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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 881 - 890 of 1264 matching essays
- 881: Ann Frank
- ... Ann was compassionate she cared about other people s feelings. She wanted to make Hanukkah special during their time in the annex. Ann had no money so she had to use her imagination to come up with special gifts. She thought about each person individually and made a personal gift for each one in her family and the Van Dann s ... person. She made the best out of a bad situation. She was trapped in the annex of a building for a very long time. She couldn t do the simple everyday things, like go for a walk, listen to the radio, smell the air outside or even go to the bathroom when she needed to. She made life very interesting for ...
- 882: Adolf Hitlers Life And Times
- ... did not return to the Linz Realschule for the fourth term. He was immediately signed up for the Realschule at Steyr. He had to leave home early to get there everyday. He did a bit better that term but did not pass geometry so was not allowed to proceed on to Oberrealschule. He went back to the Realschule to pass his ... dictatorship based on terror. The War "Hitler's ultimate goal was the establishment of a greater Germany than had ever existed before in history." To do this Hitler planned to use Russia to help him take over Europe, then dispose of Russia. The only country he could see blocking his goal was France. So France needed to be eliminated. Germany did ...
- 883: Thomas Edison
- ... rumored that one of Edison's friends said the lab storeroom even had the eyeballs of a US senator.” (Denmark pg. 54) Most of these lab substances had no practical use, but a few did. Edison used rain-forest nuts to make phonograph needles. Japanese bamboo was used to make filament (wire) for his light bulb. The hair of the Amazon ... Edison’s life would be simple. He was raised in a positive environment with lots of encouragement from his father. And he made it possible for electronics to become an everyday part of our lives. Word Count: 2112
- 884: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
- ... work at home. Doyle’s mother, Mary Foley, was a homemaker who took care of her son Arthur and his brothers and sisters, and also worked and cleaned the house everyday.2 Doyle’s early education started when he was about seven years old. His mother spent lots of time reading with him and tutoring him, because this is what she ... who played rugby and billiards like a paid professional. Doyle was a person everyone had doubted would ever turn out to be someone with a great deal of talent and use it to his ability. Doyle’s life was similar to a mixture of all of his characters, because of his high drama talent, energy by the truckload, and a very ...
- 885: Shel Silverstein
- ... The Giving Tree could slant in two directions. It’s a little too sad for children, and kind of simple for adults. Although, churches and teachers found it necessary to use it as a parable for society. Each book was a pure example of energetic wordplay. A Light In the Attic, published in 1981, scored a major breakthrough for children's ... s been known to write about bodily functions in humorous ways. Personification is top on the list of things one must have in a piece for him. He personifies common, everyday things and allows people to view them in a whole new way. An example of this was taken from Where the Sidewalk Ends; its title is "Hungry Mungry”: " Hungry Mungry ...
- 886: Sigmund Freud
- ... thus it was called "the talking cure." Freud went to Paris for further study under Jean-Martin Charcot, a neurologist known all over Europe for his studies of hysterics and use of hypnosis. In 1886, Freud returned to Vienna, opened a private practice specializing in nervous and brain disorders, and married. He tried hypnotism with his hysteric and neurotic patients, but ... their current suffering. In 1900, Freud published The Interpretation of Dreams, and introduced the wider public to the notion of the unconscious mind. In 1901, he published The Psychopathology of Everyday Life, in which he theorized that forgetfulness or slips of the tongue (now called "Freudian slips") were not accidental at all, but it was the "dynamic unconscious" revealing something meaningful ...
- 887: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
- ... work at home. Doyle's mother, Mary Foley, was a homemaker who took care of her son Arthur and his brothers and sisters, and also worked and cleaned the house everyday.2 Doyle's early education started when he was about seven years old. His mother spent lots of time reading with him and tutoring him, because this is what she ... who played rugby and billiards like a paid professional. Doyle was a person everyone had doubted would ever turn out to be someone with a great deal of talent and use it to his ability. Doyle's life was similar to a mixture of all of his characters, because of his high drama talent, energy by the truckload, and a very ...
- 888: Prejudice In To Kill A Mocking
- ... of the colour of her skin. The inhabitants of the small Southern town of Maycomb are so unaware of their words that racism and racial slander has become a normal everyday thing, children grow seeing nothing wrong in being racist. Racial slander is so commonly used that it is clearly seen that even the author of the novel does not realize ... he is implying that she is not using proper language for a woman, and only men can speak in profane language. He is telling her that is she continues to use this type of language she will not become a lady. While sitting in the living room of her home. Jean Louise is asked what she wanted to be when she ...
- 889: Walking The Tight Rope
- ... caught up in self-destructive lifestyles. Due to a great deal of misinformation and a changing economy, their numbers are growing, even as they are being wiped off the planet everyday. Herein lies one of the greatest challenges facing the Black world in the 21st century: how do we combat the dominant public image of young Black men that has largely ... nation to remain true to beliefs and rooted in reality. At its worst, it implies that only those things ghettocentric are true and real in black culture. It endorses the use of street ethics to settle, like the willingness to bust a cap in someone if necessary. Tupac's death is only the most recent and heart-wrenching reminder that with ...
- 890: With And Without The State In
- ... inherits one of the grandest houses in the village, he is also privileged to having the only toilet in the vicinity. This symbol represents the state's ignorance. The farmers use their wastes for fertilizing productive fields. When the government is responsible for the infrastructure of their country, they introduce a decoration, a toilet seat to glorify the benefits of modern ... a personal business. The Italian subjects in the south include political prisoners, exiles, government officials, Italian Americans and the peasants whose power is reserved by a government that ignores their everyday burdens. In this make-up, Americans, the former 'new wealthy', has succumbed to a worthless life, falling back into the same poverty they were tangled in before they left. They ...
Search results 881 - 890 of 1264 matching essays
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