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    "Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been?" By Joyce Carol Oates A short story titled "Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been?" tells a tale of an adolescent girl who suffers consequences of growing up in the unsupportive environment and the society preoccupied by the media. It is considered to be the most famous work of Joyce Carol Oates‚ an American writer‚ the winner of many significant literary awards and a two- time candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature. The story was first

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    Zcash May End The Money Trail Zcash A decentralized and open-source cryptocurrency that has a complete anonymity on the blockchain is causing a lot of worries with law enforcement as most agencies think it will harbour illicit transactions. A US state prosecutor‚ Kathryn Haun‚ expressed skepticism regarding Zec’s claims of full anonymity‚ emphasizing that if it works as advertised then it would make the prosecutor’s job “a lot more difficult.”Criminals want to be paid‚ Haun stated‚ therefore agents

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    “Humanity as an End in Itself‚” he discusses Kant’s theory about humanity and explains what Kant thinks humanity is and that it is the ultimate end that a person should strive for. One of the elements of this theory is Kant’s second Categorical Imperative which goes into detail with five different aspects‚ what he believes makes up humanity in a person. Then he goes on to give seven different explanations about humanity as an end. Kant also believes that there are two different types of ends‚ personal

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    End of Life Care

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    Palliative Care‚ 7-12. Kinsman‚ L.‚ Rotter‚ T.‚ E‚ J.‚ & Snow‚ P. a. (2001). What is a clinical pathway? Development of a definition to inform the debate. BMC Medicine. Lynn‚ J.‚ Schuster‚ J.‚ & Wilkinson‚ A. a. (2007). Improving care for the End of Life: A Sourcebook for Health Care Managers and Clinicians (2nd Edition). Cary: Oxford university Press. O ’Brien‚ M. a. (2010). Barriers to dying at home: the impact of poor co-ordination of community service provision for patients with cancer.

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    Belonging - Rainbow's End

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    within varied contexts; personal experience can trigger a transformation of outlook‚ self-esteem and ideas linked to personal identity. Even within a significant place; barriers arise from indifference and prejudice. Jane Harrison’s play Rainbow’s End explores how minority groups struggle to find a strong sense of connection in a world full of racial prejudice and posits the notion that individuals or groups must overcome significant barriers if they are to develop a positive sense of belonging.

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    “Home is where the heart is" One Flesh‚ by Elizabeth Jennings and The Lake Isle of Innisfree‚ by W.B Yates‚ both discuss desire in their poems. In One Flesh‚ the narrator of the poem speaks of the lack of desire her parents have in her life‚ due them growing and slowly drifting apart‚ whereas‚ the Lake Isle of Innisfree deals with the desire to be someplace else‚ a longing for a more simple way of life‚ away from a hectic civilisation. In One Flesh‚ Elizabeth Jennings discuss’ the feelings of

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    End Of Life Care

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    al. (2005) define end- of –life as a chronologically indefinite part of life when patients and their caregivers are struggling with the implications of an advance chronic illness. Every person’s end- of – life trajectory is different and the need for quality healthcare services‚ hospital or homecare interventions‚ family and patient legal rights‚ government policies and regulations pose some challenges to some patients at the end of their life. Therefore‚ the provision of good end- of- life care should

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    Once the experiment was over the results showed that the head end was able to retain the learning by classical condition better than the tail end could. There were more positive reactions with the head compared to the tail. It was not a drastic difference‚ but the head it was able to retain the learning slightly better than the tail end did. Not everything goes as planned so there were some experiment where the planarian was lost or it died. Some planaria did not retain the information before it

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    The End of the Transition Paradigm Carothers‚ Thomas‚ 1956Journal of Democracy‚ Volume 13‚ Number 1‚ January 2002‚ pp. 5-21 (Article) Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: 10.1353/jod.2002.0003 For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jod/summary/v013/13.1carothers.html Access Provided by Universite de Lausanne at 07/20/10 7:13AM GMT THE END OF THE TRANSITION PARADIGM Thomas Carothers Thomas Carothers is vice president for studies at the Carnegie

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    Home is where the heart is

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    By definition a house is a building built for habitation where as a home is an abode built for one’s family. But a home is something more special than that. A home is a place‚ where you feel comfortable. A house is just shelter. A home is a place that one love’s to live in‚ but a house one just lives in. A home is built with a family‚ but a house has no intentions of family life. ’A house belongs to you‚ but you belong to a home.’ (C. Marks) The first memory that I have of a home is waking up one

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