The document contains summaries of three chapters from a marketing textbook. It discusses distribution channel management, designing customer-oriented marketing channels, and customer-oriented logistics management. Distribution channel management ensures products are available where and when customers want them. Channel design clarifies how entities are linked in the network and their roles. Logistics is the process of efficiently moving goods and services from origin to customer while meeting customer requirements.
Is bao presentation-updated august 2017.phpapp01bob commander
Commander Aviation Services offers an audit service for the International Standard for Business Aircraft Operations, IS-BAO.
CAS can also advise how to meet the IS-BAO standards pre-audit. It can't do both for the same company though!
My 12 year old son created this as part of his history project, using the actual letter his great-grandmother received from the commanding officer after the death of her son in Italy during WWII. We wanted to share it to ensure that we continue to honor and respect those that gave their lives for our freedom. May we always remember, freedom comes with a hefty price. LEST WE FORGET
The construction schedule outlines the timeline and key milestones for completing the project. Work will begin with site preparation in January, followed by the foundation pour in February and framing in March. The project is scheduled to be completed by the end of April with final inspections and landscaping.
Barack Obama named his former presidential campaign rival, Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State. While rivals may be truthful, they remain opponents. The first English colony of Roanoke in present-day North Carolina is known as the "lost colony" because when more settlers arrived, all of the original colonists had vanished without a trace. Jamestown was a successful colony that made money growing tobacco and importing slaves.
1. The document contains a quiz with 42 multiple choice questions about topics covered in class such as African history, slavery, and colonial America.
2. Students are instructed to work in groups and use their notes to answer the questions, and not to turn the quiz in until it is reviewed as a class on Monday.
3. The questions cover a wide range of topics including ancient African kingdoms, important figures, the Middle Passage, plantation life, and the Underground Railroad.
The document discusses the debate around restoring forts that slaves departed from during the transatlantic slave trade. Some argue the forts should be rebuilt as they were historically, while others believe they should remain in their current state. There is also a discussion around using former slave castles as tourist sites, with differing views on whether this appropriately honors the suffering of slaves. Students are assigned readings and homework on the Middle Passage and slave factories along the coast of Africa.
The document contains summaries of three chapters from a marketing textbook. It discusses distribution channel management, designing customer-oriented marketing channels, and customer-oriented logistics management. Distribution channel management ensures products are available where and when customers want them. Channel design clarifies how entities are linked in the network and their roles. Logistics is the process of efficiently moving goods and services from origin to customer while meeting customer requirements.
Is bao presentation-updated august 2017.phpapp01bob commander
Commander Aviation Services offers an audit service for the International Standard for Business Aircraft Operations, IS-BAO.
CAS can also advise how to meet the IS-BAO standards pre-audit. It can't do both for the same company though!
My 12 year old son created this as part of his history project, using the actual letter his great-grandmother received from the commanding officer after the death of her son in Italy during WWII. We wanted to share it to ensure that we continue to honor and respect those that gave their lives for our freedom. May we always remember, freedom comes with a hefty price. LEST WE FORGET
The construction schedule outlines the timeline and key milestones for completing the project. Work will begin with site preparation in January, followed by the foundation pour in February and framing in March. The project is scheduled to be completed by the end of April with final inspections and landscaping.
Barack Obama named his former presidential campaign rival, Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State. While rivals may be truthful, they remain opponents. The first English colony of Roanoke in present-day North Carolina is known as the "lost colony" because when more settlers arrived, all of the original colonists had vanished without a trace. Jamestown was a successful colony that made money growing tobacco and importing slaves.
1. The document contains a quiz with 42 multiple choice questions about topics covered in class such as African history, slavery, and colonial America.
2. Students are instructed to work in groups and use their notes to answer the questions, and not to turn the quiz in until it is reviewed as a class on Monday.
3. The questions cover a wide range of topics including ancient African kingdoms, important figures, the Middle Passage, plantation life, and the Underground Railroad.
The document discusses the debate around restoring forts that slaves departed from during the transatlantic slave trade. Some argue the forts should be rebuilt as they were historically, while others believe they should remain in their current state. There is also a discussion around using former slave castles as tourist sites, with differing views on whether this appropriately honors the suffering of slaves. Students are assigned readings and homework on the Middle Passage and slave factories along the coast of Africa.
