...Alternative to physician practices by providing convenient and personalized ambulatory health care services Strategy: Differentiation Tactic: Preventive health care, minor-emergency care, referral for acute and chronic health care problems, specialized employer services, primary health care services, basic X-ray and laboratory tests. Objective: Service convenience Strategy: Direct channel strategy Tactic: PHC: Open 260 days a year (Mon-Fri, 8 AM- 5 PM). Located in Objective: To become self-supporting three years after opening Strategy: Price Skimming Tactic: Average: $67.90: Personal illness/exam: $50, Workers’ compensation exam/treatment: $78, Employment/insurance physical examination: $94, The Pate Health Clinic created a 12-month budget during construction in fall of 1998. They had a total annual budget of $510,048. It would cost $137,280 to pay the physicians (260 days, 8hr/day at $66/hr). The lease would cost $76,500. Supplies and utilities would cost $46,894 and $6,630 respectively. Amortization would cost $30,648 and personnel (nurse, director, lab assistant, X-ray technician and receptionist) would cost $168,376. Financial Performance from May 1999-March 2000 PHC had a total of $236,970 in gross revenue and $185,224 in total contribution. PHC has made 105 referrals to PMH and produced slightly over $378,000 in revenue and $30,000 in profit. PHC had a total of $51,746 in variable...
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...Memorializing events from history are based on different criteria that come for the specific event. In some cases a memorial can pay tribute to a great achievement. Others are show respect for a tragedy that can never be changed. While these are good reasons to provide a memorial there are other things needed to be considered in order to be worthy of a memorial. Without certain criteria every signal failure and success to ever happen would be memorialized. With history being as eventful as it was I believe that understanding what deserves to be remembered is an important thing. The three factors that should considered when creating a memorial are the number of lives impacted, the purpose of this moment in time, and the ability for this memorial to bring healing to the people who need it. The first piece of criteria to consider is the number of lives impacted by the moment. In order to memorialize a moment in time it needs to have a lasting impact on people. Whether this impact has to do with people finding new land to colonize or burying the dead the lost in a tragedy. According to Source D, Savannah Memorial Park holds more than 3,000 graves dated back to as early as 1847. Kosareff states, "The pioneers from the Santa Fe Trail would bring their dead along with them, preserved somehow, and buried them here." Due to the fact the...
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...Facebook Alive or Dead Nichole M. Osborne Bis/221 2/16/15 Jamie Telesca MEMO Dear CEO, I have completed my research on the Facebook memorialization of its deceased members as you requested. I based my research on an article I found about Facebook memorializing deceased members by having the members set up an executive for their Facebook account in the event something happens to them. Below you will find my summary of what I read within my research. Facebook is starting to allow members to name someone as their executive if they were to die. Not only will members have what is usually in their will’s but now we have the option to have someone take responsibility of our social media accounts. Is this Ethical? Im sure we all will have many questions on this matter like these below. * If I die, and I want to be immortalized forever in Facebook glory, do I count toward the membership numbers? Does Facebook make advertising money on me forever? * Will Facebook run ads for tombstones, caskets, and flowers on my page when I die? * Can I set it up so certain "likes" disappear when I die? I mean, it was one thing when I "liked" Justin Bieber when I was alive. But do I really want people judging me when I'm dead? * What happens if my executor dies, too? Can he or she pass it on? Can I have 10 generations of my family running my Facebook page for me, so I can make sure everyone remembers two hundred years from now that I once watched How I Met Your Mother...
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...“Once you crossed the gate to the Camp , There was no chance to get out of there alive”.- Chaim Hirszman.Memorials and monuments show, in part, the ways that communities and people have answered these questions. The gallery of images below exhibits a variety of memorials and monuments that have been constructed to remember the Holocaust. The introduction that follows explores the complex questions that memorials raise about how we choose to remember history. Memorials raise complex questions about which history we choose to remember. Some people distinguish between the two, saying that memorials are a response to loss and death and that monuments are more commemorative and celebratory . “Thou shalt not be a victim, thou shalt not be a perpetrator,...
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...Monuments are all around the world, and are made for a certain reason. They can represent things, or they can just show the culture and history of that place. They all stand for something significant like independence, a war, a great accomplishment, and much more. When you look at a monument, you begin to think of the situation that took place during that time. They are a symbol to that country, state, town or region and it is something big that went down in history. The Statue of Liberty is the upper New York Bay, on Ellis Island, and is a symbol of freedom. The Statue of Liberty is a monument that was a gift from France. It was given to America in 1886 to celebrate the friendship between them during the Revolutionary War. The statue stands 305 feet tall including its pedestal, but the torch is 29 feet tall from the bottom of the handle to the flame tip. In the statue’s left hand she holds the Declaration of Independence, and in the right lie’s a torch. The seven spikes on the crown represent the seven oceans and continents. History Edouard de Laboulaye is the “Father of the Statue of Liberty”, because he was the person who had the idea of making it. He was born on January 18, 1811 in Paris, France. Laboulaye was a leading expert on the U.S. Constitution, and a supporter of Abraham Lincoln. He got the idea of making the statue after the Union won the war. The statue of Liberty was made in 1865 as a symbol of freedom. The original architect to design a support structure for...
