PPT-1 CRAFTING A PENALTY CLOSING ARGUMENT
Author : giovanna-bartolotta | Published Date : 2016-05-24
October 24 2014 2 Basics 1 The death penalty is never required or necessary 3 Each decision must be your own not influenced by harassment or interference from others
Presentation Embed Code
Download Presentation
Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "1 CRAFTING A PENALTY CLOSING ARGUMENT" is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this website for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.
1 CRAFTING A PENALTY CLOSING ARGUMENT: Transcript
October 24 2014 2 Basics 1 The death penalty is never required or necessary 3 Each decision must be your own not influenced by harassment or interference from others 2 Explaining justifying convincing . brPage 5br Coincidental Penalties Team A Team B 6 2 10 2 Penalties are coincidental Both teams play full strength Both teams play full strength No time on the clock no players taken off the floor to serve penalties brPage 6br Coincidental Penaltie 875 NO Monthly Principal Interest See Projected Payments below for your Estimated Total Monthly Payment 76178 NO Does the loan have these features Prepayment Penalty YES As high as 3240 if you pay o57375 the loan during the 57374rst 2 years Balloon By: Bobbi Brown. History of the . D. eath . P. enalty. The first ever death penalty was dated back to the Eighteenth century B.C., in code of king . Hammaurabi. of Babylon, which stated that the death penalty was acceptable for only 25 crimes. In the Seventh Century B.C.’s the Athens code made the death penalty the only punishment for a crime. But in the Tenth Century A.D. hanging became the usual method of execution in Britain.. Learning Objectives:. Develop productive attitudes and a professional perspective toward the close.. Know the function of the close.. Discover the importance of reassuring the prospect.. Appreciate the value of persistence.. Is It Worth It? . By Oscar Flores. What is Capital Punishment? . The Death Penalty or Capital Punishment is The death penalty is a form of punishment that involves executing a person after he or she has been found guilty of a crime by his or her legal system. . Problem #10 Victim is Clueless. The death penalty may be applied at random, often victims are taken not knowing that they are being sentenced to death. Humans, good or bad, deserve to know when their life is actually going to be taken.. Presented by:. Gloria . Larkin. President, TargetGov. Gloria Larkin. President. Nationally recognized federal contracting business development expert. Author . of . The Basic Guide to Government Contracting. Content Warning. © AI. What is the Death Penalty?. Artwork on the wall of Abu Salim Prison in Tripoli, Libya. 15 March, 2014. © Amnesty International. Sentenced to Death. Death Sentences 2014. Where?. Argument in its best academic, scholarly, or journalistic sense is not the same as an emotional argument or conflict between people. In general, it seeks to open a subject, not close it; to broaden a subject, not narrow it; and primarily to earn respect for a position, not necessarily defeat one.. Info Session. General Info. What: Jenckes Closing Argument Competition. When: October 2. nd. . OR 3. rd. , AND 5th (Jenckes Cup: Nov. 3rd). Time: 5:30pm- 9pm. Location: Arizona Center for Law & Society. If that’s so, what is the argument here?. Every argument starts with a question.. So – what questions does this text inspire? . SOAPS is one way to start thinking about how to argue.. S = What is the subject?. OSU Department of Agricultural Economics. Extension Presentations. for the New Extension Professional. Our Topics Today. The role of in-person presentations. Preparing for the event. Crafting presentations for impact. Causal arguments are inductive arguments in which the conclusion is a claim that one thing causes another.. For example:. Clogged arteries cause heart attacks. A rough surface produces friction. Exercise during heat causes sweating. Everything is an argument…. -When you hear the word “argument,” what springs to mind?. -“Argument” encompasses more than the common connotation.. -An argument can be any text—written, spoken, aural, or visual—that expresses a point of view..
Download Document
Here is the link to download the presentation.
"1 CRAFTING A PENALTY CLOSING ARGUMENT"The content belongs to its owner. You may download and print it for personal use, without modification, and keep all copyright notices. By downloading, you agree to these terms.
Related Documents