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331 Essays on Drug Use. Documents 51 - 75

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Last update: October 16, 2022
  • Drugs, Steroids and Athletes - Excellence in Sports

    Drugs, Steroids and Athletes - Excellence in Sports

    "Excellence in Sports" What is excellence? Is it perfection, a goal, a feeling, a gift? To some athletes, it is an everyday challenge that comes easy; to others it might not be so easy. Whether it holds a psychological meaning or it's just another goal to set, it shows a persons attitude and dedication towards a sport. To what extremes will people actually go to reach excellence? Some athletes strive so hard that they will

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    Essay Length: 1,388 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: November 28, 2009 By: Monika
  • Drugs

    Drugs

    After reviewing the charts created from the packets given to the class, I discovered that the results from were right around were I expected them to be. One of the charts required me to take half of all the vitamin requirements then add it to the original amount. I had to do this because I weighed between 121 and 180 pounds. That was one of the only changes I had to make in this packet

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    Essay Length: 637 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 28, 2009 By: Tasha
  • Drugs in Society

    Drugs in Society

    Today’s world can be very tough for students of all ages. Our country is at war with many enemies for many reasons. This can produce many problems for students and they may turn to school counselor’s, teachers, and other school faculty for help. It is a difficult responsibility for them but needs to be dealt with correctly. There are many different ways that students can be affected by terrorism. Terrorism can have a direct

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    Essay Length: 1,138 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 28, 2009 By: Edward
  • Drug Abuse

    Drug Abuse

    Drug Abuse The subject I have chosen to research is ‘drug abuse’. Drug abuse is referred to in dictionaries as the over use of a substance for a non-therapeutic affect. There are many drugs legally available in our day-to-day lives some of which we take quite regularly like caffeine. Caffeine is an addictive stimulant and can be found in coffee, coco-cola and chocolates. Although it has minimal affects on the body in small amounts, large

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    Essay Length: 736 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 29, 2009 By: Jon
  • Legalization of Drugs - Legalize It or Not to Legalize It?

    Legalization of Drugs - Legalize It or Not to Legalize It?

    Legalize it or not to legalize it?, this is the question. For several decades drugs have been one of the major plights that we are incapable of stopping its devastating growth. There have been escalating costs spent on the war against drugs and a huge amount of money spent on rehabilitator, however, the predicament still exits. The rate of drug addiction among people all over the world is tremendously increasing regardless to the restrictions and

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    Essay Length: 679 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 29, 2009 By: Kevin
  • Drug War

    Drug War

    Drug war Every weekend night on Cops, we see “drug crazed” criminals being escorted to the back of police cruisers to be place under arrest. There is neither name nor story behind the person, they are just labeled as criminals and portrayed as bad people. America has the highest percentages of incarceration rates in the world. This was on drugs has slowly become a war on lower class and has placed many people behind

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    Essay Length: 1,215 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 29, 2009 By: Fonta
  • Drugs Drugs Drugs

    Drugs Drugs Drugs

    Drugs Drugs. What do we know about drugs? What do we imagine when we say this word? White powder or a young person, wiping out any possibility for his future to grow, killing himself slowly. Drugs came in our life and destroyed any relations between parents and children. I say "any" because this is the word, defining exactly what happens when a child starts taking drugs. Ignorance. Ignorance from the rest of the world, living

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    Essay Length: 327 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Mikki
  • Performance Enhancing Drugs

    Performance Enhancing Drugs

    The use of performance enhancing drugs has spread from the Olympic and professional athletics to college, high school, junior high schools and middle schools for athletes and non-athletes a like. Just by looking at the facts you’ll probably realize how widespread the problem has become. A study in 2001 revealed that it was estimated that as many as three million athletes in the United States have used anabolic steroids for non- medically prescribed applications (Silver

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    Essay Length: 1,748 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Tasha
  • History of Drug Laws and Law Enforcement

    History of Drug Laws and Law Enforcement

    Drug Laws and Drug Law Enforcement Since the late 19th century, the federal and states governments of the United States have enacted laws and policies to deter the use and distribution of illegal drugs. These laws and policies have not only deemed what drugs are legal and illegal, but have also established penalties for the possession and distribution of these substances and established federal agencies to control drug use and administer drug law enforcement. This

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    Essay Length: 1,547 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Artur
  • Drugs, Cheating, and the Purity of America’s Pastime

