Word: scoping
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...youth voter turnout makes absolutely no sense considering that young people had the most at stake in this election. Senior citizens and Baby Boomers vote in droves, but they won’t be the ones ultimately most affected by Tuesday’s implications. The scope of the issues directly relating to youth that the president will have to address over the next four years is staggering. There are four Supreme Court Justices over the age of 70 currently serving on the court. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist is severely ailing and may resign within the year. The conservative...
...balance was off for the three other courses examined. AP Chemistry, Biology and Physics were found to be too sweeping in scope, lacking the depth of a good college course. The study's authors concluded that the practice and understanding of laboratory work--a critical piece of college-level science--was given short shrift both in the AP teacher's manuals and on the exams. They lamented that a "significant number of examination questions ... appear to require only rote learning" rather than a deeper understanding of science...
...enfranchised from exercising their constitutional right to vote. Outside groups (and some groups connected to the inside) have taken up this deplorable shadow campaign, which unfortunately strikes at the legitimacy of any and all electoral results. The barrage of dirty tricks marring this election cycle is staggering in both scope and frequency—and democracy is poorer...
...year of research was followed by three years of intense writing, during which Sawyer-Lauçanno said he “was more attuned to the world of 1924 than 2004.” Yet for a work of this 600 page volume’s scope, he considers four years a short duration...
...refreshingly strong language from a normally conservative court, the three-justice panel argued that the government must not use the vague threat of terrorism “as a basis for restricting the scope of the Fourth Amendment’s protection in any large gathering of people.” Reminding us of the eternal foolishness of trading liberties for securities, Judge Gerald Tjoflat wrote for the Court that “it is quite possible that our nation would be safer if police were permitted to stop and search anyone they wanted, at any time, for no reason...