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Against all odds
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A Brief History of Washingtonโs Crossing of the Delaware River, Christmas Night 1776... In the fall of 1776, General George Washington and his army had suffered a series of defeats at the hands of the British Army. The Continental Army had lost every battle with the British in the New York campaign: Long Island, Manhattan, Brooklyn Heights, Harlem and White Plains and had surrendered Fort Washington and Fort Lee. At Fort Lee, the army barely escaped and was forced to leave behind its store of provisions, ammunition, and many of its weapons. A sense of defeat had settled around Washington as he was forced to retreat across New Jersey in November and finally to Pennsylvania on December 8, 1776. The British, at least, considered the war over. By December 11th, the only reason the British had not taken Philadelphia, the seat of the Continental Congress, was that Washington had ordered every boat in the Delaware River on the New Jersey side to be brought to the Pennsylvania side, thus denying the British army transportation. Washington knew that the British would be capable of resuming an offensive by crossing the Delaware once it iced over. As the harsh winter set in, the morale of the American troops was at an all-time low. The soldiers were forced to deal with a lack of both food and warm clothing, while Washington watched his army shrink because of desertions and expiring enlistments. Now, more than ever, a victory was desperately needed. Washington devised a courageous plan to take the offensive and cross the Delaware River on Christmas night and attack the Hessian garrison at Trenton, New Jersey, nine miles south of his encampment near McConkey's Ferry. The original plan called for three divisions to cross the Delaware under the cover of darkness. Lt. Col. John Cadwalader's division was to cross at Bristol and engage the southern most contingent of British forces โ Hessian troops under the command of Colonel von Donop. General James Ewing's division was to cross at Trenton Ferry and take a position south of Assunpink Creek below Trenton and hold the bridge over that stream. Washington's division was to cross at McConkey's Ferry and then divide into two corps under General Nathanael Greene and General John Sullivan. Their point of attack was Trenton and the Hessian troops quartered there under the command of Colonel Johann Gottlieb Rall. The boats to be used for the crossing were gathered earlier in the month in compliance with General Washington's orders, primarily as a defensive measure. Various types of boats had been collected, most notably the large Durham boats used to carry pig iron down the Delaware to the Philadelphia markets. There were a number of problems in moving a large number of men, cannons, and supplies in an age when overland transportation was by foot and animal power. The roads were rutted and winding. There were no bridges over major rivers because the technology did not exist to span great distances. A river like the Delaware was crossed by ferry, sometimes out of service because of ice floes or floods, and certainly not designed to carry masses of men and equipment across quickly. A river could be a formidable natural barrier to an army on the move. Washington had several logistical concerns for the crossing. In addition to the troops were the cannon; each of which required at least two horses to pull it. The heavier twelve pounders, and probably the eight pounders, had four horses. There would have been between four and six ammunitions wagons. Officers of the rank of colonel or higher may have had horses. In sum, Washington had to move 2,400 men, eighteen cannons, at least four ammunition wagons and fifty to seventy-five horses across the Delaware River the night of December 25, 1776. Fully expecting to be supported by Cadwalader's and Ewing's divisions south of Trenton, Washington assembled his own troops near McKonkey's Ferry in preparation for the crossing. By 6:00 pm, 2,400 men had begun crossing the ice-chocked river. There was an abrupt change in the weather, forcing the men to fight their way through sleet and a blinding snowstorm. The river was flooded with sheets of ice moving at eleven or twelve miles per hour. These obstacles proved to be too much for the two supporting divisions led by Generals Cadwalader and Ewing, who did not cross at their assigned points along the river. It was Washington's pure force of will and determination that led to his troops' successful crossing of the river. Increasing Washington's odds were the sailors of Marblehead, Massachusetts. This group of hardened seamen, led by Col. John Glover, were used to the Nor'easters of New England. Sheer determination and muscles conditioned to the demands of rowing under the weather conditions now facing the Continental army enabled the Marbleheaders to row back and forth across the Delaware countless times. During the time of the Revolution, American soldiers marched single file along the margins of the roads. They were only assembled into a battle line (three deep) when they reached the battlefield. The battle plan had Washington's army marching in two divisions... General Greene's and General Sullivan's. They made a night march in two columns on separate roads, a very tricky operation that was prone to failure since the columns needed to arrive at the battlefield at the same time to carry out the surprise attack planned by Washington. The American army carried out the march flawlessly. Against all odds, Washington and his men successfully completed the crossing and marched to Trenton on the morning of December 26th and, in the resulting battle, achieved a resounding victory over the Hessians. By moving ahead with his bold and daring plan, General Washington reignited the cause of freedom and gave new life to the American Revolution.
Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course U.S. History, and today, we're going to talk about slavery, which is not funny. 0:06 Yeah, so we put a lei on the eagle to try and cheer you up, but let's face it, this is going to be depressing. 0:10 With slavery, every time you think, like, "Aw, it couldn't have been that bad," it turns out to have been much worse. 0:14 Mr. Green, Mr. Green! But what about โ 0:15 Yeah, Me from the Past, I'm going to stop you right there, because you're going to embarrass yourself. Slavery was hugely important to America. 0:20 I mean, it led to a civil war and it also lasted what, at least in U.S. history, counts as a long-ass time, from 1619 to 1865. 0:29 And yes, I know there's a 1200-year-old church in your neighborhood in Denmark, but we're not talking about Denmark! 0:35 But slavery is most important because we still struggle with its legacy. 0:38 So, yes, today's episode will probably not be funny, but it will be important. 0:42 [Theme Music] North & South economic ties 0:51 So the slave-based economy in the South is sometimes characterized as having been separate from the Market Revolution, but that's not really the case. 0:57 Without southern cotton, the North wouldn't have been able to industrialize, at least not as quickly, because cotton textiles were one of the first industrially products. 1:04 And the most important commodity in world trade by the nineteenth century, and 3/4 of the world's cotton came from the American South. 1:11 And speaking of cotton, why has no one mentioned to me that my collar has been half popped this entire episode, like I'm trying to recreate the Flying Nun's hat. 1:18 And although there were increasingly fewer slaves in the North as northern states outlawed slavery, cotton shipments overseas made northern merchants rich. 1:26 Northern bankers financed the purchase of land for plantations. 1:29 Northern insurance companies insured slaves who were, after all, considered property, and very valuable property. 1:35 And in addition to turning cotton into cloth for sale overseas, northern manufacturers sold cloth back to the South, where it was used to clothe the very slaves who had cultivated it. 1:45 But certainly the most prominent effects of the slave-based economy were seen in the South. Slave-based agriculture in the South 1:49 The profitability of slaved-based agriculture, especially King Cotton, meant that the South would remain largely agricultural and rural. 1:56 Slave states were home to a few cities, like St. Louis and Baltimore, but with the exception of New Orleans, 2:00 almost all southern urbanization took place in the upper South, further away from the large cotton plantations. 2:06 And slave-based agriculture was so profitable that it siphoned money away from other economic endeavors. 2:11 Like, there was very little industry in the South. 2:13 It produced only 10% of the nation's manufactured goods. 2:16 And, as most of the capital was being plowed into the purchase of slaves, there was very little room for technological innovation, like, for instance, railroads. 2:23 This lack of industry and railroads would eventually make the South suck at the Civil War, thankfully. 2:27 In short, slavery dominated the South, shaping it both economically and culturally, and slavery wasn't a minor aspect of American society. Popular attitudes concerning slavery 2:35 By 1860, there were four million slaves in the U.S., and in the South, they made up one third of the total population. 2:42 Although in the popular imagination, most plantations were these sprawling affairs with hundreds of slaves, 2:47 in reality, the majority of slaveholders owned five or fewer slaves. 2:51 And, of course, most white people in the South owned no slaves at all, though, if they could afford to, they would sometimes rent slaves to help with their work. 2:57 These were the so-called yeoman farmers who lived self-sufficiently, raised their own food, and purchased very little in the Market Economy. 3:04 They worked the poorest land and, as a result, were mostly pretty poor themselves. 3:08 But even they largely supported slavery, partly, perhaps, for aspirational reasons, and partly because the racism inherent to the system gave even the poorest whites legal and social status. 3:18 And southern intellectuals worked hard to encourage these ideas of white solidarity and to make the case for slavery. 3:23 Many of the founders, a bunch of whom you'll remember, held slaves, saw slavery as a necessary evil. 3:29 Jefferson once wrote, quote, "As it is, we have the wolf by the ear, and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. 3:37 Justice is on one scale, and self-preservation in the other." 3:41 The belief that justice and self-preservation couldn't sit on the same side of the scale was really opposed to the American idea, 3:47 and, in the end, it would make the Civil War inevitable. 3:50 But as slavery became more entrenched in these ideas of liberty and political equality were embraced by more people, 3:55 some southerners began to make the case that slavery wasn't just a necessary evil. 3:59 They argued, for instance, that slaves benefited from slavery. 4:03 Because, you know, because their masters fed them and clothed them and took care of them in their old age. 4:07 You still hear this argument today, astonishingly. 4:09 In fact, you'll probably see asshats in the comments saying that in the comments. 4:12 I will remind you, it's not cursing if you are referring to an actual ass. 4:15 This paternalism allowed masters to see themselves as benevolent and to contrast their family-oriented slavery with the cold, mercenary Capitalism of the free-labor North. 4:26 So yeah, in the face of rising criticism of slavery, some southerners began to argue that the institution was actually good for the social order. 4:33 One of the best-known proponents of this view was John C. Calhoun, who, in 1837, said this in a speech on the Senate floor: 4:40 "I hold that, in the present state of civilization, 4:43 where two races of different origin and distinguished by color and other physical differences as well as intellectual, are brought together, 4:51 the relation now existing in the slave-holding states between the two is, instead of an evil, a good. A positive good." 4:59 Now, of course, John C. Calhoun was a fringe politician, and nobody took his views particularly seriously. 