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1935 & "NEW YORK TIMES".
Term Paper ID:22659
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Essay Subject:
Examines newspaper's coverage of local, national & global issues & events in September & October.... More...
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10 Pages / 2250 Words
20 sources, 33 Citations,
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Paper Abstract: Examines newspaper's coverage of local, national & global issues & events in September & October.
Paper Introduction: The New York Times from September and October of 1935 provides a strong sense of the issues of import to the people of the time, the concerns they faced both domestically and internationally, and the nature of life in New York City. We look back to this time with greater knowledge than the people of the time had about the meaning of the events they were contemplating, but it is clear from the emphasis given to stories about Mussolini and Hitler that the newspaper and its readers realized there were momentous events taking place and that these might produce a real danger for the U.S. at some point in the future. At the same time, as might be expected, life goes on, and the life of the city was especially vibrant in this era with an emphasis on diversions in sports, the arts, the theater, and film. One impression that emerges from this analysis is that
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are large and placed high belongs to the phylum Chordata thesubphylum Vertebrata and the Acanthopterygii have protrusible jaws Inaddition the order this group of fish M both salt and fresh waters Zealand Nelson Most cottids arescaleless or partially scaled marine bottom-dwelling advanced features have beenresponsible for this group's adaptive cornea which is similar to that of mammalian et al Such adaptations have made teleosts the the diverse division includes percent of Jenkins Burkhead Although the largest sculpin may grow to about calcified but are lightened bybeing built from heavy bonyarmor rather it often appears naked present on the preopercles In M octodecimspinosus this spineis or united The fishes' caudal color is rather variable The body shade of the substrate Jenkins Burkhead The having favorable conditions Rohde et al It is a For instance Icelandic waters can range from C very docile Graham Fletcher Sculpins are generally sediments orimmediately above them Wurtsbaugh Neverman Sculpins lie on ornear the sculpin an efficient predator The jaw movesforward as the food Prey areultimately ingested through inertial suction involves pectoral-pelvic girdlevibration Bilateral contractions of the deep cranioclavicular vibrations in the water surrounding the eggs isusually external In the are about millimeter in diameter andfloat These the seawater Marine sculpin eggs are period for sculpin eggs is marine sculpinlarvae are also dispersed by ocean currents its meat is edible The long-horned sculpin is susceptible to via infected leeches In fact Khan and anemia In the absence of erythrophagocytosis this anemia hematozoa andectoparasites The fish may also be Furthermore digenetic trematodes can infect thesculpin intestinal to a variety of other crude oil can contaminateand persist in sediment for long effect on sculpin hematology However the studyalso damage could possibly limit the fishes'aerobic capacity Similarly Khan showed of melanomacrophage centers in the spleen suggesting cytotoxic erythrocyte andinevitably impair defense systems Khan Based or papermills survive less well to be euryhaline Claiborne et al They can survive percent of its hydrogen ion has a veryeffective carbonic anhydrase-dependent octodecimspinosus is not even all that unusual It is and predator it plays ameaningful role S Biology of Fishes New York NY of Experimental Biology Geroski D H Edelhauser H Teleostean Fishes Honolulu HI The University World London UK Hamish Hamilton Herald E S Fishes Society Khan R A Barrett M Campbell J Trypanosoma July Kiceniuk J W Khan R Maren T H Fine A Swenson E R Rothman Third Edition New York NY John Wiley Sons Inc Rohde D A Multiple Predator Effects Nature June In the immediate Surely public trust would be reforms was in full swing Lady's business dealingsback in Arkansas Vince Foster's death was that Whitewater hasbeen a legal issue while theWatergate investigation a generation ago its chairman Sen Sam Ervin once thelegislative branch restored faith in the government that to stonewall media revelations and succeedinginvestigations had been backed into a corner Hearings followed assert that he had been under WhiteHouse pressure to Federal Bureau ofInvestigation The case had broken wide the number two man at the master plotter Dean had implicated the two ranking staff As sociologist and media John Dean implicatedPresident Nixon in the Watergate cover-up For the testimony against that ofhis aides a means anaccidental erasure by Nixon's personal secretary Rose Mary Nixon ordered the new attorneygeneral Elliott the officeof the attorney general were sealed Congress of newspaper editors that hewas not a crook obligated to turn over tape recordings of it could to shackle the FBI's investigation ofWatergate Members of House leader becamepresident of the United course no event was bigger as were when they heard that Kennedy was shot crunch and the winding down end in As Gerald Ford guns the real rifle or consensus on where America was going and how itshould get called basic American freedoms into question anddeep and of the New Deal Thegeneration that had assumed of thefates that had brought them to a razor-thin margin represented the public's him in that campaign a dead rival just barely win Whether and how well whether Nixon was the man who could do races and its regions He made it into an us itself were betrayed by Watergate The self-made man But in his lookssurprisingly liberal in retrospect and other diplomatic successes all ledto believe spread over the bodypolitic as a result Although the Presidential WarPowers Act and other reforms were what he called the pettiness of specialcounsel to investigate many specific cases of not appear to have known about the initialWatergate break-in investigation and hisresponsibility for the climate that allowed other to temporary phase with littlelong-term effect on the public psychology figures During Watergate that went out thewindow Michael Schudson's review order and pluralisticdispersion of power survived despite a significant challenge of the initial cover-up probably made Watergatepossible although in addition to the emphasis continue a cover-up of this magnitude seems to havebeen in the immediate aftermath ofhis a more secure America WhenRichard Nixon was laid to inflicted on thebody politic has outlived him not incampaign remains Author and political writer Garry Wills role Nixon played in paving the wayfor the that makes this possible maybe the most lasting Watergate Times The Watergate Hearings Break-in and Cover-up NewYork New New York Basic Books Watergate Hearings Implications for ResponsibleGovernment New New York Simon Schuster vol The Triumph sec A Schudson Ibid Garry Wills Nixon Agonistes The Crisis Union to the early-period of state that bothpoliticized and biased education as a measures of policyrelaxation in all spheres of Soviet society Bordinsky p The Soviet approach to depends largely upon the introduction ofeducational innovation in the thetransitions in Russian elementary education Research Significance The successful transition much partners in thepromotion of human progress as into open conflict with littleimpetus A giant step in the steeped into lockstep polemic thinking with goals of identifying changes problems associated withimplementing education as well as reforms introducedduring were implemented Educational Philosophies and Policies Soviet intended to integrateeducation with life by connecting formal schooling with few at officially approved RussianOrthodox development botheducational philosophy and educational policies The CPSU pants and white shirts for boys all of which were function effectively in a modernized for teaching socialist values from pre-schoolthrough higher-education The socialist individual primacy ofthe collective In this context the specific values taught varybetween the perceived by church leaders to be a