<span>Actually the first and the main reason is that the quality of school facilities and education or teaching, will easily gets compromised on a very negative note, which with time becomes a bad habit, and then it will surely affects the school students and the concerned parents who are paying big fees,which will have very big negative impact on both schools reputation and mainly school children in future for sure.</span>
Answer:
Manolo: Hello ... Irene, isn't it?
Irene: Yes. I'm Irene, okay?
MAnolo: Alright. I'm Manolo.
Irene: I hope I wasn't late.
Manolo: What time is it?
Irene: 2 pm.
Manolo: You arrived just in time.
Irene: What course do you take?
Manolo: I study history and philosophy and you?
Irene: English literature.
Manolo: Can we start the research?
Irene: Yes, we can. I believe that we can find suitable books in the third hall. Should we go?
Manolo: Sure.
Explanation:
The dialogue was made with basic questions between two people who were meeting and needed to do academic work together. As they were in a library, I believe that the execution of some academic research between the two is the most appropriate subject to establish this dialogue.
Answer:
Explanation:
Get in touch with your local Jehovah's Witness branch. They can give you an earful on this subject.
They have religious reasons for objecting to transfusions. When it comes to children, the courts have overruled them saying that the welfare of the child is more important than any medical objection or argument that the witnesses may have.
People with Leukemia at some point in course of their disease, may need a transfusion. Nothing else will do. The cells in blood fight foreign antibodies and transport oxygen to organs that need it. If a patient's own blood can't do it, then a transfusion becomes necessary.
The courts have a right to dictate terms when children are involved. The courts do not have the same right with adults. If an adult chooses to end the suffering, they have that right. There even comes a point (in Canada at least) where death is an option. But an individual patient must give knowledgeable consent to taking his own life.
So medicine has a say in some things and not in others. In the United States, the population has not given up on the rights of the 1st amendment. And medicine can override even those rights.
Answer:
Japanese internment camps were established during World War II by President Franklin D. Roosevelt through his Executive Order 9066. From 1942 to 1945, it was the policy of the U.S. government that people of Japanese descent, including U.S. citizens, would be incarcerated in isolated camps. Enacted in reaction to the Pearl Harbor attacks and the ensuing war, the incarceration of Japanese Americans is considered one of the most atrocious violations of American civil rights in the 20th century.