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Search results on "LEONIDS METEOR SHOWER":

WordSuggestions
leonids LENDS LEONTES LEONIDAS LEONID

Term Paper # 39221 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Leonids Meteor Shower, 2002.
An overview of this meteoric phenonemen which occured in November 2001.
650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 26.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the Leonids meteor shower. The Leonids meteor shower occurs every November and was particularly active in November 2001. This paper explains the origins and importance of the Leonids meteor shower.
Term Paper # 71554 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Meteors, 2003.
This paper examines meteor showers and meteor storms.
1,840 words (approx. 7.4 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 63.95
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Abstract
This paper describes the origin of meteors, their composition and properties. The author explains the source of light and color of meteors, their speed and size. The paper gives some features of major meteor showers such as the Leonid and Perseid.

From the Paper
"The smallest units in the solar system, which can be observed with the naked eye, are meteoroids and they range in size from large fragments of asteroids and comets to small micro-meteoroids. Most meteoroid streams come from..."
Term Paper # 16042 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Comets, 2002.
This paper explains what a comet is and why they continue to circle around the planets.
1,200 words (approx. 4.8 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 41.95
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Abstract
This paper explains the composition of comets and clarifies what happens that gives them their shimmering appearance. It explains the various types of comets and elucidates the close link between the orbit of comets and the orbit of meteor showers. It lists the commonly seen features when a comet is near the sun and concludes by looking at factors resulting in a change in the behavior of a comet.

From the Paper
"In outer space there are many things that man is still trying to fathom, and he has been intrigued by many things high up in the sky, but yet has not been able to figure out what they are or what they may mean. The field of astrology is one that began thousands of years ago with the Egyptians being the first known astronomers. They were the ones who created the first map of the North Star that is used till today to trace the movements of our planet and the heavenly bodies around it."
Term Paper # 51336 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Cosmic Impacts, 2004.
A discussion of the result of meteor strikes on earth, the possibility of a 1 km meteor striking earth, and the effects the meteor would have.
888 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 31.95
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Abstract
This paper explains how there is proof that earth has been bombarded by meteors in the past. These meteors have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs, provided iron to jump-started the Iron Age, and caused a crater in Arizona. The possibility of a 1 km-sized meteor striking Earth, or even Duluth for that matter, is slim. This paper discusses the possible ramifications of such an event in the future.

From the Paper
"Earth is a target for destruction, but it?s not aliens or terrorists who are planning its ruin. Meteors have assaulted the Earth ever since our home planet came into existence, and they continue to bombard the Earth with broken pieces from asteroids and comets. Some of these results have been disastrous, and some have furthered along human development. In my essay, I hope to show that these meteors have crash-landed on Earth in the past, that meteors do pose a threat to Earth, and evidence for the need for protection against them."
Term Paper # 3441 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Stone Age in the 21st Century, 2001.
This is a creative writing sample that examines what the planet Earth might look like to outsiders, hundreds of years after a meteor destroys it.
1,040 words (approx. 4.2 pages), 0 sources, $ 36.95
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Abstract
This creative writing essay presents an accounting of a scenario in which a meteor hits the planet Earth, destroying all living things. Hundreds of years after the collision, someone stumbles across what used to be a home, and tries to figure out what the artifacts left in the house were used for before the meteor crash.

From the Paper
"We arrived on planet Earth this morning and began our expedition with little hope of finding anything useful for our research. Earth has been a dead planet for hundreds of years and we know that there is no life form existing on it. As we begin to disembark however our scout conveyed that he found what appears to be a dwelling form the structure people. The structure people are those who lived here on Earth hundreds of years ago. We so named them the structure people because of the structures that they used to live in. The structures are long gone because the elements on Earth have destroyed them but the scout found a location of a former structure in which some things have been preserved."
Term Paper # 14498 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Extinction Of The Dinosaurs, 1999.
Examines theories for their extinction including genetics, climatic change, sea fluctuations and a meteor strike.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 9 sources, $ 71.95
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Abstract
"The earth has evolved in geologic terms, but it has also evolved in terms of the life that teems upon it. All the change that can be seen and inferred has to be explained. The argument in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was divided into two camps, the catastrophists and the uniformitarianists.

