Examples of John Scopes in the following topics:
-
The Scopes Trial
- The Scopes Trial of 1925 brought to national attention the debate over teaching evolution in public schools.
- John Thomas Scopes, the "Scopes Monkey Trial" of 1925 was a landmark American legal case in which John Scopes was accused of violating the state's Butler Act by teaching evolution in a state-funded school.
- Tennessee State Representative John W.
- Teacher John T.
- Scopes was the defendant in the famous Scopes Trial of 1925, which provided a forum in which to argue the teaching of evolution in public schools in schools.
-
Scoping Your Speech
- Make sure that only the most relevant information is including in the speech, so the scope of your speech does not become too wide.
- A speech with a scope that is too broad complicates the audience's ability to retain information.
- Scope refers to the extent of the area or subject matter that something deals with or to which it is relevant.
- Anything superfluous or extraneous is only going to broaden the scope and take the speech away from that ultimate goal.
- Scoping a speech is not only helpful for the audience, but is also to the benefit of the speaker.
-
The Constitutional Right to Petition the Government
- John Quincy Adams and other Representatives eventually achieved the repeal of this rule in 1844 on the basis that it was contrary to the right to petition the government.
- While the prohibition of abridgement of the right to petition originally referred only to the federal legislature and courts, the incorporation doctrine later expanded the protection of the right to its current scope, over all state and federal courts and legislatures and the executive branches of the state and federal governments.
-
Logarithmic Functions
- Historically, logarithms were invented by John Napier as a way of doing lengthy arithmetic calculations prior to the invention of the modern day calculator.
- The purpose is to bring wide-ranging values into a more manageable scope.
- Taking the logarithm of each brings the values into a more comprehensible scope ($10$ to $-50$) .
-
Scoping Your Topic
- Once you have generated a variety of ideas, it is time to narrow the topic to ensure it fits the scope of your speech.
- Scoping your topic is the process of identifying the important subtopics that form the parameters of your speech.
- If you have a shorter amount of time, you will need to narrow the scope of your speech.
- Use time constraints to your benefit, let them guide you to narrow the scope of your speech.
- Scoping your topic will not only make the writing of the speech easier, but by narrowing the scope of your speech, you also increase the likelihood that your speech will effectively communicate with the audience.
-
Hamilton's Achievements
- Hamilton justified the Bank and the broad scope of congressional power necessary to establish it by citing Congress' constitutional powers to issue currency, regulate interstate commerce, and enact any other legislation "necessary and proper" to enact the provisions of the Constitution.This broad view of congressional power was enshrined into legal precedent in the Supreme Court case McCulloch v.
-
Regulating Campaign Finance
- The amount spent on the presidential race alone was $2.4 billion, and over $1 billion of that was spent by the campaigns of the two major candidates: Barack Obama spent $730 million in his election campaign, and John McCain spent $333 million.
- In 2004 Bush and Democrats John Kerry and Howard Dean chose not to take matching funds in the primary.
- In 2008, Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, and Republicans John McCain, Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney and Ron Paul decided not to take primary matching funds.
- Republican Tom Tancredo and Democrats Chris Dodd, Joe Biden and John Edwards elected to take public financing.
- Assess the origins, scope, and impact of money spent on election campaigns
-
Gibbons v. Ogden
- Chief Justice John Marshall avoided the issue of exclusivity of federal powers over commerce, claiming it was not essential to the case.
- Of course, the steamboats in this case did cross a state line, but Marshall suggested that his opinion had an even broader scope.
- However, Strict Constructionists (those who believe that the Constitution must be given the narrowest possible construction) held a different view of the meaning of the Commerce Clause as interpreted in Gibbons, arguing that it was limited in scope because the decision could be interpreted to suggest that navigation only pertained to the Commerce Clause insofar as it allowed for the interstate transportation of goods.
-
Landscape Painting in the Romantic Period
- By the beginning of the 19th century, the most highly-regarded English artists were all, for the most part, dedicated landscapists, including John Constable, J.M.W.
- French painters were slower to develop an interest in landscapes, but in 1824, the Salon de Paris exhibited the works of John Constable, an extremely talented English landscape painter.
- In Europe, as John Ruskin noted, and Sir Kenneth Clark confirmed, landscape painting was the "chief artistic creation of the nineteenth century," and "the dominant art. " As a result, in the times that followed, it became common for people to "assume that the appreciation of natural beauty and the painting of landscape was a normal and enduring part of our spiritual activity. "
- American painters in this movement created works of mammoth scale in an attempt to capture the epic size and scope of the landscapes that inspired them.
-
The Trial of Zenger
- John Peter Zenger (October 26, 1697 – July 28, 1746) was a German-American printer, publisher, editor and journalist in New York City.
- John Peter Zenger, a New York newspaper editor, publicly opposed several policies implemented by the newly-appointed colonial governor William Cosby.
- In successfully defending Zenger in this landmark case, Hamilton established the precedent that a statement, even if defamatory, is not libelous if it can be proved--expanding the scope of free expression for the colonial American press.