|
ESSAY TOPICS |
|
MEMBER LOGIN |
|
|
|
Miscellaneous Essay Writing Help
Martial Arts
Words: 326 / Pages: 2 .... is an interesting type of martial art, the origins of which are
unknown. Some historians believe it started as early as 1500 BC
There are two major types of Japanese martial arts. They are Bujitsu,
and Budo. The bujitsu martial art is a relatively new one. It emphasises combat
and willingness to face death as a matter of honour.
Budo, which was started during the late 1800's, focuses on developing
moral and aesthetic developments. Karate-do and Judo are forms of Budo. People
who learn budo learn it to use it only as a last resort.
Another martial art that developed in Japan is ninjitsu, which means
"the art of stealing in!" Peopl .....
|
Businesses In Canada
Words: 562 / Pages: 3 .... of knowledge. There is an abudance of positions available to Canadians that cannot be completed by computers (at least, for the time being) and therefore, our standard of living and quality of life will not be depleted. Technology will either be the blessing or curse for society in the future, and depending on the position of our government, will we be able to make sure that our standard of living does not decrease. The deficit poses a severe problem in a country littered will such vast natural resources and a high education level in its populace.
The presence of inflation in the cost of goods will not profit private businesses if they are unable t .....
|
The Issue Of Sport
Words: 748 / Pages: 3 .... tactics were used due to the competitive pressure. At the State
Final Championship Scott and Liz were blocked by Ken Railings and Pam Short. It
was also unfair competition, Barry Fife (The Dance Ferderation President) was
being dishonest. Wayne overheard Barry setting it up so that Scott didn't win
the Pan Pacific Grand Prix.
The Sport weekly magazine article " Shirley knows her tables" printed on 14th
May, 1996 dicusses her determination and preparation for the competition in the
2000 Olympics game. Every game have different levels of competion and also the
bigger the prizes, the more competitive. Shirley trains very hard and knows it
is very .....
|
Canada's Ideal Population - What Is It? And How Should It Be Achieved?
Words: 1493 / Pages: 6 .... estimated that our natural resources will be used up in
a few hundred years. Just think what an increase in our population would
do to the level of resources. We would probably have our resources down
to nothing in a matter of generations. What people are forgetting is that
scientists will always be working on new inventions, and are bound to come
up with some alternate manufactured resource that people can use as a
substitute to all the gasses, gasoline and other oil products.
Other problems that would occur due to an increase in population are,
an increase in taxes. More people would be using facilities funded by taxes,
like schools, .....
|
Atomism: Democritus And Epicurus
Words: 1290 / Pages: 5 .... form new groupings” (Jones 84).
They believe it to be a mechanical process occurring completely by chance.
Furthermore, although new groupings are constantly being formed, only the few
that can survive are considered the “right” combinations. These are the
combinations we recognize through our senses as being “real”, although they are
not. However, the way in which this complex motion begins is a source of
controversy and disagreement amongst the Atomists.
Democritus assumes that the atoms' motion is perpetual. The atoms are
never at rest. He presumes that their nature is to move, thereby avoiding “the
problem of explaining t .....
|
Sex Education
Words: 638 / Pages: 3 .... the junior high
Many children in junior high know there are sexually transmitted diseases, but many do not realize just how threatening these diseases are. Living in a small community, many youth believe that getting a sexually transmitted disease will never happen to them. But our children need to know that there are diseases in our country like Syphilis, Gonorrhea, Chlamydia, Genital Herpes, Genital Warts, Hepatitis, and even AIDS. Since 1986, Syphilis cases have increased by 100 percent (Haas and Haas 441). These kinds of facts need to be brought to students' attention. However, just because we inform our children of these diseases does not m .....
|
Community Service Projects, Lo
Words: 775 / Pages: 3 .... in our own ways. Greek organizations must also stop completely the actions that the public associates with us, and sometimes holds true, including (and not limited to) hazing, binge drinking and the use of drugs at parties.
A philanthropic event also known as community service is a vital part of greek life. For example Alpha Xi Delta Sorority’s national philanthropy is “Choose Children,” which is a way for various chapters to raise money for local children organizations in their community. They also hold an annual Xi-Man competition for the fraternities on campus in order to raise money for local children’s charities.
As well as bein .....
|
The Enlightenment And The Role Of The Philosophes
Words: 905 / Pages: 4 .... and destiny of humanity; these men were
materialists, pantheists, or atheists. Other enlightened thinkers, such as
Pierre Bayle, Voltaire, David Hume, Jean Le Rond D'alembert, and Immanuel
Kant, opposed fanaticism, but were either agnostic or left room for some
kind of religious faith.
All of the philosophes saw themselves as continuing the work of the
great 17th century pioneers--Francis Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Leibnitz,
Isaac Newton, and John Locke--who had developed fruitful methods of
rational and empirical inquiry and had demonstrated the possibility of a
world remade by the application of knowledge for human benefit. The
philosophes .....
|
Brett Farve Bio
Words: 596 / Pages: 3 .... he
went out for wide receiver and landed on the football after a catch and lost his breath. He
told his father, the coach for his team, “I don’t want to play wide receiver no more.”
Ever since that day he has been a quarterback after his dad put him as one, and scored 4
touchdowns.
As a teenager Brett grew up about the same as anyone else. Since he grew up in a
totally football enclosed family, with his brother playing football in college and his father
being a coach, he loved the game. He has the same posters, and the same dreams and
heroes as most kids of today. In high school he played quarterback as he decided he was
going to .....
|
Why Murder
Words: 841 / Pages: 4 .... upon the town”(73). When her father died she would not let them take the body for three days, now that’s pretty strange. The people in town at the time didn’t think she was crazy, they explained her actions like this, “We remembered all the young men her father had driven away, and we knew that with nothing left, she would have to cling to that which had robbed her, as people will.” (75) Here is the first indicator that her motives for killing her only love Homer Baron are founded on an emotional type of basis. Her father believed that no one was ever good enough for his daughter, and because she never got close to a .....
|
|
|