From the Paper
"The earth has evolved in geologic terms, but it has also evolved in terms of the life that teems upon it. All the change that can be seen and inferred has to be explained. The argument in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was divided into two camps, the catastrophists and the uniformitarianists. The catastrophists explained the changes by resorting to cosmic violence, to a succession of catastrophes that bring about change suddenly. The uniformitarianists saw the earth evolving in a uniform manner over time. Both groups agreed that catastrophes do play a role in the evolution of the earth and that catastrophes still occur to reshape portions of the earth's surface or to bring about biological changes in a relatively short time. However, this is different from holding that a ..."
Term Paper # 99118 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Full Moon on a Summer Day", 2007.
A simple narrative describing the author's most embarrassing moment.
849 words (approx. 3.4 pages), 0 sources, $ 30.95
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Abstract
This paper tells the story of a man and his girlfriend that go to the beach. Later on when they go to take showers, an incident occurs within the shower room which causes the man to exit the showers without any clothes on. The piece is a description of what happened and how the man dealt with his embarrasment.

From the Paper
"It was the end of July in Chicago, the time when even the student's tinted sun glasses couldn't deflect the visibility of school over the horizon. It was also the time when children, teenagers' and families alike rushed and did what they hadn't had time for all summer. My girlfriend, Martha, and I didn't dissent from this group. We had packed our beach bags, with sun block and food, and jumped on the Metra. We looked quite peculiar with our swim wear on, in contrast to the eminent looking "suits" whose hundred dollar ties they habitually tightened every other minute. They were headed to Fortune One Hundred companies, where a full day's work lay before them, while my girlfriend and I were taking our long-awaited trip to the shore of Lake Michigan."
Term Paper # 61765 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Professional Development, 2004.
An analysis of various models used for the evaluation of professional development.
1,699 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 11 sources, MLA, $ 55.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses professional development, explaining it as an extensive term that can apply to a range of education, training and opportunities for development. The paper applies the term to a wide range of activities that have the general aim of enhancing the knowledge and skills of staff and volunteers. Various models useful for evaluation are described in the paper. These are: Kirkpatrick Evaluation Model, Guskey's Critical Levels of Professional Development Evaluation Model, Joellen Killion Evaluation Model, Bruce Joyce and Beverly Showers Evaluation Model and Mosaic Approach & Shinohara Evaluation Model.
Outline
Introduction
Kirkpatrick Evaluation Model
Guskey's Critical Levels of Professional Development Evaluation Model
Joellen Killion Evaluation Model
Bruce Joyce and Beverly Showers Evaluation Model
Mosaic Approach & Shinohara Evaluation Model
References

From the Paper
"Professional development refers to the sequence of getting the aptitude required so as to develop one's profession. (Professional Development) The eventual value of professional development is the main role it plays in the enhancement of student learning. This means that educators must provide interest to the results of professional development on the output of jobs, efficiency of organization, and the success of entire students. Each professional development activity should be convoyed by a perfectly-designed assessment plan for finding its efficiency. Professional development programs must be analyzed to understand their value to the school, teachers, and finally the students. Assessment of a professional development program has two important objectives: to enhance the quality of the program, and to find its complete effectiveness. "
Term Paper # 67475 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Hitchcock and "Psycho", 2006.
An examination of the movie "Psycho" directed and produced by Alfred Hitchcock.
1,764 words (approx. 7.1 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 56.95
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Abstract
In this review of Alfred Hitchcock's movie "Psycho", the author looks at elements of the movie that made it so successful. The author points out that "Psycho" was not one of Hitchcock's regular movies. The author tells us how Hitchcock was a very careful craftsman. There was absolutely not a single "ad lib" type scene shot in the movie. Hitchcock was a creative innovator, not merely a director of a number of takes of scenes. The author talks about the two key scenes in the movie, the infamous shower scene, and then the revelation of Norman Bates' "mother." The author concludes with his own personal opinion of the movie and states that no-one will know in advance if a movie will be a classic or not. That is left up to the viewers to decide.