This document discusses Ida B. Wells Barnett and the 1892 Memphis lynchings that she investigated and worked to publicize. It describes how three African American men who owned a successful grocery store were lynched after fighting back against a mob that attacked their store. Wells Barnett realized the lynchings were meant to intimidate African Americans, not punish crimes. She urged blacks to leave the South for their safety and worked with the NAACP to expose the practice of lynching across the country for decades to come. The document provides historical context about Wells Barnett and lynchings in Memphis up through the civil rights era.
1) Wess Young, now 94, fled with his family during the 1921 Tulsa race riot when he was 4 years old. The riot destroyed Tulsa's thriving black community of Greenwood, known as the "Negro Wall Street", leaving up to 300 dead and over 8,000 homeless according to an official state report.
2) Efforts over the past decade have brought greater awareness to the Tulsa race riot through educational initiatives and memorials. However, survivors' attempts to secure compensation through the legislature and courts have been unsuccessful.
3) As the number of surviving witnesses of the riot dwindles, advocates continue pushing for recognition, but acknowledge momentum may be lost once no living survivors remain to testify
The document discusses who should pay compensation for past suffering - everyone or just those who caused it. It provides context about the 1921 Tulsa race riot where a violent conflict erupted between white and black residents in Tulsa, Oklahoma, destroying the prosperous black neighborhood of Greenwood and leaving hundreds dead. The riot began with the arrest of a black man accused of assaulting a white woman, and escalated with whites attacking and burning Greenwood, arresting black residents, and inflicting suffering on the black community with no reparations since provided for victims or their descendants.
This document discusses Berry Gordy and Motown Records. It explains that Berry Gordy founded Motown Records in Detroit in the 1960s and helped launch the careers of many popular African American artists such as The Supremes, The Temptations, and The Jackson 5. Motown Records had huge crossover success by making African American music popular with mainstream American audiences.
The document contains a series of questions about events in the story involving characters Kunta and Fiddler. It asks what the characters were doing at the start, whether Kunta looked surprised by something related to chains, why Fiddler was angry with Kunta, why Fiddler didn't go with Kunta, where Kunta slept, how Kunta was found, what Ames said he would make Kunta do and why, what Fiddler did when Kunta returned, and what Fiddler said to Kunta at the end. It concludes by asking if the character Kunta, who is now called Toby, should still be referred to as Kunta when teaching about the story.
The document contains information about the TV show Roots and slavery. It discusses Kunta's desire to run away after the last episode, asks students to analyze interactions between slaves on a plantation to understand their relationships, provides homework reminders to stay safe and out of trouble, defines terms like "jubilee" and "slave catcher", and assigns students to watch a Roots clip and respond to questions for class work.
The document discusses a lesson plan about the 1793 Yellow Fever epidemic in Philadelphia. It provides context about the disease and its impact, particularly on the African American community. Students will analyze primary sources from the time period, complete a diary entry, and answer comprehension questions to assess their understanding of how African Americans like Richard Allen helped treat victims at the request of Dr. Benjamin Rush despite great risks.
The document provides an overview of classroom activities and lessons for students reading the novel The Rains. It includes the objective to increase students' skills in making inferences from text, homework assigning students to write questions for the book's author, vocabulary lessons on the words "prevailed" and "disillusionment", class work of reading specific pages and answering comprehension questions, and an exit ticket question about a character named Reverend Catto.
The document discusses slavery in the United States around the time of the Constitution. It summarizes that while the Constitution allowed slavery, it is seen as a document that establishes freedom. It then examines the impact of the 3/5 compromise and the cotton gin on slavery. The 3/5 compromise gave slaveholding states more representation. The cotton gin dramatically increased cotton production and slavery expanded significantly in the South as a result.
The document contains a series of questions about events in the story involving characters Kunta and Fiddler. It asks what the characters were doing at the start, whether Kunta looked surprised by something related to chains, why Fiddler was angry with Kunta, why Fiddler didn't go with Kunta, where Kunta slept, who found Kunta and how, what Ames said he would make Kunta do and why, what Fiddler did when Kunta returned, and what Fiddler said to Kunta at the end. It concludes by asking if the character Kunta, who is now called Toby, should still be referred to as Kunta when teaching about the story.
