We can work on Stimulated letter to a member of congress

Simulated Letter to a Member of Congress (1): This letter is to take a side on a bill currently before
Congress. You can research such bills by visiting the Library of Congress home page
(http://thomas.loc.gov). In the section “Legislation in Current Congress,” you can type in keywords in the
“Search Bill Summary & Status” box, or you can view legislation by a bill sponsor. Choose one of these bills
and write a letter to a member of Congress who represent you – either your House representative or one of
your Senators.
You can also go to the following web page to find a billwww.govtrack.us
How to find your Congressional House Representative and/or your Congressional Senator? Please see
below.
Finding your US Representative
https://www.senate.gov/
https://www.house.gov/
http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/index.aspx
Explain in a single-spaced letter of no more than two pages (including the heading and closing) why you
think he or she should support or oppose the bill. You should also describe in your letter some of the
political concepts we have discussed in class when relevant(civil rights civil liberty). Please make sure to
provide the bill number and title in the text of your letter. Your letter should also be properly formatted,
including listing the name and address of the member of Congress you are writing to, as well as the date

Sample Solution

the late 80’s and early 90’s, Fessi et al.,1989 [143] patented the nanoprecipitation method as a procedure for the preparation of eligible colloidal systems of a polymeric substance in the form of nanoparticles [143]. Nanoprecipitation is also called solvent displacement method or interfacial precipitation method [143-148] .It depends on the precipitation of a preformed polymer from an organic solution and the diffusion of the organic solvent in the aqueous phase either in the presence or absence of a surfactant [143, 149-151]. The main principle of this technique is based on the interfacial deposition of a polymer after displacement of a semi polar solvent, miscible with water, from a lipophilic solution. Rapid diffusion of the solvent into non-solvent phase results in the decrease of interfacial tension between the two phases, which increases the surface area and causes the formation of small droplets of organic solvent [143, 152]. Nanoprecipitation system composed of three basic components: the polymer (synthetic, semi synthetic or natural), the polymer solvent and the non-solvent of the polymer. Organic solvent (i.e., Ethanol, acetone, hexane, methylene chloride or dioxane) which is miscible in water and can be easily removed by evaporation is chosen as polymer solvent. Because of this reason, acetone is considered to be the most commonly used polymer solvent in this method [143,153, 154]. Sometimes, it consists of binary solvent blends, acetone with small volume of water [155], blends of acetone with ethanol [156-158] and methanol [159]. The polymers commonly used are biodegradable polyesters, especially poly (Ɛ-caprolactone) (PCL) [160-164], polylactide (PLA) [165, 166] and poly (lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) [167, 168]. Eudragit [156] can also be used as many other polymers such as polyalkylcyanoacrylate (PACA) [169-171]. Natural polymers such as allylic starch [172], dextran ester [173], were also used ,though synthetic polymers have higher purity and better reproducibility than natural polymers [174]. On the other hand, some polymers are PEG copolymerized in order to decrease nanoparticle reco>

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