Alan Baird, the founding figure of Stitch it, a primarily mall based service provider which officers alteration services to the private and public sector, was now the company’s CEO. In 1990, Baird sold Stitch it to a business group after sales and income had begun to slow. After selling his company and having stayed on as CEO, he oversaw the growth of the company and overall expansion form the initial 3 stores under Baird’s direct leadership, to today’s 84 stores throughout Canada and the United States. Now having the opportunity to buy back his business venture, his daughter, Jennifer Baird has expressed her interest I becoming an executive in the Stitch It Group.…
SUBJECTIVE Mr. Hamilton was readmitted to MCCRC on 03/02 and seen on 03/05/2018. Mr. Hamilton had been here after a motor vehicle accident, leaving here with fractured ribs, pneumonitis, fractured sternal, and a complicated right acetabular hip fracture. He recuperated and was able to return home on analgesics. He was on amiodarone, Lasix, metformin, and glimepiride for his diabetes. He did not check his blood sugar, although I had advised him to do so.…
I attended a telephone conference call regarding the above-referenced matter on 05/12/2017. Other participants in the conference Jim Murphy and Chris Mason.…
Rick Sauve is 62 years old and is a co-owner of KCB Cabinets & Renovations together with his wife and his youngest son. Before taking KCB over he gained work experience in a large printing company in Ontario which eventually brought him to Alberta. Rick Sauve is managing his business since almost 12 years by now and overcame several downturns as the financial crisis in 2008. The company took the crisis as a chance and improved the renovation side of the company.…
Thursday, September 15th, 2016 at approximately 8:29 a.m., I Detective L. Donegain and Detective D. Johnson conducted a noncustodial interview of Devin McCall (white, male 4/20/1986 of 1201 Southwood Drive, Fayetteville, North Carolina 28304). The interview was audio recorded and is contained in the case file. The following is a summary of Devin McCall’s interview:…
Dave Sharland – Mr. Sharland a physical therapist for the North Florida/South Georgia Veteran’s Administration (VA) reported that during his career, he has participated in over 800 physical therapy visits in home settings and been very positive. The Council questioned Mr. Sharland on licensure requirements, technical platform, types of services offered, and patient and patient representative access to services. Mr. Sharland to explain the health care providers working with the VA are only required to obtain a license in one state, but they are limited to providing services to only VA patients. He noted that that necessary technology is sometimes provided directly to patients and that in other instances the patient is responsible for purchasing…
It can be seen that adding another investment vehicle, i.e. Real Estate here to his portfolio reduces his dependance on the performance of his stock which is currently comprised of 95% of his overall portfolio vis-a-vis 48% after the investment.…
Facts: This lawsuit involves Dred Scott, an African American slave and his owner due to the passing of his previous owner Dr. Emerson, John F. A. Sanford. John F.A Sanford is the brother to the wife of Dr. Emerson. Dred Scott sued for his freedom in the Missouri Circuit Court for the City of St. Louis on April 6, 1846 . Dred Scott’s legal suit is for assault and false imprisonment: “A slave could be punished and kept as property, but a free person could not.”…
1. Billy is a voluntary patient and can leave the ward at any time. He has attempted to commit suicide more than once. He is deathly afraid of his mother and authority figures. I think that Billy has Anxiety disorder as well as social phobia. I do not think that Billy should be in the ward, he would do better at a rehabilitation facility. The ward is for insane or criminally insane and Billy does not belong there.…
Marvin Pickering was a high school science teacher from Will County, Illinois who was fired by the Board of Education for writing a letter to the editor. The letter was published in a local newspaper and contained many negative and inflammatory statements toward the school board regarding their use of taxpayer’s money. Specifically, Pickering was upset about the use of bond money to athletic programs, instead of fixing facilities and paying teachers. The Board of Education concluded that Pickering’s letter was “detrimental to the efficient operation and administration of the schools of the district” (Essex, 2012). Pickering argued that being fired for writing a letter as a private citizen violated both his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to Free Speech and Due Process under the U.S. Constitution.…
Dred Scott made history by launching a legal battle to gain his freedom. That he had lived with Dr. Emerson in free territories become the basis for his case.…
In Revisiting Dred Scott: Prudence, Providence, and the Limits of Constitutional Statesmanship, Justin Buckley Dyer argues “According to the opinion written by Chief Justice Roger Taney, African slaves and their descendants were not, and could never become, citizens of the United States,”1 rejecting that President Abraham Lincoln meant any less, when he “declared Taney’s opinion to be ‘erroneous”2 could endure modern scrutiny. During the framing and development of the early American United States, slavery and its transition into legalized freedom constantly challenged its opponents…
The conclusion of Scott v. Sandford was considered the worst judgment Chief Justice Roger broke Taney ever composed. He disregarded constitutional points of reference, misshaped history, forced an inflexible instead of an adaptive development on the constitution, overlooked particular awards of power in the constitution, and tormented implications out of other, more-cloud provisions. His rationale on the citizenship issue was maybe the most convoluted. He conceded that African Americans could be citizens of a particular state and that they may even have the capacity to vote, as they truth be told did in some states. In any case, he contended that state citizenship had nothing to do with national citizenship and that African Americans couldn't…
Hubris was a major problem for the guides that led to the demise of many climbers. In this case, some guides did not use oxygen masks (Storm Over Everest). This increased the risk of the climb and made it more likely that they could be incapacitated and unable to perform the duties of a guide as necessary and endangering the customers (Krakauer 9). Regardless of their climbing experience, the safety of the customer should have been put first. Hubris was also relevant when the guides got behind schedule and thought…
December 28th 2013 at 7:30 on a Saturday morning, Andrew Anderson was shot and killed. The suspect behind the gun was Amanda jo Lucero. These two just so happen to be my cousins. Amanda jo and Andrew grew up together, they were practically brother and sister. My aunty beck raised the two and treatee Amanda like her own. You can imagine how hard it was for my aunty beck to hear her son was gone but hurt her even more to hear Amanda was responsible for Andrews death.…