achieved by
the resultant union of all patriotic citizens….
Even in the matter of national defense there is such a labyrinth
of committees and counsels and advisors that there is
a tendency on the part of the average citizen to become
confused and do nothing. I ask you to help strike the note
that shall unite our people. As a people we must be united. If we
are not united we shall slip into the gulf of
measureless disaster. We must be strong in purpose for our own
defense and bent on securing justice within our
14. borders. If as a nation we are split into warring camps, if we
teach our citizens not to look upon one another as
brothers but as enemies divided by the hatred of creed for creed
or of those of one race against those of another race,
surely we shall fail and our great democratic experiment on this
continent will go down in crushing overthrow. I ask
you here to-night and those like you to take a foremost part in
the movement a young men`s movement for a greater
and better America in the future.
ONE AMERICA
All of us, no matter from what land our parents came, no matter
in what way we may severally worship our Creator,
must stand shoulder to shoulder in a united America for the
elimination of race and religious prejudice. We must
stand for a reign of equal justice to both big and small. We must
insist on the maintenance of the American standard
of living. We must stand for an adequate national control which
shall secure a better training of our young men in
time of peace, both for the work of peace and for the work of
war. We must direct every national resource, material
and spiritual, to the task not of shirking difficulties, but of
training our people to overcome difficulties. Our aim
must be, not to make life easy and soft, not to soften soul and
15. body, but to fit us in virile fashion to do a great work
for all mankind. This great work can only be done by a mighty
democracy, with these qualities of soul, guided by
those qualities of mind, which will both make it refuse to do
injustice to any other nation, and also enable it to hold
its own against aggression by any other nation. In our relations
with the outside world, we must abhor wrongdoing,
and disdain to commit it, and we must no less disdain the
baseness of spirit which lamely submits to wrongdoing.
Finally and most important of all, we must strive for the
establishment within our own borders of that stern and lofty
standard of personal and public neutrality which shall guarantee
to each man his rights, and which shall insist in
return upon the full performance by each man of his duties both
to his neighbor and to the great nation whose flag
must symbolize in the future as it has symbolized in the past the
highest hopes of all mankind.
Document 2: [excerpt] “Shut the Door” Speech (1924)
As part of the debate over the Immigration Act of 1924 (also
known as the National Origins
Act), Senator Ellison DuRant Smith of South Carolina gave
voice to many who supported
16. immigration restrictions as a means of preserving existing
American resources.
It seems to me the point as to this measure—and I have been so
impressed for several years—is that the time has
arrived when we should shut the door. We have been called the
melting pot of the world. We had an experience just
a few years ago, during the great World War, when it looked as
though we had allowed influences to enter our
borders that were about to melt the pot in place of us being the
melting pot.
I think that we have sufficient stock in America now for us to
shut the door, Americanize what we have, and save
the resources of America for the natural increase of our
population. We all know that one of the most prolific causes
of war is the desire for increased land ownership for the
overflow of a congested population. We are increasing at
such a rate that in the natural course of things in a
comparatively few years the landed resources, the natural
resources of the country, shall be taken up by the natural
increase of our population. It seems to me the part of
wisdom now that we have throughout the length and breadth of
continental America a population which is beginning
to encroach upon the reserve and virgin resources of the country
to keep it in trust for the multiplying population of
17. the country.
I do not believe that political reasons should enter into the
discussion of this very vital question. It is of greater
concern to us to maintain the institutions of America, to
maintain the principles upon which this Government is
founded, than to develop and exploit the underdeveloped
resources of the country. There are some things that are
dearer to us, fraught with more benefit to us, than the immediate
development of the undeveloped resources of the
country. I believe that our particular ideas, social, moral,
religious, and political, have demonstrated, by virtue of the
progress we have made and the character of people that we are,
that we have the highest ideals of any member of the
human family or any nation. We have demonstrated the fact that
the human family, certainty the predominant breed
in America, can govern themselves by a direct government of
the people. If this Government shall fail, it shall fail
by virtue of the terrible law of inherited tendency….
I think we now have sufficient population in our country for us
to shut the door and to breed up a pure, unadulterated
American citizenship. I recognize that there is a dangerous lack
of distinction between people of a certain nationality
18. and the breed of the dog. Who is an American? Is he an
immigrant from Italy? Is he an immigrant from Germany? If
you were to go abroad and some one were to meet you and say,
“I met a typical American,” what would flash into
your mind as a typical American, the typical representative of
that new Nation? Would it be the son of an Italian
immigrant, the son of a German immigrant, the son of any of the
breeds from the Orient, the son of the denizens of
Africa? We must not get our ethnological distinctions mixed up
with out anthropological distinctions. It is the breed
of the dog in which I am interested. I would like for the
Members of the Senate to read that book just recently
published by Madison Grant, The Passing of a Great Race.
Thank God we have in America perhaps the largest
percentage of any country in the world of the pure,
unadulterated Anglo-Saxon stock; certainly the greatest of any
nation in the Nordic breed. It is for the preservation of that
splendid stock that has characterized us that I would
make this not an asylum for the oppressed of all countries, but a
country to assimilate and perfect that splendid type
of manhood that has made America the foremost Nation in her
progress and in her power, and yet the youngest of all
the nations. I myself believe that the preservation of her
institutions depends upon us now taking counsel with our
19. condition and our experience during the last World War.
Without offense, but with regard to the salvation of our own, let
us shut the door and assimilate what we have, and
let us breed pure American citizens and develop our own
American resources. I am more in favor of that than I am
of our quota proposition. Of course, it may not meet the
approbation of the Senate that we shall shut the door—
which I unqualifiedly and unreservedly believe to be our duty—
and develop what we have, assimilate and digest
what we have into pure Americans, with American aspirations,
and thoroughly familiar with the love of American
institutions, rather than the importation of any number of men
from other countries. If we may not have that, then I
am in favor of putting the quota down to the lowest possible
point, with every selective element in it that may be.
The great desideratum of modern times has been education not
alone book knowledge, but that education which
enables men to think right, to think logically, to think
truthfully, men equipped with power to appreciate the rapidly
developing conditions that are all about us, that have converted
the world in the last 50 years into a brand new world
and made us masters of forces that are revolutionizing
production. We want men not like dumb, driven cattle from
20. those nations where the progressive thought of the times has
scarcely made a beginning and where they see men as
mere machines; we want men who have an appreciation of the
responsibility brought about by the manifestation of
the power of that individual. We have not that in this country
to-day. We have men here to-day who are selfishly
utilizing the enormous forces discovered by genius, and if we
are not careful as statesmen, if we are not careful in
our legislation, these very masters of the tremendous forces that
have been made available to us will bring us under
their domination and control by virtue of the power they have in
multiplying their wealth.
We are struggling to-day against the organized forces of man’s
brain multiplied a million times by materialized
thought in the form of steam and electricity as applied in the
everyday affairs of man. We have enough in this
country to engage the brain of every lover of his country in
solving the problems of a democratic government in the
midst of the imperial power that genius is discovering and
placing in the hands of man. We have population enough
to-day without throwing wide our doors and jeopardizing the
interests of this country by pouring into it men who
willingly become the slaves of those who employ them in
manipulating these forces of nature, and they few reap the
21. enormous benefits that accrue therefrom.
We ought to Americanize not only our population but our
forces. We ought to Americanize our factories and our
vast material resources, so that we can make each contribute to
the other and have an abundance for us under the
form of the government laid down by our fathers.
The Senator from Georgia [Mr. Harris] has introduced an
amendment to shut the door. It is not a question of politics.
It is a question of maintaining that which has made you and me
the beneficiaries of the greatest hope that ever
burned in the human breast for the most splendid future that
ever stood before mankind, where the boy in the gutter
can look with confidence to the seat of the Presidency of the
United States; where the boy in the gutter can look
forward to the time when, paying the price of a proper citizen,
he may fill a seat in this hall; where the boy to-day
poverty-stricken, standing in the midst of all the splendid
opportunities of America, should have and, please God, if
we do our duty, will have an opportunity to enjoy the marvelous
wealth that the genius and brain of our country is
making possible for us all.