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...Monuments are a symbol of a considerable time in history. They represent life, death, success, and struggle. They transport the past lively to new generations, and good or bad memories to those who were present in that. Many people feel a well-built sense of loyalty and patriotism when they view a monument. Also, those monuments help bring out those feelings of nationalism. Millions of people from all over the world go to the city where they are building just to appreciate them. Monuments make people reflex and think about an important event. Some of them are places where people go to spend time with their families and to experiments new experiences. One of those national monuments that are very famous in the United States is called Poverty Point, which is located in Louisiana. It was elected as a national historic landmark in 1962 and certified as a national monument in 1988. It occupies 1.4 square miles. Poverty Point is the biggest and most multifaceted Late Archaic (4000 to 2500 B.P.) fortification activity and traditional site located in North America. A town with 4,000 to 5,000 amounts of residents flourished at Poverty Point from about 1700 to 700 B.C.E. The site is subjugated by the enormous Poverty Point Mound A. First illustrious in the scientific literature in 1872; it was not in anticipation of the early 1950s, with airborne cinematography, that the six concentric mud ridges, became perceptible. These earthworks, in addition five other earthen mounds contain the Landmark...
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...Victoria Pompei Acts of terror during the Korea War Many visit the Washington Mall without ever having seen the Korea War memorial, which is indicative of how misunderstood the Korea War is, hence its other name : The Forgotten War. Overshadowed by the Lincoln monument just a few feet away, this memorial commemorates the American men who served during the war that took place between 1950 and 1953. Nineteen stainless steals statues stand in a triangle form, surrounded by bushes and on their right a wall representing the 38th parallel. These statues evoke feelings of sorrow and anguish unlike any other monuments on the Mall, but what it fails to do is recall the lives lost due to acts of terror committed by US troops during that time....
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...Source A shows that Gibraltar is interpreted as a fortress that became a little world of itself with 300 Jew and Genoese "the fortress became a little world of itself ... 300 Jews and Genoese "this was published by Drinkwater in 1785. The evidence that supports the statement that Gibraltar was a fortress is that there were sentries to prevent confusion and riot which means there was presence of military forces which showed that it was big enough to support military forces Source C supports Source A as it is interpreted as being a fortress in 1761 by colonel William Green , Royal engineers believed hat "Gibraltar was as tenable as any place in Europe. It was vulnerable from the sea, but as long Britannia ruled the waves, it was possible to make the Rock near impregnable as any fortress can be". This supports that interpretation of Gibraltar being a fortress. Source D supports source C as Governor Cornwallis said in 1768 "Gibraltar has its faults, but with them, as tenable as any place in Europe : where it is vulnerable is the sea .. Though it has often been said that Gibraltar is impregnable which no place is according to my notion, while you command the sea. the bay is extensive, our garrison small". However this also contradicts source C as it believes that Gibraltar is only interpreted as a small garrison. Source E supports Source D and C as in 1772 Major general Robert Boyd and colonel William Green supported by lieutenant Governor Edward Cornwallis remodelled Gibraltar's defences...
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...The 9/11 memorial consists of two enormous reflecting pools that sit in the very footprints of where the Twin Towers once stood. A cascade of water falls from each wall and into the pools in a continuous stream. The pools are surrounded by bronze panels that are inscribed with the names of the nearly three thousand people who died in the attacks of 2001 and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993. Each of these components highlight the gigantic void that resulted from the attack. That is, they symbolize devastating loss. Encompassing the memorial is the memorial plaza. The surface of the plaza is decorated by a forest of swamp white oak trees. One tree, however, is different. It is a callery pear tree, now known as the, “Survivor Tree”. This tree was at the site on September 11, 2001. It was discovered in a pile of debris, nursed back to health, and returned back to the site. This is meant to represent...
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...------------------------------------------------- Guidelines for writing a MemorialParticipation in the Telders International Law Moot Court Competition consists of an oral and a written part, the memorials. Through the years, many teams have lost vital points on editorial technicalities in their memorials even though these memorials were of a very high legal quality. Considering the fact that the memorials make up 50% of the total score, a proper presentation of the written arguments, in conformity with the Rules of Procedure, is vital in a competition that is getting more competitive each year. Why such an emphasize on presentation? Is the legal reasoning not the most important issue in this competition? Certainly so, but every participant should realize that also in legal practice, solidly and neatly presented legal documents are a "must". A well-written submission, a logically built-up argument is easier for a judge to understand. He or she is more likely to pick up counsel's line of argument and, hopefully, its submission. Uniformly used editing rules make it easier for a judge to find the documents, referred to in the Memorials and it will be easier for him or her to read through the document in general. A well written and neatly and uniformly presented document will show the judge that effort is being put into the case. Combine that with excellent legal arguments and most judges will at least be willing to listen to your case with an open mind.Clarity and consistency...