5:04 Stan: Well, he was Secretary of State from 1844 to 1845. 5:07 John: Well, I mean, who really cares about the Secretary of State, Stan? 5:10 Danica: Eh, he was also Secretary of War from 1817 to 1825. 5:13 John: All right, but we don't even have a Secretary of War anymore, so... 5:16 Meredith: And he was Vice President from 1825 to 1832. 5:19 John: Oh my god, were we insane?! 5:21 We were, of course, but we justified the insanity with Biblical passages and with the examples of the Greeks and Romans, 5:28 and with outright racism, arguing that black people were inherently inferior to whites. 5:33 And that not to keep them in slavery would upset the natural order of things. 5:37 A worldview popularized millennia ago by my nemesis, Aristotle. God, I hate Aristotle. 5:42 You know what defenders of Aristotle always say? 5:44 "He was the first person to identify dolphins." 5:47 Well, ok, dolphin identifier. 5:50 Yes, that is what he should be remembered for, but he's a terrible philosopher! Lives & experiences of enslaved people 5:53 Here's the truth about slavery: 5:55 It was coerced labor that relied upon intimidation and brutality and dehumanization. 6:00 And this wasn't just a cultural system, it was a legal one. 6:03 I mean, Louisiana law proclaimed that a slave "owes his master... a respect without bounds, and an absolute obedience." 6:09 The signal feature of slaves' lives was work. 6:12 I mean, conditions and tasks varied, but all slaves labored, usually from sunup to sundown, and almost always without any pay. 6:20 Most slaves worked in agriculture on plantations, and conditions were different, depending on which crops are grown. 6:25 Like, slaves on the rice plantations of South Carolina had terrible working conditions, 6:29 but they labored under the task system, which meant that once they had completed their allotted daily work, they would have time to do other things. 6:36 But lest you imagine this is like how we have work and leisure time, bear in mind that they were owned and treated as property. 6:42 On cotton plantations, most slaves worked in gangs, usually under the control of an overseer, or another slave who was called a "driver." 6:49 This was back-breaking work done in the southern sun and humidity, and so it's not surprising that whippings โ or the threat of them โ were often necessary to get slaves to work. 6:58 It's easy enough to talk about the brutality of slave discipline, but it can be difficult to internalize it. 7:03 Like, you look at these pictures, but because you've seen them over and over again, they don't have the power they once might have. 7:09 The pictures can tell a story about cruelty, but they don't necessarily communicate how arbitrary it all was. 7:14 As, for example, in this story, told by a woman who was a slave as a young girl: 7:18 "[The] overseer... went to my father one morning and said, "Bob, I'm gonna whip you this morning." 7:22 Daddy said, "I ain't done nothing," and he said, "I know it, I'm going to whip you to keep you from doing nothing," 7:28 and he hit him with that cowhide โ you know it would cut the blood out of you with every lick if they hit you hard." 7:33 That brutality โ the whippings, the brandings, the rape โ was real, and it was intentional, because, in order for slavery to function, slaves had to be dehumanized. 7:43 This enabled slaveholders to rationalize what they were doing, and it was hoped to reduce slaves to the animal property that is implied by the term "chattel slavery." 7:51 So the idea was that slaveholders wouldn't think of their slaves as human, and slaves wouldn't think of themselves as human. 7:57 But it didn't work. Let's go to the Thought Bubble. 7:59 Slaves' resistance to their dehumanization took many forms, but the primary way was by forming families. Family, love, & religion of enslaved people 8:05 Family was a refuge for slaves and a source of dignity that masters recognized and sought to stifle. 8:10 A paternalistic slave owner named Bennet H. Barrow wrote in his rules for the Highland Plantation: 8:15 "No rule that I have stated is of more importance than that relating to Negroes marrying outside of the plantation... It creates a feeling of independence." 8:23 Most slaves did marry, usually for life, and, when possible, slaves grew up in two-parent households. 8:28 Single-parent households were common, though, as a result of one parent being sold. 8:32 In the upper South, where the economy was shifting from tobacco to different, less labor-intensive cash crops, the sale of slaves was common. 8:40 Perhaps one-third of slave marriages in states like Virginia were broken up by sale. 8:45 Religion was also an important part of life in slavery. 8:47 While masters wanted their slaves to learn the parts of the Bible that talked about being happy in bondage, 8:52 slave worship tended to focus on the stories of Exodus, where Moses brought the slaves out of bondage, 8:57 or Biblical heroes, who overcame great odds, like Daniel and David. 9:01 And, although most slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write, many did anyway. And some became preachers. 9:07 Slave preachers were often very charismatic leaders, and they roused the suspicion of slave owners, and not without reason. 9:13 Two of the most important slave uprisings in the South were led by preachers. 9:16 Thanks, Thought Bubble. 9:17 Oh, it's time for the Mystery Document? Mystery Document 9:19 We're doing two set pieces in a row? All right. [buzzing noise] [music] 9:24 The rules here are simple. 9:26 I wanted to re-shoot that, but Stan said no. 9:29 I guess the author of the Mystery Document. 9:30 If I am wrong, I get shocked with the shock pen. 9:33 "Since I have been in the Queen's dominions I have been well contented, yes well contented for sure, man is as God intended he should be. 9:40 That is, all are born free and equal. 