We do not want to tangle the skein of America’s progress by
those who imperfectly understand the genius of our
22. Government and the opportunities that lie about us. Let up keep
what we have, protect what we have, make what we
have the realization of the dream of those who wrote the
Constitution.
I am more concerned about that than I am about whether a new
railroad shall be built or whether there shall be
diversified farming next year or whether a certain coal mine
shall be mined. I would rather see American citizenship
refined to the last degree in all that makes America what we
hope it will be than to develop the resources of America
at the expense of the citizenship of our country. The time has
come when we should shut the door and keep what we
have for what we hope our own people to be.
Document 3: “This Land Is Your Land” (1940)
Born in Oklahoma in 1912, Woody Guthrie would become one
of the foremost voices of
American folk music. Guthrie wrote “God Blessed America for
Me” in February 1940 as a
response to Irving Berlin’s song “God Bless America” which he
viewed as elitist and not
reflective of the America that he knew. Over time, the song
23. evolved and was renamed “This
Land is Your Land.”
This Land Is Your Land
Words and Music by Woody Guthrie
This land is your land This land is my land
From California to the New York island;
From the red wood forest to the Gulf Stream waters
This land was made for you and Me.
As I was walking that ribbon of highway,
I saw above me that endless skyway:
I saw below me that golden valley:
This land was made for you and me.
I've roamed and rambled and I followed my footsteps
To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts;
And all around me a voice was sounding:
This land was made for you and me.
When the sun came shining, and I was strolling,
And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling,
24. As the fog was lifting a voice was chanting:
This land was made for you and me.
As I went walking I saw a sign there
And on the sign it said "No Trespassing."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.
In the shadow of the steeple I saw my people,
By the relief office I seen my people;
As they stood there hungry, I stood there asking
Is this land made for you and me?
Nobody living can ever stop me,
As I go walking that freedom highway;
Nobody living can ever make me turn back
This land was made for you and me.
Document 4: LOOK Magazine “How to spot a Communist”
(1947)
Intended to warn Americans about the perceived threat of
communist activities in the
25. United States, Leo Cherne’s “How to spot a Communist” was
published in Look
Magazine’s Spring 1947 edition.
The real Communist is not a liberal or a progressive. He
believes in Russia first and a Soviet America. He accepts
the doctrines of dictatorship as practiced in Russia. And he is
prepared to use a dictator’s tactics of lies and violence
to realize his ambitions.
Because the whole Communist apparatus is geared to secrecy, it
is not always easy to determine just who is a
Communist. But whether he is a Party card-holder or a fellow
traveler, the American Communist is not like other
Americans. To the Communist, everything – his country, his
job, his family – take second place to his party duty.
Even his sex life is synchronised with the obligations of the
[communist] cause…
There is no simple definition of an American Communist.
However, certain general classifications can be set up.
And if either a person or an organization falls within most of
these classifications, that person or organization can be
said to be following the Communists’ lead. These classifications
26. include:
1. The belief that the war waged by Great Britain and her allies
during the period from August 1939 to June 1941
(the period of the war before Russia was invaded) was an
“imperialistic” war and a game of power politics.
2. The support of a foreign policy which agrees always with that
followed by Soviet Russia, and which changes as
the USSR policy changes.
3. The argument that any foreign or domestic policy which does
not fit the Communist plan is advanced for ulterior
motives and is not in the best interests of either the people or
world peace.
4. The practice of criticising only American, British and
Chinese policies, and never criticising Soviet policies.
5. Continually receiving favorable publicity in such Communist
publications as the Daily Worker and the New
Masses.
6. Continually appearing as sponsor or co-worker of such
known Communist-front groups as the Committee to Win
the Peace, the Civil Rights Congress, the National Negro
Congress and other groups which can be described as
Communist inspired because they within the classifications set
forth here.
27. 7. Continually charging critics with being “fascists,” no matter
whether the criticism comes from liberals,
conservatives, reactionaries or those who really are fascists.
8. Arguing for a class society by pitting one group against
another; and putting special privileges ahead of
community needs as, for example, claiming that labor has
privileges but has no responsibilities in dealing with
management.
9. Declaring that capitalism and democracy are “decadent”
because some injustices exist under those systems.
Of course, actual membership [of a communist party] is 100 per
cent proof, but this kind of proof is difficult to
obtain. These are the five basic layers that the Communists rely
on for their strength:
1. The Party member, who openly or secretly holds a
membership card.
2. The fellow-traveler, who is not a Party member but who is
carefully trained to follow the Communist policy.
3. The sympathiser, who may disagree with some polices, but
who is in general agreement with Communist
objectives.
4. The opportunist, who is unconcerned with Party goals or
tactics but who believes… that the party can be used to
28. his own advantage.
5. The muddled liberal, who despite deep disagreement with the
Communist Party’s ultimate goals, co-operates
with Party members in front organizations.
How not to be a sucker for a ‘left hook’
Most Americans want to help a good cause, but don’t want to
help Communists hiding behind a good-cause label.
Here are tips:
1. Check credentials: Before you join or help a group, find out
if it opposed Britain’s “imperialistic” war and favored
isolationism before Russia was invaded in 1941; if it supported
the “people’s” war after Russia was invaded; if it
now favors the veto as used by Russia in the UN.
2. Signing petitions… are you getting your name on a
Communist list?
3. Contributing money… check carefully, you may be paying a
Communist.
4. On the escalator… is your support of one group involving
you in causes you didn’t know about? Check all
affiliations.
5. Resolutions… does the group you support suddenly endorse
29. other groups you know nothing about?
6. Politics… is your non-partisan group endorsing candidates?
Who are they?
7. Speakers… who are the outsiders invited to address your
meetings?
8. Fly-by-night issues… does your group support policies also
supported by the Communist Party, and then forget
those policies as soon as the Party line changes?
9. Double standard… is it sensitive about American policy in
China and British policy in Palestine, but quiet about
Russian policy in Iran, Poland, Rumania, Bulgaria?
10. Literature… does literature handed out at meetings endorse
Party causes?
11. Social life… are you urged to buy tickets to other groups’
events? You may be contributing to other causes.
12. Demonstrations and conferences… does the local group
which was set up to study the cost of living, for
example, send delegates to conferences which pass resolutions
on atomic energy control?
13. Membership… watch who joins and who resigns. Harold
Ickes recently resigned from the Independent Citizens
Committee of the Arts and Sciences; Marion Hargrove quit the
30. Duncan-Paris Post of the American Legion and the
National Committee to Win the Peace.
Document 5: “You read books, eh?” by Herbert Block (1949)
One of the most renowned political cartoonists in modern
American History, Herb Block
published this editorial cartoon in the Washington Post on April
24, 1949. This cartoon was
produced as a response to the growing anti-Communist hysteria
of the late 1940s and 1950s
that became known as the Second Red Scare.
Document 6: “Enemies from Within” speech (1950)
Wisconsin Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s rose to political
prominence on the waves of anti-Communist
hysteria sweeping America during the early years of the Cold
War. McCarthy utilized this speech honoring
Abraham Lincoln’s birthday in Wheeling, West Virginia on
February 9, 1950 to launch a full scale attack
upon President Truman’s administration for harboring
Communists within the State Department.
31. Ladies and gentlemen, tonight as we celebrate the one hundred
forty-first birthday of one of the greatest men in
American history, I would like to be able to talk about what a
glorious day today is in the history of the world. As
we celebrate the birth of this man who with his whole heart and
soul hated war, I would like to be able to speak of
peace in our time—of war being outlawed—and of world-wide
disarmament. These would be truly appropriate
things to be able to mention as we celebrate the birthday of
Abraham Lincoln.
Five years after a world war has been won, men’s hearts should
anticipate a long peace—and men’s minds should be
free from the heavy weight that comes with war. But this is not
such a period—for this is not a period of peace. This
is a time of “the cold war.” This is a time when all the world is
split into two vast, increasingly hostile armed
camps—a time of a great armament race.