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...According to Merriam-Webster, a national monument is a place (such as an old building or an area of land) that is owned and protected by a national government because of its natural beauty or its importance to history or science. National monuments are often times seen as a symbol of a significant period of time that represents life, death, and everything in between. National monuments also inspire feelings of patriotism and strength; showing the beautiful and the once ugly history of the United States. The United States currently has 122 protected sites called national monuments. Each year, the history and beauty of these locations attracts millions of people nationwide. Each and every one of these monuments holds an important role: to tell a story about the United States of America. One of the most important national monuments in the United States is located in Charleston, South Carolina and is called Fort Sumter. Fort Sumter is known to be a very important factor of the Civil War. Not only was Fort Sumter where the first shots of the Civil War were fired, but it was also the turning point to a war that would change the course of history. The fort was named after a Revolutionary War hero, Thomas Sumter. Built as a symbol of independence in 1860, Fort Sumter stood at a towering 300 feet by 400 feet in Charleston Harbor. Originally, the fort was under the command of union troops until General P.G.T. Beauregard and the confederates bombarded the fort on April 12th and 13th,...
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...There are a lot of memorials, monuments and markers across the United States. Their very existence serves the purpose of honoring the memory of an event, a person or a span of history. The significance of the landscape can be expressed in admonishing or admiring terms. In either case, these landmarks manage to garner both the local and the world’s attention. Such important monuments and memorials abound in the U.S. As 9/11 Memorial, Lincoln Memorial, Liberty Memorial, Mount Rushmore, Korean War Veterans Memorial, and Washington Monument, among a myriad of others. This paper attempts to make a rhetorical analysis of one of the most important monuments in America, Washington Monument, in order to find out the relevance of this great monument conveys to its audience and how it...
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...My first argument is that monuments can never be neutral, they always mean or represent something. The word monument itself derives from the Latin word monere, meaning to remind and instruct. In terms of the Confederate monuments, they are making a political statement about the Confederacy in Civil War. Even though it was the side that lost, the ideologies that the Confederacy stood for have been carried through into modern day southern America, and this has been represented in the monuments that honour the dead Confederate soldiers and leaders. This means that the public space they are in is no longer public, it is claimed by the belief or viewpoint that the monument represents. To be public means to concern the people as a whole, to be seen as something “inclusive of everyone, where interaction between people is spontaneous and non-political” (Warf, 2006). As monuments are always part of a political agenda it is impossible for them to be inclusive of everyone as, whatever the belief may be, there will always be someone that disagrees with it, “just as ones ‘terrorist’ is often another’s ‘freedom fighter’” (Levinson, 1998). It therefore means that the space that the monuments are in is no longer representative of what the entire community believes; the landscape has been claimed by a political ideology. By not being inclusive of the whole community, the people who believe in what the monument represents have claimed that space in the landscape through the physical representation...
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...that the builders had to take many things into consideration. People who built the monuments had to take many things into consideration when building a monument, like the size and place. If people take the location, size, and funding into consideration they will be able to build a long lasting monument. The first reason why it is important to memorialize people is because they have to take multiple things into consideration when they are building it. One thing that the people have to take into consideration when building the monument is how are they going to get the materials they need. This is important because if the people do not have the materials that they need they may not be able to make the monument. In an article named Making the Memorial they stated, “I imagined taking a knife and cutting into the earth, opening it up, an initial violence and pain that in time would heal. The grass would grow back, but the initial cut would remain a pure flat surface in the earth with a polished, mirrored surface, much like the surface on a geode when you cut it and polish the edge.” Source G (Lin) By them wanting to cut into the earth it can make people think that they do not have the materials to do this to the land, but what they do not know is that the materials can be used to memorialize the people who are important. The Second reason why it is important to memorialize people is because the people who are making the monument have to take many things into consideration. For example...
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...Remembrance is “something that serves to bring to mind or keep in mind some place, person, event, etc.” We have many days specified to one special event that we take the time to remember and celebrate once every year. It is important to have these special days to make sure that events that have happened in the past live on to not be forgotten. It`s important that we recognize hero`s, and what they have done for our country. Along with the fallen that have gave their lives for us today. There are many events in history that get over looked and not recognized how they should be, lots of events have been forgotten because we don’t specify a day for us all to give thanks and remember. As well as December 6, 1917, when a tragic event occurred in...
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