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Manners & Conduct

Free presentations in powerpoint format.

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Manners PowerPoint

Subject: Personal, social and health education

Age range: 5-7

Resource type: Assembly

HappinessTeacher's Shop

Last updated

17 February 2024

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A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them in different situations every single day.

The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good manners. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction to manners for a PSHE lesson.

The presentation and worksheets are suitable for Early Years and Key Stage 1 children.

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A bundle is a package of resources grouped together to teach a particular topic, or a series of lessons, in one place.

10 KS1 Assemblies

**Apologising/Saying Sorry PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on apologising and saying sorry. The presentation covers why we need to apologise and how it makes others and ourselves feel if we do something wrong. **Happiness PowerPoint** A presentation aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children about being a superhero and spreading happiness and smiles. The presentation explains that we all have a superpower and that superpower is making people smile. The presentation asks children to think about how they can make people smile and provides some ideas for how we can spread happiness. The children will enjoy believing that they are a superhero and using their superpowers throughout the day. **Kindness PowerPoint** A presentation aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children about kindness. The presentation explains what kindness is and how it makes people feel. The presentation asks children to think about how to show kindness and provides some ideas for how we can show kindness to each other. The presentation also explains that we can show kindness to the world around us and gives examples. **Manners PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them in different situations every single day. The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good manners. **Emotions PowerPoint** A presentation about emotions, what they are and how we can recognise and control them. This presentation can be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson about emotions. The PowerPoint includes questions for children to think about and answer. This presentation can be used to help children to understand that everybody experiences positive and negative emotions and how we can deal with these emotions. **Making Mistakes** A PowerPoint presentation about making mistakes. The presentation explains that we all make mistakes and that making mistakes helps us to build skills such as resilience, confidence, problem solving skills. The presentation explains that we need to start to celebrate our mistakes. **Resilience** A PowerPoint presentation about resilience. The presentation explains what resilience is and how children can become resilient. There are opportunities throughout the presentation for the children to discuss their own ideas about resilience and how to become more resilient. **How to be Amazing** A PowerPoint presentation about being amazing. The presentation explains that we are all amazing and that we all do amazing things every day. There are opportunities throughout the presentation for the children to discuss their own ideas about being amazing and the final slide encourages children to celebrate their own and other people’s amazingness. **Rules** A PowerPoint presentation about rules. The presentation explains what rules are and why they are important. The presentation also talks about what would happen if we didn’t have any rules. There are opportunities throughout the presentation for the children to discuss their own ideas about rules. **Accepting Challenges** A PowerPoint presentation about challenges. The presentation explains that every challenge comes with a reward and then gives some examples of these rewards. The presentation also talks about how we might feel when faced with a challenge and how we feel when we achieve a challenge. There are opportunities throughout the presentation for the children to discuss their own ideas about challenges. These presentations could be used as an assembly or during a PSHCE lesson. Aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children.

KS1 Assemblies Bundle Set 1

**Apologising/Saying Sorry PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on apologising and saying sorry. The presentation covers why we need to apologise and how it makes others and ourselves feel if we do something wrong. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction during a PSHE lesson. **Happiness PowerPoint** A presentation aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children about being a superhero and spreading happiness and smiles. The presentation explains that we all have a superpower and that superpower is making people smile. The presentation asks children to think about how they can make people smile and provides some ideas for how we can spread happiness. The presentation could be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson. The children will enjoy believing that they are a superhero and using their superpowers throughout the day. **Kindness PowerPoint** A presentation aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children about kindness. The presentation explains what kindness is and how it makes people feel. The presentation asks children to think about how to show kindness and provides some ideas for how we can show kindness to each other. The presentation also explains that we can show kindness to the world around us and gives examples. The presentation could be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson. **Manners PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them in different situations every single day. The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good manners. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction to manners for a PSHE lesson. **Emotions PowerPoint** A presentation about emotions, what they are and how we can recognise and control them. This presentation can be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson about emotions. The PowerPoint includes questions for children to think about and answer. This presentation can be used to help children to understand that everybody experiences positive and negative emotions and how we can deal with these emotions. Aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children.

Four KS1 Assemblies

**Happiness Assembly/Presentation** A presentation aimed at Early Years and Key Stage 1 children about being a superhero and spreading happiness and smiles. The presentation explains that we all have a superpower and that superpower is making people smile. The presentation asks children to think about how they can make people smile and provides some ideas for how we can spread happiness. The presentation could be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson. The children will enjoy believing that they are a superhero and using their superpowers. **Emotions Assembly/Presentation** A presentation about emotions, what they are and how we can recognise and control them. This presentation can be used as an assembly or during a PSHE discussion or lesson about emotions. The PowerPoint includes questions for children to think about and answer. Can be used to help children to understand that everybody experiences positive and negative emotions and how we can deal with these emotions. **Manners PowerPoint/Assembly** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them every single day. The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good manners. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction to manners for a PSHE lesson. **Apologising/Saying Sorry Assembly/PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on apologising and saying sorry. The presentation covers why we need to apologise and how it makes others and ourselves feel if we do something wrong. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction during a PSHE lesson. These presentations are suitable for Early Years and Key Stage 1 children.

Manners and Apologising PowerPoints

**Manners PowerPoint/Assembly** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them every single day. The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good manners. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction to manners for a PSHE lesson. **Apologising/Saying Sorry Assembly/PowerPoint** A PowerPoint presentation focusing on apologising and saying sorry. The presentation covers why we need to apologise and how it makes others and ourselves feel if we do something wrong. The presentation could be used as an assembly or as an introduction during a PSHE lesson. These presentations are suitable for Early Years and Key Stage 1 children.

