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write my assignment 30398

Southwestern University: (C)*

The popularity of Southwestern University’s football program under its new coach Phil Flamm surged in each of the 5 years since his arrival at the Stephenville, Texas, college. (See Southwestern University: (A) in Chapter 3 and (B) in Chapter 4.) With a football stadium close to maxing out at 54,000 seats and a vocal coach pushing for a new stadium, SWU president Joel Wisner faced some difficult decisions. After a phenomenal upset victory over its archrival, the University of Texas, at the homecoming game in the fall, Dr. Wisner was not as happy as one would think. Instead of ecstatic alumni, students, and faculty, all Wisner heard were complaints. “The lines at the concession stands were too long”; “Parking was harder to find and farther away than in the old days” (that is, before the team won regularly); “Seats weren’t comfortable”; “Traffic was backed up halfway to Dallas”; and on and on. “A college president just can’t win,” muttered Wisner to himself.

At his staff meeting the following Monday, Wisner turned to his VP of administration, Leslie Gardner. “I wish you would take care of these football complaints, Leslie,” he said. “See what the real problems are and let me know how you’ve resolved them.” Gardner wasn’t surprised at the request. “I’ve already got a handle on it, Joel,” she replied. “We’ve been randomly surveying 50 fans per game for the past year to see what’s on their minds. It’s all part of my campuswide TQM effort. Let me tally things up and I’ll get back to you in a week.”

When she returned to her office, Gardner pulled out the file her assistant had compiled (see Table 6.6). “There’s a lot of information here,” she thought.

TABLE 6.6 Fan Satisfaction Survey Results (N=250)(N=250)

Overall Grade

A

B

C

D

F

Game Day

A. Parking

90

105

45

5

5

B. Traffic

50

85

48

52

15

C. Seating

45

30

115

35

25

D. Entertainment

160

35

26

10

19

E. Printed Program

66

34

98

22

30

Tickets

A. Pricing

105

104

16

15

10

B. Season Ticket Plans

75

80

54

41

0

Concessions

A. Prices

16

116

58

58

2

B. Selection of Foods

155

60

24

11

0

C. Speed of Service

35

45

46

48

76

Respondents

Alumnus

113

Student

83

Faculty/Staff

16

None of the above

38

Open-Ended Comments on Survey Cards:

Parking a mess

Add a skybox

Get better cheerleaders

Double the parking attendants

Everything is okay

Too crowded

Seats too narrow

Great food

Phil F. for President!

I smelled drugs being smoked

Stadium is ancient

Seats are like rocks

Not enough cops for traffic

Game starts too late

Hire more traffic cops

Need new band

Great!

More hot dog stands

Seats are all metal

Need skyboxes

Seats stink

Go SWU!

Lines are awful

Seats are uncomfortable

I will pay more for better view

Get a new stadium

Student dress code needed

I want cushioned seats

Not enough police

Students too rowdy

Parking terrible

Toilets weren’t clean

Not enough handicap spots in lot

Well done, SWU

Put in bigger seats

Friendly ushers

Need better seats

Expand parking lots

Hate the bleacher seats

Hot dogs cold

$3 for a coffee? No way!

Get some skyboxes

Love the new uniforms

Took an hour to park

Coach is terrific

More water fountains

Better seats

Seats not comfy

Bigger parking lot

I’m too old for bench seats

Cold coffee served at game

My company will buy a skybox—build it!

Programs overpriced

Want softer seats

Beat those Longhorns!

I’ll pay for a skybox

Seats too small

Band was terrific

Love Phil Flamm

Everything is great

Build new stadium

Move games to Dallas

No complaints

Dirty bathroom

*This integrated case study runs throughout the text. Other issues facing Southwestern’s football stadium include: (A) Managing the renovation project (Chapter 3); (B) Forecasting game attendance (Chapter 4); (D) Break-even analysis of food services (Supplement 7 Web site); (E) Locating the new stadium (Chapter 8 Web site); (F) Inventory planning of football programs (Chapter 12 Web site); and (G) Scheduling of campus security officers/staff for game days (Chapter 13 Web site).

Discussion Questions

  1. Using at least two different quality      tools, analyze the data and present your conclusions.
  2. How could the survey have been more      useful?
  3. What is the next step?

   ,V

 

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write my assignment 19180

Need an argumentative essay on Hamlet: A Guide to the Play. Needs to be 6 pages. Please no plagiarism.

According to the research findings, it can, therefore, be said that Hamlet simply did not act when it was required that he acted and the consequence is tension and confusion that reigns throughout the play, resulting in at the end of the ply that creates even more uncertainties. Thus, confusion and uncertainty is a major lens through which one can look at the play Hamlet, considering the fact that the whole story revolves around the uncertainties and confusion that keeps building up at every stage of the story until finally, virtually everybody in the story has perished. The major confusion that the inaction of Hamlet has contributed in the play is the confusion that surrounds the character Gertrude, the Queen of Denmark and Hamlet’s mother. Hamlet’s inaction has caused the character of Gertrude to raise more questions than answers in the play. This is because, it is not immediately clear whether she cooperated or contributed to the death of her husband who was the former king of Denmark, and neither is it clear whether she loved her former husband nor whether she betrayed her son to Claudius. All this uncertainty regarding Gertrude has been caused by Hamlet’s inaction since if he had decided to act immediately after the ghost informed him to avenge his father’s death, he would have confronted Gertrude immediately, and the whole truth would have come out. On the contrary, Hamlet does not swing to action immediately, rather opting to take time and investigate the cause of his father’s death, despite the fact that he never had any doubt that it is Claudius who had killed his father. His delayed action enables the villain in the play, Claudius, to buy all the necessary time that is required to plan for the elimination of Hamlet as well.