9:43 This is a wholesome law, not like the southern laws which puts man made in the image of God on level with brutes. 9:49 O, what will become of the people, and where will they stand in the day of judgment. 9:53 Would that the 5th verse of the 3rd chapter of Malachi were written as with a bar of iron, 9:59 and the point of a diamond upon every oppressor's heart that they might repent of this evil, and let the oppressed go free..." 10:06 All right, it's definitely a preacher, because only preachers have read Malachi. 10:10 Probably African American, probably not someone from the South. 10:13 I'm going to guess that it is Richard Allen, the founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church? 10:18 [buzzing noise] DAAAH, DANG IT! 10:19 It's Joseph Taper, and Stan just pointed out to me that I should have known it was Joseph Taper because it starts out, 10:24 "Since I have been in the Queen's dominions..." 10:27 He was in Canada. He escaped slavery to Canada. The Queen's dominions! 10:31 All right, Canadians, I blame you for this, although, thank you for abolishing slavery decades before we did. 10:36 [electric sounds] AHHH! How people resisted & escaped slavery 10:37 So, the Mystery Document shows one of the primary ways that slaves resisted their oppression: by running away. 10:42 Although some slaves like Joseph Taper escaped for good by running away to northern free states, 10:47 or even to Canada, where they wouldn't have to worry about fugitive slave laws, even more slaves ran away temporarily, hiding out in the woods or the swamps, and eventually returning. 10:55 No one knows exactly how many slaves escaped to freedom, but the best estimate is that a thousand or so a year made the journey northward. 11:01 Most fugitive slaves were young men, but the most famous runaway has been hanging out behind me all day long: Harriet Tubman. 11:07 Harriet Tubman escaped to Philadelphia at the age of 29, and over the course of her life, she made about 20 trips back to Maryland to help friends and relatives make the journey north on the Underground Railroad. 11:17 But a more dramatic form of resistance to slavery was actual, armed rebellion, which was attempted. 11:22 Now, individuals sometimes took matters into their own hands and beat or even killed their white overseers or masters. 11:27 Like Bob, the guy who received the arbitrary beating, responded to it by killing his overseer with a hoe. 11:33 But that said, large-scale slave uprisings were relatively rare. 11:36 The four most famous ones all took place in a 35-year period at the beginning of the 19th century. Slave rebellions 11:41 Gabriel's Rebellion in 1800 โ which we've talked about before โ was discovered before he was able to carry out his plot. 11:45 Then, in 1811, a group of slaves upriver from New Orleans seized cane, knives, and guns, and marched on the city before militia stopped them. 11:52 And in 1822, Denmark Vesey, a former slave who had purchased his freedom, may have organized a plot to destroy Charleston, South Carolina. 11:59 I say "may have" because the evidence against him is disputed and comes from a trial that was not fair. 12:05 But regardless, the end result of that trial was that he was executed, as were 34 slaves. Nat Turner's Rebellion 12:09 But the most successful slave rebellion, at least in the sense that they actually killed some people, was Nat Turner's in August 1831. 12:15 Turner was a preacher, and with a group of about 80 slaves, he marched from farm to farm in South Hampton County, Virginia, 12:21 killing the inhabitants, most of whom were women and children, because the men were attending a religious revival meeting in North Carolina. 12:27 Turner and 17 other rebels were captured and executed, but not before they struck terror into the hearts of whites all across the American South. 12:34 Virginia's response was to make slavery worse, passing even harsher laws that forbade slaves from preaching, and prohibited teaching them to read. 12:42 Other slave states followed Virginia's lead and, by the 1830s, slavery had grown, if anything, more harsh. 12:47 So, this shows that large-scaled armed resistance was โ Django Unchained aside โ not just suicidal, but also a threat to loved ones and, really, to all slaves. How enslaved people resisted their oppression & why it matters 12:55 But, it is hugely important to emphasize that slaves did resist their oppression. 12:59 Sometimes this meant taking up arms, but usually it meant more subtle forms of resistance, 13:03 like intentional work slowdowns or sabotaging equipment, or pretending not to understand instructions. 13:08 And, most importantly, in the face of systematic legal and cultural degradation, they re-affirmed their humanity through family and through faith. 13:16 Why is this so important? 13:17 Because too often in America, we still talk about slaves as if they failed to rise up, 13:21 when, in fact, rising up would not have made life better for them or for their families. 13:26 The truth is, sometimes carving out an identity as a human being in a social order that is constantly seeking to dehumanize you, is the most powerful form of resistance. 13:34 Refusing to become the chattel that their masters believed them to be is what made slavery untenable and the Civil War inevitable, so make no mistake, slaves fought back. 13:45 And in the end, they won. I'll see you next week. Credits 13:48 Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller. 13:50 The script supervisor is Meredith Danko. 13:52 Our associate producer is Danica Johnson. 13:54 The show is written by my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer and myself. 13:57 And our graphics team is Thought Cafe. 13:58 Every week, there's a new caption to the Libertage, but today's episode was so sad that we couldn't fit a Libertage in... 14:04 UNTIL NOW! [Libertage Rock Music] 14:08 Suggest Libertage caption in comments, where you can also ask questions about today's video that will be answered by our team of historians. 14:13 Thanks for watching Crash Course, and as we say in my home town, don't forget to be abolitionist.