This document contains information from a lesson on the film Roots, including the objectives, homework assignments, vocabulary terms, and discussion questions. The lesson will have students watch a clip from Roots about slave owners removing African culture from slaves, then answer comprehension questions. Students are asked to create a poster to advertise showing Roots after school for extra credit.
The document discusses updating a Facebook status upon arriving at school, with possible status updates including general greetings and reminders to stay safe. It also addresses using social media to discuss plantation culture, the privacy of online posts, and how future employers may view postings. Students are asked to watch a video clip and write a 140-character tweet about what they observed.
The document discusses how African Americans began claiming citizenship in the new United States. It mentions that both the British and Colonial armies offered freedom to slaves who would fight for them during the Revolutionary War. Students are assigned to read pages 119 to 132 answering questions about how African Americans began pursuing citizenship rights through military service.
Banneker's grandmother Molly Welsh was an English indentured servant who married one of her freed slaves in violation of Maryland law. At age 22, Banneker constructed an almost entirely wooden clock based on his own designs and calculations, which was unusual given he had only seen two timepieces before. In 1788 he nearly accurately predicted a solar eclipse and in 1791 assisted in surveying Washington D.C., proving Jefferson's views on racial inferiority wrong according to newspapers. In 1792 he published an almanac including his own calculated ephemeris and challenging Jefferson. On the day of his death in 1806, his house and all its contents, including his clock, burned down.
This document contains questions about slave marriages, citizenship for African Americans, wedding invitations for Anna Madgigine Jai, the term "jumping the broom", Benjamin Bannecker's almanac, misconceptions around slavery, interracial marriages between whites and slaves, different types of questions, Benjamin Banneker's importance, and what was unique about Anna Madgigine Jai.
Six graves containing the remains of slaves were discovered at the Kingsley Plantation in Jacksonville, Florida. The graves contained the bodies of a man around age 40, a woman over age 60, and three children. Square nails, buttons, and skeletal measurements indicated the remains were of Africans from the 19th century. Descendents cannot be identified due to lack of documentation. Johnetta Cole, director of the National Museum of African Art, is a descendant of the Kingsley family and was emotional upon the discovery. Anna Madgigine Jai, Zephaniah Kingsley's wife, helped manage the plantation after being freed as a slave purchased in Senegal.
Banneker's grandmother Molly Welsh was an English indentured servant who married one of her freed slaves in violation of Maryland law. At age 22, Banneker constructed an almost entirely wooden clock based on his own designs and calculations, which was unusual given he had only seen two timepieces before. In 1788 he nearly accurately predicted a solar eclipse and in 1791 assisted in surveying Washington D.C., proving Jefferson's views on racial inferiority wrong according to newspapers. In 1792 he published an almanac including his own calculated ephemeris and challenging Jefferson's ideas, and died in 1806 when his house burned down on the day of his burial.
Uncle Blue was concerned that the name Octavius chosen by the Cattos for their newborn son would cause him trouble in the future. The document asks if parents should be careful about giving a child a "strange name" and considers Uncle Blue's view that the name Octavius may present difficulties for the child. It also provides context about the story being discussed from the novel "The Rains" and includes vocabulary and reading assignments.
This document contains a series of questions about events that occurred in chapters 107 to 119 of the novel "The Rains". The questions cover topics such as Ellen Craft getting a job and facing suspicion from white coworkers, an interfaith picnic where Ellen is noticed, William Still and Reverend Catto leaving the picnic, Ellen experiencing discrimination from a customer named Mr. Sloan, and events of a riot in Philadelphia where buildings were burned down and Reverend Catto thought of something while picking it up. The final question asks what the Philadelphia Gazette blamed for causing the riot.
Uncle Blue was concerned that the name Octavius chosen by the Cattos for their newborn son would cause him trouble in the future. The document asks if parents should be careful about giving a child a "strange name" and considers Uncle Blue's opinion on the potentially problematic name Octavius. Homework involves creating a birth announcement for Octavius Catto and the document provides context on the characters and events from the previous week's reading of the novel "The Rains."
