Inside your body, you have a short-lived gas that tremendously affects your body's function. This gas—called nitric oxide—has a half-life of less than several seconds. Like a wind that comes in and blows away pollution, nitric oxide is fleeting and exhilarating.
You have nitric oxide, then you don't. So what? We've all got gas from time to time.
But we're not talking about gas that clears dinner parties; we're talking about the kind that's important enough to have generated a Nobel Prize in Medicine, important enough to influence whether you have a heart attack, and important enough that it powers a man's anatomical cranes. In fact, this gas—nitric oxide (NO)—was discovered to be the neurotransmitter in the nerve cells that control erections (this finding led to the development of Viagra and its friends). And that makes the declining functioning of nitric oxide over time a key cause of erectile dysfunction and other age-related and artery-related problems.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.