    Drugs, Cheating, and the Purity of America’s Pastime

    Drugs, Cheating, and the Purity of America’s Pastime Most children who have grown up in an American household have at one point in their lives looked up to sports figures as heroes. Whether it was your grandfather telling his stories of watching Babe Ruth become a legend, your father’s stories of Mickey Mantle and the legendary Yankee teams of the 1950’s and 1960’s, or your own memory of Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa chasing

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    Essay Length: 2,290 Words / 10 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Mike
  • Prenatal Drug Abuse

    Prenatal Drug Abuse

    Prenatal drug abuse is a very tragic, yet preventable issue in our society. For a pregnant woman, drug abuse is doubly dangerous. Drugs may harm her own health, interfering with her ability to support the pregnancy. Also, some drugs can directly impair prenatal development. All illegal drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, pose dangers to a pregnant woman. Legal substances, such as alcohol and tobacco, are also dangerous, and even medical drugs, both prescription and

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    Essay Length: 946 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 30, 2009 By: Tommy
  • Effective Methods for Treating Adhd for Teachers and Parents Using Various Interventions and Instructional Strategies Instead of Prescription Drugs

    Effective Methods for Treating Adhd for Teachers and Parents Using Various Interventions and Instructional Strategies Instead of Prescription Drugs

    Effective Methods for Treating ADHD for Teachers and Parents Using Various Interventions and Instructional Strategies Instead of Prescription Drugs Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, commonly known as ADHD, affects three to five percent of all school-aged children in the United States (Strickland, 2001). Excessive activity, an inability to concentrate, and impulsive behavior characterize this disorder. As a result, teachers and parents alike are far too eager to accept the use of prescription medication, such as

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    Essay Length: 1,768 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2009 By: David
  • Performance Enhancing Drugs in Sports

    Performance Enhancing Drugs in Sports

    Performance Enhancing Drugs in Sports Performance Enhancing Drugs are a big temptation in any athlete’s life. Are performance enhancers as bad as they are made out to be? Melissa Winkller, and author of the Vegetarian Times in New York states, “Sport supplements are at best a waste of time.” Agree or not, the history and facts of performance enhancers will tell you what these drugs can do to your body; the good, the bad and

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    Essay Length: 1,402 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2009 By: Jessica
  • Drug Abuse

    Drug Abuse

    INTRODUCTION Definition Drug abuse has a wide range of definitions, all of them relating either to the misuse or overuse of a psychoactive drug, or performance enhancing drug for a non-therapeutic or non-medical effect, or referring to any use of illegal drug in the absence of a required, yet practically impossible to get, license from a government authority. Some of the most commonly abused drugs include alcohol, amphetamines, barbiturates, caffeine, cannabis, cocaine, methaqualone, nicotine, opium

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    Essay Length: 1,608 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2009 By: Tommy
  • Why Do So Many Athletes Feel That They Need to Use Performance Enhancing Drugs?

    Why Do So Many Athletes Feel That They Need to Use Performance Enhancing Drugs?

    Paul Walsh Dr. Aziz Psychology 1000 WHY ATHLETES FEEL THE PRESSURE TO USE STEROIDS Why do so many Athletes feel that they need to use performance enhancing drugs? Our society loves to place athletes on an iconic status they expect to see a good show day in and day out. They want to see bigger athletes playing, bigger home runs in baseball, bigger hits in football, and faster times ran in track meets. Our

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    Essay Length: 1,241 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2009 By: Venidikt
  • Mandatory Drug Sentences Opposing Viewpoints

    Mandatory Drug Sentences Opposing Viewpoints

    This significance of this paper is to summarize and evaluate the debate on whether the petty drug offenders should be crowding our prisons, and also if some drugs should be legalized or at least decriminalized to reduce our prison populations. This issue is linked to Parenti’s discussion on drugs and the “War of Drugs”. Many of prisons in the United States are over crowded because of the petty offenders and the first time offenders that

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    Essay Length: 844 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2009 By: Vika
  • What Are the Effects of Drugs? and Why They Are Bad for Your Body

    What Are the Effects of Drugs? and Why They Are Bad for Your Body

    George Wells Beadle was born at Wahoo, Nebraska, U.S.A., October 22, 1903, the son of Chauncey Elmer Beadle, a farmer, and his wife Hattie Albro. George was educated at the Wahoo High School and might himself have become a farmer if one of his teachers at school had not directed his mind towards science and persuaded him to go to the College of Agriculture at Lincoln, Nebraska. In 1926 he took his B.Sc. degree at

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    Essay Length: 598 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Top
  • What Is the Difference Between Psychoactive Druggs and Nonpsychoactive Drugs?