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Chess Tie Breaks. Buchholz system is the sum of opponents' scores. The idea is that the same score is more valuable if achieved against players with a better performances in a given tournament. It seems like an ideal tie-breaking method and has been used since the Swiss system was invented. Median-Buchholz (M-Buch.) is the same as Bucholz but discarding the highest and the lowest opposition's scores. Its idea is to eliminate distortions in Buchholz values, caused by taking into account games against run-away winners and bottom placed players. Sonnen-Berger is calculated by adding the score of each of your opponents multiplied by the score you achieved against that opponent. ie โ adding the score multiplied by 1 for each opponent you beat, and the score multiplied by ยฝ for each opponent you drew with. Any opponent you lost to is ignored. Koya system is the number of points achieved against all participants who have scored at least 50% of the maximum possible tournament score.
Write questions about the following story:Into the Woods Henry David Thoreau raised his pen to write, but the chatter of guests in the next room filled his ears. He stared at the page. โConcord, 1841โ was all that he had written. How would he write a book with such noise in his familyโs house? Thoreau headed outside, shutting the door with emphasis. He would have to find a place of his own. Thoreau walked out of town. Tall white pines soon replaced the painted houses. He listened to the rustling of the leaves. What if I could stay here, he thought. He could live off the land, close to nature, and begin his book. It would take work, but he could do it. FPG /The Image Bank/Getty Images Years passed, but Thoreau still did not have a place in the woods. One day, his friend Ralph Waldo Emerson had an idea. Emerson was a well-known writer who had bought some land near Walden Pond. Because he and Thoreau shared the same interest in nature, Emerson decided to let Thoreau use part of this land. In March of 1845, Thoreau began to build a cabin. By July, it was ready. He could live and write in the woods.Cabin Life Thoreauโs move to the woods indicated that he liked to be alone. But Thoreau did not feel that way. โI have a great deal of company in my house,โ he wrote. Red squirrels woke him by running up and down the sheer sides of his cabin. A snowshoe hare lived in the debris under his cabin, thumping against the floorboards. A sparrow once perched on his shoulder. Thoreau recorded these experiences in his journal. How easily writing came to him with the beauty of nature around him! On Walden Pond Thoreau was a naturalist. He noticed the habits of animals. Each encounter showed him something new. One afternoon, Thoreau tried to get a close look at a loon, but the bird quickly dove into the pond. He knew loons could travel long distances under water, so he guessed where it would come up. But every time Thoreau paddled to one spot, the loon came up somewhere else and let out a callโa howling laugh. What a silly loon, Thoreau thought. But after a while, Thoreau felt as though the bird was laughing at him because he still could not catch up to it. Thoreau wrote in his journal: His white breast, the stillness of the air, and the smoothness of the water were all against him. At length he uttered one of those prolonged howls, as if calling on the god of the loons to aid him, and immediately there came a wind from the east and rippled the surface, and filled the whole air with misty rain, and I was impressed.The spectacular scene made Thoreau wonder at the loon. It no longer seemed a silly animal, but one with some mysterious power. As months went by, Thoreau also became aware of each animalโs ability to stay alive. โHis power of observation seemed to indicate additional senses,โ Emerson once remarked. In winter, as he warmed his cabin by fire, he watched in awe as the moles warmed their nest by their own body heat. He understood forest life as never before. Back to Concord Like the geese that move to new ponds at the seasonโs end, so too did Thoreau leave Walden. He had done what he had set out to do, and had learned much from the woods around him. He packed his few belongings and his stack of journals and returned to Concord. Now, he would turn his journal entries into a book. Generations to come would know life on Walden Pond!
Flying Kites The Hoppers pressed their noses against the window. They watched the March wind blow outside. "Remember, do not leave the house while we are gone," said Mother Hopper. She and Papa Hopper were going shopping. Snubby Nose cried, "Can we sit on the doorstep?" "Do not set one paw outside," Mother Hopper said. She and Papa Hopper left for town. The Hoppers swept the floor, made their beds, and made lunch. All the while, Snubby Nose said, "I want to fly my kite. Let's fly our kites!" After lunch, the Hoppers took out their kites, just to look at them. They sat by the window. The March wind blew around the house. "Let's just fly our kites in the yard," said Snubby Nose. "Mother said we must not leave the house," said Fluffy Tail. The March wind blew some leaves against the window. Snubby Nose couldn't stand it anymore. Hะต stepped outside with his kite, and the other Hoppers followed. Fluffy Tail was the last one out. They ran around the house with their kites. But soon they got tired of their yard. "We can go down the path," said Snubby Nose. The Hoppers flew their kites down the path into the woods. Floppy Ears cried, โOh, no! I let go of my string!" Her kite sailed away. Then Speedy Legs cried, "A branch tore my kite!" "We should have listened to Mother," said Fluffy Tail. Just then, Snubby Nose howled, "My kite is caught in a tree!" Just then, Grandpa Grizzly walked by. "What's all this crying?" he asked. "We are in trouble," said Snubby Nose. "My kite is caught in a tree!" Grandpa Grizzly winked. He climbed the tall tree and pulled the string from the branches. He brought it down and gave it to Snubby Nose. "Be careful, now," he said. "That kite might do strange things. You should always be good when you play by yourselves." Snubby Nose took hold of his kite string, and the kite sailed up and up. Then Snubby Nose went up and up with it. Soon he flew out of sight. Speedy Legs, Fluffy Tail, and Floppy Ears nearly burst into tears. But Grandpa Grizzly led them home. "I have a feeling you'll see Snubby Nose soon," he said. When they got home, Floppy Ears looked into the sky. "I see a speck!" she cried. "Is it Snubby Nose?" cried Speedy Legs. It was Snubby Nose, still holding the kite string. He came down and landed right on the doorstep. "Have you learned to listen to your mother?" Grandpa Grizzly asked. "Yes, we have," said the Hoppers. Just then, Mother and Papa Hopper came around the corner. Before Grandpa Grizzly went home, he gave each little Hopper a brand new kite!
