I need to get the phone number or website for the Ducting company that makes Gray Owl flex ducting?

Question by star: I need to get the phone number or website for the Ducting company that makes Gray Owl flex ducting?

I heard from my home warranty company that this ducting is under recall and I need my ducting replaced and the warranty will now not cover it, but I can’t find anything on this company.

Best answer:

Answer by Becca
website is

What do you think? Answer below!

Need to design a free printable mother’s day card on computer?

Question by Erin: Need to design a free printable mother’s day card on computer?

I want to be able to completely design this myself thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by expletive_xom
try American Greetings website

http://www.americangreetings.com/printables/

i havent tried it, but it says 3 easy steps.
Mom always liked stuff i did by hand, even though everyone else said my stuff looked stupid.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Q&A: Why do corporations need regulations in a Capitalist System?

design flaws
by ebrunar

Question by A Peaceful Rebel: Why do corporations need regulations in a Capitalist System?

What causes the need for regulation? Is it because of design flaws, or structural flaws within the corporation itself? What is it?

Best answer:

Answer by sound_of_the_silenced3
They dont. We just need a GREAT judicial system so that people injured, and defrauded can have legal recourse.

Give your answer to this question below!

Economics 9 out of 50 quistions i need help answering the 9 its for a bigtest i must pass it plz help asap?

Question by Bigdog92: Economics 9 out of 50 quistions i need help answering the 9 its for a bigtest i must pass it plz help asap?

if u find them on the web plz list the links plz thank you
____is known as the capacity to be useful.

A. Wealth

B. Utility

C. Productivity

D. Paradox of value

The sum collection of those economic products that are tangible, scarce and useful. This is known as ___________.

A. Wealth

B. Productivity

C. Utility

D. Value
The _________ issued a recall of asbestos-insulated hair dryers, put an end to the use of benzene in paint removers, banned the use of Tris, cancer-causing flame retardant in children’s clothing-and required that slats on baby cribs be set closer together to prevent strangulation.

A. Occupational Safety and Health Administration

B. Food and Drug Administration

C. Consumer Product Safety Commission

D. Federal Power Commission

E. None of the above
There are government agencies not only to protect our health, but to protect our pocketbooks. ____________ tries to prevent deceptive advertising. These are called Truth in Advertising laws. It has made producers of aspirin pills, diet breads, toothpastes, cigarettes, and numerous other products either prove their claims or change their advertisements.

A. The Federal Trade Commission

B. Occupational Safety and Health Administration

C. Consumer Product Safety Commission

D. Food and Drug Administration

__________includes buildings, machinery and equipment.

A. Physical Capital

B. Human Capital

C. Neither
Fed and State Governments make payments to lower levels of government. These are known as_________.

A. Grants in Aid

B. Subsidies and Incentives

C. Transfer Payments

D. Direct Purchase
Given by government, raised by taxes, to assist individuals who give the government nothing in return. This is known as_______.

A. Subsidies and Incentives

B. Grants in Aid

C. Transfer Payments

D. Transfer Incentives
THe_________sought to prevent the creation of monopolies by defining specific illegal practices such as trusts and interlocking directorates.

A. Celler – Kefauver Act

B. Sherman Antitrust Act

C. Interstate Commerce Commission Act

D. Clayton Antitrust Act
The_________was a set of federal deficit targets for Congress and the President to meet over a six year span of time. The federal deficit was to decrease each year until it reached zero in 1991.

A. Budget Enforcement Act (BEA) of 1990

B. Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985

C. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993

D. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985

Best answer:

Answer by Josh A
c
a
c
a
a
b
b
b
b

Give your answer to this question below!

i need Economics help asap 9 quistions 10 points?

consumer product recalls
by Public Citizen

Question by Bigdog92: i need Economics help asap 9 quistions 10 points?

same thing on this link i asked 2 know sp plz help
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AhtSFzJghJdfYOzfKuaGkW3sy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20100330110426AA3rtyOif u find them on the web plz list the links plz thank you
____is known as the capacity to be useful.

A. Wealth

B. Utility

C. Productivity

D. Paradox of value

The sum collection of those economic products that are tangible, scarce and useful. This is known as ___________.

