Text for HW05

Edited by Name Surname

GLOBAL TEMPLATE

On the Tools menu, click Templates and Add-Ins.

To unload a template or add-in and remove it from the box under global templates and add-ins, click the item in the box, and then click Remove.

To unload a template or add-in but leave it in the Global templates and add-ins box, clear the check box next to the name of the item.

If you unload a template that's located in your Startup folder, Word unloads the template for the current Word session but will automatically reload it the next time you start Word. To locate or change your Startup setting, click Options on the Tools menu, and then click the File Locations tab.

The Remove button is unavailable when the template you select is located in your Startup folder.

Unloading a template or add-in from Word does not remove it from your computer.

DUMMY TEXT (from LibreOffice)

He heard quiet steps behind him. That didn't bode well. Who could be following him this late at night and in this deadbeat part of town? And at this particular moment, just after he pulled off the big time and was making off with the greenbacks. Was there another crook who'd had the same idea, and was now watching him and waiting for a chance to grab the fruit of his labour? Or did the steps behind him mean that one of many law officers in town was on to him and just waiting to pounce and snap those cuffs on his wrists? He nervously looked all around.

Suddenly he saw the alley. Like lightning he darted off to the left and disappeared between the two warehouses almost falling over the bin lying in the middle of the pavement. He tried to nervously tap his way along in the inky darkness and suddenly stiffened: it was a dead-end, he would have to go back the way he had come. The steps got louder and louder, he saw the black outline of a figure coming around the corner. Is this the end of the line? he thought pressing himself back against the wall trying to make himself invisible in the dark, was all that planning and energy wasted? He was dripping with sweat now, cold and wet, he could smell the fear coming off his clothes. Suddenly next to him, with a barely noticeable squeak, a door swung quietly to and fro in the night's breeze.

LETTER ELEMENTS

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When you use the Letter Wizard, many of the names and other items that you enter are stored so that later you can use them easily. As you modify a letter that you created using the Letter Wizard, you can change names and text in standard letter elements – such as the salutation or closing – by right-clicking the element and then selecting a different entry from the list that appears. To add a new entry to the list, select the letter element in the document and type the text you want. Then, right-click the letter element and click Create AutoText.

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ENVELOPES

On the Tools menu, click Envelopes and Labels, and then click Envelopes. Enter the address information, and then select the options you want. To select an envelope size, the type of paper feed, and other options, click Options. To print the envelope, insert the envelope in the printer as shown in the Feed box, and then click Print. To add the difficulty envelope as a separate section at the beginning of the document, click the Document.

OUTLINE

North America

Canada

Montreal

Vancouver

Toronto

United States

New York

Chicago

Los Angeles

Europe

United Kingdom

London

Manchester

Liverpool

Glasgow

France

Marseilles

Paris

Nice

Lyon

Toulouse

1st SEMESTERCOURSES (Sample)[1]

  • Computer I: Learning the computer skills necessary for general academia, including efficient usage of 1) the Turkish QWERTY keyboard; 2) operating system software; and 3) application software (word processing, internet, presentation, compression and photo editing).
  • Economics I: Supply and demand analysis, the pricing system, theory of consumer behavior, theory of production, market structures; perfect competition, monopoly, other forms of imperfect competition, distribution of income; factor mobility, factor pricing.
  • English I: The central basis of ENG 101 is to introduce students to an academic approach to thinking, reading, speaking and writing in an integrated, meaningful manner such that they are able to apply the skills learnt to their departmental studies. In addition, the ENG 101 course aims to further develop the students' linguistic accuracy and range in English.
  • Translation I: Aims to use English passages for translation to help students improve their reading comprehension, enlarge their vocabulary, and deepen their awareness and understanding of different usage and structures.
  • Turkish I: This course is the first of a sequence of two courses designed to develop creative writing skills of the students through their own writings in Turkish. It is an active learning course. Students write their own blogs and instructors comment and send feedback about the creativity, content, composition, grammar, spelling and punctuation of the writing regularly.

NAME / SURNAME / CITY
Ali / Smith / Istanbul
Ali / Jones / Ankara
Bob / Smith / Izmir
Ali / Çetin / Ankara
Eda / Smith / Istanbul
Bob / Jones / Istanbul
Bob / Çetin / Ankara
Yasemin / Jones / Ankara
Eda / Jones / Istanbul
Eda / Çetin / Istanbul
Enis / Jones / Izmir
Yasemin / Smith / Izmir
Enis / Çetin / Izmir
Yasemin / Çetin / Izmir
Enis / Smith / .Izmir

4th SEMESTERCOURSES (Sample)

  • Accounting II: Introduction to management accounting for internal reporting and decision making. Topics include cost volume profit analysis, cost behavior, activity based costing, process and job order costing, budgeting and budget variance analysis, pricing, responsibility accounting and performance evaluation.
  • Business Communication: Develops understanding of communication theories and builds skills in written communication emphasizing style and audience awareness. Practical applications center on external and internal business correspondence. Letters, memos that inform persuade, grant and refuse are stressed.
  • Collegiate Activities: Ground for students to engage in diversity, creativity and commitment outside coursework. Participation in various activities provided mainly by student clubs. Student activity in designing and shaping course as well as monitoring and grading performance. Grading based on points accumulated by participation to activities.
  • Drama: An introduction to the study of drama based on a selection of works including Greek tragedy and modern classics
  • Statistics II: Parametric and non-parametric tests of hypothesis, ANOVA, simple and multiple regressions based on excel and other statistical package programs, index numbers, time series and panel data all applied to financial and banking data.

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[1] Information for 1st and 4th semesters (here and later in the document) taken from
Bilkent Catalog for Departments and Programs