Policy for Bloodborne Pathogen Exposure Incident as per OSHA regulation (29 CFR 1910.1030) Purpose: To ensure that ASC staff members are protected against potential exposure to bloodborne pathogens per OSHA regulations (29 CFR 1910.1030). Scope: This policy applies to all ASC staff members who may be exposed to blood or other potentially infectious materials during their duties. Policy: An exposure incident is defined as a specific eye, mouth, other mucous membranes, non-intact skin, or parenteral contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials that results from the performance of an employee's duties. Any spill or accident that results in an exposure incident must be immediately reported to the Infection Control Nurse, first-line leader, or another responsible person. The employer shall make available the hepatitis B vaccine and vaccination series to all employees who have occupational exposure and post-exposure evaluation and follow-up to all employees who have had an exposure incident. The employer shall provide a confidential medical evaluation and follow-up for the exposed employee, which shall include at least the following elements: โข Documentation of the route(s) of exposure and the circumstances under which the exposure incident occurred. โข Identification and documentation of the source individual, unless the employer can establish that identification is infeasible or prohibited by state or local law. The source individual's blood shall be tested as soon as feasible and after consent is obtained to determine HBV and HIV infectivity. โข Collection and testing of blood for HBV and HIV serological status. โข If the employee consents to baseline blood collection but does not consent to HIV serologic testing, the sample shall be preserved for at least 90 days. If, within 90 days of the exposure incident, the employee elects to have the baseline sample tested, such testing shall be done as soon as feasible โข Post-exposure prophylaxis, when medically indicated, as recommended by the U.S. Public Health Service. โข Counseling. โข Evaluation of reported illnesses. The employer shall ensure that the healthcare professional evaluating an employee after an exposure incident is provided with the following: A copy of OSHA regulation 1910.1030 A description of the exposed employee's duties as they relate to the exposure incident Documentation of the route(s) of exposure and circumstances under which exposure occurred Results of the source individual's blood testing, if available. All medical records are relevant to the appropriate treatment of the employee, including vaccination status, which is the employer's responsibility to maintain. The employer shall obtain and provide the employee with a copy of the evaluating healthcare professional's written opinion within 15 days of the completion of the evaluation. The healthcare professional's written opinion for Hepatitis B vaccination shall include the following: Whether it is indicated for the employee If the employee has received such a vaccination The healthcare professional's written opinion for post-exposure evaluation and follow-up shall include the following: That the employee has been informed of the results of the evaluation That the employee has been told about any medical conditions resulting from exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials which require further evaluation or treatment All other findings or diagnoses shall remain confidential and not be included in the written report. An employer must establish and maintain accurate medical records for each employee with occupational exposure. Records should include the employee's Name, hepatitis B vaccination status