A. Wealth

B. Productivity

C. Utility

D. Value
The _________ issued a recall of asbestos-insulated hair dryers, put an end to the use of benzene in paint removers, banned the use of Tris, cancer-causing flame retardant in children’s clothing-and required that slats on baby cribs be set closer together to prevent strangulation.

A. Occupational Safety and Health Administration

B. Food and Drug Administration

C. Consumer Product Safety Commission

D. Federal Power Commission

E. None of the above
There are government agencies not only to protect our health, but to protect our pocketbooks. ____________ tries to prevent deceptive advertising. These are called Truth in Advertising laws. It has made producers of aspirin pills, diet breads, toothpastes, cigarettes, and numerous other products either prove their claims or change their advertisements.

A. The Federal Trade Commission

B. Occupational Safety and Health Administration

C. Consumer Product Safety Commission

D. Food and Drug Administration

__________includes buildings, machinery and equipment.

A. Physical Capital

B. Human Capital

C. Neither
Fed and State Governments make payments to lower levels of government. These are known as_________.

A. Grants in Aid

B. Subsidies and Incentives

C. Transfer Payments

D. Direct Purchase
Given by government, raised by taxes, to assist individuals who give the government nothing in return. This is known as_______.

A. Subsidies and Incentives

B. Grants in Aid

C. Transfer Payments

D. Transfer Incentives
THe_________sought to prevent the creation of monopolies by defining specific illegal practices such as trusts and interlocking directorates.

A. Celler – Kefauver Act

B. Sherman Antitrust Act

C. Interstate Commerce Commission Act

D. Clayton Antitrust Act
The_________was a set of federal deficit targets for Congress and the President to meet over a six year span of time. The federal deficit was to decrease each year until it reached zero in 1991.

A. Budget Enforcement Act (BEA) of 1990

B. Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985

C. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993

D. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985

Best answer:

Answer by Josh A
c
a
c
a
a
b
b
b
b

What do you think? Answer below!

How to Get the Information you need to protect your children from product recalls?

Question by : How to Get the Information you need to protect your children from product recalls?

Best answer:

Answer by lafillequibouge
You should try Recalls Plus, a free iPhone app that enables busy parents to proactively monitor recalls of their children’s products like strollers, cribs, baby formula, and car seats for greater safety and peace of mind, check it out: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/recalls-plus/id499200328

If you don’t have an iphone, there is also a Facebook app:

http://apps.facebook.com/recallsplus/

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Q&A: How to Get the Information you need to protect your children from product recalls?

Question by : How to Get the Information you need to protect your children from product recalls?

Best answer:

Answer by Christian in Jesus
The store that you purchase your products will refuse to sell any recalled items. And you can contact consumer affairs.

http://www.consumeraffairs.govt.nz/for-consumers/goods/product-safety/product-recall-notices

What do you think? Answer below!

can someone helps me summarize this?, please i really need it, thank you?

Question by : can someone helps me summarize this?, please i really need it, thank you?

