...the area they could be indeed, be presented as negligent by a court. The owners of O & D Campground may be held liable on court for the injuries sustained by the plaintiff on their premises. FACTS During her summer vacation, Shayla Smith, a 10 year old girl went camping with Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle to the O & D Campground. The premises are owned by Owen and Dolly Jones. According to Mary Smith, the mother of Shayla, her daughter went out swimming with the Tuttle’s daughter with neither one’s permission on the day on the incident. The two children arrived to pool area 30 minutes before the posted sign time which is 10:00 AM. While the two children were in the pool there was an absolutely lack of supervision as there was not any witnesses on the scene. Following this, Shayla dove in the shallow pool and broke her arm. Mrs. Smith claims that there was not warning signs preventing...
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...8/30/2014 McDonald's Faces 'Millennial' Challenge - WSJ Dow Jones Reprints: This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool at the bottom of any article or visit www.djreprints.com See a sample reprint in PDF format. Order a reprint of this article now BUSINESS McDonald's Faces 'Millennial' Challenge Customers in Their 20s and 30s Are Defecting to Fast-Casual Restaurants Like Chipotle, Five Guys By JULIE JARGON Aug. 24, 2014 9:05 p.m. ET McDonald's is trying to enhance its credibility with young customers by marketing more on digital channels and testing mobile ordering and payment. Associated Press Behind McDonald's Corp.'s worst slump in a decade is a trend that may augur even tougher times ahead: The Golden Arches is losing its luster with younger consumers. The world's largest restaurant company by revenue earlier this month reported its sharpest monthly decline in global same-store sales since early 2003, adjusted for calendar irregularities. In the U.S., with more than 40% of McDonald's 35,000-plus global locations, sales at restaurants open at least 13 months have been flat or falling for most of the past year. The hamburger giant on Friday announced it was replacing the head of its U.S. division for the second time in less than two years. The company tapped a former executive, Mike Andres, to take the helm...
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...When I was twenty years old, I became a kind of apprentice to a man named Andrew Lytle, whom pretty much no one apart from his negligibly less ancient sister, Polly, had addressed except as Mister Lytle in at least a decade. She called him Brother. Or Brutha—I don’t suppose either of them had ever voiced a terminal r. It was maybe an hour before midnight at the Avalon Nightclub in Chapel Hill, and the Miz was feeling nervous. I didn’t pick up on this at the time—I mean, I couldn’t tell. To me he looked like he’s always looked, like he’s looked since his debut season, back when I first fell in love with his antics: all bright-eyed and symmetrical-faced, fed on genetically modified corn, with the swollen, hairless torso of the aspiring professional wrestler he happened to be and a smile you could spot as Midwestern American in a blimp shot of a soccer stadium. Late in 1998 or early in ’99—during the winter that straddled the two—I spent a night on and off the telephone with a person named John Fahey. The first moves with the courteous lento of one of Peter Taylor’s stories; the last has the directness of something by Raymond Carver; the second, more placeless and more contemporary, could be by lots of writers—Jennifer Egan, or maybe Sam Lipsyte. Actually, all are the opening sentences of essays by John Jeremiah Sullivan, from his second book, “Pulphead” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; $16). It is obvious enough that they are by a talented storyteller, who has learned from fiction (as...
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...was admitted to the Roxbury church as member #12, which would be at or soon after the 1632 organization of the church. Only freemen could be members of the church, and only church leaders could be leaders in the local government. 1633 Jehue Burre served on a committee with William Pynchon, the Colony Treasurer, to over-see building a bridge over Muddy & Stony river, between Boston & Roxbury. 1636 July – 11 Native Americans in the village of Agawam agreed to sell land on both sides of the Connecticut River to Mr. William Pynchon and his group of planters (Jehue Burre included) in exchange for 18 fathoms of wampum (a fathom = 6 feet), 18 coats, 18 hatchets, and 18 knives. Each of the 8 original planters received a 10 acre house The Peter Burr House - Timeline - Historic Events http://www.relivinghistoryinc.org/Timeline---Historic-Events.html 2 of 49 2/23/2012 6:40 PM lot on the east side of the river plus a 3 acre planting lot on the Agawam (west) side of the river. In order to reach his planting land, each man had to cross the 300 yards wide river by canoe....
