Greater St. Louis Essays

  • Case Study: Panera Bread Company

    1276 Words  | 3 Pages

    other markets, the pair obtained St. Louis Bread Company, seeing the benefits of acquiring an already established enterprise. The niche market that Au Bon Pain had enjoyed previously, had become a strategic weakness as it became limiting. The bakery-café culture developed in the St. Louis Bread Company was too costly to implement at the Au Bon Pain locations. Shaich, the remaining founder, sold Au Bon Pain which left no debt and cash reserves to expand the St. Louis Bread Company, known as Panera Bread

  • Panera Bread Essay

    649 Words  | 2 Pages

    Headquartered out of Sunset Hills, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, Panera originally was known to the public as St. Louis Bread Company. However, in 1993, Au Bon Pain Co. purchased the small Saint Louis Bread Company of just 20 bakery-cafés in the immediate and surrounding areas of St. Louis. In the years to follow, Panera Bread Company, as we know it today, began to develop its current image through extensive studies of

  • Panera Bread Value Chain Essay

    1164 Words  | 3 Pages

    Value Chain During the economic collapse of 2008 when restaurants were experiencing loss or closing altogether, Panera Bread managed to have one of its strongest years in history. They met or exceeded earnings targets in each quarter. In the 2008 annual report to stockholders, Panera Bread bragged, and rightly so, about stock rising 50 percent and ending up the best performing restaurant of 2008 and the second best performing stock in the Russell 1000 Index. How? Through the value chain. In

  • Panera Bread Essay

    1538 Words  | 4 Pages

    Synopsis: Panera was created by Ronald Shaich, CEO and Chairman of Panera Bread Company. Shaich, combined the ingredients and cultivated the leavening agent that catalyzed the company’s phenomenal growth. Panera’s total system wide revenues rose from USD$350.8 million in 2000 to total USD$1,353.5 million in 2009, consisting of USD$1,153.3 million from company-owned bakery-café sales, USD$78.4 million from franchise royalties and fees, and USD$121.9 million from fresh dough sales t franchises (Panera

  • School Segregation, The Continuing Tragedy Of Ferguson By Richard Ferguson

    1252 Words  | 3 Pages

    school district is “among the poorest and most segregated in Missouri” (p. 2). The August 2014 shooting death of a young African-American, Michael Brown, by a white police officer, spurred riots not only in St. Louis, but also in other cities nationwide. Black and white children in the St. Louis region remain educationally divided, and the state Board of Education knows what needs to change in order for black children to gain a better

  • Kate O'Flaherty Chopin's Biography

    767 Words  | 2 Pages

    O'Flaherty, an Irish immigrant, was a successful St. Louis merchant who was killed in a railroad accident when Kate was only five years old. Kate's mother, Eliza was left a wealthy widow and raised Kate in a household "run by vigorous widows: her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother . . . a community of women who stressed learning, curiosity, and financial independence" (Toth, 187). Kate was formally educated at the Academy of the Sacred Heart in St. Louis where she kept a commonplace book "in which

  • Anheuser-Busch and France

    2192 Words  | 5 Pages

    of beers.” Budweiser is a registered trademark of the St. Louis-based Anheuser-Busch, One Busch Place, St. Louis, Missouri 63118-1852, which is the world’s largest brewing company. Budweis is a small brewing town in the Czech republic. The town has a 700-year-old history of beer brewing. The brewing company Budvar of Budejovice registered Budweiser as a trademark in Europe in 1895. Budvar’s Budweiser is considered by beer experts to be a greater beer than the American Budweiser. Czechs are very proud

  • Robert E. Lee

    969 Words  | 2 Pages

    harder and succeed. Robert was accepted to the United States Military Academy and graduated 2nd in his class. But perhaps greater than his academic success was his record of no demerits while being a cadet which today has still not been equaled. Following his graduation Lee, like most top classmen, was given a commission as an engineer. Lt. Lee helped build the St. Louis waterfront and worked on coastal forts in Brunswick and Savannah. It was during this time he married Mary Custis the granddaughter

  • Reinhold Niebuhr

    3135 Words  | 7 Pages

    Evangelical Synod after graduating from Eden Seminary at St. Louis, the training school for ministers of the Deutsche Evangelical Synod of North America. His mother was a daughter of German Evangelical Synod missionary, Edward Hosto. Gustav and Lydia had four children, Hulda, Walter, Reinhold, and Helmut Richard (who is as famous as Reinhold in theological circles). Thus Reinhold grew up in a religious atmosphere in his parents’ parish of St. John in Lincoln, Illinois. His father considered himself

  • Men and Women in Non-Traditional Sports

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    Men and Women in Non-Traditional Sports The benefits of an individual entering a non-traditional sport for his or her sex can be huge – but they are usually greater for society in general than for the athlete him/herself. Being the first person to break into a non-traditional sport would obviously be trying on the athlete, who would have to face the questioning and criticisms of media, fans, and even their fellow athletes. But one athlete’s determination and persistence can open up a whole new

