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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 2981 - 2990 of 3045 matching essays
- 2981: Pfizer In The Animal Health In
- ... health company. This offers opportunities for substantial growth and internal synergy. Pfizer has more new animal health products in its research pipeline today than at any other time in its history. Their products include anti-inflammatory, anti-infectious, and anti-parasitic pharmaceutical medicines, vaccines and feed additives. These products are used by cattle, swine, and poultry industries, as well as, veterinarians ... Animal Health business has a new world headquarters in leased offices located one block away from the Company s corporate headquarters in New York City. Animal Health owns its North American headquarters in Exton, Pennsylvania and leases some additional space in a nearby office building. It also owns office space in Belgium for support of its international operations. Most of Animal ...
- 2982: GPS: The Future of Navigation and Technology
- ... located worldwide. They transmit signals that can be detected by anyone with a GPS receiver. Using the receiver, you can determine your location with great precision. GPS is one of history's most exciting and revolutionary developments, and new uses for it are constantly being discovered. But before I go any farther it's important to understand a bit more about ... NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, Spencer Michels points out that Air Force pilot Scott O'Grady, honored by President Clinton, provided the most dramatic use of GPS. He was rescued by American forces, after he was shot down by a Bosnian Serb missile over Bosnia in 1995. O'Grady used a hand held unit to find his exact position and radio it ...
- 2983: Abortion: Life or Death Who Chooses?
- ... women. Should we compound the psychic scar already inflicted on the mother by her having the guilt of destroying a living being which was at least half her own? Throughout history, pregnant women who for one crime or another were sentenced to death, were given a stay of execution until after the delivery of the child: it being the contention of ... born, why not after birth, why not any human being we declare defective? It is no surprise of course for many of us to learn that in hospitals across North American Continent such decisions affecting the newborn and the very elderly or those with incurable disease, are being made. What is a defect, what is a congenital defect? Hitler considered being ...
- 2984: Andrew Carnegie
- ... Annuity Association in 1918, and currently provides retirement pensions for teachers of colleges, technical schools, and universities in the United States and Canada. Their studies have had much influence on American higher education. Also benefiting from Carnegie’s charity include various Carnegie museums of history, science, and art, Carnegie Hall in New York, and other public spirited organizations. Before 1919, when Carnegie died, he had given away $350,695,653, and at his death, the ...
- 2985: Tyler's "Accidental Tourist" and "Searching For Caleb": Individualism and Belonging to the Family
- ... nail polish, transparent gems of any color, jewelry shaped like animals, checkered prints . . . We're all told from birth on that no Peck has had a cavity in all recorded history has lost a single tooth; that we are punctual even when we're supposed to come late; that we write our bread-and-butter notes no more than an hour ... 1386. Nesanovich, Stella A. "Anne Tyler." Critical Survey of Long Fiction. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Salem Press, 1991:3329-3345. Reisman, Rosemary M. Canfield. "Anne Tyler." Magill's Survey of American Literature. New York: Salem Press, 1991: 1972- 1982. Tyler, Anne. "The Accidental Tourist." A New Collection. New York: Wings, 1994. Tyler, Anne "Breathing Lessons." A New Collection. New York: Wings ...
- 2986: Capital Punishment
- Capital Punishment Throughout history, statistics have proven that Capital Punishment or otherwise known as the death penalty, has been an effective deterrent of major crime. Capital Punishment is the lawful infliction of death among ... the execution less painful, and a fatal chemical agent into the condemned prisoners bloodstream. Lethal injection was first used to carry out the death penalty in 1982. In 1980, The American Medical Association [AMA] went on record to oppose the participation of any physician in an execution by lethal injection. A doctors involvment was seen as a contradiction of the professional ...
- 2987: Pierre Trudeau
- ... economic and linguistic) which offered practical conclusions without chaotic implications. Trudeau envisioned himself in power, speculating two choices he would offer to Quebec; full sovereignty or maximized integration into the American continent. But what Trudeau avoided treading upon was the infringement of state policies on the individual's rights and freedoms. Many members of the Federal government believed that Trudeau did ... the fact that he had submerged himself into a field which required innovative and pragmatic thought led me to believe that his Federalist stance would eventually be justified in Canadian history. With a superlative writing style, his use of vocabulary and terminology aided the reader in understanding his convictions. Not even this reader expected such a barrage of political jargon. Recent ...
- 2988: Comparing Britain To Japan
- ... symbol of the supremacy of law. The establishment of the democratic political system in Japan came into force in 1947 when their constitution was made up. This was helped by American occupation there with a strong influence from General McArthur. It is based on three principles: sovereignty of the people, respect for fundamental human rights and pacifism. The similarities between Britain ... is some evidence that a multi-party system is emerging. Though until this happens which can’t happen over night there will always be a source that undermines democracy. Over history many things have come into play in each political system. Britain, which has had democracy for much longer, has not made any steps for the future to improve it. While ...
- 2989: Methamphetamine: Built for Speed?
- ... the sleep from the night before. As a matter of fact, you will feel better than if you had skipped the drug and slept all night!" Speedlore and Methology: "The American Speedfreak is not a lost soul. We know how to have fun between the first ether gasp and locking ourselves in the closet. A twisted wisdom creeps into those of ... culture interested in the mass consumerism of these legitimate substances -- sugar, nicotine, caffeine. He relates the emergence of drugs like methamphetamine back to the institutionalized abuse of these substances. "The history of commercial drug synergies -- the way in which one drug has been cynically encouraged and used to support the introduction of others -- over the past five hundred years is not ...
- 2990: Marijuana
- ... names: Dope, Marihuana, Ganja, Pot Mary Jane, Cannabis Sativa (Scientific) to name a few. Marijuana originated in the middle east (Taiwan, Korea). China plays an important part in Marijuana's history. Hoatho, the first chinese physician to use Cannabis for medical purposes as a painkiller and anesthetic for surgery. In the Ninth Century B.C., it was used as an incense ... fibrous and is better known as hemp. Hemp was used to make rope, twine, paper and canvas (the word "canvas" comes from Cannabis) and was an important crop in the american colonies. In Jamestown, Virginia it was grown for it's fiber qualities in 1611. (Snyder, 1985) The U.S. Pharmacopeia had it listed as a useful medicine from the year ...
Search results 2981 - 2990 of 3045 matching essays
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