Dupes

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Possible Answers: USES, HAS, SAPS, CONS, TOOLS, PAWNS, FOOLS, SETUPS, CHEATS, DITTOS, XEROXES, REPROS, GULLS, TRICKS, TAKESIN, PIGEONS, CHUMPS, SNOOKERS, PATSIES, BEFOOLS.

Last seen on: –Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – May 12 2022
The Washington Post Crossword – Jul 26 2020
LA Times Crossword 26 Jul 20, Sunday
NY Times Crossword 22 Jul 2018, Sunday

Random information on the term “USES”:

The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (H.R. 803; Pub.L. 113–128) (WIOA) is a United States public law that consolidates job training programs under the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA) into a single funding stream. It will also amend the Wagner-Peyser Act, reauthorize adult-education programs, and reauthorize programs under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The various job programs will be authorized for six years with a requirement that they record and report on how many people get new jobs through their participation in the programs.

The bill was originally introduced into the United States House of Representatives as the “Supporting Knowledge and Investing in Lifelong Skills Act” or “SKILLS Act”. This happened during the 113th United States Congress.

In 2015, the bill was amended by the To amend the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act to improve the Act (S. 1124, Pub.L. 114–18)

The federal jobs training programs from this bill were first authorized in 1998, an authorization that expired in 2003 and Congress was unable to subsequently reauthorize.

USES on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “HAS”:

Ha’il Regional Airport (Arabic: مطار حائل الإقليمي‎‎, IATA: HAS, ICAO: OEHL) is an airport serving Ha’il (also spelled Hail), the capital of the Ha’il Province in Saudi Arabia.

The airport resides at an elevation of 3,331 feet (1,015 m) above mean sea level. It has one runway designated 18/36 with an asphalt surface measuring 3,720 by 45 metres (12,205 ft × 148 ft).

Airlines offering scheduled passenger service:

HAS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “SAPS”:

SAPS II is a severity of disease classification system (Le Gall, Lemeshow, Saulnier, 1993). Its name stands for “Simplified Acute Physiology Score”, and is one of several ICU scoring systems.

SAPS II was designed to measure the severity of disease for patients admitted to Intensive care units aged 15 or more.

24 hours after admission to the ICU, the measurement has been completed and resulted in an integer point score between 0 and 163 and a predicted mortality between 0% and 100%. No new score can be calculated during the stay. If a patient is discharged from the ICU and readmitted, a new SAPS II score can be calculated.

This scoring system is mostly used to:

The point score is calculated from 12 routine physiological measurements during the first 24 hours, information about previous health status and some information obtained at admission.

The parameters are:

The calculation method is optimized for paper schemas. In contrast to APACHE II, the resulting value is much better at comparing patients with different diseases[citation needed].

SAPS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “CONS”:

X.25 is an ITU-T standard protocol suite for packet switched wide area network (WAN) communication. An X.25 WAN consists of packet-switching exchange (PSE) nodes as the networking hardware, and leased lines, plain old telephone service connections, or ISDN connections as physical links. X.25 is a family of protocols that was popular during the 1980s with telecommunications companies and in financial transaction systems such as automated teller machines. X.25 was originally defined by the International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee (CCITT, now ITU-T) in a series of drafts and finalized in a publication known as The Orange Book in 1976.

While X.25 has, to a large extent, been replaced by less complex protocols, especially the Internet protocol (IP), the service is still used (e.g. as of 2012[update] in the credit card payment industry) and available in niche applications.

X.25 is one of the oldest packet-switched services available. It was developed before the OSI Reference Model. The protocol suite is designed as three conceptual layers, which correspond closely to the lower three layers of the seven-layer OSI model. It also supports functionality not found in the OSI network layer.

CONS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “FOOLS”:

Triboulet (1479–1536) was a jester of kings Louis XII and Francis I of France.

He appears in Book 3 of François Rabelais’ Pantagrueline chronicles. He appears in Victor Hugo’s Le Roi s’amuse and its opera version, Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto, a blend of “Triboulet” and French rigoler (to laugh), intended to deflect the censorship that Hugo’s work had received. A triboulet, a jester dressed entirely in red, is a character associated with the carnival of Monthey in Switzerland.

Having broken an order from Francis I forbidding Triboulet from making jokes on the queen and courtesans, the king ordered that he should be put to death. Having served particularly well the king for many years, Francis I granted Triboulet the right to choose the way he would die. Triboulet, with his sharp mind, said the following: “Bon sire, par sainte Nitouche et saint Pansard, patrons de la folie, je demande à mourir de vieillesse.” which translates to: “Sir, for Saint Nitouche’s and Saint Pansard’s sake, patrons of insanity, I choose to die from old age.” Having no other choice than to laugh, the king ordered that Triboulet must not be executed, but rather instead be banished from the realm.

FOOLS on Wikipedia