  • The Physics of Pitching

    1278 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Physics of Pitching I remember one time going out to the mound to talk with Bob Gibson. He told me to get back behind the batter, that the only thing I knew about pitching was it was hard to hit. ... Tim McCarver, St. Louis Cardinals catcher, 1972. Most people do not understand pitching, the mechanics, the situations and the how’s and why’s. Today we are going to talk about a few of these. When most people think of pitching they think of a person hurling a 5 oz. ball with 216 red stitches

  • Public Subsidies for Sports Facilities

    3519 Words  | 8 Pages

    America is in the midst of a sports construction boom. New sports facilities costing at least $200 million each have been completed or are under way in Baltimore, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Nashville, San Francisco, St. Louis, Seattle, Tampa, and Washington, D.C., and are in the planning stages in Boston, Dallas, Minneapolis, New York, and Pittsburgh. Major stadium renovations have been undertaken in Jacksonville and Oakland. Industry experts estimate that more than $7

  • T.s. Eliot And Society

    1467 Words  | 3 Pages

    from a moral perspective to fast times. Many people tended to look apart from average events that occurred in their daily lives to find greater reasoning. T.S. Eliot is considered to be one of the most prominent poets and playwrights of his time and his works are said to have promoted to “reshape modern literature” (World Book). He was born in 1888 in St. Louis, Missouri and studied at Harvard and Oxford. It was at Harvard where he met his guide and mentor Ezra Pound, a well-known modernist poet

  • Personal Perseverance in the Works of Maya Angelou

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    Angelou learned much from this exceptional woman and the tightly knit community there. The very essence of these lessons carried her through the hardship and struggles she endured later in her life, including a tragic rape while visiting her mother in St. Louis ... ... middle of paper ... ...works provide powerful insights into the evolution of black women in the 20th century. Maya Angelou is living proof that through hard work and personal perseverance anything is possible. Works Cited

  • The Tea Plant

    2210 Words  | 5 Pages

    Georgia, Sumatra, Iran, and non-Asian countries such as Natal, Uganda, Kenya, Congo and other African countries and also to Argentina, Brazil, and Peru in South America and even to Queensland in Australia. Americans invented tea bags, and at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904, they started the practice of drinking iced tea (Algood, 1999). The date as to when the Chinese discovered that the leaves of the tea plant could be turned into a beverage precedes written history. However, an accepted story

  • The Structure of an Airplane

    1976 Words  | 4 Pages

    across the Atlantic. He made the flight to win the prize of $25,000 offered by Raymond B. Orteig of New York City for the first nonstop transatlantic solo flight between New York City and Paris. In his single-engine monoplane named the Spirit of St. Louis, he left Roosevelt Field at 7:52 AM on May 20, 1927. After a flight of 33 hours 32 minutes, he landed at Le Bourget Airport near Paris. The Wright Brothers On December 17, 1903, near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the brothers Wilbur and Orville

  • Cell Phone History - The Evolution of the Cell Phone

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    increase of availability in channels which police systems were encouraged to use. Mobile units were available within private companies, individuals, and public agencies. In St. Louis, 1945 the first mobile telephone system in the US was introduced. Along the highway between New York and Boston a Public mobile system carried greater frequency distance in 1947. In 1n 1949, the FFC authorized separate radio channels to common carriers. A new system was developed with automatic channel selection in 1964

  • Charles Lindbergh

    1697 Words  | 4 Pages

    arrangements for Charles A. Lindbergh’s flight began in early 1927. Charles A. Lindbergh presented his proposal to Knight, Bixby, and other St. Louis businesspersons whom were impressed with Lindbergh’s confidence and agreed to sponsor his flight. Lindbergh had setup a $15,000 budget and $2,000 of which was Lindberghs. A name, the Spirit of St. Louis, was established. Lindbergh was to choose the plane and decide on all other aspects of the proposed flight. According to Lindbergh, a single-engine

  • The Battle of Pea Ridge and its Impact on the Civil War

    1703 Words  | 4 Pages

    battle were Major General Earl Van Dorn and Brigadier General Albert Pike. For the Federal's side there were Major General Samuel R. Curtis and Brigadier General Franz Sigel (Battle). The Confederate General Earl Van Dorn's objective was to "have St. Louis - then Huzza!" He hoped to accomplish this by going north from his headquarters at Pocahontas to the Boston Mountains, where the Union forces under command of General Samuel Curtis had taken up camp. After a nine-day march, Van Dorn finally made

  • Controversial Views in Kate Chopin's The Awakening

    1810 Words  | 4 Pages

    summarized the feelings of society as a whole. Chopin woke up people to the feelings and minds of women. Even though her ideas were controversial at first, slowly over the decades people began to accept them. Kate O'Flaherty Chopin was raised in St. Louis in the 1850's and 1860's. Chopin had a close relationship with her French grandmother which lead to her appreciation of French writers. When she was only five Chopin's father, Thomas O'Flaherty died leaving her without a father figure. Eliza O'Flaherty