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Search results 691 - 700 of 832 matching essays
- 691: Hong Kong 2
- ... Hong Kong citizens fear expressing themselves through art because of Chinas control. Many contemporary choreographers use the theater as a way to express political turmoil and other problems in Hong Kong. Issues range from AIDS, gay rights, and communism versus democracy. The theater has become a place to find different approaches in communicating with the audience, says Jacky Yu, choreographer from the E-Side Dance Company. The government, however, is ...
- 692: Hazelwood History Of Censorshi
- ... to publish articles. Representative Michael Connolly remarked that Hazelwood gave the administration broad discretion to determine what goes in school papers . . . If you want student papers to deal with the issues of the day like AIDS and teen pregnancy, you have to let freedom take place. The paper should prepare students for the real world. They have to learn to make their articles meaningful and address real issues. (Devault 4) Which ...
- 693: Gulf War Illness
- ... modified germ warfare agent called Mycoplasma fermentans (incognitus). There was actually up to 15 such agents used in Desert Storm by Iraq, only three of which have been identified. GWI spreads far more easily than AIDS, by sex, by casual contact, through perspiration, or by being too close to someone who coughs. Your children can be infected at a playground or school it is that contagious. One of the more ominous ...
- 694: Everything Old Is New Again
- ... more passionate about obtaining wealth, power and prestige and would rather look the other way when our president lies. The civil rights movement has been superseded with the fight for gay and lesbian rights. The AIDS epidemic has advocates supporting safe sex rather than the free love attitude that was present in the sixties. Of course, it is impossible to characterize the 60s and the 90s so simplistically and ...
- 695: Early 1900s In N. America
- ... a horse on a 19 km course. Later to be proclaimed the worlds best marathoner. In the early 1900's modern covienences were just being available like bathrooms, electric washing machines, sewing machines, electric hearing aids, vacuum cleaners. The very fortuanate who could afford these items would order them from the Eaton's Catologue. All types of goods could be ordered in the Eaton's Catologue from fence posts to fashionable ...
- 696: Deregulation Of The Airline In
- ... voice-channel congestion. Navigation Over the next 10 years, the navigation system is expected to use satellites augmented by ground monitoring stations to provide navigation signal coverage throughout the NAS. Reliance on ground-based navigation aids is expected to decline as satellite navigation provides equivalent levels of service. The transition to satellite-based navigation consists of: h Use of the global positioning system (GPS) as a supplemental system for en route ...
- 697: Did Japan Exploit Or Modernize
- ... to ensure the peasants survival. The Japanese introduced fixed prices. The prices were very high and if the peasant could not pay, they could not live on the land. The Japanese introduced several other new aids into Korea, such as heavy industry, which could not have occurred with out Electricity. The increase and modification of sea ports. Also the Japanese built the infrastructure by building better roads and allowed foreign countries ...
- 698: Communist Containment In Asia
- ... Truman. (Farrell, 325) Truman was greatly unprepared for the news that he as about to receive, and he was caught off guard. His first month in office, was largely devoted to briefings by Roosevelts aids and advisors. Truman, and the rest of the United States, was able to close out the war successfully. Despite the fact that the USSR was allied with the United States during the war, Truman kept ...
- 699: Columbian Voyages- Their Effec
- ... goes, build a better lock and you build a better thief, viruses keep getting more lethal and more frightening as medicine learn how to combat each one. However, as horrifying and lethal as Ebola and AIDS are, they still have their natural place in the worlds ecosystem.
- 700: Chernobyl 2
- ... left in its aftermath an estimated 32,000 dead. Chernobyl left something else besides it s radioactivity, many illnesses that will plague the people of this area forever. Scientist have dubbed one syndrome the Chernobyl AIDS . It has been estimated to have effected some 30,000 in the area. The syndrome, which is said to decrease the number of natural killer cells in the blood, can cause an increase in the ...
Search results 691 - 700 of 832 matching essays
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