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...caravan!” she said. “And oh, what a pity he can’t come with us after all!” “Yes - after all our plans!” said Roger. “Still, it’s a jolly good thing Mummy didn’t back out, when she heard Dad had to go off to America - I was awfully afraid she would! My heart went into my boots, I can tell you.” “Same here,” said Diana, stacking the books neatly on a shelf in the caravan. “Have we got our bird-book - we’ll see plenty of birds on our travels, and that’s my holiday task - writing an essay on ‘Birds I have seen’.” “Well, don’t forget to take the field-glasses then,” said Roger. “They’re hanging in the hall. I say - what did you think about Mummy asking Miss Pepper to come with us, now that Daddy can’t manage?” Miss Pepper was a very old friend of their mother’s. The children were fond of her - but Roger felt rather doubtful about having her on a caravan holiday with them. “You see - she’s all right in a house,” he said to Diana. “But in a small caravan, with hardly any room - won’t she get fussed? We shall be so much on top of one another.” “Oh well - Mummy must have someone to take turns at driving the car that pulls the caravan,” said Diana. “And she’ll be company for Mummy, too. She’s quite good fun - if only she won’t keep making us be tidy, and wash our hands and knees a dozen times a day,...
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...stands on the high wheat plains of western Kansas, a lonesome area that other Kansans call "out there." Some seventy miles east of the Colorado border, the countryside, with its hard blue skies and desert-clear air, has an atmosphere that is rather more Far West than Middle West. The local accent is barbed with a prairie twang, a ranch-hand nasalness, and the men, many of them, wear narrow frontier trousers, Stetsons, and high-heeled boots with pointed toes. The land is flat, and the views are awesomely extensive; horses, herds of cattle, a white cluster of grain elevators rising as gracefully as Greek temples are visible long before a traveler reaches them. Holcomb, too, can be seen from great distances. Not that there's much to see - simply an aimless congregation of buildings divided in the center by the main-line tracks of the Santa Fe Rail-road, a haphazard hamlet bounded on the south by a brown stretch of the Arkansas (pronounced "Ar-kan-sas") River, on the north by a highway, Route 50, and on the east and west by prairie lands and wheat fields. After rain, or when snowfalls thaw, the streets, unnamed, unshaded, unpaved, turn from the thickest dust into the direst mud. At one end of the town stands a stark old stucco structure, the roof of which supports an electric sign - dance - but the dancing has ceased and the...
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...Reagan aided in ending the Cold War through his foreign affairs. “The Reagan Administration used their military prowess to instill fear into all communist threats worldwide.” (“How Ronald Reagan Changed the World”). Reagan worked to stop communism not appease the Soviets as Nixon and Carter had done. He sent troops to stop a communist coup in Grenada and ordered an airstrike on Libya in response to a terrorist attack in Berlin. These attacks were meant to show the Soviets that America was not afraid to use military force. “ ...Reagan… set the price tag at $220 billion—the largest peacetime military budget in history.” (Lou Cannon, “Ronald Reagan: Foreign Affairs”). Reagan believed that the Soviets would use their military to pressure the West, so he built up the nation’s military to counter the Soviets. The...
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...Argument Essay By Joseph Peterson Ivy Tech Community College Argument Essay Guns or no guns? That seems to be a big question these days. A lot of the reason behind the discussion is mass shootings that occur so often now days. Other forms of violence with guns happen, but the most controversy over guns usually occurs after a mass shooting. The reason for that is that mass shootings tend to be more mindless and more innocent people are hurt or killed in mass shootings. The thought of what if I or one of my families was in one of these mass shootings always hit home afterwards, and so we think of ways to prevent them from happening again. I have a question though is guns really the issue or is it really another issue? I think that the anti-gun activists use every shooting as just another door to support their views against guns. I can see why they do since guns are used to the shootings, but taking away a normal citizens right to own a gun and defend themselves against crimes is not smart. These shootings are not done by normal citizens and could still occur even if they took away guns from the normal citizens who just want protection. Police are not always there when you need them and sometimes you need to protect yourself first as we can see from different crimes that take place today. What would stop a mass shooter from buying guns illegally? Do they not think that they could? Drugs are illegal but still sold and used everywhere every minute. One argument...