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Good Manners Infographics

Free google slides theme and powerpoint template.

Do your kids behave properly at the table? They don't slurp when eating (unless you're in Japan) and they put away their toys when done playing with them? Great! These are colorful infographics for educators or parents who look for visual ways of explaining good manners so that children grow into nice people! Some of the designs come with icons from Flaticon and others come with characters from Storyset. All our sister projects lend a hand in this template!

Features of these infographics

  • 100% editable and easy to modify
  • 31 different infographics to boost your presentations
  • Include icons and Flaticon’s extension for further customization
  • Designed to be used in Google Slides, Microsoft PowerPoint and Keynote
  • 16:9 widescreen format suitable for all types of screens
  • Include information about how to edit and customize your infographics

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Life Skills- Social Etiquette for Students - Manners for Children - Powerpoint

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Product Description - This is the same file as my PDF Manners File only in Powerpoint format.

A Powerpoint file that is an introduction to Social Etiquette and Manners. 30 Pages. Included: a) Manners quiz b) Manners and Etiquette Word search c) Manners and Etiquette Word search Answer Page d) Good Manners - Word Poster to post on bulletin boards (2) e) Comparison chart of good manners vs bad manners f) Manners - Scenario - What would you do? How would you show good manners? g) Information page on manners and etiquette h) Identify good manners page i) Examples of good manners j) Word cards for manners k) Blank worksheet pages Please Check out the hundreds of teaching resources I have in my store. Just click the link below. https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Geis19 If you like my products please click "Follow Me" to stay updated on all new products.

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Good Manners.

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etiquette and manners

ETIQUETTE AND MANNERS

Jul 17, 2014

1.26k likes | 2.29k Views

ETIQUETTE AND MANNERS. Social rules for the professional. No matter what the situation, social etiquette rules should be followed. When should you be particularly aware of your manners?. EVERY SITUATION!. Consider some of the benefits of etiquette….

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ETIQUETTE AND MANNERS Social rules for the professional

No matter what the situation, social etiquette rules should be followed. When should you be particularly aware of your manners?

EVERY SITUATION!

Consider some of the benefits of etiquette… • Gives professionals the tools to impress clients and colleagues. • It puts others at ease so that business can be conducted.

and… • Helps to establish rapport with others more easily. • Builds confidence and helps create a winning style. • Gives the organization an overall polished, professional image.

and Possessing a high level of etiquette knowledge and skills builds confidence and instills the perception of trustworthiness in others.

Introductions • When you are speaking with someone you know and someone new approaches, always make an introduction.

When making an introduction… • Give a piece of information about the person—it can be a conversation starter. “This is Sue, she just opened a new store in town.”

What? • LISTEN to and concentrate on conversations—don’t just wait for your turn to talk!

Don’t Jump! • Resist the urge to jump into a conversation when someone pauses in thought. Wait a second or two, then respond.

Just a peck will do. • A kiss on the cheek as a greeting is okay at a holiday gathering or a convention when you haven’t seen the person in awhile. • Resist the smooch in a purely business setting.

Smile, you’re on Candid Camera! • Be an active listener—smile, nod, make eye contact and agree when appropriate.

My Space • Respect a person’s personal space—don’t get too close! If you can smell lunch on their breath—you may be too close! • Give them a breath mint!

Build your vocabulary! • Avoid vulgar references and swear words. • Poor language IS NOT professional and offends some.

Networking Based on the success of your first impression, the other person will determine whether or not you are worthy enough for them to continue investing themselves in developing a relationship with you and your company.

Mind your own business! • Don’t ask personal questions! Like… How much did that cost? Why did they divorce? Did you get a raise?

You’ve got to be kidding! • Gossip—keep it to yourself! • Gossip: Everyone wants to hear it until it’s about them!

Hold the door. • Whoever (guy or gal) gets to the door first should open it and hold for others who are following.

The door is closing… • At an elevator, those in the elevator should get off before anyone else get on.

Meeting Seating • Generally the chairperson sits at the end of the table farthest from the entrance.

Does anyone know what time it is? • If you are attending the meeting—be on time! • On time means arriving a few minutes BEFORE the meeting begins.

Who’s in charge of this meeting? • If you are leading a meeting ARRIVE EARLY! Check the room’s temperature, lighting, and arrangement. • Get yourself organized. • Greet the participants as they arrive.

Keep your Word. • Do what you promised you would do! Make that phone call! Write that note! Make the arrangements!

H2O • Always thirsty? See a doctor! • Having a bottle of water is alright if water is available to others. • If you’re the only one—put it away!

Placing a telephone call… • If you’re making a call, identify yourself first, then ask to speak to the person you’re trying to reach.

When you finally reach the person… • Before you jump into a deep conversation, ask if they have time to talk.

If you’re on the phone and another call comes in… • Always ask if it’s alright to put them on hold.

Sign Language? • Do not interrupt someone on the telephone by gesturing, speaking or writing them notes!

What about voicemail? • If you must leave a message, state your name (spell if they don’t know you), phone number, date and reason for the call. • Repeat your phone number at the end—SLOWLY.

You’re Ringing • When you are in ANY meeting, turn off your cell phone ringer—accept voicemail and text messaging only!

Can you hear me now? • If you MUST take a call in a public place—try to move to a more private space. • Hearing one-sided conversations alienates the person NOT in the conversation!

I can’t talk now, but… • If you must talk in a public place (bus, elevator, airplane etc.) keep it short and discreet.

