Results for propriety
Successful Business Relationships
As you work these guidelines into your approach to your customers, you will gain credibility and enhance your business relationships About The Author Terence R This decreases “relationship tension” and increases trust, credibility, cooperation, and the commitment to work with you
Part 2: Designing a Trading System in MetaStock
This is a measure of how much money a stock trades Some markets tend to be more expensive than others These were measures of price, liquidity, trend, and volatility Now, you can convert this into a MetaStock formula
A Wedding For What?
Build your dreams for the future together Copyright 2005 Richard Keir About The Author Richard Keir writes from the perspective of both a background in clinical psychology and more experience with marriage than he really wants to share Walking that road, successfully, with your partner, may not be an easy thing, but ultimately it is most definitely what a wedding is for If that were true, then only an outer change - modifying something external to ourselves could change our lives
When Getting It Right On The 1St Take Counts
It could be one of the best decisions you ever make Professional wedding videographers understand the nature of the wedding service and know the ins and outs of capturing all of the important moments About The Author Shawn Hickman Find more articles at wwwcom
Cellphone Etiquette for the Clueless
ignorance is bliss Answering an incoming call in an interview or business meeting is a faux-pas that is to be avoided at all costs
The Romantic Spirit of the Harlem Renaissance: Jessie Redmon Fauset
A During the years she spent as literary editor of The Crisis, from 1919 to 1926, she was also the "most prominent black woman writer" (Wall 36) In creating the image of the proper middle class African American woman, Fauset had to suppress her sexuality, and to conduct herself within the boundaries of social propriety In her personal life, as in her art, Fauset strove to depict the middle class values of which she saw as the way to freedom and equality for her race
The Romantic Spirit of the Harlem Renaissance: Countee Cullen
Cullen embraced a particular form of public "blackness" in his position as poet, but that very public position, which he eagerly wished to maintain, conflicted with a very different form of "blackness" embodied in his private desires for black men (Early 195) Thus, Cullen was viewed as a man who could be "assimilated" while still maintaining his "racial self-consciousness" (Early 195) The tension between these different modes of being produced the creative tension out of which much of Cullen’s poetry was born 103-125
