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Search results 3311 - 3320 of 7138 matching essays
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3311: Marijuana Should Be Legal For Medicinal Reasons Only
... use marijuana to heal your pain? How can they say it’s immoral?"(15, p.2). In addition, marijuana is also used as a pain killer for many different circumstances. An example of this is child birth. Marijuana is a good pain killer for child birth because it does not impair breathing or harm the baby in any way (4, p.2). A one-time pharmacologist for the US Food and Drug Administration states, "The baby comes out nice and ...
3312: The Death Penalty for Justice and Safety
... sharp plunge into his chest. Gasping, thrashing, his life in this world about to end, he must have twisted frantically, like a trapped dog being smothered. Struggling, panic then darkness, and finally only a limp child’s body, no longer worth the pleasure, thrown into a drainage pond behind his house. There was no majesty in his going. James Arthur “Buck” Murray was convicted for the brutal rape and murder of ... him, another jest, and another chance at making his mother proud. All he is now is a tragic memory. No system of justice in recorded history has ever equated the life of a murdered innocent child with that of a homicidal, depraved predator. Ours does. (From Wash Post, still looking for author's name) There is a specific and implied contract, as well as a moral obligation, that our government has ...
3313: Character Sketch For Shiloh
... the story progresses she exhibits the emptiness which she feels. “One day Leroy arrives home from a drive and finds Norma Jean in tears.” (Mason p. 50). Norma Jean feels an emptiness toward her deceased child, her husband, and also her mother. Her emptiness toward her husband may be seen in the way she interacts with him. She feels very uncomfortable when she is around him. Norma Jean is always trying ... spoke of them again. “They never speak about their memories of Randy, which have almost faded, but now that Leroy is home all the time, they sometimes wonder if one of them should mention the child.” (Mason p. 47). Norma Jean could not discuss the problems of her sons death with anyone. She let these feelings take over her life and create an emptiness. Throughout the story it is seen how ...
3314: All Drugs Should Be Legal, Or How To End The Drug War
... Wouldn’t we like to see it end? I am sure that the answer to that question is yes. "According to a Gallup poll, 94 percent of 1,020 adults surveyed September, 1996 viewed drug abuse as a crisis or serious problem for the United States (Wren A13)." But how can we expect different results when we have been using the same tactics year after year to overcome the drug war ... this gene, it means that you are pre-disposed to the possibility of addiction problems. Meaning, that if you try a vice, any vice, you are more likely to become addicted to it or to abuse it than compared to someone who does not have this gene. Is it fair to punish these people for possessing this gene when they can’t help it? I do agree that theft, murder, and ...
3315: Babe Ruth 3
On February 6, 1895, George Herman Ruth, Jr., was born in his grandparents house in Baltimore, Maryland. Ruth as a young child. Ruth s dad worked as a bartender and owned his own bar. They spent very little time with George because they worked long hours. Eventually, his parents felt that they couldn t take care of ... matter of fact, his daughter Julia still believes that were it not for golf he would not have known what to do with himself after he retired from baseball. Perhaps it was because as a child he did not receive the love all children deserve, perhaps it was because his childhood was such a difficult one or perhaps it was because of something all together different. Regardless of the reason Babe ...
3316: Changes In Macbeth
... manliness. "to be more than what you are, you would be so much more the man". She challenges his love for her and says that she would rather "dash the brains out" of her own child than break such a promise as Macbeth has to her. Whether she was bluffing, the imagery that Macbeth would have had in his mind at this point would have been frightening. To have the brains "dashed out" of his own child. Macbeth is so awed by this woman who is his wife, who has so much power that he cannot believe it. At this point in the play, Shakespeare re-confirms just how close the relationship ...
3317: Klinefelter Syndrome
... ideas into words, while their receptive language-understanding what is said-is normal (4). Some males do not realize that they have the XXY sex chromosome until after marriage when they try and conceive a child, but are not able to because of KS related infertility. In general, many males have the extra X chromosome, but are not aware of it and go their whole lives without ever realizing it. (3 ... of the usual 46, XY karyotype. Not much is known about whom the disease affects or why it appears, but it is thought that advanced maternal age may be a factor in conceiving an XXY child (1). (4) Genetic and Cellular Origin Klinefelter Syndrome is a result of non-disjunction during meiosis or mitosis. Women usually inherit two X chromosomes-one from the male parent (X) and one from the female ...
3318: Psychoanalysis
... and of others one can achieve an amelioration of symptoms as well as a smoother and more effective socialization of one's behavior. Psychological maladaptations usually originate from painful misunderstandings or outright failures in the child's relationship to his or her parents. Sometimes parents lack the appropriate and attuned empathic understanding that children need. Sometimes severe physical or mental illness or the death of a parent or sibling causes serious ... into the present. Transference makes one have irrational expectations from the people with whom one lives and works. For example, one may feel a need to be appreciated by one's supervisors similarly to a child's needing approval from his or her parents. Frustration of these expectations may evoke immature rage or other immature behavior. Transference causes great distress, but it also makes treatment possible. The method of treatment seems ...
3319: MkIS Support For The Marketing
... and more, companies are faced with the need to control an ever larger and rapidly changing marketing environment. The information processing requirements of companies are expanding as their competitive environment becomes more dynamic and volatile (Child, 1987). To handle the increasing external and internal information flow and to improve its quality, companies have to take advantage of the opportunities offered by modern information technology (IT) and information systems (IS). Managing marketing ... Bank Management, Vol. 67 No. 12, December , pp. 49-51. Cash, J.I. Jr, and Konsynski, B.R. ( 1985), “IS redraws competitive boundaries ”, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 63 No. 2, March-April, pp. 134-42. Child, J. (1987), “ Information technology, organization, and the response to strategic challenges”, California Management Review, Vol. 30 No. 1, Fall, pp. 33-50 . Choffray, J.M. and Lilien, G.L. ( 1986), “A decision support system for ...
3320: The Sound And The Fury: Caroline Compson Focused Directly Upon Appearances
... a mother onto the black housekeeper Dilsey, because she was unable to handle the appearance of her own family. Mrs. Compson felt a great burden placed upon her life after the birth of her fourth child Benjy. At birth Benjy appeared normal, though he never fully mentally developed. When Mrs. Compson learned of her sons disability her entire life shattered. She wondered how anyone could accept her or her son now ... him than Maury was."(Faulkner 58) Mrs. Compson felt that Benjy did not deserve the family name of Maury. In her eyes he was not her son. She found it impossible to love a feeble child. Caroline Compson's fixation upon sound and appearance led to the death of Quentin. She forced Harvard upon her son. Mrs. Compson felt that she would be looked upon as an important person if she ...


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