Rapid Response • Forget junk mail and forwards, but ALWAYS respond to a real message on your e-mail.

watch wat u say • While our Internet culture is full of shorthand, check your e-mail for grammatical, capitalization and spelling errors! In business—no shorthand!

Moving? • Close your e-mail address at an old job and have them forwarded to an appropriate person. • Let everyone know your new e-mail address.

No eating with your fingers! • During the first course of the meal, use the utensils on the outside. • For example, the salad arrived, use the fork on the far left. Entrée arrives, the next fork.

I want to eat my dessert! • When wanting to eat your dessert, use the utensils that were placed above the plate.

Put the napkin where? • Open the napkin, refold in half and place in onto your lap with the fold away from you.

How did that get on the floor? • If your utensils or napkin fall, DO NOT crawl around on the floor to retrieve—flag down a waiter and ask for another.

I can’t eat another thing. • Finally done eating? Place all of your utensils on the plate with the tip of the fork and knife across the plate, pointing at 11 o’clock.

Chop sticks or Chop Suey? • Eat your Chop Suey (or any other food) with chop sticks ONLY if you already know how to use them—learning in front of someone can be ugly!

What’s in my Mouth? • Great meal when— all of a sudden you realize something in your mouth needs to come out! • Cover your mouth with a napkin and get it out—discreetly!

Doing lunch? • Whoever invites a colleague or client to a business lunch pays for it—that includes the tip, coat check and parking if necessary.

Where to Lunch • Select a restaurant that is conducive to conducting business. • The restaurant should be centrally located for both, or close to the guests’ office.

Mirror, mirror on the wall… • Don’t primp at a restaurant table or in public. • Use the restroom to groom!

Party time! • Have fun, but maintain control! DO NOT get drunk hit on a co-worker stay at the buffet

Warning: DO NOT PICK • at your teeth. • at your face. • your nose. • on your friends.

Never, Never, Never… • Burp • Snort In general: DO NOT make ANY bodily noises that are rude and disgusting!

Allergies and colds happen, but… • DO NOT blow your nose at a table. It’s alright to pat your nose with a tissue. Otherwise, excuse yourself and find a place away from others.

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ppt presentation on good manners for students

Good Manners

Agenda showed that 43% of teachers in public. schools spend more ... 7. if you hear a burp, don't laugh. 8. try dining out once in a while. ( not fast food) ... – powerpoint ppt presentation.

  • Model good manners for them
  • Teach your kids the basics like saying please , thank you, and youre welcome.
  • Be respectful to elders by saying sir and maam.
  • Teach children to excuse themselves. The words excuse me and pardon me are some useful phrases to teach children.
  • Teaching good manners can be easy
  • Work on one skill at a time
  • Give positive feed back
  • Be tolerant for mistakes,
  • but dont over look them
  • Positive reinforcement
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Julie Burkhart stands in a pale shirt and black jacket.

The Great Read

Wyoming Banned Abortion. She Opened an Abortion Clinic Anyway.

The only abortion clinic left in the state has been protested and set on fire, rebuilt and opened as Wyoming grapples with what it means to be conservative in a post-Roe nation.

Rather than leave the front lines of the abortion wars, Julie Burkhart pushed on in Wyoming. “I really reject the notion of putting facilities only in the safe states,” she says. Credit... Joanna Kulesza for The New York Times

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By Kate Zernike

Kate Zernike covers abortion for The Times and has written extensively about the fallout of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. She reported this story from Wyoming and Colorado.

  • March 10, 2024

It was not such an implausible idea, back in 2020, when a philanthropist emailed Julie Burkhart to ask if she would consider opening an abortion clinic in Wyoming, one of the nation’s most conservative states and the one that had twice given Donald Trump his biggest margin of victory.

In fact, Ms. Burkhart had the same idea more than a decade earlier, after an anti-abortion extremist killed her boss and mentor, George Tiller, in Wichita, Kan., where he ran one of the nation’s few clinics that provided abortion late in pregnancy.

Dr. Tiller’s work had drawn the wrath of the nation’s anti-abortion groups — his clinic had been blockaded, bombed and flooded with a hose before he was shot to death while ushering his regular Sunday church service. When she reopened it instead of moving, the death threats and stalkers shifted to Ms. Burkhart, or, as they called her, Julie Darkheart.

Running a clinic in a red state had worn her down, and she was looking to put Wichita and all it represented behind her. But if Wyoming was even more conservative than Kansas, she understood that it was more Cowboy State conservatism, shaped by self-reliance and small government, less interested in regulating what people do behind their drapes.

So she said yes.

Then, three months before Ms. Burkhart planned to open her clinic in 2022, the Wyoming Legislature, pushed by a new Freedom Caucus, joined a dozen other states in passing a trigger law that would ban abortion as soon as the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

After the court ruled, other abortion providers in states with trigger bans moved their clinics to safe havens in Illinois, Maryland or Minnesota. Ms. Burkhart, rather than leave the front lines of the abortion wars, pushed on in Wyoming, making her the only person in America to open an abortion clinic in a state that bans abortion.

“I really reject the notion of putting facilities only in the safe states, because the only way we’re going to preserve rights in this country is to go to these really uncomfortable places.” she said in an interview on the three-and-a-half-hour drive from her home near Denver to the clinic in Casper. “For us to say we’re going to concede in certain areas, I don’t think we’re living up to our words and what we say when we say we support the rights of everyone.”

Julie Burkhart in the driver’s seat of a car.

Instead of finding only resistance in a Trump-voting state, she has encountered the nation’s complex politics of abortion post-Roe.

