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Teen Alcoholism

... drunk, when polled in 1997. Yet alcohol is addictive for only a minority - an estimated 10 percent in the United States - of it users. For most drinkers alcohol is a relatively harmless social beverage. Even though the percent is small, too many students are spending weekends and weeknights drinking the nights away. Time is not the only commodity that kids are wasting on alcohol. Research shows that college students spend 5.5 billion dollars a year on beer and alcohol. That is over four billion cans a year and 430 million gallons annually. All ...

Number of words: 977 | Number of pages: 4

Child Labour

... solution to these problems. With this in mind, the purpose of this paper will be to discuss the issue of child labour on a national and an international scale. This will not only include an evaluation of it prominence and any problems that are associated with the use of child labour, but also an examination of the efforts that are being made to discourage national and foreign markets who employ children. In many respects, the issue of child labour on a national scale, at least from a Canadian perspective, is one that is quite limited. Muc ...

Number of words: 1260 | Number of pages: 5

Atomic Diplomacy

... ascension are the most fascinating times in the history of U.S. international relations. Hopefully, an investigation into this , along with a balanced analysis of the problems of conceptualizing and implementing containment, will provide insight for our current efforts to devise a workable post-war national security policy. There is no way to tell the story of post-war national security without also telling the story of George Kennen. Kennen, the foremost expert of Soviet Affairs in early post-war America, is almost wholly responsib ...

Number of words: 1776 | Number of pages: 7

Ideals Of Law And Justice In Different Civilizations

... it is no wonder that the heights to which women rose was short of their male predecessors. Two clearly marked instances were the accomplishments of women in early Mesopotamia, and Rome. Two city-states with different laws for women then men. These differences, and how they were explicitly defined proved to be an important device in measuring the advancement of women in their respective areas. In ancient Rome, the majority of its lawmakers were wealthy nobles, and were mostly men. Because of this, the laws were written to benefit its maj ...

Number of words: 1009 | Number of pages: 4

Abortion

... a person?”(Gilbert,Intro-2). This question is the most important one to ask yourself before deciding whether or not to have an . Some people ask doctors the same question, and their response would be to define “life”. After a discussion in 1981, the U.S. Senate decided that biological life starts at implantation. Many of the Pro-ists, however could not found one expert to prove that life starts at any other time than implantation. They were able to however to show an alternative viewpoint. It considers the continuum to run from sper ...

Number of words: 782 | Number of pages: 3

One Of The Six Basic Principles Of The Constitution: Federalism

... or local governments. Each level of government has its own area of powers and no level acting alone can change the basic divisions of powers the Constitution makes between them. Each level operates through its own agencies and acts directly on the people through its own officials and laws. The Constitution sets out the basic design of the American federal system. The document provides for a division of powers between the National Government and the States. That division of powers was implied in the original Constitution and the ...

Number of words: 1387 | Number of pages: 6

Interracial Relationships

... neighborhoods. The steadily growing areas in the west and southwest are least segregated, because these areas never had the…"entrenched African American and white sections of town" (Afgen). There are other signs that are visibly seen in the areas of education. A study, done by the University of Michigan, shows that integration on campuses occur on a regular basis. The racial lines are crossed routinely; about 50% of African Americans and 15% of whites reportedly study together and a percentage close to that also eat together. Socially, there ...

Number of words: 1591 | Number of pages: 6

One Man, One Vote?

... should not equal as much as an election educated person. I do not think that this is a good idea at all. It would not encourage people to learn more about the election but keep them away from the voting area. It will probably make people not want to vote because many of them would think that their vote will not mean as much to the election. It would make the people who are familiar with the candidates want to vote because they would have a bigger say in who gets elected. It would be very hard to decide who know what about the running candid ...

Number of words: 652 | Number of pages: 3

Indian Suffrage

... children, savage- uncivilized people in need of their protection and salvation (Carroll and Noble: 30). Therefore, they felt it is their responsibility to civilize the Indian and put their lands into good uses. Hence, American Indians suffrages and nightmares began. The impact of American expansion has turned upon the Indians and confronted them with social and economic crises never before experienced. As a result, many tribes torn apart, in many cases extinct, and their identity was lost. Indians also lost their original lands as a result ...

Number of words: 1449 | Number of pages: 6

Capital Punishment

... age, as stated in article by Kirk Makir, in the March 26, 1987 edition of the Globe and Mail, titled "B.C. MPs split on Death Penalty". The death penalty deters murder by putting the fear of death into would be killers. A person is less likely to do something, if he or she thinks that harm will come to him. Another way the death penalty deters murder, is the fact that if the killer is dead, he will not be able to kill again. Most supporters of the death penalty feel that offenders should be punished for their crimes, and that it does not matt ...

Number of words: 1317 | Number of pages: 5

The Evolution Of The First Amendment

... British parliament's enactment of a series of tax levies to pay off a large national debt that England incurred in its Seven Years War with France. In newspaper articles, pamphlets and through boycotts, the colonists raised what would become their battle cry: "No taxation without representation!" And in 1773, the people of the Massachusetts Bay Colony demonstrated their outrage at the tax on tea in a dramatic act of civil disobedience, the Boston Tea Party.(Eldridge,15) The stage was set for the birth of the First Amendment, which forma ...

Number of words: 970 | Number of pages: 4

Euthanasia Overview

... euthanasia, on the other hand, is allowing the patient to die due to lack of treatment. This includes taking the patient off their support system, or respirator. Passive euthanasia also includes stopping the food supply intravenously to comatose patients (Compton’s, 1). Debate has flourished against those who accept passive euthanasia, but reject active. Questions are asked why one form is accepted and not the other. The distinction that is made between the two of them is that active is murder, while passive is merciful. Turning off suppo ...

Number of words: 950 | Number of pages: 4

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