Today we can almost physically hear the mutterings and
rumblings of an invigorated god of war. You can see it, feel
it, and hear it all the way from the Indochina hills, from the
shores of Formosa, right over into the very heart of
Europe itself.
32. The one encouraging thing is that the “mad moment” has not yet
arrived for the firing of the gun or the exploding of
the bomb which will set civilization about the final task of
destroying itself. There is still a hope for peace if we
finally decide that no longer can we safely blind our eyes and
close our ears to those facts which are shaping up
more and more clearly . . . and that is that we are now engaged
in a show-down fight . . . not the usual war between
nations for land areas or other material gains, but a war between
two diametrically opposed ideologies.
The great difference between our western Christian world and
the atheistic Communist world is not political,
gentlemen, it is moral. For instance, the Marxian idea of
confiscating the land and factories and running the entire
economy as a single enterprise is momentous. Likewise, Lenin’s
invention of the one-party police state as a way to
make Marx’s idea work is hardly less momentous.
Stalin’s resolute putting across of these two ideas, of course,
did much to divide the world. With only these
differences, however, the east and the west could most certainly
still live in peace.
The real, basic difference, however, lies in the religion of
immoralism . . . invented by Marx, preached feverishly by
Lenin, and carried to unimaginable extremes by Stalin. This
33. religion of immoralism, if the Red half of the world
triumphs—and well it may, gentlemen—this religion of
immoralism will more deeply wound and damage mankind
than any conceivable economic or political system.
Karl Marx dismissed God as a hoax, and Lenin and Stalin have
added in clear-cut, unmistakable language their
resolve that no nation, no people who believe in a god, can exist
side by side with their communistic state.
Karl Marx, for example, expelled people from his Communist
Party for mentioning such things as love, justice,
humanity or morality. He called this “soulful ravings” and
“sloppy sentimentality.” . . .
Today we are engaged in a final, all-out battle between
communistic atheism and Christianity. The modern
champions of communism have selected this as the time, and
ladies and gentlemen, the chips are down—they are
truly down.
Lest there be any doubt that the time has been chosen, let us go
directly to the leader of communism today—Joseph
Stalin. Here is what he said—not back in 1928, not before the
war, not during the war—but 2 years after the last war
was ended: “To think that the Communist revolution can be
carried out peacefully, within the framework of a
34. Christian democracy, means one has either gone out of one’s
mind and lost all normal understanding, or has grossly
and openly repudiated the Communist revolution.” . . .
Ladies and gentlemen, can there be anyone tonight who is so
blind as to say that the war is not on? Can there by
anyone who fails to realize that the Communist world has said
the time is now? . . . that this is the time for the show-
down between the democratic Christian world and the
communistic atheistic world?
Unless we face this fact, we shall pay the price that must be
paid by those who wait too long.
Six years ago, . . . there was within the Soviet orbit,
180,000,000 people. Lined up on the antitotalitarian side there
were in the world at that time, roughly 1,625,000,000 people.
Today, only six years later, there are 800,000,000
people under the absolute domination of Soviet Russia—an
increase of over 400 percent. On our side, the figure has
shrunk to around 500,000,000. In other words, in less than six
years, the odds have changed from 9 to 1 in our favor
to 8 to 5 against us.
This indicates the swiftness of the tempo of Communist
victories and American defeats in the cold war. As one of
35. our outstanding historical figures once said, “When a great
democracy is destroyed, it will not be from enemies from
without, but rather because of enemies from within.” . . .
The reason why we find ourselves in a position of impotency is
not because our only powerful potential enemy has
sent men to invade our shores . . . but rather because of the
traitorous actions of those who have been treated so well
by this Nation. It has not been the less fortunate, or members of
minority groups who have been traitorous to this
Nation, but rather those who have had all the benefits that the
wealthiest Nation on earth has had to offer . . . the
finest homes, the finest college education and the finest jobs in
government we can give.
This is glaringly true in the State Department. There the bright
young men who are born with silver spoons in their
mouths are the ones who have been most traitorous. . . .
I have here in my hand a list of 205 . . . a list of names that
were made known to the Secretary of State as being
members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still
working and shaping policy in the State
Department. . . .
As you know, very recently the Secretary of State proclaimed
his loyalty to a man guilty of what has always been
36. considered as the most abominable of all crimes—being a traitor
to the people who gave him a position of great
trust—high treason. . . .
He has lighted the spark which is resulting in a moral uprising
and will end only when the whole sorry mess of
twisted, warped thinkers are swept from the national scene so
that we may have a new birth of honesty and decency
in government.
Document 7: [excerpt] Port Huron Statement (1962)
This political manifesto, largely crafted by University of
Michigan student Tom Hayden,
was the product of a five-day national convention of the
Students for a Democratic Society
(S.D.S.) held on June 11-15, 1962. With this document, the SDS
described what they
perceived as the major problems within American Society and
called for solutions through
“participatory democracy.”
Port Huron Statement
Introduction: Agenda for a Generation
37. We are people of this generation, bred in at least modest
comfort, housed now in universities, looking
uncomfortably to the world we inherit.
When we were kids the United States was the wealthiest and
strongest country in the world; the only one with the
atom bomb, the least scarred by modern war, an initiator of the
United Nations that we thought would distribute
Western influence throughout the world. Freedom and equality
for each individual, government of, by, and for the
people--these American values we found god, principles by
which we could live as men. Many of us began maturing
in complacency.
As we grew, however, our comfort was penetrated by events too
troubling to dismiss. First, the permeating and
victimizing fact of human degradation, symbolized by the
Southern struggle against racial bigotry, compelled most
of us from silence to activism. Second, the enclosing fact of the
Cold War, symbolized by the presence of the Bomb,
brought awareness that we ourselves, and our friends, and
millions of abstract "others" we knew more directly
because of our common peril, might die at any time. We might
deliberately ignore, or avoid, or fail to feel all other
human problems, but not these two, for these were too
immediate and crushing in their impact, too challenging in
38. the demand that we as individuals take the responsibility for
encounter and resolution.
While these and other problems either directly oppressed us or
rankled our consciences and became our own
subjective concerns, we began to see complicated and disturbing
paradoxes in our surrounding America. The
declaration "all men are created equal..." rang hollow before the
facts of Negro life in the South and the big cities of
the North. The proclaimed peaceful intentions of the United
States contradicted its economic and military
investments in the Cold War status quo.
We witnessed, and continue to witness, other paradoxes. With
nuclear energy whole cities can easily be powered,
yet the dominant nation-states seem more likely to unleash
destruction greater than that incurred in all wars of
human history… Although mankind desperately needs
revolutionary leadership, America rests in national stalemate,
its goals ambiguous and tradition-bound instead of informed and
clear, its democratic system apathetic and
manipulated rather than "of, by, and for the people."
Not only did tarnish appear on our image of American virtue,
not only did disillusion occur when the hypocrisy of
39. American ideals was discovered, but we began to sense that
what we had originally seen as the American Golden
Age was actually the decline of an era. The worldwide outbreak
of revolution against colonialism and imperialism,
the entrenchment of totalitarian states, the menace of war,
overpopulation, international disorder, supertechnology--
these trends were testing the tenacity of our own commitment to
democracy and freedom and our abilities to
visualize their application to a world in upheaval.
Our work is guided by the sense that we may be the last
generation in the experiment with living. But we are a
minority--the vast majority of our people regard the temporary
equilibriums of our society and world as eternally
functional parts. In this is perhaps the outstanding paradox; we
ourselves are imbued with urgency, yet the message
of our society is that there is no viable alternative to the
present. Beneath the reassuring tones of the politicians,
beneath the common opinion that America will "muddle
through," beneath the stagnation of those who have closed
their minds to the future, is the pervading feeling that there
simply are no alternatives, that our times have witnessed
the exhaustion not only of Utopias, but of any new departures as
well….
40. The search for truly democratic alternatives to the present, and
a commitment to social experimentation with them,
is a worthy and fulfilling human enterprise, one which moves us
and, we hope, others today. On such a basis do we
offer this document of our convictions and analysis: as an effort
in understanding and changing the conditions of
humanity in the late twentieth century, an effort rooted in the
ancient, still unfulfilled conception of man attaining
determining influence over his circumstances of life.