For all the ways Wyoming is unusual — roughly 600,000 residents, spread across a vast expanse of mountains, high plains and moon-like outcroppings — its recent politics turn out to resemble other red and purple states. Republicans have fractured, between the Freedom Caucus pushing bans on books and abortion on one side and those who see themselves as defending the state’s more libertarian brand of conservatism on the other.

And as they have watched the consequences of banning abortion, many residents have discovered that their views on the issue are more complicated than they previously understood, that even if they would not choose an abortion themselves, there are situations where people need them. Most of all, they do not think it should be up to the government to decide.

“People, when it comes down to very deeply personal issues, and particularly health issues, they’re going to do what they think is right, even if it’s illegal,” said Ogden Driskill, the president of the State Senate.

A sixth-generation rancher in the shadow of the massive rock formation known as Devils Tower, Mr. Driskill describes himself as pro-life but opposes banning abortion, for the same reason he defends his use of ivermectin, a drug used to deworm horses, to try to fend off Covid, despite warnings that it is ineffective and unsafe . Most Wyomingites, he added, are like him.

“It’s what level of pro-life are you at,” he said. “If you’re using abortion as a form of birth control, probably a lot of people would say no. If it’s for a reason, probably most of them are willing to listen to what the reason is.”

Jeanette Ward, a state representative who moved to Casper in 2021 to escape what she called the “tyranny” of mask mandates in Illinois during the Covid pandemic, argued that Wyoming is still “overwhelmingly pro-life.”

“A loud minority would like to imply it is not so,” she added, but the Legislature overwhelmingly passed the abortion ban, and the governor signed it.

Ms. Burkhart is operating in that shifting space. Her clinic survives on an injunction from a judge, pending a trial in a lawsuit her clinic and other abortion rights supporters filed against the bans. Staking even a small claim in such a sparsely populated state, she argues, is a way to keep the conversation about abortion rights alive.

“I think it’s been proven time after time that you can’t make change without risk, right?” she said. “We owe it to ourselves to challenge these laws. Even if the clinic is only able to stay open four, 12, 24, 36 months, it’s how many people can you help in the meantime?”

The Summers of Mercy

For all her refusal to cede ground, Ms. Burkhart, now 58, does not come across as a firebrand. She speaks in even tones, her intonation barely changing as she lists the horrors that have shaped her career: “Arson, murder, flooding, stabbing, death threats.” (“Hmm,” she adds, quietly.) While others who knew and worked for Dr. Tiller refer to his murder or assassination, she talks about when “Dr. Tiller died.” And it is never George or Tiller, always Doctor Tiller.

She brushes off talk of the risks of her work almost passively: “I mean, you know, this is what I’ve decided to do with my life, or what my life decided to do with me.”

Ms. Burkhart was shaped in Wichita by one of the defining events of the nation’s long fight over abortion.

She had grown up there, after her earliest years on a farm in Oklahoma. Home on summer break from graduate school in 1991, she took a job answering phones and doing light lab work at the Wichita Women’s Center. She was unaware that anti-abortion demonstrators were about to descend on the city for what they called the Summer of Mercy .

For six weeks, thousands blockaded the city’s three clinics, mobbing sidewalks, throwing themselves in front of cars, handcuffing themselves to fences and screaming verses from Scripture. At the clinic where she worked, Ms. Burkhart watched one man bolt himself by the neck to the handles of the entrance with a bicycle U-Lock.

Wichita had become the nation’s central battleground on abortion, and the experience seared her. “Seeing the self-righteousness, the violence, the intimidation, the lack of respect for the women coming to the clinic,” she said, “how can you say we love and care for somebody and then spew hatred at the same time?”

The protesters chose Wichita because they wanted to shut down Dr. Tiller’s clinic, which was across town. Ms. Burkhart did not meet him for another 10 years. In the meantime, she went back to school in Seattle and prepared to go to medical school, then abandoned that plan after her stepsister was found murdered a week before the entrance exams. She managed political campaigns, but when her partner left her when she was pregnant, she moved home again, this time with her infant daughter.

She took a job as community affairs director at a Planned Parenthood clinic. It was 2001, and anti-abortion protesters were returning to Wichita for what they called the 10th anniversary revival of the Summer of Mercy. She met Dr. Tiller in meetings about security, and within months he insisted that she go work for him to start a new political action committee.

A longtime Republican and former Navy flight surgeon , Dr. Tiller had taken over his father’s primary care practice in the early 1970s after his parents died in a plane crash, and only when women began coming to him for abortions did he realize that his father had been providing them before Roe v. Wade made them legal nationwide.

Initially, Ms. Burkhart said, “He scared the crap out of me,” with his defiance in the face of death threats and a dry sense of humor that people sometimes mistook for brusqueness. But they were “simpatico,” she said. She didn’t mind that he called her at 1 in the morning, since she was up working too.

“He really understood, and I understood, that this work is risky, you have to take risks, you have to think outside the box and sometimes you have to make big, difficult, challenging decisions.”

Over the next eight years she became the public face of his clinic in state politics. She appreciated his approach to the Legislature, that he resisted efforts to enact even seemingly innocuous regulations on abortion providers — requiring that their procedure rooms be larger than those in other surgical practices, for example — because he believed those laws would only make it easier for abortion opponents to push for more restrictions.

Dr. Tiller’s opponents accused him of running a “baby killing factory,” but Ms. Burkhart saw only deep commitment. “To his practice, and to people,” Ms. Burkhart said. “I really admired that, that he felt that everybody deserves forgiveness, redemption, that it’s part of life.”