when it comes to the safety of young chidren, fire is a parent’s nightmare. just the thought of their young ones trapped in their cribs and beds by a raging nocturnal blaze is enough to make most mothers and fathers take every precaution to ensure their children’s safety. little wonder that when fire-retardant children’s pajamas first hit the market, they proved an overnight success. within a few short years more than 200 millíon pairs were spld, and the sále of millíon more were all but guaranteed. for their manufacturers, the future could not have been brighter. then, like a bolt from the blue, came word that the pajamas were killér. the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) moved quickly to ban their sale and recall millions of pairs. Reason: the pajamas contained the flame-retardant chemícal Tris (2,3-dibromoprophyl), which had been found to cause kidney cancer in children. because of its toxicity, the sleepwear couldnt even thrown away, let alone sold. indeed, the CPSC left no doubt about how the pajamas were to be disposed of buried or burned or used as industrial wiping cloths. whereas just months earlier the manufacturers of the Tris-impregnated pajamas couldnt fill orders fast enough, suddenly they were worrying about how to get rid of the millions of pairs now sitting in warehouses. soon, however, ads began appearing in the classified pages of WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY. “Tris,tris… we will buy any fabric containing Tris,” read on. another said, “Tris- we will purchase any large quantities of garments containing Tris.” the ads had been placed by exporters, who began buying up the pajamas, usually at 10 to 30 percent of the normal wholesale price. their intent was clear: to dump the carcinogenic pajamas on overseas markets. Tris is not the only êxampl of dumping. there were the 450,000 baby pacifiers, of the type known to have caused choking deaths, that were exported for sale overseas, and the 400 Iraqis who died and 5000 who were hospitalized after eating wheat and barley treated with a U.S.-banned organic mercury fungicide. Winstrol, a synthetic male hormone that had been found to stunt the growth of American children, was made available in Brazil as an appetite stimulant for children. DowElanco, although the Environment Protection Agency forbade its sale to U.S. farmers because Galant may cause cancer. after the U.S Food and Drug Administration banned the painkiller dipyrone because it can cause a fatal blood disorder, Winthrop Product continued to sell dipyrone in Mexico City. Manufacturers that dump products abroad clearly are motivated by profit, or at least by the hope of avoiding financial losses resulting from having to withdraw a product from the U.S market. for government and health agencies that cooperate in the exporting of dangerous products, sometimes the motives are more complex. for example, when researchers dôcumented the dangers of the Dalkon Shield intrauterine device-among the adverse reactions were pelvic inflammation, blood poisoning. tubal pregnancies, and uterine perforations-its manufacturer, A.H.Robins Co., began losing its domestic market. as a result, the company worked out a deal with the office of population within the U.S Agency for International Development, whereby AID bought thoúsand of the devices at a reduced price for use in population-control programs in forty-two countries. why do government and population control agencies approve for sale and use overseas a birth control device proved dangerous in the U.S? They say their motives are humanitarian. because the rate of dying in childbirth is high in third world countries, almost any birth control device is preferable to none. analogous arguments are used to defend to export of pesticides and other products judged too dangerous for use in the U.S: foreign countries should vague or ambiguous or too technical to understand.but even if communication procedures were improved or the export of dangerous products forbidden, there are ways that companies can circumvent these threats to their profit- for example, by simply changing the name of the product or by exporting the individual ingredients of a product dumped. the U.S does prohibit drugs banned in this country, but sidestepping the law is not difficult. ” unless the package bursts open on the clock,” one drug company executive observes, “you have no chance of being caught”. unfortunately for us, in the case of pesticides, the effects of overseas dumping are now coming home. in U.S the EPA bans all crop uses of ?DT and dieldrin, which kill fish, cause tumór in animals, and build up in the patty tissue of human. it also bán heptachlor, chlordane, leptophos, endrin, and many other pesticides, including 2,4,5-T (which contains the deadly poíson dioxin, the active ingredient in Agent Orange, the notorious defoliant used in Vietnam) because they are danger to human being. no law, however, prohibits the sale of ?DT and these other U.S-banned pesticides overseas,

Best answer:

Answer by KenK
Summarizing it might involve replacing the specific examples with a general statement, such as “Numerous products have been…”. There is a sentence in the middle of this document that also gets a bit close to a summary.

Add your own answer in the comments!

during the design stage of an electrical installation why do i need to know prospective earth fault current?

Question by spiderb: during the design stage of an electrical installation why do i need to know prospective earth fault current?

Best answer:

Answer by Jeremy D
You would need to know the available fault current of the system in order to properly rate the electrical components. Most all types of electrical switchgear have a fault current interrupting capacity rating. All components must have an interrupting capacity of at least as high as the available fault current.

Add your own answer in the comments!

can someone help me summarize this, i am so stress, can’t write anything, i need help please?

consumer product recalls
by Public Citizen

Question by : can someone help me summarize this, i am so stress, can’t write anything, i need help please?