Values
Making values explicit--an initial task in establishing
alternatives--is an activity that has been devalued and
corrupted. The conventional moral terms of the age, the
politician moralities--"free world," "people's democracies"--
reflect realities poorly, if at all, and seem to function more as
ruling myths than as descriptive principles. But neither
has our experience in the universities brought us moral
enlightenment. Our professors and administrators sacrifice
controversy to public relations; their curriculums change more
slowly than the living events of the world; their skills
and silence are purchased by investors in the arms race; passion
is called unscholastic. The questions we might want
raised--what is really important? can we live in a different and
better way? if we wanted to change society, how
41. would we do it?--are not thought to be questions of a "fruitful,
empirical nature," and thus are brushed aside.
Unlike youth in other countries we are used to moral leadership
being exercised and moral dimensions being
clarified by our elders. But today, for us, not even the liberal
and socialist preachments of the past seem adequate to
the forms of the present... It has been said that our liberal and
socialist predecessors were plagued by vision without
program, while our own generation is plagued by program
without vision. All around us there is astute grasp of
method, technique--the committee, the ad hoc group, the
lobbyist, the hard and soft sell, the make, the projected
image--but, if pressed critically, such expertise in incompetent
to explain its implicit ideals….
Theoretic chaos has replaced the idealistic thinking of old--and,
unable to reconstitute theoretic order, men have
condemned idealism itself. Doubt has replaced hopefulness--and
men act out a defeatism that is labeled realistic.
The decline of utopia and hope is in fact one of the defining
features of social life today…. To be idealistic is to be
considered apocalyptic, deluded. To have no serious aspirations,
on the contrary, is to be "tough-minded."
In suggesting social goals and values, therefore, we are aware
of entering a sphere of some disrepute. Perhaps
42. matured by the past, we have no formulas, no closed theories--
but that does not mean values are beyond discussion
and tentative determination. A first task of any social movement
is to convince people that the search for orienting
theories and the creation of human values is complex but
worthwhile. We are aware that to avoid platitudes we must
analyze the concrete conditions of social order. But to direct
such an analysis we must use the guideposts of basic
principles. Our own social values involve conceptions of human
beings, human relationships, and social systems.
We regard men as infinitely precious and possessed of
unfulfilled capacities for reason, freedom, and love. In
affirming these principles we are aware of countering perhaps
the dominant conceptions of man in the twentieth
century: that he is a thing to be manipulated, and that he is
inherently incapable of directing his own affairs. We
oppose the depersonalization that reduces human being to the
status of things--if anything, the brutalities of the
twentieth century teach that means and ends are intimately
related, that vague appeals to "posterity" cannot justify
the mutilations of the present. We oppose, too, the doctrine of
human incompetence because it rests essentially on
the modern fact that men have been "competently" manipulated
into incompetence--we see little reason why men
43. cannot meet with increasing the skill the complexities and
responsibilities of their situation, if society is organized
not for minority, but for majority, participation in decision-
making.
….The goal of man and society should be human independence:
a concern not with image of popularity but with
finding a meaning in life that is personally authentic; a quality
of mind not compulsively driven by a sense of
powerlessness, nor one which unthinkingly adopts status values,
nor one which represses all threats to its habits, but
one which has full, spontaneous access to present and past
experiences, one which easily unites the fragmented parts
of personal history, one which openly faces problems which are
troubling and unresolved; one with an intuitive
awareness of possibilities, an active sense of curiosity, an
ability and willingness to learn….
Human relationships should involve fraternity and honesty.
Human interdependence is contemporary fact; human
brotherhood must be willed, however, as a condition of future
survival and as the most appropriate form of social
relations….
We would replace power rooted in possession, privilege, or
44. circumstance by power and uniqueness rooted in love,
reflectiveness, reason, and creativity. As a social system we
seek the establishment of a democracy of individual
participation, governed by two central aims: that the individual
share in those social decisions determining the
quality and direction of his life; that society be organized to
encourage independence in men and provide the media
for their common participation.
In a participatory democracy, the political life would be based
in several root principles: that decision-making of
basic social consequence be carried on by public groupings; that
politics be seen positively, as the art of collectively
creating an acceptable pattern of social relations; that politics
has the function of bringing people out of isolation and
into community, thus being a necessary, though not sufficient,
means of finding meaning in personal life; that the
political order should serve to clarify problems in a way
instrumental to their solution; it should provide outlets for
the expression of personal grievance and aspiration; opposing
views should be organized so as to illuminate choices
and facilitate the attainment of goals; channels should be
commonly available to relate men to knowledge and to
power so that private problems--from bad recreation facilities to
personal alienation--are formulated as general
45. issues.
The economic sphere would have as its basis the principles: that
work should involve incentives worthier than
money or survival. It should be educative, not stultifying;
creative, not mechanical; self-directed, not manipulated,
encouraging independence, a respect for others, a sense of
dignity, and a willingness to accept social responsibility,
since it is this experience that has crucial influence on habits,
perceptions and individual ethics; that the economic
experience is so personally decisive that the individual must
share in its full determination; that the economy itself is
of such social importance that its major resources and means of
production should be open to democratic
participation and subject to democratic social regulation.
Like the political and economic ones, major social institutions--
cultural, educational, rehabilitative, and others--
should be generally organized with the well-being and dignity
of man as the essential measure of success. In social
change or interchange, we find violence to be abhorrent because
it requires generally the transformation of the
target, be it a human being or a community of people, into a
depersonalized object of hate. It is imperative that the
means of violence be abolished and the institutions--local,
46. national, international--that encourage non-violence as a
condition of conflict be developed.
These are our central values, in skeletal form. It remains vital to
understand their denial or attainment in the context
of the modern world.
The Students
In the last few years, thousands of American students
demonstrated that they at least felt the urgency of the times.
They moved actively and directly against racial injustices, the
threat of war, violations of individual rights of
conscience, and, less frequently, against economic
manipulation….The significance of these scattered movements
lies not in their success or failure in gaining objectives--at
least, not yet.... The significance is in the fact that
students are breaking the crust of apathy and overcoming the
inner alienation that remain the defining characteristics
of American college life.
If student movements for change are still rarities on the campus
scene, what is commonplace there? The real
campus, the familiar campus, is a place of private people,
engaged in their notorious "inner emigration." It is a place
of commitment to business-as-usual, getting ahead, playing it
cool. It is a place of mass affirmation of the Twist, but
47. mass reluctance toward the controversial public stance. Rules
are accepted as "inevitable," bureaucracy as "just
circumstances," irrelevance as "scholarship," selflessness as
"martyrdom," politics as "just another way to make
people, and an unprofitable one, too."
Almost no students value activity as citizens. Passive in public,
they are hardly more idealistic in arranging their
private lives: Gallup concludes they will settle for "low success,
and won't risk high failure." There is not much
willingness to take risks (not even in business), no setting of
dangerous goals, no real conception of personal identity
except one manufactured in the image of others, no real urge for
personal fulfillment except to be almost as
successful as the very successful people. Attention is being paid
to social status (the quality of shirt collars, meeting
people, getting wives or husbands, making solid contacts for
later on); much, too, is paid to academic status (grades,
honors, the med school rat race). But neglected generally is real
intellectual status, the personal cultivation of the
mind….
The academic life contains reinforcing counterparts to the way
in which extracurricular life is organized. The
academic world is founded on a teacher-student relations
48. analogous to the parent-child relation which characterizes
in loco parentis. Further, academia includes a radical separation
of the student from the material of study. That
which is studies, the social reality, is "objectified" to sterility,
dividing the student from life--just as he is restrained
in active involvement by the deans controlling student
government. The specialization of function and knowledge,
admittedly necessary to our complex technological and social
structure, has produced an exaggerated
compartmentalization of study and understanding. This has
contributed to an overly parochial view, by faculty, of
the role of its research and scholarship; to a discontinuous and
truncated understanding, by students, of the
surrounding social order; and to a loss of personal attachment,
by nearly all, to the worth of study as a humanistic
enterprise.