In May 2009, an extremist who later testified that he had planned for many years to kill Dr. Tiller fatally shot him at his church. The funeral was standing room only. Ms. Burkhart recalls mostly her rage. The political action committee Dr. Tiller had started, ProKanDo, had been the state’s biggest donor to campaigns, yet she felt that the politicians it supported had been too timid to speak up for him, or abortion rights. “I remember people saying, ‘This is devastating, this is horrible, how can this happen?’” she said. “I was like, ‘How the hell do you think this happened?’”

A month later, a “maniacal mess” and compelled more by grief than good manners, she said, Ms. Burkhart visited Dr. Tiller’s widow, and, armed with a PowerPoint presentation, asked for her blessing to reopen the clinic. She did so in 2013, and named it “Trust Women,” after a slogan Dr. Tiller wore on a political button.

Anti-abortion groups worked hard to discourage her. They leafleted her neighborhood with a wanted-style poster that included her home address, and encouraged abortion opponents to “bring her home to Jesus.” One protester, a pastor, stood outside her house with a sign asking, “Where is your church?” which she took as a hint that anti-abortion activists intended to kill her the same way they had Dr. Tiller.

In a recorded phone call from prison in 2013 , Dr. Tiller’s killer mused to David Leach, of the anti-abortion group Army of God, that Ms. Burkhart might be the next provider to be killed — “She’s kind of painting a target on her,” he said in the recording, which Mr. Leach posted on YouTube.

Still, Trust Women was successful enough that in 2016 she opened another location in Oklahoma — the first new abortion clinic licensed in that state in 40 years .

The Code of the West

The call from Wyoming in 2020 came from Christine Lichtenfels, a lawyer and the director of Chelsea’s Fund, a nonprofit that helps women seeking abortions. There was only one clinic in the state, and it provided only medication abortion, up until 10 weeks of pregnancy, and it was in Jackson, on the western edge of the state. That clinic served nearly 100 people that year , but nearly 400 Wyoming residents traveled to Colorado for abortions. And Wyoming winters made travel difficult, with snow closing some roads for up to six months.

Ms. Lichtenfels proposed setting the new clinic in Casper, which is the center of gravity for the state’s population and just off highways that connect to four states that had passed trigger bans.

Proudly the “Equality State,” Wyoming was the first to give women the right to vote and the right to run for office, and the first to elect a woman as governor. The state’s voters had soundly rejected a ballot measure in 1994 that would have banned abortion by establishing fetal personhood . Its long libertarian tradition was codified in 2010 when the Legislature adopted the cowboy-inspired “Code of the West,” with its ten commandments including “talk less, say more” and “remember that some things are not for sale.”

“If you could buck a bale of hay or pull someone out of a ditch in a blizzard, that’s what mattered,” Ms. Lichtenfels said in an interview. “Whatever you do in your own home, people weren’t going to go there.”

Most intriguing to Ms. Burkhart, the state’s voters had approved a constitutional amendment in 2012 declaring that adults have the right to make their own health care decisions. Republicans in the Legislature intended it as a shot against Obamacare, but Mr. Driskill, the State Senate president, said they recognized that it would be interpreted to protect abortion, too.

Ms. Burkhart had read up on Wyoming’s laws around abortion immediately after Dr. Tiller’s death, as she tried to help doctors who worked in his clinic find safer places to practice. “Surely it’s all gone to hell there,” she remembered thinking. Instead, she found, “not much had changed at all.”

Across the country, legislatures had swung to Republican control in 2010 and proceeded to break records for the number of abortion restrictions passed . Wyoming enacted just one, a relatively inconsequential requirement that women considering abortion get ultrasounds.

It was also time for Ms. Burkhart to leave Kansas. A younger generation of activists was pushing abortion rights groups to think more broadly, about reproductive justice. That concept had been developed by Black women in the South, and Trust Women, along with national reproductive rights groups, welcomed new leadership that reflected the diversity of that new movement. And Ms. Burkhart chafed with some staff members, who said that in her trench she had become too controlling, too insistent on doings things her own way.

“I frankly feel like I overstayed my welcome,” she said. “I mean, I had no friends.” An exaggeration, she added. Still, Wichita had become haunted: “All the negative was always kind of hanging around. There were always those reminders.”

In early 2022, Ms. Lichtenfels bought a one-story former medical building half a mile from the historic center of Casper, where the towering lighted marquee on a 105-year-old ranch outfitters store stands across the street from a coffee bar with stickers on tables urging customers to “Read Banned Books.”

Ms. Burkhart named the clinic Wellspring Health Access, and planned to see the first patients in June of that year, just as the Supreme Court was expected to rule on Roe.

“I thought it was an interesting time to be starting a new abortion clinic,” she said.

Overturning Roe would throw the question of how to regulate abortion back to the states. Wyoming law allowed the procedure until viability — around 24 weeks of pregnancy — in line with the laws in some of the bluest states.

‘My God, this is serious.’

The Covid pandemic made Wyoming’s live-and-let-live spirit appealing to many conservatives, like Ms. Ward, who saw the state as a haven from masks and vaccine mandates. In the Legislature, which meets for only 20 or 40 days depending on the year, a rambunctious Freedom Caucus was growing in influence — its membership increased to 26 members in 2023 from five in 2017. And sessions once devoted to little more than passing a budget now broke out into arguments over bills sponsored by new members to prohibit teaching critical race theory and transgender girls from competing in girls’ athletic events.

In March 2022, the caucus led the push for the trigger law banning abortion. “I thought, ‘Well, we’ll just sue the state,’ ” Ms. Burkhart said.

Then in May of that year, three weeks after the leak revealing that the Supreme Court intended to overturn Roe, Ms. Burkhart’s contractor called to tell her that the clinic was on fire. Surveillance video showed a woman whose face was obscured by a hoodie and surgical mask breaking in and dousing the floors with a gasoline can.

