ordinarily be regarded as conclusive.” Consumer Prod. Safety Comm’n v. GTE Sylvania‚ Inc.‚ 447 U.S. 102‚ 108 (1980). “The legal presumption is that the Legislature used‚ and intended to use‚ these words in this statute in their usual sense at the time the law was passed...” Westerlund v. Black Bear Mining Co.‚ 203 F. 599‚ 607 (8th Cir. 1913). Also “the law uses familiar legal expressions in their familiar legal sense.” Bradley v. United States‚ 410 U.S. 605‚ 609
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Huber v. Wal-Mart Stores‚ Inc. Timothy M McDonald Webster University: HRMG 5700 QA Spring II‚ 2015 Huber v. Wal-Mart Stores‚ Inc. Case Summary Pam Huber sustained a permanent injury that would not allow her to perform the essential functions of her position as an order filler. Huber asked for a reasonable accommodation in the form of taking a vacant position as a router. Both Huber and Wal-Mart agreed that the position was vacant and equivalent. Wal-Mart did not automatically assign Huber to
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Chapter 2 Characteristics of the Airline Industry The real difficulty in changing any enterprise lies not in developing new ideas‚ but in escaping from the old ones. John Maynard Keynes 2.1 Introduction In recent years‚ the European airline industry has exhibited impressively dynamics. The sector has gone through a drastic change on both the supply and the demand side. Unlikely in other industries‚ the driving forces governing the recent changes do not depend mainly on technological factors
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Strategic Issues in the Airline Industry and the Role of Singapore Intl. Airlines The Economic and Strategic Issues of Airlines in a Regulated World Airline is a highly regulated industry in every country. Domestic air-routes are preserved for the domestic airlines only. This regulatory constraint effects success of an airline a lot. In the scenario‚ technological advancement in the airline industry can not provide desired benefits to the airline company because it can not compete effectively
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Airline Industry Analysis Page 1 of 15 Memorandum Date: Subject: To: From: July 13‚ 2009 Airline Industry Analysis Dr. Matt Ford Adam Brown‚ Radmila Gogzheyan‚ Greg Huwel‚ Marie Meininger‚ Josh Riedel‚ Christina Ryan Introduction The following is an analysis of the airline industry. Using collected information and Porter’s “Five Forces” model‚ we will provide information about the attractiveness of the airline industry and provide a recommendation based on that information. Industry Background
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------------------------------------------------- SriLankan Airlines From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia | This article may be written from a fan ’s point of view‚ rather than a neutral point of view. Please clean it up to conform to a higher standard of quality‚ and to make it neutral in tone. (January 2012) | SriLankan Airlines | | IATA UL | ICAO ALK | Callsign SRILANKAN | | Founded | 1947 (as Air Ceylon) | Commenced operations | July 1979 | Hubs | * Bandaranaike
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to the Reputation of Malaysia Airlines (MAS)” Student Name: Widi Prayudi Student ID: UP2005 Assessment Due Date: Tuesday‚ 8 April 2014 Lecturer: Mr. Sandhy Patrick The Implication of Accident to the Reputation of Malaysia Airlines (MAS) Research Proposal Proposed Research Topic: “What is the implication of accident to the reputation of Malaysia Airlines (MAS)?” Purposes: In general
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North America for Euro-Air. Euro-Air‚ a major European-based commercial airline‚ operated daily service to its European hub from fourteen cities in North America and onward service to more than 300 locations in 90 countries around the world. The fax letter (see Exhibit 1) suggested that Euro-Air had recently caused a lot of problems for at least one of its passengers. Passenger complaint letters were not unusual at any airline. What was unusual about this letter was the litany of problems described
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CASE 3: STRATEGIC CHOICES AT THE SINGAPORE AIRLINES GROUP Strategic Management and strategic Competitiveness Productivity Enhancement 1) Deployment of Technology 2) Total Involvement 3) Incentives The External Environment A) General Environment 1) Demographic • Malaysian Airlines (regional competitor)‚ which is geographically closed to Singapore‚ were imitating SIA’s strategy (threats) 2) Economic • Global financial crisis – reduced demand
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Southwest Airlines’ Corporate Strategy & Control System Southwest Airlines became one of the most admired airlines in the world based on their dedication to their customers and the corporate strategies their leadership instituted. Their leadership created a different corporate culture that CEO Herb Kelleher and his company are devoted to the philosophy of putting employees first (Govindarajan‚ pg. 115). In doing so‚ Southwest was able to instill a management control system that relied on
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