and dates, results of medical testing and follow-up procedures, healthcare professional's written opinion, and information provided to the healthcare professional. Records must be kept confidential and not disclosed without the employee's written consent, except as required by law. Records must be kept for at least the duration of the employee's employment plus 30 years. Form 7.041 Employee Consent Form for Testing for HBV and HIV Serological Status Following Accidental Exposure I, __________________________, understand that I have been involved in an accidental exposure incident and may be at risk for contracting Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) under 29 CFR 1910.1030. Therefore, following OSHA standards, I am being offered the opportunity to be tested for these viruses. I understand that the testing will involve a blood sample and that the results will be kept confidential and will only be shared with authorized personnel. I also understand that testing is voluntary and that I have the right to refuse to test. By signing this form, I consent to be tested for HBV and HIV following the accidental exposure incident. Signed: __________________________ Patient's Name: __________________________ Form 7.042 Patient Consent Form for Testing for HBV and HIV Serological Status Following Accidental Exposure I, __________________________, understand that a staff member involved in an accidental exposure incident may be at risk for contracting Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) following 29 CFR 1910.1030. Therefore, by OSHA standards, the staff member may be offered the opportunity to be tested for these viruses. I also understand that testing of my blood is necessary to determine if I am infected with HBV and HIV. The results will be kept confidential and only shared with authorized personnel. I understand that testing is voluntary and that I have the right to refuse to test. By signing this form, I consent to the staff member being tested for HBV and HIV and to my blood testing following the accidental exposure incident. Signed: __________________________ Form7.043 Refusal of Testing Patient/Employee (Circle One) I,_____________________________________, understand that I have the right to refuse testing for Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) following an accidental exposure incident per 29 CFR 1910.1030. I understand that if I refuse to test, it may impact my ability to receive appropriate medical treatment and the healthcare facility's power to respond to the exposure incident. Following 29 CFR 1910.1030, The source individual's blood shall be tested as soon as feasible and after consent is obtained to determine HBV and HIV infectivity. The employer shall establish that legally required consent cannot be obtained if permission is not obtained. When the source individual's consent is not required by law, the source individual's blood, if available, shall be tested, and the results documented. Signed: __________________________
According to ใใซใใใฐ add to ๅขใใ add up ๅ่จใใ after a while ใใฐใใใใฆ against the idea ใใฎ่ใใซๅๅฏพใใฆ all of a sudden ็ช็ถใซ all the time ใใคใ all through the night ไธๆฉไธญ along with ใใจไธ็ทใซ apply for ใใซ็ณใ่พผใ apply to ใใซ้ฉ็จใใ as a rule ๅๅใจใใฆ aside from ใใฎใปใใซ / ใใ้คใใฆ at any cost ใฉใใช็ ็ฒใๆใฃใฆใ at heart ๅฟใฎๅบใงใฏ at last ใคใใซ at least ๅฐใชใใจใ at length ่ฉณ็ดฐใซ at most ๅคใใฆใ at once ใใใซ / ไธๅบฆใซ at the sight of ใใ่ฆใฆ at times ๆใ