Ms. Burkhart watched firefighters and police officers from the bed of a truck across the street later that morning: “I remember thinking, My God, this is serious. You’re going to get yourself or someone else killed.”

To her surprise, the staff she had hired agreed to stick with her. Her contractor, a Trump voter, put in extra hours to rebuild the clinic — although he declined to put his sign out front.

In July 2022, Ms. Burkhart, Ms. Lichtenfels and other abortion rights advocates in Wyoming sued to overturn the trigger ban, arguing, among other claims, that it violated the state constitutional right allowing adults to make their own health care decisions. A judge issued a temporary block on the law, saying that they were likely to succeed at trial.

The Legislature responded by passing a new law in March 2023 declaring that abortion is not protected as health care under the constitution — along with another law explicitly banning medication abortion. Again, the judge blocked the laws from taking effect.

That month, the police arrested a suspect in the arson, a college student who said she’d had nightmares about the clinic opening. And in April, Wellspring did open, nearly a year and $300,000 in repair costs later.

Ms. Burkhart was still facing familiar opposition. Casper’s mayor, Bruce Knell, responded to an article about the clinic’s plan to open by posting a GIF of a man dancing in flames, an image he said he intended to warn those who provide abortions that they must repent or face hellfire.

Anti-abortion activists turned out to City Council meetings in June and July and begged officials to shut down the clinic. They worried it was attracting what one described as “prostitutes, sex traffickers, child molesters, pedophiles” to Casper.

Ms. Ward, who was among them, blamed the state’s Republican governor “who is not really pro-life” for appointing a “radical judge” who “gave the middle finger to the Legislature and We the People” by putting the abortion ban on hold.

“It’s funny how the court protects the so-called medical freedom right of women to kill their babies but did not protect our rights when we were being force-vaccinated or losing our jobs during the scamdemic,” she told the council.

A crisis pregnancy center run by anti-abortion activists in Casper opened a second location two blocks from the Wellspring clinic, and sent “sidewalk advocates” to the alley behind it to try to steer women away, offering roses, gift bags and the promise of free ultrasounds.

It’s easier not to take the opposition personally now, Ms. Burkhart said, perhaps because she has chosen not to live in Casper. That choice, too, has its stresses: The drive to the clinic from her home in Colorado can take more than three hours, depending on how much she speeds.

She had intended to be at the clinic once a week, on the day it sees patients, so she could sit in on every consultation. The doctors who perform the abortions also travel in from out of state. But Ms. Burkhart complained of trouble finding nursing and administrative staff who were local, qualified, and as committed as she was.

In the administrative office at Wellspring, she frowned over medical records, worrying that the staff didn’t fully appreciate that the state could come after her if the paperwork was not filled out properly. She moved a marker over a whiteboard, trying to clarify the flow of patients from the waiting room to treatment and the recovery room.

Staff members described it as mission work.

“God, just to help these girls through these awful moments, that’s why I’m a nurse,” said Brittany Brown. Ms. Brown grew up in what she called Bible Belt Kansas, but came to appreciate the struggles women can face after her husband left her a single mother. She sought the job after seeing an article about the clinic on Facebook; she was working in what she described as a corporate-owned clinic, burned out from Covid and seeking to “do something useful.”

Behind the heavy curtains that separate the recovery room, she and Ms. Burkhart checked on Jade, a 22-year-old college student who called the clinic “my saving grace.” She and her partner had driven four hours from their home in Montana; clinics closer to home were so busy, Jade said, that they either didn’t return her call or offered her an appointment two months out.

Her parents were immigrants who had her when they were teenagers, and she and her sisters grew up in and out of foster care. “I don’t ever want to put a human being through what I had to go through as a child,” she said.

Jade had arrived at the clinic 11 weeks pregnant, and left a couple of hours later with a hug from a nurse and a paper bag containing recovery instructions and birth control. On the bag a staff member had written, “Live life to the absolute fullest!”

‘It Was Just Too Much’

Ms. Burkhart’s frustrations grew over the fall. As she waited for reimbursements to come in from insurance companies and abortion funds, she worried about budgets, and struggled to keep her staff. She let some people go, suspecting they were “antis.” Others quit, frustrated that Ms. Burkhart seemed disorganized and impossible to please.

In late September, she drove to Cheyenne to witness the sentencing of the 22-year-old woman who pleaded guilty to setting the clinic on fire. Ms. Burkhart said she wanted to show her gratitude to law enforcement. “In a lot of cases, folks aren’t caught,” she said.

“This is also for Dr. Tiller,” she added. “Nobody caught the bomber. Nobody caught the person who drilled a hole in the roof and flooded the clinic.”

But her visits to Wyoming became less regular. Just before Thanksgiving, staff members said, Ms. Burkhart erupted during a videoconference and threatened to quit.

In late January, she told the staff that she would step back from her role running the clinic, though she would continue to lead Wellspring’s board.

“This work is relentless, and I’m simply trying to find some balance in my life here,” Ms. Burkhart said in a phone interview. She said it was not the local opposition that wore her down. “The arson aside, it is not the most hostile area I have worked at in this country,” she said.

She is also a part owner of a clinic in Illinois, and hoping to open more, and characterized herself as “more of a start-up person.”

“It was just too much,” she said. “What I love is building things. I love taking something from scratch and giving it life and watching our patients come through the doors.”

Ms. Lichtenfels, who recruited Ms. Burkhart, said there was no question the arson had taken a toll on her: having to make sure donors and staff members did not give up, all the while not knowing who had committed the crime or what else they might be planning.