There is, finally, the cumbersome academic bureaucracy
extending throughout the academic as well as the
extracurricular structures, contributing to the sense of outer
complexity and inner powerlessness that transforms the
honest searching of many students to a ratification of
convention and, worse, to a numbness to present and future
49. catastrophes. The size and financing systems of the university
enhance the permanent trusteeship of the
administrative bureaucracy, their power leading to a shift within
the university toward the value standards of
business and the administrative mentality. Huge foundations and
other private financial interests shape the under
financed colleges and universities, making them not only more
commercial, but less disposed to diagnose society
critically, less open to dissent. Many social and physical
scientists, neglecting the liberating heritage of higher
learning, develop "human relations" or "morale-producing"
techniques for the corporate economy, while others
exercise their intellectual skills to accelerate the arms race.
Tragically, the university could serve as a significant source of
social criticism and an initiator of new modes and
molders of attitudes. But the actual intellectual effect of the
college experience is hardly distinguishable from that of
any other communications channel--say, a television set--
passing on the stock truths of the day. Students leave
college somewhat more "tolerant" than when they arrived, but
basically unchallenged in their values and political
orientations. With administrators ordering the institution, and
faculty the curriculum, the student learns by his
isolation to accept elite rule within the university, which
50. prepares him to accept later forms of minority control. The
real function of the educational system--as opposed to its more
rhetorical function of "searching for truth"--is to
impart the key information and styles that will help the student
get by, modestly but comfortably, in the big society
beyond.
The Society Beyond
Look beyond the campus, to America itself. That student life is
more intellectual, and perhaps more comfortable,
does not obscure the fact that the fundamental qualities of life
on the campus reflect the habits of society at large.
The fraternity president is seen at the junior manager levels; the
sorority queen has gone to Grosse Pointe; the
serious poet burns for a place, any place, to work; the once-
serious and never-serious poets work at the advertising
agencies. The desperation of people threatened by forces about
which they know little and of which they can say
less; the cheerful emptiness of people "giving up" all hope of
changing things; the faceless ones polled by Gallup
who listed "international affairs" fourteenth on their list of
"problems" but who also expected thermonuclear war in
the next few years; in these and other forms, Americans are in
withdrawal from public life, from any collective
51. effort at directing their own affairs.
Some regard these national doldrums as a sign of healthy
approval of the established order--but is it approval by
consent or manipulated acquiescence? Others declare that the
people are withdrawn because compelling issues are
fast disappearing--perhaps there are fewer bread lines in
America, but is Jim Crow gone, is there enough work and
work more fulfilling, is world war a diminishing threat, and
what of the revolutionary new peoples? Still others
think the national quietude is a necessary consequence of the
need for elites to resolve complex and specialized
problems of modern industrial society--but then, why should
business elites help decide foreign policy, and who
controls the elites anyway, and are they solving mankind's
problems? Others, finally, shrug knowingly and announce
that full democracy never worked anywhere in the past--but why
lump qualitatively different civilizations together,
and how can a social order work well if its best thinkers are
skeptics, and is man really doomed forever to the
domination of today?...
The apathy here is, first, subjective--the felt powerlessness of
ordinary people, the resignation before the enormity of
events. But subjective apathy is encouraged by the objective
American situation--the actual structural separation of
52. people from power, from relevant knowledge, from pinnacles of
decision-making. Just as the university influences
the student way of life, so do major social institutions create the
circumstances in which the isolated citizen will try
hopelessly to understand his world and himself.
The very isolation of the individual--from power and
community and ability to aspire--means the rise of a
democracy without publics. With the great mass of people
structurally remote and psychologically hesitant with
respect to democratic institutions, those institutions themselves
attenuate and become, in the fashion of the vicious
circle, progressively less accessible to those few who aspire to
serious participation in social affairs. The vital
democratic connection between community and leadership,
between the mass and the several elites, has been so
wrenched and perverted that disastrous policies go unchallenged
time and again....
The University and Social Change
There is perhaps little reason to be optimistic about the above
analysis. True, the Dixiecrat-GOP coalition is the
weakest point in the dominating complex of corporate, military,
and political power. But the civil rights, peace, and
53. student movements are too poor and socially slighted, and the
labor movement too quiescent, to be counted with
enthusiasm. From where else can power and vision be
summoned? We believe that the universities are an
overlooked seat of influence.
First, the university is located in a permanent position of social
influence. It's educational function makes it
indispensable and automatically makes it a crucial institution in
the formation of social attitudes. Second, in an
unbelievably complicated world, it is the central institution for
organizing, evaluating and transmitting knowledge.
Third, the extent to which academic resources presently are
used to buttress immoral social practice is revealed,
first, by the extent to which defense contracts make the
universities engineers of the arms race. Too, the use of
modern social science as a manipulative tool reveals itself in
the "human relations" consultants to the modern
corporations, who introduce trivial sops to give laborers
feelings of "participation" or "belonging," while actually
deluding them in order to further exploit their labor. And, of
course, the use of motivational research is already
infamous as a manipulative aspect of American politics. But
these social uses of the universities' resources also
54. demonstrate the unchangeable reliance by men of power on the
men and storehouses of knowledge: this makes the
university functionally tied to society in new ways, revealing
new potentialities, new levers for change. Fourth, the
university is the only mainstream institution that is open to
participation by individuals of nearly any viewpoint.
These, at least, are facts, no matter how dull the teaching, how
paternalistic the rules, how irrelevant the research
that goes on. Social relevance, the accessibility to knowledge,
and internal openness--these together make the
university a potential base and agency in a movement of social
change.
1. Any new left in America must be, in large measure, a left
with real intellectual skills, committed to
deliberativeness, honesty, reflection as working tools. The
university permits the political life to be an
adjunct to the academic one, and action to be informed by
reason.
2. A new left must be distributed in significant social roles
throughout the country. The universities are
distributed in such a manner.
3. A new left must consist of younger people who matured in
the postwar world, and partially be directed to
the recruitment of younger people. The university is an obvious
beginning point.
4. A new left must include liberals and socialists, the former for
55. their relevance, the latter for their sense of
thoroughgoing reforms in the system. The university is a more
sensible place than a political party for these
two traditions to begin to discuss their differences and look for
political synthesis.
5. A new left must start controversy across the land, if national
policies and national apathy are to be reversed.
The ideal university is a community of controversy, within
itself and in its effects on communities beyond.
6. A new left must transform modern complexity into issues that
can be understood and felt close up by every
human being. It must give form to the feelings of helplessness
and indifference, so that people may see the
political, social, and economic sources of their private troubles,
and organize to change society. In a time of
supposed prosperity, moral complacency, and political
manipulation, a new left cannot rely on only aching
stomachs to be the engine force of social reform. The case for
change, for alternatives that will involve
uncomfortable personal efforts, must be argued as never before.
The university is a relevant place for all of
these activities.
But we need not indulge in illusions: the university system
cannot complete a movement of ordinary people making
demands for a better life. From its schools and colleges across
the nation, a militant left might awaken its allies, and
56. by beginning the process towards peace, civil rights, and labor
struggles, reinsert theory and idealism where too
often reign confusion and political barter. The power of
students and faculty united is not only potential; it has
shown its actuality in the South, and in the reform movements
of the North.
The bridge to political power, though, will be build through
genuine cooperation, locally, nationally, and
internationally, between a new left of young people and an
awakening community of allies. In each community we
must look within the university and act with confidence that we
can be powerful, but we must look outwards to the
less exotic but more lasting struggles for justice.
To turn these mythic possibilities into realities will involve
national efforts at university reform by an alliance of
students and faculty. They must wrest control of the educational
process from the administrative bureaucracy. They
must make fraternal and functional contact with allies in labor,
civil rights, and other liberal forces outside the
campus. They must import major public issues into the
curriculum--research and teaching on problems of war and
peace is an outstanding example. They must make debate and
controversy, not dull pedantic cant, the common style
57. for educational life. They must consciously build a base for
their assault upon the loci of power.
