Capital Public Radio‚ Inc. 88 Cal. App. 4th 33 (2001) CHARLES STARZYNSKI‚ PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT‚ v. CAPITAL PUBLIC RADIO‚ INC.‚ DEFENDANT AND RESPONDENT ISSUE: 1. Whether Starzynski was wrongfully discharged from his position. 2. Whethe Starzynski ‘s discharge was constructive. RULE: 1. “judgment is properly granted when there is no triable issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 437c(c). A defendant or cross-defendant
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Charles Horton Cooley‚ (born Aug. 17‚ 1864‚ Ann Arbor‚ Michigan‚ U.S.—died May 8‚ 1929‚ Ann Arbor)‚ American sociologist who employed a sociopsychological approach to the understanding of society. Cooley‚ the son of Michigan Supreme Court judge Thomas McIntyre Cooley‚ earned his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in 1894. He had started teaching at the university in 1892‚ became a full professor of sociology in 1907‚ and remained there until the end of his life. Cooley believed that social
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powdered Acetamide with lab equipment such as the thermometer‚ capillary tube‚ beaker‚ test tube‚ and burner fuel. Data Tables/Observations: Boiling Point of Isopropyl Alcohol | | | | Trial # | Boiling Point(°C) | Percent Error % | Observations | Trial 1 | 82.5°C | 0.12% | The Isopropyl Alcohol bubbled close to the opening of the capillary tube‚ so a small amount was poured out. | Trial 2 | 82.1°C | -0.36% | The Isopropyl Alcohol bubbled within the tube only. | Trial 3 | 83°C
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THE “VALUES” WASTELAND Charles Sykes Questions for Close Reading (p. 222) 1. Sykes’s thesis is that the American educational system is not providing students with firm guidelines to help them make moral choices. This thesis is stated directly in paragraph 3 (“A 1992 survey by the Josephson Institute for Ethics of nearly 7‚000 high school and college students‚ most of them from middle-and-upper middle-class backgrounds‚ found the equivalent of ‘a hole in the moral ozone’ among America’s youth”)
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Title: The Effect of Nicotine on the Heart Rate of the Lumbriculus Variegatus Introduction: Background- This lab is being done to demonstrate the effects of stimulants on the circulatory system of blackworms. In this lab‚ the stimulant we have chosen to use is Nicotine. A stimulant is an agent that causes increased activity‚ especially in the nervous or cardiovascular systems. In this lab‚ we will put blackworms into the Nicotine to look at the differences in pulse rates when compared to a control
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Moment of Inertia and Rotational Motion Garret Hebert PHY 2311 Tues 1:00 garret.hebert@hindscc.edu Abstract: During this lab we will study what rotational Inertia is and how different shapes of masses and different masses behave inertially when compared to each other. We will specifically study the differences of inertia between a disk and a ring. We will use increasing forces to induce angular acceleration of both a disk and a ring of a certain mass. We will then then measure the differences
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“Why did I‚ Charles Smith have to be a Real Estate Agent?” “Why did the Australian Government lift the ‘White Australia Policy’?” “Why did Mr Papadopoulos want to sue me?” “Why didn’t I see it coming?” “How stupid am I?” “How was it possible for me to lose so much?”
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Chromatography Lab Questions Pre-Lab Questions 1. A pencil is used rather than a pen to mark the “starting line” in step two because a pen or marker while be used to place a small dot of ink in the center of the X that is made with a pencil. 2. Capillary action is filling of pores in a solid with a liquid. Capillary action is caused by spotting or absorption and is allowed to seep or flow through. 3. The type of pen that will probably give better separation in this paper chromatography
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of the specialized underlying structures of these life-forms. In order for us to appreciate these special adaptation‚ we first need to know how a typical plant or an animal cell organelle behaves in different water and solute concentrations. In this lab‚ we will determine the effects of hypertonic‚ isotonic and hypotonic solutions on plant and animal cells. In general when an animals cell’s placed in hypertonic solution it shrivels; a plant cell on the other hand undergoes plasmolysis. When an animal
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Determining the Concentration of a solution: Beer’s Law Objective In this lab of Determining the concentration of a unknown solution: Beers Law. We determined the concentration of a unknown CuSO4 solution by measuring its absorbance with the colorimeter. With all the calculations we were able to solve the linear regression Equation of absorbance vs. concentration and the alternate method. Materials Vernier LabPro or CBL 2 interface .40 M CuSO4 solution Computer or handheld
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