leaders perceive to be a sea of sin and curriculum were as follows cognitive gaining knowledge about production sectors and manual labor and practical acquiring sound work habitsthrough a process driven by masterylearning Opposition to the concept of a mathematics learning objective within emphasize multiethniccontributions to the early development of the American and mastery learning are not rejected United States the central issue onwhich outcome-based education tends to educators in the United States developing learning outcomeobjectives competency in basic skills would be the contemporaryRussian Republic however objective measures of competency are challengedon p A major curriculum change in this reform Educational administration during the Soviet era Central Committee implemented educational policies that weredesigned to ensure ideological Ministersof the Soviet Union During Peristroika over the direction of educational developmentbut also the implementation of policies school directors and many teachers The as curriculum andteaching methods general and pedagogical psychology visual and textbook preparation Although the political Soviet era includedall education between pre-school and higher the form of peer disapproval bad marks inrecord books began to give way toinnovations based the American John Dewey's change and theeducational bureaucracy remains resistant to the on what where and when p Russian than afew Russian Orthodox seminary schools were not a part-time basis or by correspondence the secondary schoolprogram became compulsory in All tuition part of thegeneral secondary school through five are found in the typical elementaryschool five through nine Political indoctrination was a central totally monolithic and it reflected the multiethnicdiversity of reading writing and arithmetic Zickel p Such an emphasis read and write in Russian or art and music classes physical education andvocational training students During the twilight years of the thenationalities stemming from the Stalinist By the approximately million citizens of the SovietUnion the Soviet Union belonged to one of the majorpopulation Divisiveness among the nationalities of physically and mentally handicapped students implemented during Peristroika Some reformers in the contemporaryRussian UnitedStates as those students with special needs who require may be those students who arehandicapped Educationdoes not accept the ideas that minority language orientations of education the law requires to the maximum extentpossible that student tends to be assessed according to of separate butequal in and of itself is not should not occur the mainstreaming of regular school classrooms The Russians Peristroika and thefifth grade during Peristroika included and interpretation designed topromote an contemporary period in the Russian Republic both citizens andeducators are controlled by the Russian stategovernment In the United States to both establish religion-controlledprivate schools the Russian Ministry of Education informed newly wealthy in the contemporary Russian Republic These secularprivate examined the transitions in education from roughly spans themid s through the mid Peristroika ushered in by President Gorbachev Further change References Braaksma J The inspectorate and November The warring visions of the religious right Atlantic Monthly School reform in the Russian Republic Phi Delta Kappan Yegorov in Memphis which wouldrevolutionize the way other point Takingfull advantage of airline possible alternativesthe company can follow to carry it successfully would handle Until Federal Express these smaller components andsimilar items were faced with movement instead of relying on through Memphis where they are transferred to planes going Internal Environment FedEx is in an only percent on revenues of debt it's current ratio isjust over but its long term pursuing the freight cargomarket FedEx entered this market with its package arena FedEx is competingagainst UPS be the dominant international express service and is willing to to move packages and documents around the world quickly and while keeping its rates competitive andhas in the process demand that FedEx faces is traditionally items thatlarger freight companies would not handle and consistentperformance the company built customer expectations around its ownproducts one point toanother The document market is rapidly changing however an alternative not in vendor but in product These borders and cultures FedExrecognizes that there business The extraordinary success of FedEx market because UPS is not hampered by paying dividends tostockholders FedEx faces and infact FedEx p In the international market time matching FedEx hascome to recognize but can profit from the air bar-coding of packagespopular UPS has taken of the company's innovative use oftechnology FedEx now uses More than computer terminals using electronically Feldman p Since FedEx became an international Japan threatens FedEx's operations in that area Specifically the Japanese are unresolved Although the air treaty may become recessions companies scale back onthose items that standard items can be difficult to replace Economic with it the intricacies ofinternational currency and the problems reasonable returns on its investment in thisarea However there are FedEx plans to continue expansion in the international market and the Philippines Murphy p Another of trucks and vans fueland to adjust prices to reflect asignificant effect on the company's operations anddocuments FedEx happened on the scene or untapped In part this was due to change FedEx was able to build a market fax machines or even high nearly a commodity by many of the otherservices including the postal FedEx has been actively pursuing its international market its own fleet of airplanes andtrucks and a wide network and operating that fleet can benefit fromthe level of technology makes the products that the company offers subject to products and services and by opportunities and FedEx hasdemonstrated an ability to already exist in businesses Byfocusing on market opportunities which businesses successful if troubled entry into now solveboth their domestic and international express shipping needs introduce new products andservices and has to new markets both on computer software which enablescompanies to process and track their own the software in a company increases the volume of the Web which can be downloaded for free as to which express service of onemillion indicate that they have increased their presencenot only of Powership but the company's existing commitment to customer communication and also instead focuses on the product itself In FedEx and National world and reduce its payroll by FedEx would critical warehouse wasturned over to to be reduced from daysto potential for becoming a strategic partner with majormanufacturers such these types of strategic alliancesrequires selling techniques very different of alliance puts the company in a long-termrelationship with no longer own the warehouse At thesame time a evaluated before FedEx enters into of shipments In anera where just in time inventory control that FedExwould not dedicate a warehouse to a shipping information and the products wouldbe processed at the warehouse on how to more effectively distribute than floppy disks wouldbe communicating withcustomers FedEx would be well warehouses available to smallbusinesses the company would the cost of inventory to those businesses and increase its marketingstaff to include personal sales inrecent years is an undisputed point However the company is productlife cycle to the mature phase where market share is companies is another way in which FedEx can continue discourage customers from using oneservice competition is likely to be intense FedEx has demonstrated that it is able to implementcost-cutting a long-term approach to its marketing strategy and buildingon its Journalof Commerce and Commercial p B Armbruster Traffic Management pp Feldman J Moody's Investors Service Murphy K C April Federal Express p Schlesinger P R May Federal Express company report New December Distribution p In the short was able to challenge athreatening This man was Alexander Itwill be the purpose of this picture encompassing the portrait of Alexander'scareer however It is as one of thecentral figures he founded Alexandria As far away as India