...in-game settings - Visibility of aim-circles optimized - Crosshair colors optimized - Version of Artillery crosshair with shell travel time removed - XVM v3.5.0 included with config matching crosshair colors - Artillery and Tank Destroyer angle indicators moved to minimap (XVM) - Clock top left moved to config (XVM) - J1mB0’s logo added as player icon (XVM) 1.22 - World of Tanks v0.8.4 supported - Angle indicator added for Tank Destroyers 1.21 - World of Tanks v0.8.3 supported 1.20 - DebugPanel.swf reintroduced with clock - Font in FragCorrelation.swf fixed 1.19 - World of Tanks v0.8.2 supported - Clock removed - Angle indicator moved to FragCorrelation.swf 1.18 - World of Tanks v0.8.1 supported - Angle indicator for Artillery added - Clock added to DebugPanel 1.17 - World of Tanks v0.8.0 supported - Artillery aiming optimized - Angle indicator for Artillery removed 1.16 - World of Tanks v0.7.5 supported - My logo used as lag indicator - Center marker for Artillery angle indicator added - All sec changed to s 1.15 - World of Tanks v0.7.4 supported - Server side crosshairs removed - Performance optimized - Cassette indicators optimized - Angle indicator for Artillery added 1.14 - World of Tanks v0.7.3 supported - Distance indicators fixed - Design tweaked - Shell travel time added to crosshair_panel_strategic.swf - Max reload...
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...Nursing Sensitive Indicators The American Nurses Association established national initiatives called nursing-sensitive outcome indicators that focus plans/programs to increase quality and safety in patient care. They gauge aspects of direct patient care related to quality of nursing care by reflecting on structure, process and outcomes of nursing care. Structure in regard to staffing and the skill, education and certification of staff; process in regards to measuring aspects of nursing care related to assessment, intervention and RN job satisfaction, and outcomes by improving the rates of specifics in relation to patient outcomes such as in this particular case preventing hospital acquired pressure ulcers, improving patient satisfaction and restraint prevalence. Nursing Sensitive indicators are only specific to nursing and in 1998, ANA developed a National Data base of nursing quality indicators (NDNQI) so they could continue to collect and build on data from studies to expand nursing knowledge related to factors that influence the quality of nursing care. Why is this important? The nursing profession has the responsibility to measure, evaluate and continually improve practice. NDNQI identify where and how the staff is needed and show the need to increase staff in particular areas of nursing care that need improvement. The NDNQI mission is to help the RN in patient safety and quality improvements by providing research based national and comparative data on nursing care...
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...from starting a motor vehicle. Paul R. Marques et al. (1998) states further that The new NHTSA guidelines attempted to differ the preoccupation with accuracy and advocated to key features: a rolling retest and a data recorder. The rolling retest requires operators to retest periodically is or her BAC while the vehicle was running. This feature was included to circumvention such as getting someone else to blow into the interlock, allowing the vehicle to sit idling for long periods to avoid having to restart and retest or using stored air sample to blow into the sampling head of the interlock. Studies by Roth (2007) show that missing a rolling retest not to be a significant predictor of recidivism. The studies conclude the significant indicator was the initial BAC when the individual attempted to start the vehicle. “All variables (gender, age, and BAC>0.16), except test refusal (interpreted in the study as a missing a rolling retest) were significantly related to recidivism.” ( Roth page 348) Paul Marqus, Tippetts, and Voas (2002) in one of the few studies not supported by MADD states that, Two of the key touchstones of science are demonstrating an ability to (1) predict and (2) control human behavior, with out unreasonable restrictions on civil liberties, remains among the more difficult challenges for any scientific or technologically based contribution to social order. Evidence suggests interlock technology is an innovation that succeeds reasonable well in the control...
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...of their duties, approving leave ,conducting staff training and dealing with clients firsthand , caking phone calls making appointments, welcoming clients at reception and informing the stylists of their arrival. Purpose The purpose of their report is to determine whether sajini and Ihara will work successfully together, based on their personality, Interaction and learning styles. They will be working together on a daily basis and so must be compatible in terms of how they interact with one another and also how they plan to run the finance Scope Both Sajini and Ihara completed several personality inductors, It result of which will provides some suggestion as to weather they will be compatible the work environment. They following indicators will be used to ascertain such information . * ------------------------------------------------- Brain tlemisphere * ------------------------------------------------- Interaction styles * ------------------------------------------------- Learning styles * ------------------------------------------------- Personal...
