Berlin Model United Nations at the John F. Kennedy School BERMUN Instructional Guide for Delegates page 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgments 3 Section pages I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. 4–5 6–13 14–15 16–18 19–24 25 26–28 Developing a Policy Writing the Resolution Lobbying The Opening Speech The Debate Flow Chart of the Conference For Further Reference BERMUN Instructional Guide for Delegates page 3 Acknowledgments This Model United Nations
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Joseph Boasiako AP World History Chapter 1 Evolution August 1‚ 2013 Cues | Notes | Before History (Lucy) | A Woman said to have died 3.2 million years ago‚ whose skeleton was referred to as AL 288-1‚ scientists and archeologists. | Evolution of Homo Sapiens | Were said to have evolved about two hundred years ago. Homo sapiens or Human species are to have similar external features‚ and basic elements of genetic makeup and body chemistry- DNA‚ chromosomal patterns
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Part 1: The Modern World Chapter 1: The Problem of Production “One reason for overlooking this vital fact is that we are estranged from reality and inclined to treat as valueless everything that we have not made ourselves.” (15) Human nature Because of modern technology and advancements‚ we don’t see the same amount of value in something we buy vs. something we make ourselves. Due human nature‚ it is our instinct to treat something we buy as less valuable. Our problem is that in 2013 kids are
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“Interpreting the contemporary situation as reflecting the longue durée of the relationship between science and religion‚ the progressivists declared it a war” (36). The Church believed the earth was flat according to the historians‚ but it was a myth‚ explained by Jeffrey Burton Russell‚ the author of Inventing Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians. Russell‚ a former professor of History at the University of California‚ Santa Barbara‚ has published seventeen books in the field of history of theology
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Chapter 27 1. Russia overturned its conservative policies in many ways. Alexander II removed the serfdom. Cultural nationalism led to political demands and worried the state. Their lust to become as successful as the west led them to industrialize. The lower classes suffered greatly in this time period‚ and they demanded better living conditions. Since the serfdom was disestablished‚ the government gave them land‚ but they would only be able to leave if they paid off the debt on the land. Many
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Tevan Luong AP World History: Summer Assignment Chapter 1 1. Geography and climate play a major role in the development of early human societies‚ for instance‚ Middle Eastern grains did not grow at all in the humidity of equatorial West Africa. Rather than cultivating grains‚ the geography and climate limitations made it more suitable to grow rice‚ pearl millet‚ and sorghum in West Africa. The barriers that the environment set led to the diversity of human culture and diets based on the condition
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Brave New World Chapter 1 Summary (Notes) -Central London Hatchery and Conditioning Centre. -The year is a.f. 632 (632 years “after Ford”). -Director of Hatcheries / Conditioning is giving students a tour of a factory that produces humans and conditions them for their roles in the world. -Explains that humans no longer produce living offspring. Instead‚ surgically removed ovaries produce ova that are fertilized in artificial receptacles and incubated in bottles. -The Hatchery destines each
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A.P. U.S. History Notes Chapter 1: “New World Beginnings” Summary: 225 million years ago‚ Earth was one supercontinent (Pangaea) and ocean. About 10 million years ago‚ the North America that we know today was formed (geographical shape). The first discoverers of North America were nomadic Asians who wandered over here by way of an exposed land bridge from Russia to Alaska during the Ice Age. Though they were hunters at first‚ by 5000 BC‚ they had become hunter-gatherers with a diet of
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Chapter one Native American Worlds‚ pp. 7-14 Anthropologists and historians believe that the first inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere were migrants from Asia‚ most of whom most probably came by land between 13‚000 B.C. and 9000 B.C. across a hundred-mile-wide land bridge between Siberia and Alaska. About 3000 B.C.‚ some Native American peoples developed better cultivation techniques and began to farm a variety of crops‚ most notably maize (corn)‚ which resulted in agricultural surpluses that
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Origins of the Modern World: Chapter Four Robert B. Marks stated the Industrial Revolution Changed world by enabling societies to escape the constraints of the old regime and to build whole new economies and ways of organizing human life on the basis of stored sources like coal (118). The beginning of the Industrial Revolution was marked by the replacement of wind‚ water‚ and animals for powering machines (95). This switch allowed for stable and consistent power sources‚ allowing for more products
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