The unemployment rate went as high as 24.9% during the great depression.
Answer:
The correct answer is: A lower performer.
Explanation:
In organizational settings, low performers are usually individuals who had the potential to be top performers, but voluntarily or involuntarily sabotage themselves and end up under-achieving.
They usually criticize work-place and blame other colleagues when things go wrong.
They are willing to do the minimum necessary to keep the job and usually are not very pro-active and diligent.
In this particular case, Kyongji is slightly more productive than Bernadette but she refuses to work overtime, often expresses negative opinions about the organization, and is often late. Bernadette is often willing to work overtimeand seldom misses work. Kyongji is probably a lower performer than Bernadette.
Explanation:
The Mormon pioneers were known as very hard working and industrious people. They were very well organized and had great faith that God was on their side and therefore they could succeed. From their struggles, they learned to work together to survive. Immediately after they arrived, they plotted out a city and began digging irrigation lines from mountain streams to the valleys below. Crops were planted before homes were built.
People were organized into companies to settle various areas which would produce different items based on the climate - those sent to southern Utah grew cotton and raised silkworms; Northern Utah was ideal for dairy farming; Central Utah had areas for mining and timber. They worked together to build homes, often many families would share a small cabin until more could be built. Because timber was hard to find and nails were extremely rare, they made do with what they had, making adobe homes and lashing wood frames together with hides.
Rather than become dependent on expensive shipments from the East, they made their own materials (including yarn and fabric!) and sold the excess to those traveling further west to California and Oregon. It took a lot of faith and hard work, but the Mormon pioneers turned what was practically a barren wasteland into a thriving and prosperous place.
Hello. You forgot to enter the answer options. The options are:
"United States v O'Brein, United States v. Eichman, Korematsu v. United States, Abrams et al. v. United States"
Answer:
Korematsu v. United States
Explanation:
The opinion shown above was issued in the Korematsu v. United States.
Korematsu v. United States was a case related to defending the petition that excluded Japanese-American citizens from the military area of the west coast during the Second World War. This occurred after the attack on Pearl Habor organized by American troops, causing a great loss to the USA and leaving the Japanese and descendants as unwanted people and enemies of the USA.
As a result, the government ordered all Japanese and Japanese descendants to leave their homes and move into internment camps (similar to concentration camps), which were places with no structure and resources necessary for the survival of these people. Because of this inhospitable environment Fred Korematsu, a descendant of Japanese, refused to go to the internment camps and claimed that this was a violation of the Fifth Amendment, that is, it was illegal. Thus began the case Korematsu v. United States.