“She knew what the risks were, especially given her experience with Dr. Tiller’s murder,” Ms. Lichtenfels said. “Regardless, it’s emotionally and physically draining when it happens.”

Ms. Brown, the nurse, will run the clinic in Casper, overseen by a new executive director who lives in Arkansas, a former colleague of Ms. Burkhart’s from Trust Women in Wichita. Ms. Burkhart said she felt confident in the clinic’s future under them: “We didn’t work this hard to watch things fall apart.”

Demand seems to be increasing: The medication abortion clinic in Jackson closed in December, blaming high rent and other costs. That leaves Wellspring as the only abortion clinic in the state, and with a big hole to fill: Data from the Wyoming department of health show that the number of abortions in the state doubled between 2021 and 2022.

Ms. Burkhart’s clinic remains a plaintiff in the lawsuits challenging Wyoming’s abortion law. A trial is set for April, but both the state and the abortion rights providers appeared in court in December to argue for a quicker judgment. The judge could rule any day.

Kate Zernike is a national reporter at The Times. More about Kate Zernike

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  • 1. MANNERS AND ETIQUETTES
  • 2. WHAT ARE MANNERS ??? Way of behaving / acting in public . Correct way of behaving in society . Person’s way of behaving towards others .
  • 3. TYPES OF MANNERS … Table Manners Corporate Manners Eating Manners Wedding Manners Sitting Manners Meeting Manners Telephone Manners Social Manners
  • 4. TABLE MANNERS
  • 5. Cut only enough food for the next mouthful . Eat in small bites and slowly . Do not talk with your mouth full , Chew with your mouth closed .
  • 6. Do not place anything on the table . Keep utensils in the same order they appear on the table . Wait for all parties to arrive before beginning any part of meal . Do not push your plate away from you when you have finished .
  • 7. EATING MANNERS
  • 8. It is impolite to put too much food in your mouth . Be careful that food does not spoil your mouth or clothes .
  • 9. If you cannot eat a certain type of food, tell your host several days before the dinner party . If you are a guest, it is polite to wait until your hosts start . Always say thank you when served something. Never lick the fingers .
  • 10. CORPORATE MANNERS
  • 11. Try not to bore audience . Respect the speaker .
  • 12. Turn the cell phone off - completely . Hold the door for other person . Say please and thank you . Keep your right hand free for handshakes . Make eye contact and offer a warm smile . Be perceptive .
  • 13. SOCIAL MANNERS
  • 14. Always speak politely and use good manners . Always be helpful to the others .
  • 15. SOCIAL ETIQUETTES DURING FUNCTION : • Punctuality • Telephone conduct • Wine tasting • Attire • Gratuities • Awareness of guest preference • Appropriate language • Exit strategy
  • 16. TELEPHONE MANNERS
  • 18. Treat the call as if it were a meeting . Put the phone down gently . Don’t type or shuffle papers while you are on the phone . If you have sneeze or cough and you are talking on the call , turn your head and cover your mouth .
  • 19. WEDDING MANNERS
  • 21. Keep the ceremony short , sweet and simple . Do not plan a wedding that you can’t afford . Brides should not have an attitude of an expecting gifts .
  • 22. MEETING MANNERS
  • 23. Appropriate place , Appropriate time . Pay your attention in the meeting .
  • 24. Set a convenient time and place for a meeting . Going in and out during meeting is disruptive . Do be sure that everyone knows the meeting purpose and agenda . Do turn off phones and pagers . Do actively participate in discussion .
  • 25. Manners which must be followed by us.
  • 26. Wait for everyone to be served.
  • 27. Keep your things off the table.
  • 28. Don’t text at the table
  • 29. If you prefer not to have wine while dinning out, don’t turn your glass upside down.
  • 30. Practice good speaker phone manners.
  • 31. Whoever arrives at a door first holds it for the next person.
  • 32. Don’t microwave stinky food in the shared lunchroom.
  • 33. At the airport, don’t crowd the boarding area.
  • 34. Let people off the elevator and hold the door for others before you board.
  • 35. If all you have to say in your e-mail reply is “thanks!” refrain from sending it.
  • 36. Keep your cell phone out of the conversation.
  • 37. Be polite in e-mail.
  • 38. Respect the text.
  • 40. THANK YOU
  • 41. MADE BY – JINAL AND JINAL

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  1. Good manners

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    Presentation Transcript. Manners and Etiquette By Sarah Harvey. Basic Etiquette • Practice Basic Courtesy • Hold the Door for People • Speak Politely • Congratulate People • Groom yourself appropriately. Practice Basic Courtesy People notice when you use good manners, even when they don't say anything. Always say 'please' and ...

  3. GOOD MANNERS

    This document contains etiquette and manners rules from another century for individuals, at home, at school, in sports, on the street, at the table, and everywhere. The rules instruct one to be honest, helpful, kind, respectful, clean, and polite. They advise not using bad language, cheating, bullying, annoying others, or being rude or selfish.

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    Free Presentations in PowerPoint format. Dining Etiquette - Just the Basics. Etiquette. Good Manners. Good Manners at School. Manners around the World. Manners and Etiquette - Welcome. Manners - Remember to . . . Presentation Etiquette.

  5. Good Manners at School

    Courtesy, politeness or having good manners are. all about respecting others and yourself. Good manners is about considering the feelings of. other people, and being the kind of person that. others will like and respect. "Always do to others as you would wish them to do. to you if you were in their place." 3.