As students for a democratic society, we are committed to
stimulating this kind of social movement, this kind of
vision and program in campus and community across the
country. If we appear to seek the unattainable, as it has
been said, then let it be known that we do so to avoid the
unimaginable.
Document 8: Black Panther’s Ten-Point Program (1966)
Drafted by the founders of the Black Panther Party, Huey P.
Newton and Bobby Seale in
1966, the Ten-Point Program appeared in the second issue of
their weekly newspaper,
Black Panther, on May 15, 1967. With this document the
authors intended to plainly state
the cause and purpose of the Black Panther Party.
Black Panther Party Platform and Program
What We Want
What We Believe
1 . We want freedom. We want power to determine the destiny
of our Black Community.
58. We believe that black people will not be free until we are able
to determine our destiny.
2 . We want full employment for our people.
We believe that the federal government is responsible and
obligated to give every man employment or a guaranteed
income. We believe that if the white American businessmen will
not give full employment, then the means of
production should be taken from the businessmen and placed in
the community so that the people of the community
can organize and employ all of its people and give a high
standard of living.
3 . We want an end to the robbery by the CAPITALIST of our
Black Community.
We believe that this racist government has robbed us and now
we are demanding the overdue debt of forty acres and
two mules. Forty acres and two mules was promised 100 years
ago as restitution for slave labor and mass murder of
black people. We will accept the payment in currency which
will be distributed to our many communities. The
Germans are now aiding the Jews in Israel for the genocide of
the Jewish people. The Germans murdered six million
Jews. The American racist has taken part in the slaughter of
over fifty million black people; therefore, we feel that
this is a modest demand that we make.
59. 4. We want decent housing, fit for shelter of human beings.
We believe that if the white landlords will not give decent
housing to our black community, then the housing and the
land should be made into cooperatives so that our community,
with government aid, can build and make decent
housing for its people.
5. We want education for our people that exposes the true
nature of this decadent American society. We want
education that teaches us our true history and our role in the
present-day society.
We believe in an educational system that will give to our people
a knowledge of self. If a man does not have
knowledge of himself and his position in society and the world,
then he has little chance to relate to anything else .
6. We want all black men to be exempt from military service.
We believe that Black people should not be forced to fight in
the military service to defend a racist government that
does not protect us. We will not fight and kill other people of
color in the world who, like black people, are being
victimized by the white racist government of America. We will
protect ourselves from the force and violence of the
racist police and the racist military, by whatever means
necessary.
60. 7. We want an immediate end to POLICE BRUTALITY and
MURDER of black people.
We believe we can end police brutality in our black community
by organizing black self-defense groups that are
dedicated to defending our black community from racist police
oppression and brutality. The Second Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States gives a right to bear arms.
We therefore believe that all black people should
arm themselves for self-defense.
8. We want freedom for all black men held in federal, state,
county and city prisons and jails.
We believe that all black people should be released from the
many jails and prisons because they have not received a
fair and impartial trial.
9. We want all black people when brought to trial to be tried in
court by a jury of their peer group or people
from their black communities, as defined by the Constitution of
the United States.
We believe that the courts should follow the United States
Constitution so that black people will receive fair trials.
The 14th Amendment of the U.S . Constitution gives a man a
right to be tried by his peer group. A peer is a person
from a similar economic, social, religious, geographical,
61. environmental, historical and racial background. To do this
the court will be forced to select a jury from the black
community from which the black defendant came. We have
been, and are being tried by all-white juries that have no
understanding of the "average reasoning man" of the black
community.
10. We want land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice
and peace. And as our major political objective,
a United Nations-supervised plebiscite to be held throughout the
black colony in which only black colonial
subjects will be allowed to participate, for the purpose of
determining the will of black people as to their
national destiny.
When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for
one people to dissolve the political bands which have
connected them with another, and to assume, among the powers
of the earth, the separate and equal station to which
the laws of nature and nature's God entitle them, a decent
respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they
should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with
62. certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. That, to secure these rights,
governments are instituted among men, deriving their just
powers from the consent of the governed; that, whenever
any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is
the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to
institute a new government, laying its foundation on such
principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to
them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.
Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments
long established should not be changed for light and transient
causes; and, accordingly, all experience hath shown,
that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are
sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms
to which they are accustomed. But, when a long train of abuses
and unsurpations, pursuing invariably the same
object, evinces a design .to reduce them under absolute
despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such
government, and to provide new guards for their future security.
Document 9: Caesar Chavez’s “Letter from Delano” (1969)
Born in Arizona in 1927, Caesar Chavez became one of the
foremost labor leaders and civil
63. rights activists for Mexican-Americans. Chavez’s leadership of
what would become the
United Farm Workers of America (UFW) turned the Delano
Grape Strike (begun in 1965)
from a local protest into a nationwide consumer boycott of non-
union grapes that did not
end until the 1970 with the table-grape growers of California
finally reaching a collective
bargaining agreement with the UFW.
Good Friday 1969
E.L. Barr, Jr., President
California Grape and Tree Fruit League
717 Market St., San Francisco, California
Dear Mr. Barr:
I am sad to hear about your accusations in the press that our
union movement and table grape boycott have been
successful because we have used violence and terror tactics. If
what you say is true, I have been a failure and should
withdraw from the struggle; but you are left with the awesome
moral responsibility, before God and man, to come
forward with whatever information you have so that corrective
64. action can begin at once. If for any reason you fail to
come forth to substantiate your charges, then you must be held
responsible for committing violence against us, albeit
violence of the tongue. I am convinced that you as a human
being did not mean what you said but rather acted
hastily under pressure from the public relations firm that has
been hired to try to counteract the tremendous moral
force of our movement. How many times we ourselves have felt
the need to lash out in anger and bitterness.
Today on Good Friday 1969 we remember the life and the
sacrifice of Martin Luther King, Jr., who gave himself
totally to the nonviolent struggle for peace and justice. In his
“Letter from Birmingham Jail” Dr. King describes
better than I could our hopes for the strike and boycott:
“Injustice must be exposed, with all the tensions its exposure
creates, to the light of human conscience and the air of national
opinion before it can be cured.” For our part I admit
that we have seized upon every tactic and strategy consistent
with the morality of our cause to expose that injustice
and thus to heighten the sensitivity of the American conscience
so that farm workers will have without bloodshed
their own union and the dignity of bargaining with their
agribusiness employers. By lying about the nature of our
movement, Mr. Barr, you are working against nonviolent social
65. change. Unwittingly perhaps, you may unleash that
other force which our union by discipline and deed, censure and
education has sought to avoid, that panacea
shortcut, that senseless violence which honors no color, class or
neighborhood.
You must understand –I must make you understand –that our
membership and the hopes and aspirations of the
hundreds of thousands of the poor and dispossessed that have
been raised on our account are, above all, human
beings, no better and no worse than any other cross-section of
human society; we are not saints because we are poor,
but by the same measure neither are we immoral. We are men
and women who have suffered and endured much,
and not only because of our abject poverty but because we have
been kept poor. The colors of our skins, the
languages of our cultural and native origins, the lack of formal
education, the exclusion from the democratic
process, the numbers of our men slain in recent wars –all these
burdens generation after generation have sought to
demoralize us, to break our human spirit. But God knows that
we are not beasts of burden, agricultural implements,
or rented slaves; we are men. And mark this well, Mr. Barr, we
are men locked in a death struggle against man’s
66. inhumanity to man in the industry that you represent. And this
struggle itself gives meaning to our life and ennobles
our dying.
As your industry has experienced, our strikers here in Delano
and those who represent us throughout the world are
well trained for this struggle. They have been under the gun,
they have been kicked and beaten and herded by dogs,
they have been cursed and ridiculed, they have been stripped
and chained and jailed, they have been sprayed with
the poisons used in the vineyards; but they have been taught not
to lie down and die nor to flee in shame, but to
resist with every ounce of human endurance and spirit. To resist
not with retaliation in kind but to overcome with
love and compassion, with ingenuity and creativity, with hard
work and longer hours, with stamina and patient
tenacity, with truth and public appeal, with friends and allies,
with nobility and discipline, with politics and law, and
with prayer and fasting. They were not trained in a month or
even a year; after all, this new harvest season will mark
our fourth full year of strike and even now we continue to plan
and prepare for the years to come. Time
accomplishes for the poor what money does for the rich.