This document discusses Ida B. Wells Barnett and the 1892 Memphis lynchings that she investigated and worked to publicize. It describes how three African American men who owned a successful grocery store were lynched after fighting back against a mob that attacked their store. Wells Barnett realized the lynchings were meant to intimidate African Americans, not punish crimes. She urged blacks to leave the South for their safety and worked with the NAACP to expose the practice of lynching across the country for decades to come. The document provides historical context about Wells Barnett and lynchings in Memphis up through the civil rights era.
1) Wess Young, now 94, fled with his family during the 1921 Tulsa race riot when he was 4 years old. The riot destroyed Tulsa's thriving black community of Greenwood, known as the "Negro Wall Street", leaving up to 300 dead and over 8,000 homeless according to an official state report.
2) Efforts over the past decade have brought greater awareness to the Tulsa race riot through educational initiatives and memorials. However, survivors' attempts to secure compensation through the legislature and courts have been unsuccessful.
3) As the number of surviving witnesses of the riot dwindles, advocates continue pushing for recognition, but acknowledge momentum may be lost once no living survivors remain to testify
The document discusses who should pay compensation for past suffering - everyone or just those who caused it. It provides context about the 1921 Tulsa race riot where a violent conflict erupted between white and black residents in Tulsa, Oklahoma, destroying the prosperous black neighborhood of Greenwood and leaving hundreds dead. The riot began with the arrest of a black man accused of assaulting a white woman, and escalated with whites attacking and burning Greenwood, arresting black residents, and inflicting suffering on the black community with no reparations since provided for victims or their descendants.
This document discusses Berry Gordy and Motown Records. It explains that Berry Gordy founded Motown Records in Detroit in the 1960s and helped launch the careers of many popular African American artists such as The Supremes, The Temptations, and The Jackson 5. Motown Records had huge crossover success by making African American music popular with mainstream American audiences.
The document contains a series of questions about events in the story involving characters Kunta and Fiddler. It asks what the characters were doing at the start, whether Kunta looked surprised by something related to chains, why Fiddler was angry with Kunta, why Fiddler didn't go with Kunta, where Kunta slept, how Kunta was found, what Ames said he would make Kunta do and why, what Fiddler did when Kunta returned, and what Fiddler said to Kunta at the end. It concludes by asking if the character Kunta, who is now called Toby, should still be referred to as Kunta when teaching about the story.
The document contains information about the TV show Roots and slavery. It discusses Kunta's desire to run away after the last episode, asks students to analyze interactions between slaves on a plantation to understand their relationships, provides homework reminders to stay safe and out of trouble, defines terms like "jubilee" and "slave catcher", and assigns students to watch a Roots clip and respond to questions for class work.
The document discusses a lesson plan about the 1793 Yellow Fever epidemic in Philadelphia. It provides context about the disease and its impact, particularly on the African American community. Students will analyze primary sources from the time period, complete a diary entry, and answer comprehension questions to assess their understanding of how African Americans like Richard Allen helped treat victims at the request of Dr. Benjamin Rush despite great risks.
The document provides an overview of classroom activities and lessons for students reading the novel The Rains. It includes the objective to increase students' skills in making inferences from text, homework assigning students to write questions for the book's author, vocabulary lessons on the words "prevailed" and "disillusionment", class work of reading specific pages and answering comprehension questions, and an exit ticket question about a character named Reverend Catto.
The document discusses slavery in the United States around the time of the Constitution. It summarizes that while the Constitution allowed slavery, it is seen as a document that establishes freedom. It then examines the impact of the 3/5 compromise and the cotton gin on slavery. The 3/5 compromise gave slaveholding states more representation. The cotton gin dramatically increased cotton production and slavery expanded significantly in the South as a result.
The document contains a series of questions about events in the story involving characters Kunta and Fiddler. It asks what the characters were doing at the start, whether Kunta looked surprised by something related to chains, why Fiddler was angry with Kunta, why Fiddler didn't go with Kunta, where Kunta slept, who found Kunta and how, what Ames said he would make Kunta do and why, what Fiddler did when Kunta returned, and what Fiddler said to Kunta at the end. It concludes by asking if the character Kunta, who is now called Toby, should still be referred to as Kunta when teaching about the story.
