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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper discusses the impact Medicare Part D is expected to have on the macroeconomic system and on specific demographic groups. It also comments on the Act's possible effects on the health care system. Statistical data are included. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGmedD.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
point of view. The story begins by the grandmother criticizing her son, Bailey, on his choice of vacation sites as she informs him that a convict known as
"The Misfit" has escaped from the federal penitentiary and was reportedly heading toward Florida (OConnor 137). The grandmother tells her son that she thinks that they ought to go
to Tennessee, since they have been to Florida before, and that he shouldnt even consider taking the children to an area where The Misfit is reportedly "aloose" (OConnor 137).
The grandmothers tirade concerning the vacation site is ignored by her son and his wife, who is feeding the baby, and the other two children, eight-year-old John Wesley and his
sister, June Star, greet the pronunciations with the scorn of the young for the old-fashioned grandmother (OConnor 137). While the story is set in more modern times, it is apparent
that the grandmother has retained many of the beliefs and attitudes of her earlier years. She is the first one in the car with her valise and her cat,
Pitty Sing, because she is afraid the cat will "asphyxiate himself" by bumping one of the gas burners in the house while they are gone (OConnor 138). She is
dressed in a hat and white cotton gloves, and her dress has lace-trimmed collar and cuffs with a small bouquet of violets containing a sachet pinned to the neckline of
the dress (OConnor, 138). She dresses in this manner so that in case of an accident, anyone who would find her would "know at once that she was a
lady" (OConnor, 138). In contrast, the daughter-in-law is dressed in slacks with a kerchief tied around her head. As they travel along the road, John Wesley criticizes the choice
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