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...15/10/2015 Airbus and Boeing Duke It Out To Win Lucrative Iberia Deal WSJ This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. To order presentationready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visit http://www.djreprints.com. http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1047243854826319840 ĿĚǺĐĚŘ (Ų.Ș.) ňįẄ ǿŤ ťųǾ ťİ ěķųĐ ģňįěǿB đňǻ șųbřįǺ ŀǻěĐ ǻįřěbİ ěvįťǻřčųĿ Bỳ ĐǺŇİĚĿ MİČĦǺĚĿȘ Șțǻff Řěpǿřțěř ǿf Țħě Ẅǻŀŀ Șțřěěț Jǿųřňǻŀ Ųpđǻțěđ Mǻřčħ 10, 2003 12:01 ǻ.m. ĚȚ MǺĐŘİĐ -- Ǿňě đǻỳ ŀǻșț Ǻpřįŀ, țẅǿ mǿđěŀ ǻįřpŀǻňěș ŀǻňđěđ įň țħě ǿffįčěș ǿf İběřįǻ Ǻįřŀįňěș. Țħěỳ ẅěřěň'ț țǿỳș. Țħě Șpǻňįșħ čǻřřįěř ẅǻș șħǿppįňģ fǿř ňěẅ jěțŀįňěřș, ǻňđ țħě mǿđěŀș ẅěřě čǻŀŀįňģ čǻřđș fřǿm Bǿěįňģ Čǿ. ǻňđ Ǻįřbųș, țħě ẅǿřŀđ'ș ǿňŀỳ țẅǿ přǿđųčěřș ǿf bįģ čǿmměřčįǻŀ ǻįřčřǻfț. İț ẅǻș țħě fįřșț ěňčǿųňțěř įň ẅħǻț ẅǿųŀđ běčǿmě ǻ mǿňțħș-ŀǿňģ đǿģfįģħț běțẅěěň țħě țẅǿ ǻvįǻțįǿň țįțǻňș -- ǻňđ İběřįǻ ẅǻș pŀǻňňįňģ țǿ čŀěǻň ųp. Ǻįřbųș ǻňđ Bǿěįňģ mǻỳ ǿẅň țħě jěțŀįňěř mǻřķěț, ẅįțħ įțș přǿjěčțěđ șǻŀěș ǿf mǿřě țħǻň $1 țřįŀŀįǿň įň țħě ňěxț 20 ỳěǻřș, bųț řįģħț ňǿẅ țħěỳ đǿň'ț čǿňțřǿŀ įț. Țħě čřįșįș įň țħě ǻįřțřǻvěŀ įňđųșțřỳ mǻķěș țħě țẅǿ mǻňųfǻčțųřěřș đěșpěřǻțě țǿ ňǻįŀ đǿẅň ǿřđěřș. Șǿ țħěỳ ħǻvě ģřǿẅň įňčřěǻșįňģŀỳ đěpěňđěňț ǿň ǻįřŀįňěș, ěňģįňě șųppŀįěřș ǻňđ ǻįřčřǻfț fįňǻňčįěřș fǿř čǿňvǿŀųțěđ đěǻŀș. Ǿňčě țħě ųňđěřđǿģ, Ǻįřbųș ħǻș čŀǿșěđ țħě ģǻp fřǿm jųșț fǿųř ỳěǻřș ǻģǿ -- ẅħěň Bǿěįňģ bųįŀț 620 pŀǻňěș țǿ Ǻįřbųș'ș 294 -- ǻňđ țħįș ỳěǻř țħě Ěųřǿpěǻň pŀǻňě mǻķěř ěxpěčțș țǿ ǿvěřțǻķě įțș Ų.Ș. řįvǻŀ...