    What Is the Difference Between Psychoactive Druggs and Nonpsychoactive Drugs?

    What is the difference between psychoactive druggs and nonpsychoactive drugs? A Psychoactive drug is a substance that affects brain functions, mood, and behavior and are subdivided primarily on the basis of physiological and pychological effects. Nonpsychoactive drugs are substances that in normal doses do not affect the brain. Some examples of nonpsychoactive drugs include vitamins, anitbiotics, and topical skin preparations (Fields, 79). What are the classifactions of psychoactive drugs? Psychoactive drugs can be classified into

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    Essay Length: 787 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Wendy
  • Drug Legalization

    Drug Legalization

    Drug Legalization Most Americans want to feel safe at home, and when they are out in the streets. This security everyone dreams of is hardly ever a reality. One reason why we live in fear is because of the many problems that arise as a result of drug use. The drug problem that our country is facing is bringing violence and addiction to many people. Large amounts of crime result from drug use. Drug addicts

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    Essay Length: 1,079 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Anna
  • Every “rockefeller Drug Laws”

    Every “rockefeller Drug Laws”

    “Rockefeller Drug Laws” In May of 1973, New York’s Governor, Nelson Rockefeller, made a set of strict anti-drug laws for the state legislature. The purpose of these laws was to stop the drug abuse epidemic that was occurring in New York during the early 1970’s. It was the most severe law in the nation; the drug laws were to punish those who possessed and sold heavy amounts of narcotics like cocaine and heroine and to

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    Essay Length: 1,555 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Max
  • Gateway Drugs and Common Drug Abuse

    Gateway Drugs and Common Drug Abuse

    Gateway Drugs and Common Drug Abuse The oldest known written record of drug use is a clay tablet from the ancient Sumerian civilization of the Middle East. This tablet, made in the 2000’s B.C., lists about a dozen drug prescriptions. An Egyptian scroll from bout 1550 B.C. names more than 800 prescriptions containing about 700 drugs. The ancient Chinese, Greek and Romans also used many drugs. The Greeks and Romans used opium to relieve pain.

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    Essay Length: 3,814 Words / 16 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Stenly
  • Drugs

    Drugs

    Kamy Pennon English Essay 2 The discourse used in classrooms today is institutionalized and establishes not only what is said but the way in which we say it. It gives those in a classroom an integrated set of words, metaphors, and symbols that enable attendants to create and converse consistently. The discourse in a class is undoubtedly different from the discourse used in the real world. After being a staple in the college classroom, I

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    Essay Length: 1,365 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2009 By: Kevin
  • Rockefeller Drugs Law Argument

    Rockefeller Drugs Law Argument

    Introduction: Crack cocaine first hit the streets over twenty years ago, in 1983 (Ammerman 1999). No one had seen anything like it. The drug was cheap, easy to get and incredibly addictive. This one type of drug destroyed families, even whole neighborhoods. The communities that were most affected were the black and latino communities. These types of problems are what brought about the Rockefeller drug laws. These laws demonstrate that the punishment for the sale

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    Essay Length: 541 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 3, 2009 By: Jack
  • Drugs

    Drugs

    Drugs They are in every home, school, and hospital in the nation. Everywhereyou look people are affected by them, but as common as they are it doesn't make them harmless. It is one of the most popular past-times of junior high and high school aged kids these days, and the fad is rapidly increasing. A drug is any chemical taken into the body that alters normal body processes. The proper use for a drug

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    Essay Length: 287 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: December 3, 2009 By: Vika
  • The War on Drugs

    The War on Drugs

    The War on Drugs For more than a hundred years, our nation has had to face a war that can=t be stopped. An unbeatable illegal market that has affected millions of families around the United States. This country has spent more than fifty billion dollars in the past year fighting against the illegal drug trade. During their time at war, it seemed as they were making progress; but in reality, they haven=t made the slightest

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    Essay Length: 521 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 4, 2009 By: Tommy

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