 

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write my assignment 29870

1) The unemployment rate is the number of ?2) The value of steel sold to an automobile producer is __________ directly included in the GDP because __________. 3) In the simplest Keynesian model of the determination of income, interest rates are assumed ?4) An increase in the money supply will raise equilibrium GDP if the IS or IM curve?5) The aggregate demand curve may be derived from the IS-LM analysis by shifting6) Suppose that members of Congress and the President believe that the natural rate of unemployment is 2% but in fact it is 6%, and employing fiscal policy they increase AD each time unemployment rises above 2%. The underestimation of the natural rate combined with adaptive expectations will lead to?7) Unanticipated inflation will hurt __________ and help __________. 8) Once monetary policy is dedicated to controlling the level of nominal GDP, then fiscal policy can be used to?9) A major side-effect of a stimulative fiscal policy is that it will ?10) The conditions for joining the “Euro” single-currency block led a number of European countries to __________ and consequently reduce their debt-GDP ratios. 11) The national debt must eventually be paid off to ?12) Over a decade or longer, a government budget deficit ?13) As an individual, you cannot participate in the financial markets to issue new stock or sell new bonds because?14) The quantity equation makes the demand for money depend on ?15) The quantity theory of money assumed?16) Keynes’s “speculative motive” for holding money is?17) If the level of interest rates increases, then the current value and price of a bond paying a fixed interest payment will?18) The central issue in the stabilization policy debate is?19) The increase of the real money supply by 10% by the Federal Reserve when the unemployment rate rises by 1% is an example of ?20) Non-activists believe that the IS curve is ?21) In the early 1970s monetary growth was relatively stable yet unemployment and prices were quite unstable. This suggests that ?22) A policymaker would prefer that the lag in the effect of a policy be ?23) Which of the following statements best describes the rational expectations hypothesis? Individuals will not enter into long-term agreements unless they are certain about the payments they will receive; it is likely that individuals will consistently make errors; it is reasonable to expect individuals to consistently underestimate the level of inflation; individuals will make random errors, independent of previous errors 24) Business cycles will occur if either of the two theories below characterizes the behavior of the economy deflation impotence or rigid nominal wages and/or the classical or the real balance theory and/or the classical or the Keynesian theories of aggregate demand. 25) If it is less costly for business firms to adjust the labor demanded as the price level changes than it is for households to adjust Ns, then in the short-run?26) Switzerland has experienced the lowest rate of price increases in the post World War II period. Consequently, Lucas would predict?27) According to the classical model, real wages should do what during recessions?28) The structural deficit is?29) The natural employment surplus __________ be used to determine the effectiveness of discretionary fiscal policy actions because __________. 30) The cyclical deficit is?31) The 2001 recession was caused principally by ?32) A government budget deficit is financed by a combination of ?33) The ballooning of the U.S. foreign debt to 500 billion dollars by 1988 implied that ?34) If the Federal Reserve intervenes in the foreign-exchange markets and buys foreign currencies?PROBLEM 1 (Weight 40 points) Derive the LM curve by one of the standard methods shown either in the Gordon Macroeconomics text or in the Soule IMS reference. Be sure to label all axis and curves on your graphs.Explain in writing to what market your derivation brings equilibrium and how it accomplishes this.PROBLEM 2 (Weight 40 points) Derive the IS curve by one of the standard methods shown in either the Gordon Macroeconomics text or in the Soule IMS reference. Be sure to label all axis and curves on your graphs.Explain in writing to what market your derivation brings equilibrium and how it accomplishes this.PROBLEM 3 (Weight 50 points)What are the principal differences between flexible and fixed exchange systems?

 

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Create a 3 page essay paper that discusses Hamartiology: The Reality Of Evil In This World.

First of all, there are two kinds of evil in this world: moral and natural evil. Moral evil is evil that stems from human action or inaction while Natural evil occurs as a consequence of nature. An example of moral evil is when one commits adulterous acts towards one’s neighbor while an example of natural evil would be earthquakes, tornadoes, floods, diseases, those which are not controlled by man. Having a comparison between these two, one would be able to find Elwell’s argument reasonable when he said that though evil has resulted in a misuse of human free will which was granted by God to humans, God is not to be held responsible for evil in this world even when He knows humans are inclined to abuse it because of the fact that human free will is a gift and only becomes a curse once man uses it in the wrong way. However, there are other theodicies presented that reflect a faulty reasoning of the presence of evil such as of the Consequentialist account of ethics that presupposes the good or evil of an act is determined by its result. Taking the act of robbery to be able to provide for one’s family as an example, though the end is good, the act towards it clearly is a moral evil that makes it sinful in its entirety. In this case, one could have used human free will to resort to perhaps finding a lowly job to be able to acquire money to feed one’s family instead. Thus, the Consequentialist theory is indeed faulty and is one of the principles that explain why there is a worsening case of moral evil in our society. Also, another faulty account on this issue would be the argument of atheists that theism and religion, in general, are not worthy of adherence because of its inability to solve the problem of evil. To counter this faulty theory would be to defend that religion in itself is good as it is established to guide people towards what is moral.&nbsp.

 

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