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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 81 - 90 of 359 matching essays
- 81: Becoming A Professional Chef
- ... that, a chef, a cook. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, Monthly Labor review,November, 1995. By the year 2000, there will be an estimated 16-38% increase for chefs. The Wall Street Journal notes that the average salary for a trained culinarian is $37,500 and can rise as high as $210,000. for top executive chefs.(2) A chef can be ... outside a kitchen environment, learning by contact with other professionals is what professionalism is all about. Works cited The California Culinary Academy,WWW.Baychef.com/educational/ index.html. Website. The Wall Street journal,January 2, 1990, Page 1. The Culinary Institute of America,The New Professional Chef. 5th ed.New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold,1991
- 82: Iomega Corporation Data Storag
- ... rise-again impression that the company has acquired since its entry into the removable storage market in 1980, thus spurring improved gross profits, consumer confidence, and an increased interest on Wall Street.16 In 1983, Iomega was on top of the Wall Street world. The searing property raised $21.7 million in public offerings due to the interest drawn by IBM PC users who were amazed by Iomega s patented Bernoulli ...
- 83: Interview to Dow Jones
- ... broadest sense, any quality products or services that compete for the time and attention of busy businesspeople compete with Dow Jones. More specifically, we have some franchises such as The Wall Street Journal that are dominant in their fields. In other cases, we face particular competitors; Dow Jones Telerate, for example, competes with Reuters in offering real-time financial information around the ... S., thus adding the third component of a global business network. The ITT sports programming will help to draw even larger audiences. Q. What is the profile of a typical Wall Street Journal reader? A. The typical reader of the Journal spends 49 minutes every business day with the newspaper. He or she might be a senior executive of a ...
- 84: Computers and Crime
- ... Going Undercover in the Computer Underworld". New York Times, Jan. 26, 1993, B, 1:2. Carley, W. "As Computers Flip, People Lose Grip in Saga of Sabatoge at Printing Firm". Wall Street Journal, Aug. 27, 1992, A, 1:1. Carley, W. "In-House Hackers: Rigging Computers for Fraud or Malice Is Often an Inside Job". Wall Street Journal, Aug 27, 1992, A, 7:5. Markoff, J. "Hackers Indicted on Spy Charges". New York Times, Dec. 8, 1992, B, 13:1. Finn, Nancy and Peter, "Don' ...
- 85: Coca Cola
- ... dollars. A financial analyst said, “Coke’s market share fell from 24.3 percent in 1980 to 21.8 percent in 1984.” Schuster, S. (1997, May). The Thirst Quenching Drink. Wall Street Journal, pp. 20-21. This was the first flavor change since the existence of the Coca-Cola Company. The change was announced April 23, 1985 at the Vivian Beaumont Theater ... Cola, “ Pharmacy in History, vol. 29 (1987), no. 2, pp. 85-89. [Online]. Available FTP:www.thecoca-colacompany.com/tcc.bottle.html Schuster, S. (1997, May). The Thirst Quenching Drink. Wall Street Journal, pp. 20-21. I’d like to buy the World a Coke.” (1972, July 12). The New York Times p. A17. [Online]. Available FTP:www.thecoca-colacompany. ...
- 86: An Argument For Animal Research
- ... animals have rights which supersede human subsistence. "For most of the past decade, the animal-rights movement hasn't merely opposed animal research; it has tried to destroy it." ( ¯The Wall Street Journal®, "Animals and Sickness", Page 378.) Animal rights advocates and activists generally have ethical objections regarding treatment of animals during experimentation, but the use of animals in research for the ... portray ethical righteousness can be wrong. For instance, " an American Medical Association ( AMA ) poll found that 77 percent of adults think that using animals in medical research is necessary." ( ¯The Wall Street Journal®, "Animals and Sickness", Page 378.) It is a curious thing to see animal welfare groups try to hinder animal research by threatening researchers lives and destroying years ...
- 87: Rise Of The Tech Stock
- ... did in the mid to late seventies; but it is on steroids, and is growing like never before. Backed by the relentless, yet sometimes spasmodic, growth of the NASDAQ Composite, Wall Street s impact on the future cannot be denied. For as long as the market has been in existence, drastic changes such as these have never taken place. What awesome power ... not as of 3-2-00, anyway. However, all good things must come to an end; the question is when. Milton Friedman and Alan Greenspan are both major authorities in Wall Street, and when they speak, the world of investors listens. The one bad thing is this, they usually never agree. In late 1999, Friedman "suggested the current market looks ...
- 88: Cloning
- ... admit some good aspects of this genetic engineering, but they still seem pessimistic of the future of cloning in animals excluding humans. The first thing the article states is the Wall Street opportunities for the biotech field. Instead of phone calls from eager investors only phone calls from reporters were coming in asking about this market. I feel that now would be ... be a commonly routine thing and price wars will begin for the products produced by them which means many great investment opportunities will be available. But one must remember that Wall Street is extremely short term investing so this is a good explanation for not many investors being interested in this because it is still many years before tangible and ...
- 89: An Analysis Of The Cask Of Ama
- ... is at hand, but what is Montresor going to do to Fortunato? Why is he taking him underground? The climax of the story is when Montresor chains Fortunato to the wall and begins to layer the bricks. It is our high point of emotional involvement. We are like Fortunato in that we cannot bring ourselves to believe what is about to ... the carnival as a backdrop is also skillful because it is a time when everything is in chaos and people have lost their self-control. There is noise in the street, the servants are gone, and Fortunato might have sensed something evil about Montresor’s intentions and left the vaults before it was too late. Poe’s style is what makes ... mood of the story is one of horror and impending evil. The ending of the story is filled with suspense. What will happen now that Fortunato is chained to the wall? Will Montresor come to his senses and have mercy on Fortunato? We see Montresor carefully construct each tier of the wall. Why does he hesitate at the end? Will ...
- 90: The Catcher In The Rye
- ... with becoming the catcher in the rye is shown when he goes to Phoebe s school. I saw something that drove me crazy. Somebody d written fuck you on the wall. It drove me damn near crazy. I thought how Phoebe and all the other little kids would see it, and how they d wonder what the hell it meant, and ... time I came to the end of a block and stepped off the goddam curb, I had this feeling that I d never get to the other side of the street. I thought I d just go down, down, down, and nobody d ever see me again Then I started doing something else. Every time I d get to the end ... believe I was talking to my brother Allie. I d say to him, Allie, don t let me disappear .. And then when I d reach the other side of the street without disappearing, I d thank him. Allie was catching him, not letting Holden fall into the cliff. Allie was able to do this because Allie could not change, there ...
Search results 81 - 90 of 359 matching essays
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