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...Hospital Reimbursement – Differences Between Medicare and BWC The two tables below provide a summary of areas where the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (BWC) differs from Medicare for reimbursement of hospital inpatient and outpatient services. Use this document as supplemental material to support Ohio Administrative Code Rule 4123-6-37 Payment .1, of Hospital Inpatient Services, and Rule 4123-6-37 Payment of Hospital Outpatient Services, for the .2, effective dates specified at the beginning of each table. 4123-6-37.1 Payment of Hospital Inpatient Services Effective for Discharge Dates from Feb. 1, 2011, to Jan. 31, 2012 Area Payment adjustment factors Medicare 100 percent of the Medicare rate (Includes both the Medicare portion and the beneficiary portion) BWC • 120 percent of inpatient • • • prospective payment system (IPPS) rate for inliers (non-outlier bills). 180 percent of IPPS rate for outliers Additional 0.25 percent adjustment to restore Medicare’s market basket adjustment Additional 2.9 percent adjustment to restore Medicare’s documentation and coding adjustment Hospital acquired conditions (HACs) provision Reduces IPPS payments when hospitals meet the HAC criteria Excludes the HAC provision Direct graduate medical education per diem (DGME) Does not provide DGME per diem payments under IPPS Provides a per diem add-on payment for DGME for eligible providers Does not reduce IPPS payments Does not apply DGME per diem addon payments to outlier bills...
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...Timeline of Women’s Rights Starting in the late 1700’s states started to write legislation to remove the right of a women to vote. This first started with the State of New York with Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and New Jersey closing folling suiit. Then in 1848 women collected together in Seneca Falls, New York in what would be the first influential women’s rights convention completely organized by women in the western world. Topics discussed such as law and what role women played in modern society. One of the resutling factors of this convention was the Declaration of Sentiments that served as a foundation of the women’s suffarage movement. Such conventions happened on a regular bases, leading to annual events up until the start of the civil war. In the mid to late 1800’s Susan B. Anthony began her persuit of women’s rights by traveling across the country and lectured for the right for women’s vote. She also campainged for the end of slavery, for the right for women to own property and advocated for women’s labor organizations. On November 18, 1872, her sufferage efforts resulted in her arrest after she participated by voting in the presidential election on November 5, 1872. After her trial and conviction she was charged a $100 fine but never paid it, but continued in her determination in supporting women’s rights. It was fourty three years after Susan Anthonly’s arrest that Jeanette Rankin, a Montana Republican carried the distinction to be the first women elected...
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...first Women’s Rights Convention. With that simple preparation, on the morning of July 19, the roads to the church were jammed with carriages and carts. A crowd was milling around outside when Stanton arrived to find the church inadvertently locked and the key missing. The first day of the meeting was to be for women only, but Stanton and the others did not know how to ask the men who were present to leave. The convention had strong support from some men. In fact, the women asked a man to preside at the convention. For Stanton, then thirty-two, it was only her second public appearance. In the convention’s first order of business, she read the declaration of Sentiments. The document detailed the ways in which women were denied property rights, rights in marriage and divorce, and the vote. The Declaration of Sentiments was...
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...My choice for the historic document is Carrie Chapman Catt’s persuasive argument titled "Address to the Congress on Women's Suffrage." Her thesis states “Woman suffrage is inevitable” (Catt 1) and her paper explain why. She has three causes that make up her argument which is both logical and clear. She is asking for Women’s Suffrage; she needs to comport herself in a rational, cohesive, manner. Catt knows the audience she must convince will be men. Therefore, she chose logos as her mode of persuasion. This approach helped her to prove her point. Her introduction is short and succinct. It grabs the readers attention by telling them this is happening and this is why. The body of her speech is made up of three major arguments. First is the history...
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...In Elizabeth Cady Stanton's Declaration of the Rights of Women, she copies Thomas Jefferson's style and technique to advocate for women's rights. Comparing both Stanton and Jefferson, I believe they share some similarities. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was an American abolitionist, social activist, writer, suffragist and leading figure of the early women's right movement. She wrote the Declaration of Sentiments(or Declaration of the Rights of Women) which fought for the civil, political, social, and religious rights of women in the 1800's. Thomas Jefferson was the third president of the United States. He was also a historian, philosopher, American Founding Father, and the author of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson was also...
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...Elizabeth Cady Stanton has many titles associated with her name: wife, mother, abolitionist, suffragist, social activist, but mainly a protector, defender, and fighter of women’s rights. From the age of twenty-five up until her death at age eighty-six, Stanton was involved publicly in speaking out in favor of social reforms, especially those that concerned women. Unlike other female activists of her time, she would speak directly in front of state and federal legislative bodies in order to accomplish whatever she set her mind to. As this paper, will suggest, by examining her influences in youth, her work, and her legacy, Stanton was one of the forefront activists during her lifetime, constantly pushing and arguing for what she deemed as necessary and right. Stanton was born into the privileged family of Margaret Livingston Cady and Lawyer Daniel Cady, who were both wealthy landowners and prominent citizens of their community in Johnston, New York. She was the seventh child, born on November 12, 1815. Her mother’s father was Colonel James Livingston who raised a regiment of Americans and fought at Quebec and Saratoga. This is important to note, because her mother would be an important influence in Elizabeth’s young life. She supported abolition and women’s rights unashamedly throughout her life, and according to Elizabeth, she always preferred “diplomacy to open warfare.” However, even though her mother had a reputation of being strong-willed and opinionated, she also made...
