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    Hybrid Records and Retention Rules Jessica Fisher WGU Missouri Hybrid Records and Retention Rules Hybrid records are records that are part paper based and part electronic health record. They are a common occurrence due to the implementation of the electronic health record. Many facilities have not gone to the complete form of the electronic record and must keep partial portions of the medical record in paper form. The hybrid record is a step up from the all-paper record in many ways. It allows

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    Riding The Waves Together

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    RIDING THE WAVES TOGETHER : a SUCCESSFUL PARTNERSHIP CASE-STUDY Brought to you by: Louis Poh Ihwa Myung Jane Ng Mabel Tan Sai Kaung Ngin Introduction 1) Surf Life Saving New Zealand (SLSNZ) is a lifesaving association that provideswere lifesaving services 3) SLSNZ benefited by DHL’s investment through its clubhouse which allows SLSNZ to update their facilities and equipment. • Has been in the communities for 100 years • onTotal of 9 districts 4) Based the social partnership‚ DHL provided reasonable

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    Second- Wave Feminism

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    History 2112 Second-Wave Feminism Towards the end of the twentieth century‚ feminist women in America faced an underlying conflict to find their purpose and true meaning in life. “Is this all?” was often a question whose answer was sought after by numerous women reaching deeper into their minds and souls to find what was missing from their life. The ideal second-wave feminist was defined as a women who puts all of her time into cleaning her home‚ loving her husband‚ and caring for her children

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    Uses of Electromagnetic Waves Radio Waves * TV and FM radio (short wavelength) * Direct line of sight with transmitter (do not diffract) * Medium wavelength – travel further because they reflect from layers in the atmosphere * Used for transmitting signals. Microwaves * Microwaves are used in satellite television broad casting. * It is used to transmit mobile phone signals between Mast‚ which may be up to 20km apart. * Microwaves are absorbed by water molecules

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    French New Wave

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    THE FRENCH NEW WAVE LA NOUVELLE VAUGE During the German occupation French cinema thrived‚ this was due to the protection given to it from foreign competition. When the war ended American films flooded into the French market‚ these films were greeted with great enthusiasm‚ as many were curious about all aspects of American culture. The Blums-Byrnes Agreement regulated the flow of foreign films in the French market. This agreement stated that French films could only be shown for 13 weeks

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    Joseph Paz Dr. Scanlon Ap English Lit 27 January 2013 The Sound of Waves: Personal Reflection In Yukio Mishima’s The Sound of Waves the reader is immersed in a rich‚ traditional‚ spiritual form of Japanese culture. The island is not only an accurate portrayal of the traditional Japanese culture but also that of the western world which is making its way to the small Japanese island in which the books plot unfolds. Mishima manages to show the reader of the importance of keeping with tradition

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    Three Waves Of Feminism

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    male is head of the family and descent is traced through the male line. The history of western modern feminist movements has three “waves”. First-wave feminism look for changes in marriage relationship‚ equality in property rights and finally in women’s right to vote or women’s suffrage. Second-wave feminism‚ began in the 1960s‚ called women’s liberation. Third-wave feminism began in the 1980s or early 1990s and addresses feminism across class and race lines. It was deal with in culture rather than

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    The Great Wave Analysis

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    Katsushika Hokusai’s print entitled The Great Wave is a Japanese art during the period ukiyo-e which is a movement that depicts everyday life. There were many materials used in this piece. Including “Ink‚ Paper‚ Printing blocks‚ Prints‚ Relief prints‚ Wood blocks‚ Woodblock prints”(metmuseum). The print was created after the artists fame had died down. In his late seventies‚ to pass time. Hokusai printed different views of Mount Fuji. The Great Wave being one of 36 and the most known. Hokusai‚ born

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    The Three Big Waves of Feminism First-Wave Feminism: Women’s Right to Vote In 1776‚ the then First Lady of the United States was the first to raise her about women’s rights‚ telling her husband to “remember the ladies” in his drafting of new laws‚ yet it took more than 100 years for men like John Adams to actually do so. With the help of half a dozen determined‚ and in this case white upper-middle-class‚ women the first-wave feminism‚ which spans from the 19th century to the early 20th century

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    Radio waves and Microwaves Radio communications Radio waves are used to broadcast radio or television signals from transmitters‚ which are then converted into electrical signals with an aerial (which is made out of metal to absorb the radio waves) so you can hear and see them. When done so the aerial converts this wave into an electrical signal (because of the electromagnetic waves energy exciting particles in the aerial and causing them to oscillate/vibrate and thus create an electrical current)

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