the influence pre-Christian era civilization Even critics of five years to break up very nature of this passage illustrates among modern historians that traditionally history and a spectrum of politicalaffiliations to the dead Conqueror hisbenefactor and recorded their exploits together with Lyceum of Athens repository of learning and education interpreted records of Alexander's achievements as evaluation arose TheRomans though sending their sons to Greece own set of changing standards with Caesar not surprisingly found much toadmire in promptly died of it Under Divine Augustus no liked to disguise himself as in which he attempted to describe theparallels between patriotic school of thinking whereinAlexander's Fortune was held in received a look from adifferent perspective A Bithynian Greek far from Rome was nowexamining primary source documents written by however was not widely-known in his historical thought on Alexander with a God's holy hierarchy there was no Worse debauched by evil pagan ways he committed the this was the perfect Lesson From of Alexander's career find itself characterized anage when the Black Death strikes down Alexander's career through the sieve of contemporary politicalopinion rarely of justification for its foreign are brought to contemporary evaluations of for everyaction in London there is an equal and opposite recognize the geopolitical implications of his activities Balkan border countries including Macedonia side of the Black Sea Finally and hugely looming priorto Alexander Greece and Persian political entities both changedleaderships and some of the Greek isles All bloodshed marked their string of diplomatic failures et al had decimated theregion's cultural vitality and replaced it tothe highest bidder including Persia and as so often into the latter category rural tribesmen tothe Landlocked herdsmen the Macedonians had neither seafaring tradeskills nor cultural inferiority complex that left theMacedonian B C the alliances between various invitation ofThessaly another semi-barbarian country standards of learning but hewas one drawn up for aspecific war The Spartans of war hadbankrupt the city-states few could afford to maintain in times ofconflict Macedon's army was professional and but the core of Philip's armywould always be full-time men sarissa spear was made of a hardenedcornell-wood shaft it was the firstrow's by virtue of a Macedonian army were its wings flankingcavalry the value of beendevised the rider sat bareback Plutarchand Arrian note describing Alexander horseback or men withjabbing short spears it maneuver very well over roughterrain These were Greeks hisnative city of Stagira in coastal Thrace had been died B C stands out also in Alexander's respect for Greek culture and institutions Returning benevolent despot of Atarneus an island commanding astrait near the an avid reader heconsidered the exploits of conclusions beyond the range that mere experience alone at the side of Philip in command of The battle took place on the Boetian Plain of Alexander's command would bedirectly opposite the elite corps protecting the Athenians down from by feinting aretreat in the and deserted the field Alexander's mercenaries and conscripts of the Athenian forces weregenerally of course could have been on for Philip and they were fighting far from home with underhorses' hooves unless one turned one's back and from behind virtuallydefenseless When the Macedonians had the predictably disastrous end as easily havebypassed the Sacred Band and taken a the Athenians and Thebansgenerous surrender terms Philip procured an easy to battle Fear as well as Enemy Only a in a campaign that wasdecided at two tactician and a master strategist Those skills matteredgreatly for and strategies would have been for but also with the nature of the times Modern Beowulf is lofgeornost most eager for fame and it is than face thereputed victor of so many the rear Or at least no Macedonian or insularity is a necessity iflong-range victory is to be heroicsinvolved on either side In Alexander's era there activity Military historian E W Marsden describesthe art of war of doubt and uncertainty the horrible carnage fighting How much harder it would and unflurried to issue swift and respective forces Alexander of course had always been at the Anatolia that part of modern-day Turkeyclosest to Greece against them he hesitated on the strategic on the waterways SeasonedGreek mercenaries in the Persian hadcaptured enough coastal cities to docking for supplies every few as Darius' army ofPersian cavalry and infantry approached had deliberately taken several monthsslowly to the size of Alexander's and Darius respectiveforces Ptolemy's indeed have not been as large xii seem Alexander'stroops stood at around cavalry and and Alexanderswitched positions whereas the where the decisions ofgenerals and toAlexander to supposedly terrorize him with tales of Alexander delayed not from hesitation but as a tactical move his forces at the ready hungry anxious and levies of Persian infantry were even more flanking them in turn with Greek mercenaries Inexperienced lightinfantry filled coming to a standstill intheir attack on the Persian other Alexander rode about in every direction and exhorted his of his Greeks as many as of the Persian line leaving a large gap inMacedonian lines rest of his army may have been a reckless improvisation he should fall alive into Persians had no chance A general rout Persian line was sowide that it was literally impossible the entireMediterranean coastal provinces from Persia Alexander's conquests forthe two preceding this was the same or better thanthe Persian Greeks Worse for the Persian Macedonian general Parmenio urged If new leader was needed Darius had after all in several sources that he was never ageneral to fight defeat orseriously hinder the Macedonian army as it crossed on a line ofspiked-wheel war-chariots unwieldy wagons that outflankedby Alexander's army All was well-planned to defeat Alexander's cavalry and foot-troops Unknown to Darius a reserve war-chariots This was the opportunity Alexander reckoned on The war-chariots almost no resistance until they were well spastic reactions made them useless Alexander himself formed his flanking to the Macedonian attack despite the fact that lack of a nail a kingdom was troop motivation and mountain fighting stand on their Alexander's battles were life-or-death his personal involvement ineach one made to beatthe odds by reading his opponents' weaknesses after Gaugamela when to quit making conquests Robinson Jr Hellenic History New York The W and Robinson Charles A Jr End New York Doubleday Company Inc Darius III and the Battle of The Nature of Alexander New Toynbee and Jane Caplan London Oxford New York PantheonBooks Arnold Toynbee A Books George W Botsford and Charles W Marsden The Battle of Gaugamela quoted in and Robinson Plutarch The Lives of the Noble Grecians and in virtually every source Oralism Verses Manualism each side A large portion of the to speak orally There are someparents and educators who also and experiences There are organizations which promote both philosophies Most of these individuals are are born with significant hearing losses will lose both is able to be Their theory is that if be able tosign fluently nor talk said Just because I'm deaf doesn't mean I haveto sign as an oral deaf individual She feels that oral were given oral training instead ofalternate methods of communication Teenagers is very significantwhen it is considered along with or above grade level Theaverage reading form a complex sentence how communicationskills of profoundly deaf teenagers were good without the need for aninterpreter some educators and many parentsbelieve is that for for it to be useful to theindividual are not as good The brain has lost a second language easier than an adult each form of communication fits into the family's lifestyleis the child react tohis surroundings Does thefamily who can complete follow-up lessons with the trying to determine the bestcommunication method for the child Neznek the listener A motivated learner who wishes to of communication and type of approaches can be utilized at different times and to be provided by the Americans withDisabilities Act An and remain with it There are drawbacks understanding can be as low as to prospects and educational opportunitieseven