First and foremost, the hotel personnel must apologize. It the responsibility of the hotel to ensure quality service. Regardless the situation or whose fault the relocation is, the hotel must acknowledge the inconvenience the guest is experiencing.
To compensate for the trouble, here are some things that hotel personnel can do:
1. Make sure to arrange another accommodation ready to receive the guest (with free transportation, free one-night stay if needed to be relocated to another hotel).
*Offer the expected room for the guest the next day if it's already available.
2. Explain and apologize for a relocation. Assure that the hotel is doing its best to make up for the inconvenience.
3. Offer discount and freebies to guest that checks-in late so a relocation won’t have to happen.
Answer:
The answer is Dred Scott
Explanation:
He said he had lived in both a free territory and a free state. They did not believe that living in a free territory and free state made Dred Scott a free man. I hope this helps at least a bit!
If either chamber does not pass the bill then it dies. If the House and Senate pass the same bill then it is sent to the President. If the House and Senate pass different bills they are sent to Conference Committee. Hope this helps!
Answer:
<u>The Cornell Notes system.</u>
Explanation:
<u>The Cornell Notes system</u>/Cornell note-taking system/Cornell method/Cornell way is a note-taking system devised in the 1950s by Walter Pauk, <em>an education professor at Cornell University</em>. Pauk advocated its use in his best-selling book <em>How to Study in College.</em>
Answer:
Wechsler created a system for making tests relevant for evaluating adult intelligence
Explanation:
Terman, full name: Lewis Madison Terman (1877-1956), was a cognitive psychology professor at Standford University. He is known to develop the Binet test for use in the United States. Although Terman had updated the test quite significantly by making a version that could be used for testing adults, David Welscher(1896-1981) an American psychologist in the 1930s, further expanded the idea and made it increasingly relevant for adults by creating a version that assessed adult intelligence using written tests.