From the Paper
"The audience is so captivated by the shower scene sequence- and there are many people who see the film over and opver again-= that it is hard to realize tghat the entire scene takes a few short minutes. It seems longer, because Hitcock's careful editing draws out the suspense andn then magnifies the horror without really showing it to us in full. Whereas so many more recent films delight in bloody corpses and dismembered bodies and blood running into gutters, Psycho is horror through careful editing not through actual camera intrusion that shows everything. We don't need to see everything, because we know- from the minute we can see Norman at the peephole, that disaster is going to strike, and we wait- and then it happens! And not seeing everything all at once makes it so much more horrifying with that screaming of the violins as counterpoint to the blood dripping into the shower floor."
Term Paper # 8521 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Psycho" by Alfred Hitchcock, 2002.
An analysis of one frame in the film followed by a discussion of the central theme of the movie in relation to the selected frame.
820 words (approx. 3.3 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 29.95
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Abstract
The paper describes a scene in the film "Psycho" where the leading female character is brutally murdered while showering. It discusses the cinematography and shows how the portrayal of the scene evokes emotions in the audience. The paper analyzes how Alfred Hitchcock uses techniques in order to achieve viewer participation.

From the Paper
"The shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock?s "Psycho" is one of the most famous in the history of the cinema. Even those who haven?t seen the picture, there is no doubt that they are familiar with this scene. This scene has set the standard to all the subsequent horror movies and duplicated rather badly in most of the horror pictures. The scene sets the theme of the whole picture and is one of the most violent scenes of the picture."
Term Paper # 105572 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
" Robert Moses and the Fall of New York City ", 2008.
A discussion of the book "The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York City " by Robert Caro.
962 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 34.95
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Abstract
The paper relates that Robert Caro's book, "The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall ofnew York City", details Moses' personality and dealings with the political structure that allowed his meteoric rise and subsequent impact on New York and the nation as a whole. The paper then goes on to discuss the main points of Moses' life as chronicled in the book.

From the Paper
" Following Moses' rise from his early years to the age of 80, when he finally lost all power, Caro thoroughly dissects this developer, showing all his defects of arrogance, vanity, racism, scheming, egomania, and ruthlessness. Yet, this man, writes Caro, was the only one able at that time to mold New York. In the mid-twentieth century, notes Caro, (5) it was well known that the city was "ungovernable." Since the governmental powers had mostly devolved to its mayor, no political entity could govern the city or do more than "merely stay afloat in the maelstrom that had engulfed the vast metropolis"
Term Paper # 95044 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The U.S. Constitution and Information Policy, 2006.
A review of the impact that the U.S. Constitution has had on the Internet.
1,157 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper takes a look at how the U.S. Constitution uniquely set the foundation for, and precedents from, the meteoric growth of the Internet globally. The paper goes on to discuss how the First Amendment, which promises Freedom of Speech, and the Fourth Amendment, which provides for the protection of a person's property from search and seizure without probable cause, have both had a substantial impact on the Internet.

Outline:
First Amendment Implications on the Internet
Fourth Amendment Implications on the Internet
Government and Workplace Monitoring

From the Paper
"The second dynamic occurring today relative to the U.S. Constitution is the testing of the Fourth Amendment in light of the terrorist attacks in the United States. The Fourth Amendment states that "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause" (U.S. Constitution, 1791). Yet today there is more monitoring, watching, logging, data mining and analyzing of Internet activity than ever before. In a recent survey 30% of companies are now monitoring their employee's activities in e-mail, on the phone, and over the Web. "
Term Paper # 16820 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Like Money in the Bank, 2002.
A study of the political process in the United States and special interest spending.
1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 46.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the financial aspects of political life in the American democracy. It looks at the positive role lobbyists can have in protecting the rights of minorities. The paper describes how in reality special interest groups represent little more than themselves and their ability to shower gifts and favors on politicians. The author looks at alternative ways to fund politics and even the playing field for all.