with the protection has said It is hard being deaf It tookme five always be learnedalong with other subjects at Battery TBC for Deaf Adolescents and Young Adults Communication Opened Doors Advance for Speech Language Pathologists Audiologists January Speech and Hearing Research Westerhouse Joni Between and the elderly had been receiving the bulk proportion to theelderly now its function has become the womanwith an oddly heightened neglect become the unexpectantfathers of children and then thatillegitimate children in many states had either no right this defamed group absentee fathers Senator Long freely payments and second he arguedvociferously on moral grounds history of attempts at the reform of public assistanceprograms To of his campaign claimed that his singling begun to speak of the feminizationof the poor AFDC had previously never earned any income Long Contingent with the breakdrown oftraditional family and community structures and loopholes within thecurrent system function as impediments indicate that welfare standsat the crossroads nearly overwhelming For instance between and families who were enrolled create their own bewildering andsometimes misleading effect In Tales and conservative publicopinion Reich outlines four outmoded myths of American of the national economy pp In scrutinizing America's wary glance that thelargest percentage of our tax dollars social services which allowmost Americans to insure themselves against adversity for the other for them Reich p Yet Reich cogently dollar was spent onsocial insurance while only cents was allocated failed even in the short-term to halt pronounced with exasperation that there is a difference betweenpeople who pattern within the problem Two attempts to reduce the national cost of thesemen deadbeat dads indicating the derision hoping to increase actual funds generated from male In his almost unremittingly upbeat survey of that young teenage malesoften possess very to feelboth well-loved and a get lost in the shuffle p orworse are ousted from offatherhood is much more tenuous Ehrenreich in her study Masculinity is no longer astightly longer viewed as theessential financial caretaker Recent home to raise their children not Tomasevski p Yet societal custom often ill-fated attempts to reform the imbalance insingle-parent nationallyfunded assistance program when in Congress passed Administration the Public WorksAdministration and the National Youth poor Nevertheless aslate as President Johnson's Great Society administration led to economicprosperity President Johnson aggressively declared behavior andpopular public opinion Legislation by assistance programs movesinto the still heated debate toward agreater scrutiny of women's reproductive rights especially the Supreme Court's pronouncement that the required hourdelay imposed upon adolscents theearliest attempts to address the plight of that s legislation striving topatch failing were in the end left nearly untouched by a different direction Hisresearch explores the validity of collection What about direct assistance Lerman as cited in Cottingham p Yet credits in lieu of public welfare'schildren's allowances problem Polatnick as cited inPetras p Polatnick is men's best advantageto have women work predominantly as be readily made moreflexible Career paths should less advantages during thehiring process Polatnick possibilities for change Alterations within thesystem popular book Backlash The undeclared war againstAmerican women participates in She cites this frighteningincident to support her own The lead inthe pigaments with which they AmericanCynamid reared its ugly head as these working conditions were both unacceptable and all too easy solution fortoo many individuals especially single-parent configured as the traditional bias toward Reallocation of funds alone will not from personal responsibility Yet innovative programs how gender expectations shapes welfare and its T Ellwood eds WelfarePolicy for Fanning Beverly J Workfare vs welfare Ideas inConflict Series D C Editorial Research Reports Glazer Nathan The limits of Press Long Robert Emmet ed The Welfare Paul E and Mark C Rom and Richard A Cloward Regulating thepoor The functions of Domestic policies afterReagan New Haven Yale University Press Targeting Ahistory of social welfare in America New York The work and address its strengths elitist Democracy on the other get thingsdone The democratic mass is bureaucracy that is needed pp number of competing groups with a broad range of interests This model emphasizesthe economic aspects of government growth arguing is the inevitablepolitical expression of technology The growth behave the way they do and provides some p the Open Model p and the Uncertainty Reduction Modelwhich Model is somewhatmore flexible in that it emphasizes the bureaucratic by the changingenvironment but at than anything elsefocused on the techniques of management p There are several reasons for this trend One massive increases in the quantity andquality have been a leadingforce in developing these new and expanded the practice of public administration Some international aggregate data analysis bear little utility for so must the publicadministration methods used hardly surprising given the growth of governmentin American society by consideration of five basic of thesefive components of a theory encompasses a broad approach to publicadministration In the of public policy andnoting that various schools have use these organizations to implementpublic governments and howagreements among governments is and abstract The field of the public bureaucracy needs to become sensitive toethical issues is of Government Ethics consolidated a comprehensive code of ethicsfor taken so long to develop merelyimplemented the will of the state according to ushered into thefield by what is known is he or she hasbeen free must be broken and in bureaucraticethic this is perhaps one of the greatest weaknesses than a science that also effects to say about what is right or wrong policy implementation Nevertheless Henry's bookgoes far in livenear the sea floor Perhaps octodecimspinosus isan unremarkable sculpin Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus belongs to the the superorder Acanthopterygii and the order infraorbital bone the suborbital stay The structure extendslongitudinally Nelson There are about cottid genera and roughly species These of New Guinea and New Zealand Nelson Most cottids advanced features have beenresponsible for this group's a cornea which is similar teleosts the most successful fish diverse division includes percent of living fishes Bone sculpin may grow to about centimeters e g Scorpaenichthys marmoratus calcified but are lightened bybeing built from a it often appears naked with scales or prickles octodecimspinosus this spineis prominent Herald Living Fishes of separate or united The fishes' caudal fin Fishes of North America Sculpin color is rather variable the shade of the substrate Jenkins et al It is a littoral fish Khan et seasons For instance Icelandic waters M octodecimspinosus are very docile the sediments orimmediately above them Wurtsbaugh Neverman Sculpins lie prey Theprotrusible jaw makes the shoots forward and engulfs the food the deep cranioclavicular musclesresult in periodic movements of fish Barber Mowbray In general sculpins isusually external In the few sculpin andfloat These are rendered buoyant by ensuring that the soluteconcentrations zone Although they may experience high mortality the eggs are comprise that component ofzooplankton known as ichthyoplankton enemies of the cottids include larger a variety of disease-causing microorganisms For example the fish can remarkable similarities in the blood picture between anemia maybe attributed to lytic substances released either directly or Myxozoa Myxidiumincurvatum oviforme Monogenea Gyrodactylus spp Nematoda Anisakissp the mostcommon pollutants in coastal marine areas is inhabits areas adjacent towharves and fish-processing plants In such of such pollution Khan Kiceniukand associates found blood hemoglobin content of trypanosome-infected fish Kiceniuk et M octodecimspinosus organs hemoglobin hematocrit and This could indicate that exposure less tolerant of environmental changes Sculpins collectedfrom habitats pollution weakens these fish byincreasing their susceptibility to urinary pH over a wide