This is not to pretend that we have everywhere been successful
67. enough or that we have not made mistakes. And
while we do not belittle or underestimate our adversaries –for
they are the rich and the powerful and they possess the
land –we are not afraid nor do we cringe from the confrontation.
We welcome it! We have planned for it! We know
that our cause is just, that history is a story of social revolution,
and that the poor shall inherit the land.
Once again, I appeal to you as the representative of your
industry and as a man. I ask you to recognize and bargain
with our union before the economic pressure of the boycott and
strike takes an irrevocable toll; but if not, I ask you
to at least sit down with us to discuss the safeguards necessary
to keep our historical struggle free of violence. I
make this appeal because as one of the leaders of our nonviolent
movement, I know and accept my responsibility for
preventing, if possible, the destruction of human life and
property. For these reasons, and knowing of Gandhi’s
admonition that fasting is the last resort in place of the sword,
during a most critical time in our movement last
February 1968 I undertook a 25-day fast. I repeat to you the
principle enunciated to the membership at the start of
the fast: if to build our union required the deliberate taking of
life, either the life of a grower or his child, or the life
of a farm worker or his child, then I choose not to see the union
68. built.
Mr. Barr, let me be painfully honest with you. You must
understand these things. We advocate militant nonviolence
as our means for social revolution and to achieve justice for our
people, but we are not blind or deaf to the desperate
and moody winds of human frustration, impatience and rage that
blow among us. Gandhi himself admitted that if his
only choice were cowardice or violence, he would choose
violence. Men are not angels, and time and tide wait for
no man. Precisely because of these powerful human emotions,
we have tried to involve masses of people in their
own struggle. Participation and self-determination remain the
best experience of freedom, and free men instinctively
prefer democratic change and even protect the rights guaranteed
to seek it. Only the enslaved in despair have need of
violent overthrow.
This letter does not express all that is in my heart, Mr. Barr. But
if it says nothing else it says that we do not hate you
or rejoice to see your industry destroyed; we hate the
agribusiness system that seeks to keep us enslaved, and we
shall overcome and change it not by retaliation or bloodshed but
by a determined nonviolent struggle carried on by
those masses of farm workers who intend to be free and human.
69. Sincerely yours,
Cesar E. Chavez
United Farm Workers Organizing Committee, A.F.L.-C.I.O.
Delano, CA
Document 10: Equal Rights Amendment (1972)
Originally drafted by Alice Paul and Crystal Eastman, this
proposed amendment was first
introduced in Congress in 1921, but did not get approved until
1972. Despite initial
widespread, bipartisan support, conservative opposition to the
amendment grew rapidly.
Even with Congress extending the deadline for ratification until
June 30, 1982, the
amendment ultimately failed to be ratified by three-fourths of
the States.
HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 208
Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United
States relative to equal rights for men and women.
70. Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled (two-
thirds of each House concurring therein), That The following
article is proposed as an amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, which shall be valid to all
intents and purposes as part of the Constitution when
ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several States
within seven years from the date of its submission by
the Congress:
‘‘SECTION 1. Equality of rights under the law shall not be
denied or abridged by the United States or by any State
on account of sex.
‘‘SECTION 2. The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by
appropriate legislation, the provisions of this
article.
‘‘SECTION 3. This amendment shall take effect two years after
the date of ratification.’’
Document 11: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972
Signed into law by President Richard M. Nixon on June 23,
71. 1972, Title IX of the Education
Amendments of 1972 has become one of the most important
pieces of modern educational
legislation in the United States. Per the Department of Justice,
“Title IX applies, with a few
specific exceptions, to all aspects of federally funded education
programs or activities. In
addition to traditional educational institutions such as colleges,
universities, and
elementary and secondary schools, Title IX also applies to any
education or training
program operated by a recipient of federal financial assistance.”
No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be
excluded from participation in, be
denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under
any education program or activity
receiving federal financial assistance.
Document 12: [excerpt] Remarks of President George H.W.
Bush at the
signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (1990)
72. Signed into law by President George H.W. Bush on July 26,
1990, the American with
Disabilities Act is one of the most comprehensive civil rights
bills ever passed in the United
States.
Evan, thank you so much. And welcome to every one of you,
out there in this splendid scene of hope, spread across
the South Lawn of the White House. I want to salute the
Members of the United States Congress, the House and the
Senate who are with us today -- active participants in making
this day come true. This is, indeed, an incredible day --
especially for the thousands of people across the Nation who
have given so much of their time, their vision, and their
courage to see this act become a reality.
You know, I started trying to put together a list of all the people
who should be mentioned today. But when the list
started looking a little longer than the Senate testimony for the
bill, I decided I better give up, or that we'd never get
out of here before sunset….
This is an immensely important day, a day that belongs to all of
you. Everywhere I look, I see people who have
dedicated themselves to making sure that this day would come
to pass: my friends from Congress, as I say, who
73. worked so diligently with the best interest of all at heart,
Democrats and Republicans; members of this
administration -- and I'm pleased to see so many top officials
and members of my Cabinet here today who brought
their caring and expertise to this fight; and then, the
organizations -- so many dedicated organizations for people
with disabilities, who gave their time and their strength; and
perhaps most of all, everyone out there and others –
across the breadth of this nation are 43 million Americans with
disabilities. You have made this happen. All of you
have made this happen. To all of you, I just want to say your
triumph is that your bill will now be law, and that this
day belongs to you. On behalf of our nation, thank you very,
very much.
Three weeks ago we celebrated our nation's Independence Day.
Today we're here to rejoice in and celebrate another
``independence day,'' one that is long overdue. With today's
signing of the landmark Americans for Disabilities Act,
every man, woman, and child with a disability can now pass
through once-closed doors into a bright new era of
equality, independence, and freedom. As I look around at all
these joyous faces, I remember clearly how many years
74. of dedicated commitment have gone into making this historic
new civil rights act a reality. It's been the work of a
true coalition, a strong and inspiring coalition of people who
have shared both a dream and a passionate
determination to make that dream come true. It's been a
coalition in the finest spirit -- a joining of Democrats and
Republicans, of the legislative and the executive branches, of
Federal and State agencies, of public officials and
private citizens, of people with disabilities and without.
This historic act is the world's first comprehensive declaration
of equality for people with disabilities -- the first. Its
passage has made the United States the international leader on
this human rights issue. Already, leaders of several
other countries, including Sweden, Japan, the Soviet Union, and
all 12 members of the EEC, have announced that
they hope to enact now similar legislation.
Our success with this act proves that we are keeping faith with
the spirit of our courageous forefathers who wrote in
the Declaration of Independence: ``We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.''
These words have been our guide for more than two
centuries as we've labored to form our more perfect union. But
tragically, for too many Americans, the blessings of
75. liberty have been limited or even denied. The Civil Rights Act
of '64 took a bold step towards righting that wrong.
But the stark fact remained that people with disabilities were
still victims of segregation and discrimination, and this
was intolerable. Today's legislation brings us closer to that day
when no Americans will ever again be deprived of
their basic guarantee of life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness.
This act is powerful in its simplicity. It will ensure that people
with disabilities are given the basic guarantees for
which they have worked so long and so hard: independence,
freedom of choice, control of their lives, the
opportunity to blend fully and equally into the rich mosaic of
the American mainstream. Legally, it will provide our
disabled community with a powerful expansion of protections
and then basic civil rights. It will guarantee fair and
just access to the fruits of American life which we all must be
able to enjoy. And then, specifically, first the ADA
ensures that employers covered by the act cannot discriminate
against qualified individuals with disabilities. Second,
the ADA ensures access to public accommodations such as
restaurants, hotels, shopping centers, and offices. And
third, the ADA ensures expanded access to transportation
services. And fourth, the ADA ensures equivalent
76. telephone services for people with speech or hearing
impediments.