when it comes to the safety of young chidren, fire is a parent’s nightmare. just the thought of their young ones trapped in their cribs and beds by a raging nocturnal blaze is enough to make most mothers and fathers take every precaution to ensure their children’s safety. little wonder that when fire-retardant children’s pajamas first hit the market, they proved an overnight success. within a few short years more than 200 millíon pairs were spld, and the sále of millíon more were all but guaranteed. for their manufacturers, the future could not have been brighter. then, like a bolt from the blue, came word that the pajamas were killér. the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) moved quickly to ban their sale and recall millions of pairs. Reason: the pajamas contained the flame-retardant chemícal Tris (2,3-dibromoprophyl), which had been found to cause kidney cancer in children. because of its toxicity, the sleepwear couldnt even thrown away, let alone sold. indeed, the CPSC left no doubt about how the pajamas were to be disposed of buried or burned or used as industrial wiping cloths. whereas just months earlier the manufacturers of the Tris-impregnated pajamas couldnt fill orders fast enough, suddenly they were worrying about how to get rid of the millions of pairs now sitting in warehouses. soon, however, ads began appearing in the classified pages of WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY. “Tris,tris… we will buy any fabric containing Tris,” read on. another said, “Tris- we will purchase any large quantities of garments containing Tris.” the ads had been placed by exporters, who began buying up the pajamas, usually at 10 to 30 percent of the normal wholesale price. their intent was clear: to dump the carcinogenic pajamas on overseas markets. Tris is not the only êxampl of dumping. there were the 450,000 baby pacifiers, of the type known to have caused choking deaths, that were exported for sale overseas, and the 400 Iraqis who died and 5000 who were hospitalized after eating wheat and barley treated with a U.S.-banned organic mercury fungicide. Winstrol, a synthetic male hormone that had been found to stunt the growth of American children, was made available in Brazil as an appetite stimulant for children. DowElanco, although the Environment Protection Agency forbade its sale to U.S. farmers because Galant may cause cancer. after the U.S Food and Drug Administration banned the painkiller dipyrone because it can cause a fatal blood disorder, Winthrop Product continued to sell dipyrone in Mexico City. Manufacturers that dump products abroad clearly are motivated by profit, or at least by the hope of avoiding financial losses resulting from having to withdraw a product from the U.S market. for government and health agencies that cooperate in the exporting of dangerous products, sometimes the motives are more complex. for example, when researchers dôcumented the dangers of the Dalkon Shield intrauterine device-among the adverse reactions were pelvic inflammation, blood poisoning. tubal pregnancies, and uterine perforations-its manufacturer, A.H.Robins Co., began losing its domestic market. as a result, the company worked out a deal with the office of population within the U.S Agency for International Development, whereby AID bought thoúsand of the devices at a reduced price for use in population-control programs in forty-two countries. why do government and population control agencies approve for sale and use overseas a birth control device proved dangerous in the U.S? They say their motives are humanitarian. because the rate of dying in childbirth is high in third world countries, almost any birth control device is preferable to none. analogous arguments are used to defend to export of pesticides and other products judged too dangerous for use in the U.S: foreign countries should vague or ambiguous or too technical to understand.but even if communication procedures were improved or the export of dangerous products forbidden, there are ways that companies can circumvent these threats to their profit- for example, by simply changing the name of the product or by exporting the individual ingredients of a product dumped. the U.S does prohibit drugs banned in this country, but sidestepping the law is not difficult. ” unless the package bursts open on the clock,” one drug company executive observes, “you have no chance of being caught”. unfortunately for us, in the case of pesticides, the effects of overseas dumping are now coming home. in U.S the EPA bans all crop uses of ?DT and dieldrin, which kill fish, cause tumór in animals, and build up in the patty tissue of human. it also bán heptachlor, chlordane, leptophos, endrin, and many other pesticides, including 2,4,5-T (which contains the deadly poíson dioxin, the active ingredient in Agent Orange, the notorious defoliant used in Vietnam) because they are dangerous to human being. no law, however, prohibits the sale of ?DT and these other U.S-banned pesticides overse
continue “no law..overseas, where thanks to corporate dumping they are routinely used in agriculture. in one three-months period, for example, U.S chemical companies exported 3.9 million pounds of banned and withdrawn pesticides. the FDA now estimates, through spot checks, that 10% of our imported food is contaminated with residues of banned pesticides. and the FDA’s most commonly used testing procedure does not even check for 70% of the pesticides known to cause cancer. with the doubling of exports of Mexican produce to the U.S since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement, the problem of pêsticid-laced food has only grown worse.

Best answer:

Answer by harvinab
Exactly what do you mean by summarize, it would be helpful if you could say what your word count is for the summary and the style your summary is required to be written in such as APA format. If you can answer that I might be able to help you out.

Add your own answer in the comments!

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