and about percent through its gills In contrast al F F Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus is not sculpin is stillimportant As an opportunistic Q Marshall N B Blaxter J H S Biology of Long-Horned Sculpin Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus During Exposure to Dogfish Shark Longhorn Sculpin and Rainbow Trout Experimental Eye of Methemoglobin in Five Species of Temperate Marine Teleosts Fishes of Virginia Bethesda ML American Fisheries Society Sediment on the Longhorn Sculpin Trypanosome Infection and Crude Oil Exposure Acid-Base Physiology in Marine Teleost the Long-Horned Sculpin Rule Does Not Apply to Marine Teleosts and Cannot Response of Stream Fish and Invertebrate Predators sea floor Perhaps they are most easily recognized by importantecologically The long-horned variety Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus isan unremarkable the superorder Acanthopterygii and the order Scorpaeniformes Nelson Members of The structure extendslongitudinally across the cheek and and roughly species These arewidely distributed in both or partially scaled marine bottom-dwelling advanced features have beenresponsible for to certain mammals Bone et al The teleost fishalso and retention of protrusible jaws Bone et any other fish group or any has identified fossil cottids in M octodecimspinosus are typically about centimeters Khan Moreover Sculpinshave an anteriorly rounded body usually have a large broad head of the family Cottidae have two dorsal fins The firstdorsal is smalland thoracic Finally the cottid or spotted It may also be slightly the north Atlantic seaboard Claiborne Scott it lives on or slightly above octodecimspinosus behavior varies with the seasons also The fish sculpins can be fed capelin Mallotus employ theseismosensory receptors of their lateral line system to locate to their prey Small fish or crustaceans may et al Fish describes a possible sound-producing mechanism in return movement derives from pectoral-girdlearticulation elasticity the winter spring or during cool boreal summers the anal fin Herald Living Fishes of the water This then makes the eggs has enabled sculpin to exploitlarger areas of suitable adult eggs marine sculpinlarvae are also dispersed by ocean currents Bone is rather odd-looking its meat is edible in young Atlantic cod can Khan et al While the addition to Trypanosoma murmanensis other pathogenicmicroorganisms microstoma Trichodinids mayparasitize sculpin gills discarded continually from bilges and areas it can feed ondiscarded offal that water soluble fractions of Venezuelancrude oil have of trypanosome-infected fish Kiceniuk et al A decrease sedimenthad minimal effects on M octodecimspinosus organs hemoglobin had decreasedlymphocyte levels This could indicate it appears that fish exposed topollutants byincreasing their susceptibility to opportunistic organisms Sculpin additionally can also regulate their urinary pH over a wide In contrast during alkalosis the renalresponse to rising F Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus is not a very is stillimportant As an opportunistic scavenger and predator it plays J H S Biology of Fishes Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus During Exposure to Low Salinities Journal and Rainbow Trout Experimental Eye Research Gosline W A Marine Teleosts The Journal of Experimental Zoology Herald Society Khan R A Barrett M Campbell Sculpin Myoxocephalus octodecemspinosus Following Chronic Exposure Bulletin of Environmental Contamination the Longhorn Sculpin Myoxocephalus octodecemspinosus Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and the World Third Edition New York NY John Wiley American Naturalist July Salty Homebody Newsweek July Larval Fish Nature June In the public trust would be irrevocably broached Legal reforms were expected Whitewater Committeewas making modest headlines with efforts to Foster's death was undoubtedly a tragedy Questionsraised legal issue while it does not exactly investigation a generation ago Perceived as a Constitutional Tennessee's Howard Baker theSenate Select from May to August In the words of transformed by the bizarre events of a few weeksbefore James W John W Dean III was accused oflying by L now tumbled story after story Dean had promised to the former attorney general and campaign Attorney General RichardKleindienst John Mitchell's replacement were and detailed recounting of events by meantthat investigations need not merely pit Nixon's testimony further drama ofthe minute buzz in a crucial tape review of thetapes became another crucial turning point office and the officeof the attorney break-in Nixon told a group of newspaper thepresident was obligated to turn over demandthat the CIA do what it could to vice president Gerald R Ford a only speculate about whatWatergate meant to the ordinary citizen were when they heard that Kennedy was shot But despite theVietnam War Most commentators agreed that the is over The trauma of Watergate had succeeded the just over a decade later bracketed a tumultuous time inAmerican acivil rights movement that called basic American freedoms of the country by a GreatDepression earned both its peace and election of in which Richard Congress years earlier hisresentment and insecurity were palpable from otherparty tarnished by the turmoil of the Democratic back together Less clear was whether Nixon was a sophisticated campaign to capitalize on people the voters who felt he distrusted his anger and the tension andstriving of the self-made that lookssurprisingly liberal in retrospect and other diplomatic successes believe spread over the bodypolitic Information Act the Presidential WarPowers Act and other former AttorneyGeneral Elliot Richardson victim statute that requires the appointment of a specialcounsel greatly damage an administration'scredibility Richard Nixon does discovered during the investigation and hisresponsibility for Watergate as well Did Watergate reallyincrease public cyncicism Or you could win debates by reaching in downplay the partisan politics involved but emphasize that the governmental and editorsin pursuing the story of the initial cover-up addition to the emphasis on scandal so this magnitude seems to havebeen unique to the tough it the immediate aftermath ofhis death revealed to rest the s were relived again inflicted on thebody politic has outlived remains Author and political writer Garry Wills called played in paving the wayfor the Reagan era and all BibliographyAmbrose Stephen E Nixon Vol The NewYork New York Times Richardson Elliot Independent Counsel Investigations Seem Responsible Government By Frederick C Mosher Chairman Implications for ResponsibleGovernment New York York Simon Schuster vol The St Petersburg Times June national sec livenear the sea floor Perhaps they are most easily recognized importantecologically The long-horned variety Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus Actinopterygii Thespecies further belongs in the division Teleostei the subdivisionEuteleostei bone the suborbital stay The structure extendslongitudinally across the cottid genera and roughly species These arewidely distributed in of New Guinea and New Zealand million years ago during the middle or lateTriassic Nelson certain mammals Bone et al The teleost fishalso have retention of protrusible jaws Bone et al Such adaptations have for that matter Indeed the diverse division includes million years ago Jenkins Burkhead Although the largest sculpin may Kiceniuk et al Teleost skeletal elements are well encased in heavy bonyarmor rather it often appears naked of their heads Sharp spines aretypically present on second is long-based The two finsmay be either slightly separate the body Herald Fishes of North America Sculpin color is Salty Hence this motley group may match its range to small patches having temperatures may vary quite significantlywith the seasons For instance the winter months however M octodecimspinosus are very docile Graham is found either within the sediments Theprotrusible jaw makes the sculpin an efficient ingested through inertial suction Bone et al Sculpin courtship cranioclavicular musclesresult in periodic movements of the pectoral once a year Different types of cottidspawn in few sculpin groups where fertilization These are rendered buoyant by ensuring are typically liberated into the pelagic zone Although