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...associated with a set of attributes of the component. OPINION An opinion is a quintuple (o, f, so, h, t), where o is a target object. f is a feature of the object o. so is the sentiment value of the opinion of the opinion holder h on feature f of object o at time t. h is an opinion holder. t is the time when the opinion is expressed OPINION MINING AND SENTIMENT ANALYSIS Given a set of evaluative text documents D that contain opinions (or sentiments) about an object, opinion mining aims to extract attributes and components of the object that have been commented on in each document d ∈ D and to determine whether the comments are positive, negative or neutral. Sentiment analysis is a synonymous term. TRY THESE!! “If you are reading this because it is your darling fragrance, please wear it at home exclusively, and tape the windows shut.” “Jane Austen‟s books madden me so that I can‟t conceal my frenzy from the reader. Every time I read „Pride and Prejudice‟ I want to dig her up and beat her over the skull with her own shin-bone.” - Mark Twain SOME CONCEPTS Sentiment polarity and degrees of positivity The binary classification task of labeling an opinionated document as expressing either an overall positive or an overall negative opinion Joint topic-sentiment analysis Term presence vs. frequency Presence is more important than frequency SOME CONCEPTS Parts of speech Adjectives, adverbs, nouns, verbs Negation “I like this book” and...
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...Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions was one of America’s most utilizing tools for advocating women’s rights. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was the brave author and advocate of this amazing document set before the government apposing legitimate rights for all women across the U.S. With the help of other women who were “fed up,” Elizabeth Stanton, stood and presented the first ever, unlawful acts against, that were posed upon woman in the 18th century and every year before that. In Seneca Falls, NY in 1848 at the very first women’s rights convention, was where the independence of women’s rights finally took a turn for the better. Not only was “The Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions,” presented during the same month that the congress passed “The Declaration of Independence,” but was actually rooted back to the very same objective as “The Declaration of Independence.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the most influential women of the 19th century. Leading campaigns for women’s rights, Stanton’s goal was focused on "gaining opportunities for women such as; the right to appeal for a divorce, the right for complete custody of her own children, property rights, and her most fundamental demand at that time was for; women’s right to vote. Stanton was determined to put a stop to segregation between men and woman but also wished to instill independence and self-reliance in women nationwide. Within doing so, Stanton revised many imperative speeches, not only “The Declaration of Sentiments,” but...
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...Joseph Vaccaro Professor Leslie Lindenauer HIS 148 20 October, 2011 Independence: For All or For Some The Declaration of Sentiments written by Elizabeth Cody Stanton, and The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro by Frederick Douglas are two documents that portray their own explanation of freedom and independence. These two activists portray their justification in their own way, one heavily towards women the other towards the African American people. Freedom should be for all not for some, it should be for blacks, whites, men, and women. Elizabeth Cody Stanton follows the framework of the Declaration of Independence very closely when writing the Declaration of Sentiments. She uses the wording to show connections between women and the rest of the American people during this time. The Declaration of Independence states, “We hold this truth to be self evident that all men are created equal. However, Stanton throughout her declaration re-phrases this in a way that all men and women are created equal. Throughout the Declaration of Sentiments, Stanton mimics the style of the Declaration of Independence, in this case it directs its anger towards the King of England “He has obstructed the Administration of Justice” and “He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly.” She instead uses the word “He” not to refer to the king but to refer to the controlling males in society during this time period. Along with those issues Stanton also has concerns with the freedom...
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...Elizabeth Cady Stanton fought for equal rights; so women and men are seen as equal. Frederick Douglass fought for the equality of everyone and every race. Frederick Douglass used more rhetorical questions in his speech, while Elizabeth Cady Stanton got straight to the point. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a more effective speaker than Frederick Douglass because of her use of The Declaration of Independence, her list of demands, and her fight for equality. Cady Stanton used The Declaration of Independence to show what was said in the document, but what she thought should be used in The Declaration of Independence. Cady Stanton was more educated than Douglass. Douglass (being a slave) had no formal education. Cady Stanton attended Emma Willard School. Cady Stanton’s speech was aimed more towards men, but tried to empower women. She wanted to get her point across to the men by using The Declaration of Independence to get them to listen to her. In fact, Elizabeth Cady Stanton did not want to be known only by her husband’s last name so she kept her maiden name. Cady Stanton was the first woman to keep her maiden name. Cady Stanton and Douglass had some similarities in their speeches though. They both fought for equality and their freedom. They wanted equal rights for everyone and not just the stereotypical white male. They both considered themselves a slave to a man, Douglass was actually a slave, and Cady Stanton felt like she was a slave due to all of the things that women had to do...
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...Elizabeth Cady Stanton delivered this speech at the Seneca Falls Convention, in 1848, New York. Elizabeth was the eight of 11 children, born in Johnstown, New York. Father of Elizabeth was Daniel Cady, and Mother of Elizabeth was Margaret Livingston Cady. Her Father was a prominent federalist attorney who served one term in the United Sates Congress and later become both a circuit court judge, and in 1847, a New York Supreme Court Justice. Slavery did not end in New York until July 4th, 1827, so like many men, her dad was a slave owner and the slave owner is the one who took care of her and her sister Margaret. Stanton throughout the years lost a total of 6 siblings in their early age, and one brother, Eleazar, died at age 20. As...
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