From the Paper
"In modern day America, it costs an enormous amount of money to get elected to national or statewide office. In 2002 alone, Democrats and Republicans spent somewhere in the neighborhood of one billion dollars on their various campaigns. This includes both soft and hard money, with the Republicans out-fundraising the Democrats in hard money by more than two to one: $289 million for the Republicans, and $127 million for the Democrats. (Oppel, 2002) Television, radio, print, and Internet advertisements do not come cheap, and it is rare that a candidate can raise the sums necessary from individual supporters alone. Candidates need well-heeled, organized groups to help them fill their war chests."
Term Paper # 75254 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Restoring Confidence in Corporate America, 2006.
Presents a discussion of problems associated with workplace ethics decline and evaluates possible solutions to the existing problems.
3,843 words (approx. 15.4 pages), 18 sources, APA, $ 105.95
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Abstract
The image of organizational ethics and the trust in corporate America suffered severely from the showers of Wall Street scandals, countless breaches of confidence and numerous example of abuse of power. The paper shows that among other factors, organizational ethics decline is often attributed to corporate greed, work pressure and stress, and lack of effective internal and external regulation. However, experts suggest that in times of distress and tough economic conditions it is more important than ever to remain faithful to personal and organizational moral principles. The paper analyzes the reasons that led to the corporate confidence crisis and looks at solutions to the existing problems. The study provides useful information concerning organizational ethics policies, analyzes various problems associated with moral behavior and decision making in the modern workplace and discusses several ways to improve and promote workplace ethics. The report examines the effects of the Sarbanes-Oxley Law, analyzes organizational internal processes aimed to build value-based corporate culture and discusses the benefits and challenges of formal educational training to advance ethical behavior in business. The paper includes tables and an outline.

Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Introduction
Corporate Scandals
The Concept of Workplace Ethics
Results of the Study
Organizational Ethics Policies
Reasons Behind Workplace Ethics Decline
Restoring Workplace Ethics and Trust
- Through Government Regulation: SOX
- Through Internal Mechanisms
- Through University Education
Summary
Appendix
Works Cited

From the Paper
"Perhaps that is the reason why many people believe that companies' ethical guidelines and codes of conduct are no more than a charade, used to show off in front of clients, business partners and competitors. After all, to be perceived as an ethical organization is one way to maintain a reputation for high standards. In addition, ethical behavior has a tendency to relieve public concern about social and environmental responsibilities, as well as to ease the pressure for government regulation. On top of that, according to Amy Zipkin (2000), the author of "Management: Getting Religion on Corporate Ethics," "taking a strong ethical stand helps shield senior officers from legal troubles.""
Term Paper # 49845 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Bathroom, 2004.
This paper presents an extensive discussion of the history, design, and future of the bathroom and sanitation engineering.
8,865 words (approx. 35.5 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 185.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the first known bathtub was found in Greece in the great palace of Knossos and included impressive technologies that provided water for the tub, including a system of interlocking terra-cotta pipes. The author believes that the function of the bathroom needs to be pushed to a new extreme, allowing people, spaces, and domestic functions new potentials for hybrid activities. The paper relates that a complete home plumbing system requires three distinct networks of pipes: water supply lines, which carry water under pressure; a network of drain pipes, which works entirely by gravity; and a network of pipes, which serves to maintain equal air pressure throughout the drainpipe so that the flow proceeds without interference.

Table of Contents
Introduction
History of Bathing
Evolution of Sanitation
History of Water Closets
Environmental Aspects
Public Health Aspects
Basic Components of Modern Bathrooms
Toilet or Flush
Sinks
Tubs and Showers
Storage
Ventilation
Natural Lighting
Special Effects with Plants
Appropriate Plants for the Bath
Hydroponics
Spirituality
Landscape of Bathing and Relaxing
Metroscape
Artificial versus Real
The New Landscape in Metro Area
Water Supply Service
Purification
Boosting by Pump
Boosting by Pressure Cylinder Water Pump
Drainage
Vents and Traps
The Ideal Living, the Bathroom in New Product Design Context
The Future of the Bathroom Is Here

From the Paper
"In fact, until the mid-nineteenth century, streets were used as refuse dumping grounds, domestic animals roamed the streets and rodents ran rampant. Cesspools were located near houses and buildings, reeking and spreading germs. The Industrial Revolution and discoveries such as the germ theory brought about major changes in approach, raising the standard of living and ending serious epidemics. By 1900, improved nutrition, better sanitation, and, especially, contributions from bacteriologists increased life expectancy at birth by almost six years to age 47.3."
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Papers [1-15] of 30 :: [Page 1 of 2]
Go to page : 1 2 —>