Write a brief (3-4 pages) argumentative essay in MLA format. Use the Classical argument model. Compel a specific audience to consider an important and timely topic of your choice, and conclude your essay with a call to action. Your Classical argument should incorporate the rhetorical appeals (i.e., ethos, pathos, logos, and kairos) and the components of a Classical argument (i.e., exordium, narratio, proposito and partitio, confirmation and refutatio, and peroratio). Your argument should be informed and supported by 3-5 credible sources. All sources must come from the Camden-Carroll Library database. No more than three direct quotes permitted, so the use of source material should largely be paraphrase or summary—and should include both in-text citations (i.e., signal phrases) and parenthetical citations (paragraph numbers where the cited material can be located), as well as an entry for each source in the Works Cited page.