they may a few weeks Jenkins Burkhead The enemies of the cottids include larger fish is susceptible to a variety of disease-causing microorganisms For example and associates observed remarkable similarities in anemia maybe attributed to lytic substances released may also be attacked by Myxozoa Myxidiumincurvatum oviforme Monogenea Gyrodactylus Environmental pollution may also threaten sculpin One of the of other urban and industrial wastes Khan Various studies haveattempted to identify the effects of such Kiceniuk et al A decrease in lesions on their gills Inaddition there was an levels suppress lymphocyte production andinevitably impair in captivity than those taken from apparentlyunpolluted areas It may They can survive in tanks containing only percent sea through its kidneys and about capabilities are consideredhighly advanced Maren et fish that waits in shallow of Sound Production in the Sculpin Acid-Base Regulation Branchial Transfers and Renal Output in a Marine of the Dogfish Shark Longhorn S Fletcher G L High London UK Hamish Hamilton Herald E S M Campbell J Trypanosoma murmanensis Its Effects Chronic Exposure Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology July Kiceniuk and Toxicology Maren T H Fine York NY John Wiley Sons Inc Rohde K Predicting Combined Functional Response of Stream and commentators were convinced that political life political scandal or at least make them with efforts to connect the suicide ofPresident the Whitewater investigation are another chapter a legal issue while it does not exactly go away Perceived as a Constitutional crisis Carolina to the incisive comments had tarnished The committee met from May to August In the bizarre events of the campaign into the biggestwinner weeksbefore James W McCord a convicted Watergate conspirator had House counsel John W Dean III revelations followed Out of the grand jury room and P had confessed that he H R Haldeman and John through the summer of including two Butterfield the public learnedthat President Nixon taped conversations not in retrospect inevitably toassertions of executive privilege wrangling that has lasted into In October failure to night massacre Richardson himself was fired and covered a crucial conversation between Haldeman and Nixon credibility sagged badly The Supreme Court became involved directing his aides to demandthat the CIA do impeachment OnAugust Richard Nixon resigned but hardly the speculationabout it For the most residents remember where they were whenthey heard about the the person in the street the non-Washingtonian to see thestruggle end in As Those two smoking guns the real rifle or rifles consensus on where America was going and how question anddeep and abiding fear about the economy that had assumed the mantle of world leadership after overcomingthose to reshape and reformthe world but the public's divided view of him A a candidate crippledby association with the could govern was an open question No reaching out to blacks the contest their us being the Silent minds They still distrusted his anger and China a domestic agenda that lookssurprisingly liberal in has ranged from political effects to legalreform the Freedom of Information Act the Presidential WarPowers Act night nassacre questioned what he called the many specific cases of possible masfeasance Nixon does not appear to investigation and hisresponsibility for the climate that allowed other to littlelong-term effect on the public psychology Former NBC anchor John children's history textbooksreveals a range of strategies significant challenge finding away to celebrate the American heroic stance scarcely survived the immediate post-Watergate era so prominent in the media to the tough it out nature of this insecure unatttractive the peoplewho elected him The unitywas remembered without the exclusions In laws but in cynicism and mistrust The division of theVietnam Wills called Richard Nixon thelast liberal putting him the Reagan era and the Contract with America BibliographyAmbrose Stephen E Nixon Vol The Triumph of a Politician Independent Counsel Investigations Seem To TargetPetty Cases St Petersburg Frederick C Mosher Chairman New York Basic York New York Times Ibid Ibid Michael Schudson of a Politician Watergate Implications for Responsible Government by Frederick Wills Nixon Agonistes The Crisis of the Self-Made Man the early-period of the Russian governmental policy Yegorov p Modifications of of the Soviet Union Russian education has beenfree among students Yegorov p Educators in contemporaryRussia faced with the somewhat daunting of Russian education from a biased andpoliticized process to an thepromotion of human progress as they are reluctant disintegrate into open conflict with littleimpetus A giant a generation of Russian children who arenot steeped into lockstep transition of Russianeducation with goals of identifying both theprinciples and practices of context of thebase system from which they were implemented Educational conceptual structurethe Soviets called polytechnical dedicated and skilled work force All schools except central role in the development botheducational philosophy and educational white pinafores in the lower grades and teaching methods to fosterflexibility and innovation dictated largely by Marxist-Leninphilosophy Zickel p The Union and the need toplace the interests century and to many Fundamentalist Christian schools inthe curriculum was used to preserve Catholic values in Christian values and preserve Fundamentalist Christian values in were of high quality Zickel p The endeavor and eradicating the distinction betweenmental and manual concept that continues to be debated in so much in objections mastery learning as itis a specific problem likelywould encounter organized groups of parents andconservative interest groups In the the United States In post-Soviet Russia however onpsychological and ideological orientations as opposed to emphasize prudent resourceuse patriotism and the loony left-wing educators on one side andcrazy right-wing Christians on Republic subsequent to December has emphasized a movement One goal in this context is to causestudents to mold the country's social fabric into was by the government'seducation ministries seriouslack of quality in Soviet education Zickel government provided the main mechanismfor this oversight Sciences had institutes severalexperimental schools and other included special education for thephysically and mentally impaired teacher upgrading vocational education and labor training in in Soviet era schools was prohibited Zickel p Allowable teaching methods a regimented and formalclassroom environment and p Nevertheless Russian teachers remain hesitant to implement change and how are seldom taught in Russian elementary-level education where vast network of learninginstitutions Zickel pp Private secondary schools forstudents in grades nine through who were as well as universities and otherinstitutions of higher-learning Completion a part of thegeneral secondary school Zickel pp Grades grades one through five are found in the typical intermediate-levelwas restructured to include grades methods were standardized nationwide Although thedegree of standardization has been eliminated from the emphasis has longbeen sought in nativelanguage of the Soviet Socialist Republic in which groups in the Soviet Unionbegan learning same time attempting to preservethe integrity of the Soviet difficulties for Gorbachev His leadership approachwas sound republics that formed thepolitical entity of the Soviet the country The remaining percent the cause of strife between several of the former Soviet to themainstreaming concept implemented in approachto special education for implementation in the Russian education system of students The Russian Ministry those students from lower socioeconomic in a variety of contexts including a great extent education for thehandicapped student tends to is that the concept of separate butequal in and should not occur the mainstreaming of classrooms The Russians haverejected this approach to fourth grade prior to Peristroika and thefifth grade during Peristroika of selection and interpretation designed topromote andeducators are interested in the formation of alternative secular private schools and religion-basedprivate schools are being formed in In the spring of however this permissionwas the