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Search results 851 - 860 of 1572 matching essays
- 851: Mein Ghetto: Black Racism And Louis Farrakhan
- ... Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)." Nixon tells us that "shown side by side in ads attacking gangsta rap and Time-Warner, Tucker and Bennett compared gangsta music to propaganda which preceded the horrors of Nazi Germany and blamed rap music for most of the social ills that confront black America." Finally, Nixon consider how it is that "while many black leaders have turned away from the so-called undesirable elements of ...
- 852: International Space Station
- ... dexterous hands to complete the most precision of tasks. Although those four nations are making up the bulk of the station, a total of 16 nations are actively participating. They are Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. More than 10,000 people are involved through out all the countries listed. The work force and company support is what is making the International Space Station ...
- 853: Information Management
- ... of alliances, partnerships and co-operation agreements being forged between markets keen to harness the potential of information technology to their advantage. Some exchanges, such as NASDAQ in the US and DEUTSCHE BORSE in the Germany's financial capital of Frankfurt, have lone put IT at the heart of their strategy. Others are catching up, while smaller ones are being pulled alone in the wake of the leading players. Also, those ...
- 854: Hydrogen 2
- ... electricity. The first fuel cell was constructed by Sir William Groves in 1839 . He used platinum electrodes and sulfuric acid as the electrolytbath . A significant amount of research was done in the 1920's in Germany which laid the groundwork for today's fuel cells. One of the most important accomplishments in the history of fuel cells was the accomplishments of Francis T. Bacon. He developed the Bacon Cell. The Bacon ...
- 855: Hemophilia 4
- ... another kind of clotting factor. Both A and B forms have also been called the royal disease. Hemophilia was inherited by decedents of England's Queen Victoria and introduced into the royal houses of Spain, Germany, and Russia. Hemophilia A and B are caused by genes that are sex linked and recessive. A defective gene on the X chromosome, one of the two chromosomes, that determine a person's sex. The ...
- 856: Hantavirus
- ... not a native inhabitant in Louisiana, and the strain in the patient did not match the Four Corners strain. Surges of Hantavirus infections were not only occurring in the United States. Outbreaks were occurring in Germany as well as France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Some believed that the decreased efforts to keep rat and mouse populations low may have been the reason behind the increased infections. Early in 1994, the CDC ...
- 857: Genetics
- ... technology is a reality, how will it be used? That is the question that has everyone worried. Whenever cloning is mentioned, people immediately worry about cloning humans. Many nations of the world (including England, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain) have already banned the cloning of humans. President Clinton has ordered a federal bioethics committee to report in ninety days on the ethics involved in the cloning of humans and ...
- 858: Genetic Engineering -
- ... less than a week after an American scientist announced he would clone a child, nineteen European nations signed a treaty that said cloning people violated human dignity and was a misuse of science. Britain and Germany, however, balked at signing the measure that London considers too strict and Bonn too weak. Among the countries that signed were Denmark, France, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey (Schuman). Yet South Korean scientists claimed ...
- 859: From Legend To Science The Health Benefits Of Tea
- ... inducing and a remedy for disease.‘¨ (Binglun 335) Eventually the tea trade began, and the reputation of tea as medicine spread beyond China‘¦s borders. In his book, Tea, Jamie Shalleck states that ‘§tea reached Germany and then France from Dutch sources.‘¨ (Shalleck 45) At first, reports Shalleck, ‘§French medical authorities were on guard;‘¨ some Seventeenth Century doctors approved tea‘¦s medical benefits, while others ridiculed it ‘§as both cure and ...
- 860: Fire 2
- ... 9 2.8 Sweden 1.6 1.5 1.6 Japan 1.5 -------- 1.5 United Kingdom 1.5 1.5 1.5 France 1.5 1.5 1.5 Australia 1.5 -------- 0.8 Germany 0.9 0.9 0.9 Switzerland 0.7 0.6 0.7 References Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia: On compact disc (1996) [CD-ROM]. Lyons, John W. (1985). Fire. New York: Scientific American Library. Payne ...
Search results 851 - 860 of 1572 matching essays
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