This document contains information from a lesson on the film Roots, including the objectives, homework assignments, vocabulary terms, and discussion questions. The lesson will have students watch a clip from Roots about slave owners removing African culture from slaves, then answer comprehension questions. Students are asked to create a poster to advertise showing Roots after school for extra credit.
The document discusses updating a Facebook status upon arriving at school, with possible status updates including general greetings and reminders to stay safe. It also addresses using social media to discuss plantation culture, the privacy of online posts, and how future employers may view postings. Students are asked to watch a video clip and write a 140-character tweet about what they observed.
The document discusses how African Americans began claiming citizenship in the new United States. It mentions that both the British and Colonial armies offered freedom to slaves who would fight for them during the Revolutionary War. Students are assigned to read pages 119 to 132 answering questions about how African Americans began pursuing citizenship rights through military service.
Banneker's grandmother Molly Welsh was an English indentured servant who married one of her freed slaves in violation of Maryland law. At age 22, Banneker constructed an almost entirely wooden clock based on his own designs and calculations, which was unusual given he had only seen two timepieces before. In 1788 he nearly accurately predicted a solar eclipse and in 1791 assisted in surveying Washington D.C., proving Jefferson's views on racial inferiority wrong according to newspapers. In 1792 he published an almanac including his own calculated ephemeris and challenging Jefferson. On the day of his death in 1806, his house and all its contents, including his clock, burned down.
This document contains questions about slave marriages, citizenship for African Americans, wedding invitations for Anna Madgigine Jai, the term "jumping the broom", Benjamin Bannecker's almanac, misconceptions around slavery, interracial marriages between whites and slaves, different types of questions, Benjamin Banneker's importance, and what was unique about Anna Madgigine Jai.
Six graves containing the remains of slaves were discovered at the Kingsley Plantation in Jacksonville, Florida. The graves contained the bodies of a man around age 40, a woman over age 60, and three children. Square nails, buttons, and skeletal measurements indicated the remains were of Africans from the 19th century. Descendents cannot be identified due to lack of documentation. Johnetta Cole, director of the National Museum of African Art, is a descendant of the Kingsley family and was emotional upon the discovery. Anna Madgigine Jai, Zephaniah Kingsley's wife, helped manage the plantation after being freed as a slave purchased in Senegal.
Banneker's grandmother Molly Welsh was an English indentured servant who married one of her freed slaves in violation of Maryland law. At age 22, Banneker constructed an almost entirely wooden clock based on his own designs and calculations, which was unusual given he had only seen two timepieces before. In 1788 he nearly accurately predicted a solar eclipse and in 1791 assisted in surveying Washington D.C., proving Jefferson's views on racial inferiority wrong according to newspapers. In 1792 he published an almanac including his own calculated ephemeris and challenging Jefferson's ideas, and died in 1806 when his house burned down on the day of his burial.
Uncle Blue was concerned that the name Octavius chosen by the Cattos for their newborn son would cause him trouble in the future. The document asks if parents should be careful about giving a child a "strange name" and considers Uncle Blue's view that the name Octavius may present difficulties for the child. It also provides context about the story being discussed from the novel "The Rains" and includes vocabulary and reading assignments.
This document contains a series of questions about events that occurred in chapters 107 to 119 of the novel "The Rains". The questions cover topics such as Ellen Craft getting a job and facing suspicion from white coworkers, an interfaith picnic where Ellen is noticed, William Still and Reverend Catto leaving the picnic, Ellen experiencing discrimination from a customer named Mr. Sloan, and events of a riot in Philadelphia where buildings were burned down and Reverend Catto thought of something while picking it up. The final question asks what the Philadelphia Gazette blamed for causing the riot.
Uncle Blue was concerned that the name Octavius chosen by the Cattos for their newborn son would cause him trouble in the future. The document asks if parents should be careful about giving a child a "strange name" and considers Uncle Blue's opinion on the potentially problematic name Octavius. Homework involves creating a birth announcement for Octavius Catto and the document provides context on the characters and events from the previous week's reading of the novel "The Rains."