Incomplete/unclear question. The correct question read;
<u>88% </u>of all Rutgers/Newark students will get drunk this weekend. P2: Booze-Head is a Rutgers/Newark student. Can it be inductively concluded that Booze-Head will not get drunk this weekend?
Answer:
<u>No</u>
Explanation:
<em>Remember,</em> inductive reasoning is often based on<u> broad generalizations from specific observations.</u>
So since from this scenario, a broad generalization was made that <u>88% </u>of Rutgers/Newark students will get drunk this weekend, it seems <u>unlikely </u>and illogical that Booze will not be among those getting drunk on the weekend.
Hundreds of cities in throughout China are the fountainhead of the Yangtze River's pollution, and across the last <em>50</em> years, it has been an increase of 73% in pollution volume in the nucleus of the river, through sewage and industrial waste dumping.
Ironically enough, since the Yangtze river was often referred to as “<em>the source of life</em>” in China; due being home to <em>350</em> fish species, and accounting for a significant sum of China’s water resources for rice and fishery production as well as a big part of the nation’s GDP, while being a center of great biological wealth.
over-processing type of organizational waste refers to the work that is unnecessary or undesired and is a waste of time and resources
Explanation:
- Over -Processing is one of the seven waste of a lean manufacturing system.
- It is caused due to uncleared standards and specification of a process.
- For example:Extra Plastic Packaging on a fresh fruit of vegetable
The Meat Inspection Act of 1906 put an end to meat companies using chemicals to try to preserve meat.
Prior to this act, the companies to were using chemicals like boric acid and formaldehyde to try to keep meat from rotting. These chemicals were making people sick, and in some cases, killing them.