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Search results 791 - 800 of 832 matching essays
- 791: To Help the Poor
- ... a dollar for something totally useless to giving it to charity. This is surprising, because that dollar could give a poor child foor, slothing and vaccination. Perhaps people in the industrialised countries think these charity aids are needless, because the government donates a share of its budget to help the developing countries. Yet governments cut their foreign aid, the multinational companies take even higher adventage of the cheap labour force in ...
- 792: College Fraternities
- ... school year and especially before exams. In addition, members might also use the opinion and advice of other members about the faculty in their favor, and most fraternities keep test files and other such study aids available for the benefit of their members. Most fraternity members are also eligible to receive a number of different scholarships and awards based on academic excellence, leadership, and personal achievement which can contribute to both ...
- 793: Welfare
- ... cures for the deadly diseases that is in society today. I believe that all parts of society would benefit from this because of the possible cause that will happen when we are able to treat AIDS the same way we treat the common cold. The only disadvantage is that of the money. I don't really think people would agree with the budget becuase they would want to keep the money ...
- 794: The Increasing Prison Population
- ... American prisoners is a big business. Privately managed prison beds are increasing about 35 percent a year, and the demographics of inmates are changing rapidly. More prisoners are women or elderly, and have drug problems, AIDS, or other chronic health conditions. The number of prisoners seems certain to increase--but even if it doesn't, the cost of running prisons will. Prisons are often referred to as "the big house," but ...
- 795: Pulmonary Agents
- ... the ABCs of resuscitation as required. Establishing a patent airway is especially crucial in a patient exhibiting hoarseness or stridor; such individuals may face impending laryngeal spasm and require intubation. Establishing a clear airway also aids in interpretation of auscultatory findings. Steps to minimize the work of breathing must be taken. Because of the always present danger of hypotension induced by pulmonary edema or by positive airway pressure, accurate determination of ...
- 796: Cloning
- ... would do with it. Instead of spending all this money on a needless technology, why do scientists not spend the money on a much better cause, such as trying to find a cure for cancer, AIDS, or maybe even feeding the hungry; something that would benefit society. If we do not say or do anything, research for cloning will steadily continue and even more moral and ethical issues will arise. Cloning ...
- 797: Malthus' Principle of Population: Today and the Future
- ... billion in spite of wars, plagues, famine, and epidemics. Unrestrained, this growth could continue until world population approaches 11 billion in the year 2050. (Using currently assumed declining growth rates). An unchecked continuation of the AIDS epidemic would infect 320 million people by the year 2050 but would have a negligible effect on the total food requirements of the 11,000 million. Each month the world adds another New York City ...
- 798: How Toxic Waste Affects Canadas Natural Environment
- ... Well, they were wrong. Chemicals have turned up in dead whale bodies and dead fish in high enough concentrations to kill people. Medical wastes such as used needles and vials of blood (some carrying the AIDS virus) have washed up along the Atlantic coast and in one of the Great Lakes. Mutated and disfigured fish as well as other water animals have washed up dead or been caught by fishermen. The ...
- 799: Sedimentary Rocks
- ... the rock, freezes, and expands. The force exerted by the expansion is sufficient to widen cracks and break off pieces of rock. Heating and cooling of the rock, and the resulting expansion and contraction, also aids the process. Weathering contributes further to the breakdown of rock by increasing the surface area exposed to chemical agents. Chemical weathering is the breakdown of rock by chemical reaction. In this process, the minerals within ...
- 800: The Destruction of Red Tides
- ... got stomach cramps, became dizzy, and got skin lesions on their hands and forearms. Soon after the lab was closed for a year and became a biohazard Level 3, which is on a par with AIDS. Not much can be done to prevent or stop the destruction of red tides but scientists are starting to learn and understand these phenomena a great deal more in the last few years. Expanding research ...
Search results 791 - 800 of 832 matching essays
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