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Search results 7371 - 7380 of 8016 matching essays
- 7371: Anti-Affirmative Action
- ... Solutions to the Affirmative Action policies may be simple and complex. The example alternatives provided by Brian Sterlitz in his article, "Alternatives to Affirmative Action" found on the W.W.W., are: (1) rebuilding of civil society in minority communities; the strengthening of community associations, which will provide a foundation for collective development, (2) increasing minority and female applicant flow; maybe easy to accomplish with the addition of minority colleges and ...
- 7372: Rene Descartes
- ... lawyer and left him an annual income for life. He attended the college of Henri IV at La Fleche when he was 10, ordered by his father. Descartes left La Fleche in 1614 to study civil and anon law at Poitiers and two years later he had received the baccalaureate and licentiate degrees in law. In 1918 he joined the army of Prince Maurice of Nassau as a volunteer. In his ...
- 7373: The First Amendment: Sex, Laws, and Cyberspace
- ... the CDA was unconstitutional, thereby keeping free speech alive on the Internet. Wallace was a major role player in the outcome of this case. He is well educated in computer law and assisted the American Civil Liberties Union as needed. This was not just a book written by Wallace and Mangan, but something that means a great deal to them. Johnathn Wallace is Vice President and General Counsel at a high ...
- 7374: Rosalind Franklin
- ... and mother supported her quest for education. Eventually, her father gave in and agreed to pay her tuition. Franklin would later prove to be worth her education. As Rosalind Franklin was pursuing her degree World War II raged. She focused her research on coal, the most efficient use of energy resources. Five papers on the subject were published before Franklin¡¯s 26th birthday. Further, Franklin had given up her fellowship to ...
- 7375: Samuel Adams
- ... Act in 1765. He was an organizer and the founder of Boston’s Sons of Liberty, the group that fought for American independence. He played a key role from 1765 until the end of the War of Independence in Patriot opposition to what Adams believed was a "British plat to destroy constitutional liberty." (Miller 95) Adam’s contributions to the independence movement were many and varied. During the 1760s and 1770s ...
- 7376: The New Federalist Party
- ... first thing America should get out of is NATO. Washington continues to spend $90 billion a year on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.9 NATO can no longer do us any good because the Cold War is over. The only thing that can happen now is that NATO can entangle America in the numerous parochial quarrels and conflicts of East European nations themselves.10 Staying out of NATO allows the United ...
- 7377: The Need For Gun Control
- ... U. S. have militias because we have the five branches of the U.S. Military, the Army, Navy, Marines, Airforce, and Coast Guard. The military provides this country with enough support to fend off any war levying or belligerent nations. That is the military's obligatory purpose today. There is no necessity for a state run military. The U.S. Military's purpose is to keep this land free. Second, the ...
- 7378: Interest Groups
- ... their views. The moderate branch was by far the largest and is given most of the credit for the Nineteenth Amendment. Under the banner of the National Women's Party, the militant feminists had used civil disobedience, colorful demonstrations and incessant lobbying to get the Nineteenth Amendment out of Congress. These are just some of the ways that American politics in the twentieth century was influenced by special interest groups. Interest ...
- 7379: The Government and Environmental Policy
- ... in prison, and organizations can be fined up to $200,000 and lose any equipment involved in the violation. A source from the internet states, "The Interior Secretary or the Secretary of Commerce may impose civil penalties ranging from $500 to $25,000 for violations of the ESA. The Justice Department may seek criminal penalties of $25,000 to $50,000 and 6 to 12 months in jail against violations of ...
- 7380: Shel Silverstein
- ... During the 1950’s, Silverstein even served as a member of the United States Armed Forces. While in this position, he was employed as a cartoonist to help cheer up the troops during the Korean War. In 1956, the writer worked again as a cartoonist, but this time for a little-known magazine called Playboy. Despite this wide range of literary audiences, Silverstein’s main purpose was to entertain. Two of ...
Search results 7371 - 7380 of 8016 matching essays
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