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» Miscellaneous Essays and Papers
Management In The Year 2000 Gl
<view this essay>.... beyond will surely find out, it isnˇ¦t always easy to manage an organization when the work force and management teams are thousands of miles and an ocean away. Consequently, there are a few strategies that can ensure the success of a business located in the global market.
First of all, the 1990's have already taught us that people are proud to work for companies that treat them well. They become linked to companies in more than an
employer/employee relationship -- they come to feel as if they are truly a part of an organization; not just one of the employees. In the year 2000 and beyond, it shall be the
presence of this feeling more than any other that sets ex .....
Number of words: 3818 | Number of pages: 14 |
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Locality Planning
<view this essay>.... will need to be participative and all who may be affected by the plan would need to be actively encouraged to participate. This would involve amongst others, local community groups, elected members, voluntary organisations, residents, businesses, council services and officials. This consultation ‘phase’ would have to examine what other plans, initiatives, programmes and policies may be in place and any resultant impact on existing service provision and resources.
Inter-agency and intra-agency co-operation is essential if information is to be collated and processed in any meaningful fashion and to ensure that any plan once in place will be prop .....
Number of words: 457 | Number of pages: 2 |
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What Makes A Successful Career
<view this essay>.... careers I’d like to discuss is those who simply enjoy their work. This group of people is very fortunate, or lucky if you prefer, because they have found a job they do well and can do it without having to deal with the negativity normally associated with work. They get up every morning, head to work, and are glad to be going, unlike most of us who can only think about all of the other things we would rather be doing. With this group, few things give them as much pleasure in life as knowing that although today’s work is done, they can do it all again tomorrow. Having that kind of outlook on ones career is a success, despite how much money .....
Number of words: 878 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Cigars
<view this essay>.... and cigars have a more pleasing aroma.
Both cigars and cigarettes are constructed of tobacco, but the care
used in raising fine cigar tobacco is second to none. Only the finest
leaves of the plant are selected. The drying and fermenting process is
long (nine months for filler leaves and up to two years for wrapper
leaves) and closely watched. Cigarette tobacco is grown for quantity;
not necessarily for quality. No regard is given to the aroma and smoke of
the different types of tobacco. The only type of tobacco grown is fast-
maturing strains they can get to the market quickly. Careful and
attentive raising is non existent. The leaves are quick .....
Number of words: 602 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Kanflict: How Humans Have Risen Above The Divine
<view this essay>.... nature of
inclination. This inclination is the desire, primarily, to be happy.
To be moral means adhering to codes of goodness and selflessness.
This might involve running into a burning building to rescue a child. This
doesn't make one happy, because one doesn't say, "I could die or I could live.
Ya know, I think I'll take the first option…Yippee." This seems ludicrous, that
one would chose the good of one over the good of another, and not chose yourself.
But this is what elevates us above the rest of the life on the planet, that we
will chose to serve the laws of morality and justice, while putting aside one's
own happiness.
God o .....
Number of words: 909 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Adoption And Identity Formatio
<view this essay>.... formation of adoptees and nonadoptees?
The National Adoption Center reports that fifty-two percent of adoptable children have attachment disorder symptoms. It was also found that the older the child when adopted, the higher the risk of social maladjustment (Benson et al., 1998). This is to say that a child who is adopted at one-week of age will have a better chance of “normal” adjustment than a child who is adopted at the age of ten. This may be due in part to the probability that an infant will learn how to trust, where as a ten-year-old may have more difficulty with this task, depending on his history. Eric Erickson, a developmental the .....
Number of words: 2010 | Number of pages: 8 |
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Shiga Naoya - At Kinosaki
<view this essay>.... that take place in the novel did actually happen in the same period of time of three weeks.
A Look at Shiga Naoya's Style
"At Kinosaki" is considered to be a fine example of Shiga Naoya's famous style of writing, and an exemplary model of the "I novel" (shi-shosetsu ) . It is also a work often used as a great example of a novel written in a movement coined as the "Naturalism" movement; which describes writers attempting to take scientific methods of observation and turn it into literature. Shiga Naoya is reported to have said that he never attempted to draw a line between story novels and non-fiction essays. He described his main function as a writer .....
Number of words: 2281 | Number of pages: 9 |
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Is It Dangerous To Think Too M
<view this essay>.... and re-evaluate social norms for the betterment of society. It was his re-evaluation of social norms that was perceived as dangerous by his society. This leads to the question, “Is it dangerous to think to much?” Is it sometimes better to let things be, in order to keep the peace?
One of the many charges brought against Socrates was the charge of corrupting the youth with his teachings. Instead of letting the laws govern their lives, he was attempting to show his pupils ways of rationalizing their own world. God originally gave mankind free will so that we would not become a bunch of robots walking around doing his bidding, and yet this is what tra .....
Number of words: 1113 | Number of pages: 5 |
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