(not 100% sure) but the first thing that comes to mind for me is the Egyptian religion.
The grant available to third- or fourth-year college students majoring in physical, life, or computer sciences is the SMART Grant.
Two grant programs based on need were created by The Higher Education Reconciliation Act of 2005 for complementing the <em>Federal Pell Grant Program</em>:
- The first is called ACG (Academic Competitiveness Grants). Undergraduates from first and second year who fulfilled a rigurous high school curriculum can be awarded with it.
- The second is called SMART (National Science and Mathematics Access to Retain Talent Grants). Undergraduates from third, fourth and fifth year majoring in technical fields, critical foreign languages, or who are part of a qualifying liberal arts program can be awarded with it.
Answer:
no effect of such instructions on jurors' decision-making in passing a guilty verdict.
Explanation:
Pretrial publicity has been known to influence judges decisions in the past. This has however been condemned with new techniques put in place for an thorough trial.
Studies testing the effectiveness of judge's instructions to the jury to disregard pretrial publicity has been found to have no effect of such instructions on jurors' decision-making in passing a guilty verdict.
The researchers were following the ethical guideline that mandates <u>knowledge of results</u>.
<u>Explanation</u>:
Alcohol obstructs the storage ability of the brain. Alcohol influences information transfer from short-term memory to long-term storage. Hippocampus is a part of the brain which is mainly affected due to heavy drinking of alcohol. Hippocampus shrinks and reduces the size of brain cells.
Excessive drinking destroys brain tissue and can lead to several types of memory loss. Alcohol has immense effects on teens comparing to adults. Consumption of alcohol may lead to memory loss in teens.