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...Retrieved from: http://www.cifas.us/smith/books.html Title: The Ras Tafari Movement in Kingston, Jamaica Author(s): M.G. Smith (With R. Augier and R. M. Nettleford). Published by: Institute of Social and Economic Research, University College of the West Indies, 1960. 54p. Reprinted in: Reprinted in 1968, and in Caribbean Quarterly, vol. 13, no. 3, (September 1967), pp. 3-29; and vol. 13, no. 4 (December 1967), pp. 3-14. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF THE WEST INDIES THE RAS TAFARI MOVEMENT IN KINGSTON, JAMAICA. By M. G. Smith Roy Au/;ier Rex Nettleford INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1960 CONTENTS Foreword Chapter I II III Introduction History of the Movement Recent Developments 7 8 15 IV The Doctrines of the Movement V The Movement's Current Organisation VI VII What Ras Tafari Brethren Want Summary of Recommendations 22 28 33 38 Appendices I II Letter: Land Grant Letters: Ethiopian Orthodox Church 39 41 43 III Niyabingi Men IV The Creed of a Ras Tafari Man 48 20th July, 1960. My dear Premier, At the request of some prominent members of the Ras Tafari brethren, three members of the U.C.W.I. staff, Roy Augier, Rex Nettleford, and M. G. Smith, spent every day of two weeks with Ras Tafari brethren, making a survey of the movement, its organisation and its aspirations. They have produced a report, which I enclose herewith. The team has made a number of recommendations, which require urgent consideration. The movement...
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...Jazz History Mrs. Lester 10 February 2014 "King of the Clarinet" Artie Shaw was a bandleader, clarinetist, composer, and writer. He was born Arthur Jacob Arshawsky on May 23, 1910, in New York, New York. Sometimes referred to as the King of the Clarinet, Artie Shaw was one of the leading jazz performers and bandleaders of the swing era of the 1930s and 1940s. Born on New York’s Lower East Side, he was the only child of Jewish immigrants from Russia and Austria. The family eventually moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where Shaw spent many of his formative years. A shy child, he was deeply hurt by the anti-Semitic taunts from his schoolmates. Shaw was further wounded when his father abandoned the family. While he learned the ukulele early on, Shaw first started getting serious about playing music when he took up the saxophone. He later moved on to the clarinet. Around the age of 15, he quit school to learn to become a better musician. Shaw listened to such jazz greats as Bix Beiderbecke and Louis Armstrong in an effort to improve his own playing. Moving to Cleveland, he eventually found work with Austin Wylie, a well-known bandleader. In addition to his music, Shaw was an avid reader and maintained literary aspirations. In 1927 Artie heard several "race" records, the kind then being made solely for distribution in black (or "colored," as they were then known) districts. After listening entranced to Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five playing Savoy Blues, West End Blues, and...
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...The Missouri Mormon War of 1838 was one of the saddest in Missouri history; it was a period or confrontation and violence. The Mormon War of 1838 between Latter Day Saints and their anti-Mormon Missouri neighbors lasted from August 8, 1838 until November 1, 1938. Although a short war, it affected more than ten thousand Mormons in Missouri. The war or some call it a conflict, may have lasted only four months but skirmishes continued to break out between Mormons and anti-Mormons for several years. As I researched books and articles for my paper, I found blame for this war could be placed on either side depending on the author’s opinion. Most of the research indicated this war was a matter of fear, fortitude, power, and politics on both sides. In my opinion we cannot in good conscience say one side or the other started the war. It may not be clear who actually started the war but, the anti-Mormons appeared to have a political reason to get the Mormons out of Missouri. I did find several reasons for the war and it appeared the anti-Mormons had the most to gain. One such reason I found was Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Smith believed and reveled to the Latter Day Saints the second coming of Christ would happen near the town of Independence, Missouri. It wasn’t long after Mormons from across the country descended on Jackson County. Causing a rapid growth of Mormon settlements in this area, they came to build up what they...