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    Sep 05, 2014. 1.57k likes | 4.48k Views. Good Manners. In English. Manners in America. People who have good manners are polite . America is a big country and Americans have different cultures. Some people are more polite and some people are less polite. It’s always better to be polite.

  7. Good manners for kids

    Lesson 2 God Made Me To Be a Good Person. 2. Good Manners for kids Say "please'' when asking. 3. Good Manners for kids Say "thank you'' when receiving. 4. Saying "Thank You" and "You're welcome". 5. When your mother helps you….

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    Do you want to learn about manners and how to behave in different situations? Check out this PowerPoint presentation from Denton Independent School District, a public school district in Texas. You will find useful tips and examples on how to be polite, respectful, and courteous in various settings. This is a great resource for students, teachers, and parents who want to improve their social ...

  9. Manners PowerPoint

    pptx, 3.07 MB. A PowerPoint presentation focusing on manners and how we use them in different situations every single day. The presentation starts with some manners for sale and ends with the conclusion that manners cannot be sold, they are free and we can all use good manners everyday. The presentation includes examples and pictures of good ...

  10. Good Manners Infographics

    Great! These are colorful infographics for educators or parents who look for visual ways of explaining good manners so that children grow into nice people! Some of the designs come with icons from Flaticon and others come with characters from Storyset. All our sister projects lend a hand in this template!

  11. Etiquette for Kids PowerPoint and Manners Assembly KS1

    Use this Etiquette for Kids PowerPoint to remind children to use good manners in your classroom or for a Manners Assembly for KS1. This resource is full of important rules to keep your class ticking over. This PowerPoint reminds children to: share and take turns stand in line quietly listen carefully put things away use indoor voices put hands up walk not run keep their hands and feet to ...

  12. PPt On Manners

    The PPT was shown to children. It was an interactive session. I have made PPT to talk about 'manners' with students. I have tried to touch upon the following areas: 1 Table Manners 2. At Home 3. At School 4. Social Occasions The PPT was shown to childr.

  13. Life Skills- Social Etiquette for Students

    Product Description - This is the same file as my PDF Manners File only in Powerpoint format.A Powerpoint file that is an introduction to Social Etiquette and Manners. 30 Pages.Included:a) Manners quizb) Manners and Etiquette Word searchc) Manners and Etiquette Word search Answer Paged) Good Manners...

  14. Good manners

    Good manners Authors: Justyna Kuku ka Andrzej Wilk The WebQuest is designed for junior high school students to learn about good manners and savoir vivre within the ... - A free PowerPoint PPT presentation (displayed as an HTML5 slide show) on PowerShow.com - id: 40b8f0-NTRiO

  15. Good Manners.

    Download presentation. Presentation on theme: "Good Manners."—. Presentation transcript: 1 Good Manners. 3 Invite your friend to take a seat when he visits you. 5 Always pay attention when an elderly is talking to you. 7 Do not be noisy or mess around in public area. 9 Do not fight with your friends. 11 Share your toys with your siblings or ...

  16. Good manners at school

    5. Good Manners at SchoolGood Manners at School • saying "excuse me", rather than pushing past someone; • holding the door open for the person coming in, • especially if he/she is carrying something; • respecting your own and other people's property, especially school property; • saying "please" and "thank you". Schoolat ...

  17. PPT

    ETIQUETTE AND MANNERS. An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Download presentation by click this link.

  18. Good Manners PowerPoint Presentation Slides

    Use our captivating Good Manners Powerpoint template to illustrate ways to make good impressions in day-to-day life and showcase the conventional rules for treating others in society. Business leaders and entrepreneurs can leverage these Powerpoint slides to exhibit the significance of good manners in developing a positive workplace culture.

  19. 5,000+ Good Manners PPTs View free & download

    Good Manners PowerPoint PPT Presentations. All Time. Show: Recommended. Sort by: Good manners, bad manners - Please Unit 7 Good manners, bad ... Justyna Kuku ka Andrzej Wilk The WebQuest is designed for junior high school students to learn about good manners and savoir vivre within the ...

  20. Good Manners PowerPoint Template

    An outstanding team of customer support executives is available to offer solutions to your problems. Download this incredible set now to steal the limelight! Download our 100% editable Good Manners PPT template to exhibit the importance of teaching good manners to children. The slide comes with user-friendly features.

  21. Good manners for kids

    The document provides tips for maintaining good manners and health, including getting up early, bathing daily, brushing teeth twice a day, eating three meals on time, exercising regularly, wearing clean clothes, going to school on time, respecting teachers, playing together, caring for the sick, and going to bed early.

  22. Good Manners

    Title: Good Manners 1 Instructional Contextual PowerPoint Good Manners 4th-6th graders 110.6 English, Language Arts, and Reading 1.A, 1.B and 1.C 113.6 Social Studies 24.A Rose Barrientos EDIT 3318 Summer II 2005 2 In 1999 73 of Americans in an ABC News poll thought manners were worse than 20 or 30 years ago. 3 An April 2003 report by the ...

  23. Wyoming Banned Abortion. She Opened an Abortion Clinic Anyway

    A month later, a "maniacal mess" and compelled more by grief than good manners, she said, Ms. Burkhart visited Dr. Tiller's widow, and, armed with a PowerPoint presentation, asked for her ...

  24. Manners and etiquettes

    SOCIAL MANNERS. 14. Always speak politely and use good manners . Always be helpful to the others . 15. SOCIAL ETIQUETTES DURING FUNCTION : • Punctuality • Telephone conduct • Wine tasting • Attire • Gratuities • Awareness of guest preference • Appropriate language • Exit strategy. 16. TELEPHONE MANNERS. 18. Treat the call as if ...