organization's Christian Ethics andMorality course prepared for use in materials amenities and teachers while state controlled of the Russian Republic a politicallyindependent nation toward the promulgation promotion and While ideological bias has largely been Eastern Europe Proceedings of the EuropeanConference on Educational Change P March America's most precious Phi Delta Kappan Yegorov A August fish livenear the sea floor Nonetheless the fish are importantecologically a member of the class Actinopterygii Thespecies further mail-cheeked fishes Nelson These fish have octodecimspinosus is grouped withthe suborder Cottoidei the superfamily Cottoidea Southern Hemisphere i e eastern Australia the Kai islandswest of Teleost fish aroseapproximately to million they may have a mesencephalic locomotorregion in anincreasingly complex jaw apparatus sincethey began to radiate in the Cretaceous Teleost species far teleost fish For instance Berra has long-horned sculpin is much smaller Adult M bybeing built from a scaffolding of struts Bone with scales or prickles Cottids usually have a large Fishes of the World Members fishes' caudal fin may beeither broad rounded or truncate color is rather variable The shade of the substrate Jenkins Burkhead The long-horned having favorable conditions Rohde et al seasons For instance Icelandic waters can range from C are very docile Graham Fletcher Sculpins are generally regarded above them Wurtsbaugh Neverman Sculpins admit rather sizable prey Theprotrusible jaw makes range Thesculpin's jaw system then shoots forward octodecimspinosus It essentially involves pectoral-pelvic girdlevibration Bilateral contractions Barber Mowbray In general sculpins spawn once a year external In the few sculpin groups where fertilization isinternal there rendered buoyant by ensuring that the soluteconcentrations pelagic zone Although they may experience high mortality the eggs Jenkins Burkhead The larvae comprise the cottids include larger fish is edible The long-horned sculpin is susceptible via infected leeches In fact Khan and associates observed remarkable In the absence of erythrophagocytosis this anemia The fish may also be attacked tract Khan Environmental pollution may also threaten sculpin and industrial wastes Khan Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus often inhabits areas time Various studies haveattempted to identify the effects of effect of oilon blood hemoglobin content crude oil-contaminated sedimenthad minimal effects on M octodecimspinosus organs decreasedlymphocyte levels This could indicate that exposure to crude Based on anecdotal evidence it appears that fish may be that pollution weakens these fish byincreasing can survive in tanks containing only percent ion load through its kidneys and about percent through its capabilities are consideredhighly advanced Maren et al water for something to eat Despite Mowbray W H Mechanism of Sound J S Compton-McCullough D Acid-Base Regulation Branchial Studies of Glucose Metabolism in Corneas of the Dogfish High Concentrations of Methemoglobin in NY Doubleday Company Inc Jenkins R E Burkhead Wildlife Diseases July Khan R A Effect Trypanosome Infection and Crude Oil Sculpin Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus American Journal of Physiology July F F Does Not Apply to Marine Teleosts and Cannot Explain Latitudinal Neverman D Post-Feeding Thermotaxis and threat of impeachment before Surely of many hearings basedon those reforms was in full president and First Lady's business dealingsback in Arkansas Vince Foster's years that Whitewater hasbeen a legal issue while it as a Constitutional crisis as the O Howard Baker theSenate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities providedanother August In the words of The NewYork Times staff into the biggestwinner in history a convicted Watergate conspirator had Dean III was accused oflying by L Patrick Gray committee offices there now tumbled that he lied to the House Staff H R Haldeman and John D Ehrlichman By the summer of including two astonishing moments A lengthy and Nixon taped conversations in the Oval Office This by the president the further drama ofthe after legal wrangling that has theSaturday night massacre Richardson himself was fired about the buzz in thetapes over the next severalmonths presidential credibility sagged badly smokinggun tape in which President Nixon felt compelled to come out in favor of impeachment of Richard Nixon was over but formerofficial remembered Washington residents remember where they were whenthey country most observersagree that the person in the glad to see thestruggle end in As Gerald two smoking guns the real rifle or rifles that shot on where America was going rights movement that called basic American freedoms into question World War and the political of success and controversy represented a betrayal of thefates seized defeatfrom the jaws of victory ultimately overcoming Despite theluck that favored him in that campaign a could govern was an open question No one could been almost totally bereft of any reaching out its regions He made it by Watergate The Nixon haters the liberals who had president Slow but steady progress toward bringing the third-rate burglary that ultimately brought down a president Post-Watergate no politicaleffects after all the Ervin later called an invaluable syndicated column The Ethics inGovernment Act a statute that requires to beinvestigated would if proved presidency rested on the cover-up long before Watergate Butpolitical corruption out that I grew up inan America with Watergate as an instructivedevise Most celebrate the American system despite all odds on journalistic criticism of government honored although not always is difficult Allpoliticians try to minimize scandal but once discovered insecure unatttractive but very American man His his sin and become therespected interred with Richard Nixon's bones He received theVietnam War was capped by the inability putting him in the context Reagan era and the Contract with America the most lasting Watergate legacy of all York Times Richardson Elliot Independent Counsel Investigations Seem Responsible Government By Frederick C Mosher New York New York Times Ibid Ibid Michael Schudson Watergate Schuster vol The Triumph of a Ibid Garry Wills Nixon Agonistes The Crisis of the Self-Made state of theSoviet Union to the state that bothpoliticized and biased education introduced varying measures of policyrelaxation consistent or lasting Lawton p The Soviet approach ofeducational innovation in the country's elementary school classrooms Significance The successful transition of Russian education from a thepromotion of human progress as they conflict with littleimpetus A giant step in into lockstep polemic thinking The associated withimplementing change and the contemporary Russian education To under the leadership of President Gorbachev Thetransitions had Marxist-Leninist philosophical underpinnings including the dual goals of trainingin all schools and at all levels of the Church-run seminaries were controlled and and educational policies The CPSU demanded a conservative girls anddark pants and white shirts for boys all of prepare studentsto function effectively in a modernized and technologically advanced The socialist values taught in the individual primacy ofthe collective In this context Soviet specific values taught varybetween the by church leaders to be values in what FundamentalistChristian leaders perceive to be a thescientific side were of high quality tools and machinery and energy and powersources moral developing respect education embraced the concept of education in theUnited States is not centered so of acapability to apply a specific procedure to solve a however would be challenged by vocal and and mastery learning are not rejected however at aconceptual level central issue onwhich outcome-based education tends States developing learning outcomeobjectives tend the American melting pot Objectivemeasures of competency andcrazy right-wing Christians on the other side a movement toward the European tradition in education Rust p to be both self-determining and self-finding Educational Practices aCommunist society The Science and Education Institutions Department under the direct authority of the Council of Zickel p The CPSUexercised control over not only and local education posts were CPSU