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...PART II PRODUCERS, CONSUMERS, AND COMPETITIVE MARKETS CHAPTER 3 CONSUMER BEHAVIOR ------------------------------------------------- QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW 1. What are the four basic assumptions about individual preferences? Explain the significance or meaning of each. (1) Preferences are complete: this means that the consumer is able to compare and rank all possible baskets; (2) Preferences are transitive: this means that preferences are consistent, in that if bundle A is preferred to bundle B and bundle B is preferred to bundle C, then we should be able to conclude that bundle A is preferred to bundle C; (3) More is preferred to less: this means that all goods are desirable, and that the consumer will always prefer to have more of a good; (4) Diminishing marginal rate of substitution: this means that indifference curves are convex, and that the slope of the indifference curve increases (becomes less negative) as we move down along the curve. As a consumer moves down along her indifference curve she is willing to give up fewer units of the good on the vertical axis in exchange for one more unit of the good on the horizontal axis. This assumption also means that balanced market baskets are preferred to baskets that have a lot of one good and very little of the other good. 2. Can a set of indifference curves be upward sloping? If so, what would this tell you about the two goods? A set of indifference curves can be upward sloping if we violate assumption...
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...Introduction In the current days, the characteristics and needs of the patients in Australia and the rest of the world keep changing. The hospitals have been receiving an increased number of patients with different ailments and sometimes they get more ill during their stay in the health facility. The warning sighs always show on a patient before the adverse events such as unexpected deaths, admission to the ICUs or even cardiac arrests. It has been noted that, these warning signs are sometimes not identified, hence not acted upon (Adam, Odell, & Welch, 2010). This study is meant to discuss the case of Mrs. Jones, a 72 year old lady who has been admitted in the ward with increasing confusion and decreasing mobility. Her recent history suggests that she has had Urinary Tract Infection, and she usually has a GCS of 15. Her normal blood pressure always ranges from 140 to 150. During the primary assessment, it is noted that she is not in danger and she opens her eyes when her name is called. She is able to talk and her airway is patent. Her accessory muscle use is increases; her RR is at 22 and SP02 is at 95% on room air. She is also pale and diaphoretic. Her pulses are weak and thread y with the heart rate of 120 and blood pressure of 95/50, GCS at 13/15, temp at 38.5, BGL at 13.2mmol/L and pain in the lower abdomen. Nurses role in recognizing and responding to clinical deterioration The nurses also have a role of ensuring that the medication that a specific patient...
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...UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST OF SCOTLAND NURSE PRESCRIBING V150 CASE STUDY COURSE: NURS09125 BANNER NUMBER: B00113677 DATE OF SUBMISSION 13/12/10 COURSE LEADER FRANCES DOWNER WORD COUNT: 3745 CONTENTS PAGE 1. INTRODUCTION & GENERAL OVERVIEW, Pgs3-4. 2. ASSESSMENT PROCESS, Pgs 5-8 3. TREATMENT OPTIONS, Pgs 9-12. 4. EVALUATION, Pgs 13-16 5. CONCLUSION. Pg 17 6. COPY OF PRESCRIPTION, Pg 18 7. REFERENCE SECTION, Pgs 19-23 8. BIBLIOGRAPHY, Pg 24. INTRODUCTION In the following case study, the author will discuss the issues surrounding a seventy-year-old female with a chronic neuropathic ulcer on the sole of her right foot and the rationale and implications of prescribing in the community setting. The author a (trainee nurse prescriber) will display the need for a robust assessment, exploring all areas of health and well-being in order to achieve a safe outcome. The author will further follow current guidelines and be mentored by a senior nurse prescriber throughout the process. The aim of the case study is to display the implications involved in issuing a nurse prescription if deemed appropriate. With regard to writing a prescription as a qualified practioner, the author will adhere to the guidance within the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC 2006a) standards for safe prescribing. To protect this patient’s identity and maintain confidentiality, she will be referred to as Mrs X throughout the case...
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