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    Kunst 1600 Case

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    elements associated with the Kunst 1600 ? 1. Value elements * Cost savings from not having to change oil because the Kunst 1600 is an oil-free vacuum pump. * Higher revenues‚ and hence profits‚ due to higher productivity of the Kunst 1600 in lower pressure settings. These higher profits are only generated in the light commercial refrigerator repair segments since in these segments‚ the technicians can complete more jobs with a faster pump (the Kunst 1600) in comparison to the more traditional

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    Colonies

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    Life was very hard in colonial America in the 17th & 18th centuries. There were 13 colonies all with different purposes. Many colonists came to America to flee religious persecution in England or to find work in the colonies. By 1750 more than one million people were living in the thirteen colonies. It seems that the colonies were finally progressing from disease and feudal warfare with the Native Americans. The colonies also were beginning to show diverse groups of people. Many came to America due to

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    Thirteen Colonies

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    The 13 English Colonies (1630-1750) As the colonies grew in the 1600’s and 1700’s‚ they became the home to people of many lands. These people brought their own customs and traditions. In time‚ they shaped these old ways into a new American Culture. 1 13 colonies 2 1.The New England Colonies More than 1‚000 men‚ women and children left England in 1630 to settle in the Americas. They set up their colony in Massachusetts Bay‚ North of Plymouth. Over the next 100 years‚ English

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    Thirteen Colonies

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    and North America differ from European societies at the time the two came into contact? In What ways did Indians retain a “world view” different from that of the Europeans? 2. What role did disease and forced labor (including slavery) play in the early settlement of America? Is the view of Spanish and Portuguese as especially harsh conquerors and exploiters valid-or is this image just another version of the English “black legend” concerning the Spanish role in

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    Lit Review: Child Labor In Cocoa Production and Fair Trade Chocolate By Sarah Kopperl Introduction: I have always had a love affair with chocolate. When I was little I thought the best job in the world would be to be a chocolatier‚ and have my own candy shop. I often visited Hershey P.A. and went to Hershey World‚ never wondering why they didn’t tell us much about how the cocoa was grown and harvested‚ only looking forward to the chocolate bar at the end of the “How Chocolate is Made” ride

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    Unfree Labor

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    Unfree Labor Labor in colonial American society meant long‚ hard hours of toil‚ working from dusk to dawn to make an honest living. In the beginning‚ the workers were the original colonists themselves‚ but as more and more people began to cross the Atlantic and more and more land began to be used for agriculture and homesteads‚ this changed. The labor force in the American colonies began to evolve until it consisted mainly of indentured servants and slaves who worked for the settlers in exchange

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    From the Beginning From the first settlement founded in the 1600’s‚ the British colonies were a varied mix of communities that grew to distinct civilizations in the 17th and 18th centuries. Queen Elizabeth helped drive the colonization of Jamestown in 1607 and ultimately the creation of other Southern colonies to help Britain’s economy flourish. In contrast‚ James I‚ Elizabeth’s successor‚ spurred the settlement of the Northern colonies for religious reasons when he “vowed to purge England of all

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    Journal Entry During the early years of the 1600’s many Europeans and Africans moved over from England and became indentured servants. Indentured servants were employed by wealthy people and were used mainly for cheap labor. Some types of labor consisted of working in the fields and helping farmers. Around the 1680’s is when the employment of indentured servants slowly dropped. The reason for the drop was due to the rise of slavery. This was masterminded by European and euro-American colonist

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    Many attempts have been made around the world at reforming current legal systems in search of a better one. As the amount of crime rises worldwide‚ people are constantly on the lookout for new and improved ways to fight it‚ and prevent it. Three such attempts involving attempts to change legal systems have been discussed the last half of this course. The change from the system put in place when a country was under colonization‚ as in Kilamanjaro‚ and Papa New Guinea. An attempt to revert to the historically

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    classifying individuals of different phenotypes or genotype into discrete races. In the 1600s scientific racism was common and used until the end of World War I. In the 1600s‚ there was a terrible pseudoscience which came about. Scientific Racism is a racist‚ bias‚ based off of stereotypes and all of it was fake. Scientific Racism was an scientific idea of race superiority and inferiority. It placed races into an hierarchy system‚ describing each race negatively but the Europeans. The Native Americans

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