These provisions mean so much to so many. To one brave girl in
particular, they will mean the world. Lisa Carl, a
young Washington State woman with cerebral palsy, who I'm
told is with us today, now will always be admitted to
her hometown theater. Lisa, you might not have been welcome
at your theater, but I'll tell you -- welcome to the
White House. We're glad you're here. The ADA is a dramatic
renewal not only for those with disabilities but for all
of us, because along with the precious privilege of being an
American comes a sacred duty to ensure that every other
American's rights are also guaranteed.
Together, we must remove the physical barriers we have created
and the social barriers that we have accepted. For
ours will never be a truly prosperous nation until all within it
prosper. For inspiration, we need look no further than
our own neighbors. With us in that wonderful crowd out there
are people representing 18 of the daily Points of Light
that I've named for their extraordinary involvement with the
disabled community. We applaud you and your shining
example. Thank you for your leadership for all that are here
today….
77. I also want to say a special word to our friends in the business
community. You have in your hands the key to the
success of this act, for you can unlock a splendid resource of
untapped human potential that, when freed, will enrich
us all. I know there have been concerns that the ADA may be
vague or costly, or may lead endlessly to litigation.
But I want to reassure you right now that my administration and
the United States Congress have carefully crafted
this Act. We've all been determined to ensure that it gives
flexibility, particularly in terms of the timetable of
implementation, and we've been committed to containing the
costs that may be incurred.
This act does something important for American business,
though -- and remember this: You've called for new
sources of workers. Well, many of our fellow citizens with
disabilities are unemployed. They want to work, and they
can work, and this is a tremendous pool of people. And
remember, this is a tremendous pool of people who will
bring to jobs diversity, loyalty, proven low turnover rate, and
only one request: the chance to prove themselves. And
when you add together Federal, State, local, and private funds,
it costs almost $200 billion annually to support
Americans with disabilities -- in effect, to keep them dependent.
Well, when given the opportunity to be
78. independent, they will move proudly into the economic
mainstream of American life, and that's what this legislation
is all about.
Our problems are large, but our unified heart is larger. Our
challenges are great, but our will is greater. And in our
America, the most generous, optimistic nation on the face of the
Earth, we must not and will not rest until every man
and woman with a dream has the means to achieve it.
And today, America welcomes into the mainstream of life all of
our fellow citizens with disabilities. We embrace
you for your abilities and for your disabilities, for our
similarities and indeed for our differences, for your past
courage and your future dreams. Last year, we celebrated a
victory of international freedom. Even the strongest
person couldn't scale the Berlin Wall to gain the elusive
promise of independence that lay just beyond. And so,
together we rejoiced when that barrier fell.
And now I sign legislation which takes a sledgehammer to
another wall, one which has for too many generations
separated Americans with disabilities from the freedom they
could glimpse, but not grasp. Once again, we rejoice as
this barrier falls for claiming together we will not accept, we
79. will not excuse, we will not tolerate discrimination in
America.
With, again, great thanks to the Members of the United States
Senate, leaders of whom are here today, and those
who worked so tirelessly for this legislation on both sides of the
aisles. And to those Members of the House of
Representatives with us here today, Democrats and Republicans
as well, I salute you. And on your behalf, as well as
the behalf of this entire country, I now lift my pen to sign this
Americans with Disabilities Act and say: Let the
shameful wall of exclusion finally come tumbling down. God
bless you all.
Document 13: Maya Angelou “On the Pulse of Morning” (1993)
The following poem was delivered by Maya Angelou as part of
President William Jefferson
“Bill” Clinton’s First Inauguration on January 20, 1993. Maya
Angelou is widely regarded
as one of the foremost African-American voices in literature,
particularly her
groundbreaking autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird
Sings, published in 1969.
80. On The Pulse Of Morning
A Rock, A River, A Tree
Hosts to species long since departed,
Mark the mastodon.
The dinosaur, who left dry tokens
Of their sojourn here
On our planet floor,
Any broad alarm of their of their hastening doom
Is lost in the gloom of dust and ages.
But today, the Rock cries out to us, clearly, forcefully,
Come, you may stand upon my
Back and face your distant destiny,
But seek no haven in my shadow.
I will give you no hiding place down here.
You, created only a little lower than
The angels, have crouched too long in
The bruising darkness,
Have lain too long
Face down in ignorance.
81. Your mouths spelling words
Armed for slaughter.
The rock cries out today, you may stand on me,
But do not hide your face.
Across the wall of the world,
A river sings a beautiful song,
Come rest here by my side.
Each of you a bordered country,
Delicate and strangely made proud,
Yet thrusting perpetually under siege.
Your armed struggles for profit
Have left collars of waste upon
My shore, currents of debris upon my breast.
Yet, today I call you to my riverside,
If you will study war no more.
Come, clad in peace and I will sing the songs
The Creator gave to me when I
And the tree and stone were one.
82. Before cynicism was a bloody sear across your brow
And when you yet knew you still knew nothing.
The river sings and sings on.
There is a true yearning to respond to
The singing river and the wise rock.
So say the Asian, the Hispanic, the Jew,
The African and Native American, the Sioux,
The Catholic, the Muslim, the French, the Greek,
The Irish, the Rabbi, the Priest, the Sheikh,
The Gay, the Straight, the Preacher,
The privileged, the homeless, the teacher.
They hear. They all hear
The speaking of the tree.
Today, the first and last of every tree
Speaks to humankind. Come to me, here beside the river.
Plant yourself beside me, here beside the river.
Each of you, descendant of some passed on
Traveller, has been paid for.
83. You, who gave me my first name,
You Pawnee, Apache and Seneca,
You Cherokee Nation, who rested with me,
Then forced on bloody feet,
Left me to the employment of other seekers-
Desperate for gain, starving for gold.
You, the Turk, the Swede, the German, the Scot...
You the Ashanti, the Yoruba, the Kru,
Bought, sold, stolen, arriving on a nightmare
Praying for a dream.
Here, root yourselves beside me.
I am the tree planted by the river,
Which will not be moved.
I, the rock, I the river, I the tree
I am yours- your passages have been paid.
Lift up your faces, you have a piercing need
For this bright morning dawning for you.
84. History, despite its wrenching pain,
Cannot be unlived, and if faced with courage,
Need not be lived again.
Lift up your eyes upon
The day breaking for you.
Give birth again
To the dream.
Women, children, men,
Take it into the palms of your hands.
Mold it into the shape of your most
Private need. Sculpt it into
The image of your most public self.
Lift up your hearts.
Each new hour holds new chances
For new beginnings.
Do not be wedded forever
To fear, yoked eternally
To brutishness.
85. The horizon leans forward,
Offering you space to place new steps of change.
Here, on the pulse of this fine day
You may have the courage
To look up and out upon me,
The rock, the river, the tree, your country.
No less to Midas than the mendicant.
No less to you now than the mastodon then.
Here on the pulse of this new day
You may have the grace to look up and out
And into your sister's eyes,
Into your brother's face, your country
And say simply
Very simply
With hope
Good morning.
86. Document 14: President-Elect Barack Obama’s Victory Speech
(2008)
There was no denying the historical magnitude of the
Presidential Election of 2008.
Speaking at a rally of an estimated 240,000 people at Grant
Park in Chicago on November
4, 2008, President-Elect Barack Obama reflected upon the
moment and
Hello, Chicago.
If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a
place where all things are possible, who still wonders if
the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still
questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.
It's the answer told by lines that stretched around schools and
churches in numbers this nation has never seen, by
people who waited three hours and four hours, many for the
first time in their lives, because they believed that this
time must be different, that their voices could be that
difference.
It's the answer spoken by young and old, rich and poor,
Democrat and Republican, black, white, Hispanic, Asian,
Native American, gay, straight, disabled and not disabled.
Americans who sent a message to the world that we have
never been just a collection of individuals or a collection of red
states and blue states.
We are, and always will be, the United States of America.