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Society Term Papers and Reports
Pidgin: Dialect Of English Spoken On The Hawaiian Islands
457 Words - 2 Pages

.... Hawaiian and part Scottish. Being such I have to choose which lifestyle is right for me. There is a tug-a-war between the Hawaiian part of me and the Haole part of me. The two cultures that I consider myself, Scottish and Hawaiian, are both proud, interesting, and contain their own prescriptions toward behavior. The pidgin dialect is a major part of life in the lower class Hawaiian neighborhoods. For most children in these neighborhoods it is the language spoken at home. The other people of the islands look at this dialect as a sign of a poor education and up-bringing. My mother did not want her son associated with such a group of individuals. When I started school at M ....


Realism, Globalism, Pluralism
1634 Words - 6 Pages

.... obscure words such as these are easily explained. The realist views the state as the principle " unitary actor encapsulated by a "hard shell" facing the world as an integrated unit", concerned with specific issues of national security and sovreignity as stated in their foreign policy. Policies which accentuate national interests unlike the foreign policy of pluralists who have an expansive foreign policy converging on economic and social issues far more than military movement. Likewise, independent actors such as multinational corporations are not dismissed as insignificant to the global perspective. The political schedule of the pluralist includes exercises in coal ....


Why Corporal Punishment Is No Longer Justifiable In Discipling Children
267 Words - 1 Pages

.... straight lines down the halls, use proper table manners, et cetra, in order to avoid being beaten. Grown ups had little respect for the children, making them do slave labor at home, and display best behavior in school. When looking back, I can see why corporal punishment was allowed to be used. The year is 1991, the students are all rebels without a cause... If corporal punishment was used today, it would fail. Kids no longer are expected to act like they are in church for their complete childhood. If a child is caught talking in class, the teacher does not whip or beat them like years ago, instead: writing the childs name on the board, or giving them detention does the ....


Animal Experimentation Is Acceptable
415 Words - 2 Pages

.... to preserve endangered species, and surgeries to repair abnormalities. A final benefit for animals is that there are over 80 medications that were developed through animal research for humans but are now used on pets, farm animals, and wildlife. Another good reason animal experimentation is tolerable is because sometimes we have to be cruel to improve our well-being. The first example is that the cruel experiments result in more animals and people surviving otherwise fatal or paralyzing diseases. The Research Defense Society stated that 50,000 people fill antibiotic prescriptions, 180,000 people with diabetes survive because of insulin, 4,000 heart defects are corr ....


Reform Movements Of The Nineteenth Century
1533 Words - 6 Pages

.... new economy which was developing in America required strict schedules for the work force and was much more demanding of its employees. This was one of the reasons the temperance movement began. In 1810, a census concluded that 25 million gallons of spirits were being produced in America. At this time America was not only a hard-working society, but a hard drinking society as well (Tindall and Shi 545). Males were mostly to blame for the mass consumption, and alcohol was beginning to be blamed for many social problems of the period. Temperance groups, such as the one in Lynn, Massachusetts, began to form and lobby for prohibition (Faler 369). Here, a group called The ....


Television Violence In The United States
1845 Words - 7 Pages

.... and that the amount of violence has steadily increased each year. Since 1994 violent programming on the major broadcast networks has increased 14% in primetime (Stern 24). Television violence is a serious problem and there has to be something done to keep the violence at a respectable level. There are strong statistics about the amount of television watched by the public and the amount of violence that is shown on television. Such statistics highlight the potentially strong influence TV can have on those who watch it. It is believed that people learn by imitating what they see, and children are particularly receptive to such learning (Freedman 96). Based on the re ....


Teenage Love
2142 Words - 8 Pages

.... example of what can go wrong with teenage heartbreak. One minute they’re inseperable - sharing their most intimate thoughts and details - the next minute they are faces across a crowded room or polite acquaintances at best. These are the consequences that come along with a breakup. We teens hear about love all around us, in music and movies, on TV, in stories. If you look in the dictionary, they define love as a tender, warm feeling; warm liking; affection; attachment. Love is simply a choice we make when we find someone who makes us happy, and who we trust with our innermost thoughts and feelings. We hear that love will make us happy. We hear that single pe ....


The American Association Of Retired Persons (AARP)
1838 Words - 7 Pages

.... wide through local chapters and is run mainly by volunteer board members at the local and national levels. The 33 million members of the AARP can expect many benefits as well as support from the AARP. The wide range of services span anywhere from movie tickets to grants for re-search. The AARP also has many publications in the form of audio and publications. The most famous of these publications is the bimonthly Modern Maturity which targets all readers inter-ested in AARP issues. The issues and goals the AARP advocates span a great deal throughout the political, economic, and social arena. While diverse in its areas of interest, the AARP mainly concentrates on s ....



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