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James Frey's "A Million Little Pieces"
A review and analysis of James Frey's "A Million Little Pieces". -- 675 words;

'A Million Little Pieces' by James Frey
A discussion regarding James Frey's memoirs titled 'A Million Little Pieces'. -- 1,125 words;

The Million Man March
This paper offers an analysis of the impact of the mass gathering of the Million Man March on the problems of race in the U.S. -- 900 words;

"Million Dollar Baby"
An overview of the movie, "Million Dollar Baby", directed by Clint Eastwood. -- 1,212 words;

If I Had a Million Dollars ...
This paper is a piece of creative writing explaining how the writer would go about setting up a business. -- 640 words;

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ONE IN A MILLION

Biology/Sociology
One in a Million
DNA fingerprinting (the use of a person's DNA to identify them) has become a hot topic in
the field of law enforcement as well as the entire world. The controversy exists on
whether or not it should be admitted in court as evidence at this time. Some experts
believe that the present technology allows DNA fingerprinting to be used in cases for
positive identification (proof that the DNA match was at the scene of the crime) because
of the extreme unlikeness that a "tampered" tissue cell could come up with an exact
match. The chances are stated to be somewhere between one in ten million and one in ten
billion. Other experts believe that since there is no current standard for labs to test
DNA samples and there is a possibility of great human error in a very complicated ordered
set (DNA) that a positive identification could be made on someone who is far from the
actual perpetrator. Both sides believe that DNA can identify a person, they just disagree
on whether or not that is possible at this point in time.
DNA fingerprinting takes a sample DNA (victims, suspects, etc.) and counts the number of
variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) in a person's DNA string. The repeats for four
or five common repeating "gene groups" are counted and compared to a known sample (again
the suspect, victim, etc.) for a match up. This may sound like scientists are only
counting or four or five numbers when in reality they are counting on four or five sets
of many numbers. The chances of similar numbers coming up in life (not the court case)
are between one in a million and one in a billion.
The experts in favor of using DNA fingerprinting now use the odds of one in a million
having similar enough DNA strands to even come close to misidentifying anyone. 
They believe that since the contamination factor can come into play the evidence should
only be used to identify for positive proof. The chances that a contaminated sample could
come close to matching with a suspect's sample are even worse than the one in a billion
odds mentioned before. These experts believe that using four or five sets of numbers
clears any doubt of verification once and for all.
The experts who believe it shouldn't be used claim that our present technology disrupts
the accuracy of actual DNA fingerprinting. They agree the odds of misidentifying are
slim, but they are still too large to accept in a court of law. An example they use is
the miscalculation factor in VNTRs. The difference between 109 and 119 is so slim that it
could be calculated as the same by today's standards when in truth that may be a
different person all together. The factor of human error is easy to see also, especially
in the case of Jose Castro when witnesses for both the defense and the prosecution found
the evidence analyzing techniques inadequate (it should be noted that the defendant did
plead guilty to the crime of murder he was charged with and was found guilty).
DNA fingerprinting is at a very impressive standard at this time for identify people and
there is no doubt about whether or not it should be used in the future. At this point I
would assume that a one in a million chance is enough to be admissible in a court of law
for positive identification. I could not blame a state for not admitting it either.

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