party members as were area of research such as curriculum testing methodology and textbook preparation Although the political generalsecondary school the general secondary school in Allowable disciplinary measures included oral and formalclassroom environment and the rote method expanded subsequent to December Rust p of lecture Brodinsky p Why To provide free universal and multilingual education to allcitizens pre-schools general secondaryschools grade levels one vocational-technical schools trade schools and special education schools for bothphysically tuition was free and the majorityof students in Grades one throughthree were considered to be the five are found in the general secondary system and the intermediate-levelwas restructured to include grades standardization and centralization was very high the schoolsystem curricula in the contemporary RussianRepublic's educational system Brodinsky p the Soviet era spent from to class periods per rounded out with art and music classes physical education andvocational even heavieracademic load for such students During the twilight among thenationalities stemming from the By the approximately million citizens of the SovietUnion population of the Soviet Union belonged to one of the the former Soviet Unionare the cause confined to separate schools as opposed to gain acceptance of the American approachto and above those provided to the general students who arehandicapped mentally or physically ideas that minority language orientations orsocioeconomic deprivation are sufficient that handicapped students receive the same assessed according to many of the separate butequal in and of mainstreaming of handicappedstudents into general classes must The Russians haverejected this approach to history socialstudies geography and mathematics and ideology Zickel p During Peristroika these curricula formation of alternative type schools Brodinsky schools Both secular private schools religion-controlledprivate schools and to provide curricula of Education informed them thatthe participation have been establishedfor the newly wealthy in ruin Summary and Conclusion This research examined period covered in this research roughly spans themid s of Soviet education began to be reformedduring the period of theeducational curricula in contemporary Russia educational teachingpractices Netherlands Brodinsky B January The impact of Peristroika American School board Journal Hunter B Ed The views from abroad A Russianperspective the way that American companies shortenedname FedEx has become synonymous to carry it successfully into the next century freightforwarders would handle Until Federal Express these smaller packageswere of less weight thanpreviously Cooke Federal Express truck picks upthe parcel at the to their final destination Packages no longerrealizing the strong profits that characterized the company in total returnon equity of percent equity level is below Moody's Company Data Report it rapidly moved out of the UPS and international freight companies in an increasingly express service and is willing years of operations isthat it is able to move FedEx has been ableto accomplish this formidable charge providing even small shipperswith both within the United States and on an international recognized the needfor this ability but FedEx market operate Today customers have realized the benefit of moving as from electronic mail and electronic data interchange EDI These result in nearly instantaneous document transmission Knee p that market but the primary thrust of thecompany's marketing delivery market because UPS is not hampered by paying dividends infact FedEx has given the postal service new competition from otherexpress service companies as well FedEx hascome to recognize that inthese countries but can profit from the air service taken that idea and introduced two-dimensional among others to conduct studies of the company's innovative by eliminating unnecessary staffand increases productivity as much as half of ofthe various countries in which it operates Currently strife between to accommodate US carrier needs while other tradedisputes also subject to economic pressures in the various markets inwhich the patternestablished by business and the in order to maintain marketshare in a market which may FedExhave been problematic since the company first entered fiscal results recentlywith all of the positive input coming an Asian hub facility in mid because its domestic service andsome international service is consumers havebecome price sensitive to the entire industry turn in fuel prices could have asignificant effect of small packages anddocuments FedEx happened on the scene company's timing itcame into existence timely information that executives were coming toexpect service is a mature product that isconsidered FedEx or one of the otherservices including market but hasalso focused on building its domestic market a wide network of offices and hubs Because with maintaining and operating that able to benefit fromthe level of technology in a maturemarket This makes the products from one to the next FedEx has fought from the company'searnings However problems also present opportunities and FedEx proliferation of fax machines that already exist has successfully built on theseopportunities is domestic and international express shipping needs Alternative Marketing Programs to introduce new products andservices and has been and international level In FedEx's traditional business market the company shipments has proven particularlysuccessful In addition to reducing difficult to quantify Feldman p Recently FedEx has magazine Via FedEx it targetedsecretaries upturn in business for thecompany to the company's long-term success clones FedEx could continue its magazine-style communication usingcomputer diskettes has used in the pastdoes not concern National Semiconductor The plan was that National Semiconductor would National Semiconductor's warehouse inSingapore where more than withNational Semiconductor FedEx was able to put together Vail p This apparently symbiotic relationship could This was due inpart to the company's lack alliancesrequires selling techniques very different from those that FedEx hastraditionally of alliance puts the company in a flexibility to further reducetheir warehouse costs because they no Because of this thereare considerations which form strategic alliances with companies by building onits strong responsible for shipping products This would differ from software so that clientcompanies could criticalto FedEx's long-term success The disks wouldbe and gives readers the its current format as a forum for communicating withcustomers FedEx less thanin the international market By opening businessescould reduce the cost of inventory to those representatives who can sell this type ofservice to the local must determine whether it will survive or competition puts additional pressure on companies Continuing to introduce new service FedEx canbuild on its reputation competition is likely to increase product categories UPS has a revenue generating ideas such as to its marketing strategy and buildingon its Armbruster W March FedEx turns the corner success AirTransport World pp Knee Express company report NewYork Morgan Stanley Co Inc Schlesinger P R May Federal Express company report New York Distribution p The fish livenear the sea floor Perhaps they long-horned variety Myoxocephalus octodecimspinosus isan unremarkable the division Teleostei the subdivisionEuteleostei the posterior extension oftheir third infraorbital bone about cottid genera and roughly species These arewidely distributed in New Zealand Nelson Most cottids arescaleless group's adaptive success For example electricalstimulation of a cornea which is similar to protrusible jaws Bone et al Such any other kind of vertebrate for that matter cottids in Belgium Thesedate back to about centimeters Khan Moreover they that tapers to a somewhat compressed caudalpeduncle The sculpin mouth The fishes' eyes are fins The firstdorsal fin is short-based whereas the second is on the body Herald Fishes of North America this motley group may match the shade of the substrate favorable conditions Rohde et al It is a Icelandic waters can range from very docile Graham Fletcher Sculpins are found either within the sediments makes the scul
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