attach to ใใซไปใใ / ใใซ็ตใณใคใใ back up ๆฏๆดใใใใใใฏใขใใใใ based on ใใซๅบใฅใใฆ be absent from ใใๆฌ ๅธญใใฆใใ be against ๅๅฏพใใ be based on ใใซๅบใฅใใฆใใ be confident of ใใซ่ชไฟกใใใ be curious about ใใซๅฅฝๅฅๅฟใๆใค be derived from ใใซ็ฑๆฅใใ be filled with ใใงๆบใใใใฆใใ be full of ใใงใใฃใฑใใงใใ be made up of ใใงๆงๆใใใฆใใ be pleased with ใใซๆบ่ถณใใฆใใ be short of ไธ่ถณใใฆใใ be similar to ใใซไผผใฆใใ because of ใใฎใใใง / ใใฎใใใใง before long ใพใใชใ break out ็ช็บใใ break out in ๏ผๆฅใซ๏ผใใซใชใ break up ่งฃๆฃใใ / ๅฅใใ bring out ๅผใๅบใ / ๅ
ฌ่กจใใ bring up ่ฒใฆใ / ๆใกๅบใ burst into ๆฅใซใใๅงใใ by heart ๆ่จใใฆ by mistake ้้ใใฆ by now ไป้ ใพใงใซใฏ by the way ใจใใใง by way of ใใ้ใใฆ call for ่ฆๆฑใใ / ๅผใณใใใ call out ๅคงๅฃฐใงๅผใถ carry on ็ถใใ carry out ๅฎ่กใใใ่กใ catch up with ใใซ่ฟฝใใคใ close to ใใซ่ฟใ come across ๅถ็ถๅบไผใ / ่ฆใคใใ come into ใใซๅ
ฅใ / ใใซใชใ come out ๅบใฆใใ / ๅ
ฌ่กจใใใ come up with ใใๆใใคใ compared with ใใจๆฏในใฆ depend on ใใซไพๅญใใ do him good ๅฝผใซๅฉ็ใใใใใ drive at ๆๅณใใใ็ใ drop by ็ซใกๅฏใ drop down ่ฝใกใ feel at home ใใคใใ feel like doing ใใใใๆฐๅ feel sorry ๆฐใฎๆฏใซๆใ figure out ็่งฃใใ find fault with ใใซๆๅฅใใคใใ find out ็ฅใใ่งฃๆใใ for fear of ใใๆใใฆ for free ็กๆใง for good ๆฐธ้ ใซใๅฎๅ
จใซ for once ไธๅบฆใ ใ / ไปๅใ ใใฏ for sale ๅฃฒใ็ฉใฎ for the best ๆๅใฎใใใซ get over ไนใ่ถใใ get ready ๆบๅใใ get rid of ใใๅใ้คใ give away ไธใใใๅฏไปใใ give in to ใใซๅฑใใ give off ๆพใค give out ้
ใ / ็บ่กจใใ go ahead ็ถใใฆ่กใ go down ไธใใ / ๆฒใ hand in ๆๅบใใ hand over ๆๆธกใ hang on ๅพ
ใค / ้ ๅผตใ hang up ๅ่ฉฑๅจใ็ฝฎใ hear from ใใใ้ฃ็ตกใใใใ help yourself ่ช็ฑใซๅใ / ่ช็ฑใซใฉใใ hold back ๆงใใ hold on ๅพ
ใค / ๆใกใใใใ hold up ๅๆญขใใใใ้
ใใใ in a jacket ใธใฃใฑใใใ็ใฆ in a word ไธ่จใง่จใใฐ in advance ๅใใฃใฆ in case ใใฎๅ ดๅใซ in common ๅ
ฑ้ใใฆ in detail ่ฉณ็ดฐใซ in hand ๆๅ
ใซ in part ้จๅ็ใซ in place of ใใฎไปฃใใใซ in return ่ฆ่ฟใใซ in terms of ใใฎ่ฆณ็นใใ in the distance ้ ใใซ in the habit of ใใใ็ฟๆ
ฃใใใ in the way ๅฆจใใซใชใฃใฆ instead of ใใฎไปฃใใใซ keep a secret ็งๅฏใๅฎใ keep an eye on ่ฆๅฎใ keep away from ่ฟใฅใใชใใใใซใใ keep on Ving ใใ็ถใใ keep pace with ใใซ้
ใใใซใคใใฆใใ keep the change ใ้ฃใใฏใใใพใใ keep track of ่จ้ฒใใคใใ / ่ฟฝ่ทกใใ keep up with ใใซ้
ใใใซใคใใฆใใ lay it down ใใใ็ฝฎใ / ่ฆๅฎใใ less than ใๆชๆบ / ใใใๅฐใชใ look after ไธ่ฉฑใใใ look back on ใใๆฏใ่ฟใ look down on ใใ่ฆไธใ look like ใใฎใใใซ่ฆใใ look up ่ชฟในใ / ่ฆไธใใ made up of ใใงๆงๆใใใฆใใ major in ใใๅฐๆปใใ make efforts ๅชๅใใ make it out ็่งฃใใ / ๆใ้ใใ make out ่ฆๅใใใใใพใใใ make progress ้ฒๆญฉใใ make sense ็่งฃใงใใใๆๅณใๆใ make up your mind ๆฑบๅฟใใ mind your own business ่ชๅใฎใใจใซ้ไธญใใ move on ๆฌกใซ้ฒใ no longer ใใฏใใใชใ not always ๅฟ
ใใใใใงใชใ nothing but ใใ ใใ ใ on air ๆพ้ไธญ on behalf of ใใไปฃ่กจใใฆ on business ไปไบใง on fire ็ซใใคใใฆใใ on purpose ใใใจ on the point ใใฎ็นใง on time ๆ้้ใใซ one another ใไบใใซ out of the question ๅ้กๅคใง pass by ้ใ้ใใ pay attention ๆณจๆใๆใ play a part in ใใงๅฝนๅฒใๆใใ pour out ๆณจใๅบใใๆบขใๅบใ prefer A to B BใใAใๅฅฝใ put away ็ไปใใ put off ๅปถๆใใ put on ็ใ / ๆผใใใ(weightใงๅคชใ๏ผ put out ๆถใ / ็บ่กจใใ reach for ๆใไผธใฐใ rely on ใใซ้ ผใ result in ใ่ชๅ่ฉใ็ตๆใจใใฆใใซใชใ run it over ใใใใฒใ / ่ชญใฟ่ฟใ run out of ใใไฝฟใๆใใ run over ใฒใใฆใใพใใ่ตฐใๅใ see about ๆ้
ใใ / ่ชฟในใ see off ่ฆ้ใ see through ่ฆๆใ / ่ฆ้ใ set out ๅบ็บใใใๅงใใ set up ่จญ็ฝฎใใ / ่จญๅฎใใ show off ่ชๆ
ขใใใ่ฆใใณใใใ show up ็พใใ / ๅฐ็ใใ sit up ๅบงใใ่ตทใไธใใ speak up ใฏใฃใใ่ฉฑใ stand out ็ฎ็ซใค stand out ็ฎ็ซใค stand up for ใใๆฏๆใใ suffer from ใใซ่ฆใใ take away ๆใกๅปใ / ๅฅชใ take in ็่งฃใใใๅใๅ
ฅใใ take notice of ๆณจๆใๆใ take on ๅผใๅใใ / ๆใ take out ๅใๅบใ / ๆใกๅธฐใ take over ๅผใ็ถใใไนใฃๅใ take part ๅๅ ใใ take place ่ตทใใ / ้ๅฌใใใ take risks ๅฑ้บใๅใ take turns ไบคไปฃใง่กใ talk over ็ธ่ซใใ tear off ๅผใ่ฃใ the second largest ไบ็ช็ฎใซๅคงใใ think better of ่ใ็ดใ throw away ๆจใฆใ try on ่ฉฆ็ใใ turn in ๆๅบใใ turn off ๆถใ / ๅใ turn on ๏ผในใคใใใ๏ผๅ
ฅใใ turn out ็ตๆ็ใซใใซใชใ turn over ใฒใฃใใ่ฟใ under control ๅถๅพกไธใซใใ up to date ๆๆฐใฎ with ease ๅฎนๆใซ with regard to ใใซ้ขใใฆ