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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 351 - 359 of 359 matching essays
- 351: Computers: Nonverbal Communications
- ... have remained as one of the least-frequented portions of the Internet. Even with articles published in such mainstream publications as Time (September 13, 1993), The Atlantic (September 1993), The Wall Street Journal (September 15, 1995), MacUser (November 1995), Technology Review (July 1994), and The Village Voice (December 21, 1993), even the most cyber-savvy of citizens has likely not experienced a ...
- 352: Fahrenheit 451: Insignificance of Life and Death
- ... purposely set a mechanical hound to his own chemical complex and let it loose, trying to kill innocent people. During the climax of the novel Montag has to cross the street of fast pace cars to get to Faber’s house. He is risking his life in many ways. Montag is a cripple, he has a hurt leg and it is ... women seem artificial to Montag, and their conversation is superficial and empty. They take great pleasure from the images of theath and violence (real and fictional) that flash across the wall screens. They become visibly uncomfortable when Montag turns off the screens and tries to start a conversation. The women’s dialogue reveals their lack of concern for the coming war ...
- 353: A Review of Lawrence E. Walsh’s Iran/Contra
- ... Later on he worked in Albany under Republican governors, and served in the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations. Lawrence Walsh is a former Federal District Court judge, has practiced law on Wall Street and is the former president of the American Bar Association. Since Iran/Contra he has since gone on and wrote several more books on varying subjects. As the Independent Counsel ...
- 354: Underground to Canada
- ... out. “Julilly walked away from the children towards an ugly, long shack and went inside. There was light and air only from the open door and the cracks in the wall. The small space of hard dirt floor seemed packed with girls, each one clinging to a pile of filthy rags. Jullily didn’t look for Mammy Sally. She didn’t ... labour the slaves had to encounter every day was to work at a steady pace, picking cotton from four o’clock in the morning until sun set. This was easy street if they knew how tiring the work was in the Deep South. After the days work the slaves on the Hensen plantation are not as exhausted as the slaves on ...
- 355: Native Son
- ... which Bigger provides her in exchange for "love". An aura of death surrounds her even before Bigger murders her. Like Bessie, Bigger’s mother appears trapped on a one way street going nowhere. Conflicts An interesting aspect of Native Son develops from the many levels of conflict occurring simultaneously in the book. On a superficial level personal conflicts arise, but deeper ... actions toward Jan and Mary portray his resignation to the social inequity of the color barrier. He acts simply, as a subservient "yessah". It appears the author believes the true wall of separation between whites and blacks is an almost impassable division. Jan and Max base their decisions on the equality of man. Having a moral basis for action leads them ...
- 356: The Sixties - Years of Hope, Days of Rage
- ... as “SDS”, Students for a Democratic Society. The SDS group consisted of at least 600 members whose mission was to “shake America to its roots”. In 1965, he organized a Wall Street sit-in at the Chase Manhattan Bank rallying against loans being made to South Africa. He demonstrated with a vast majority of protesters at the White House in Washington, DC ...
- 357: The Jim Crow Laws
- ... into different cars of the train. In restaurants, it was illegal to have whites and blacks in the same room, unless they were separated by a seven foot or higher wall, and there must be different street entrances for the two races. Another law said that blacks and whites cannot legally play together in any game of pool or billiards. Employers of both black and white males ...
- 358: The Women's Civil Rights Movement
- ... rights movement into a national organization. Carrie Chapman Latt, was the president of the National American Woman's Suffrage (NAWSA) Victoria Woodhill fought for Women's freedom in economy on Wall Street, in Congress and in the Whitehouse. She was the first of many to appear before Congress to plead for and demand the rights of American Women. In 1920 Women earned ...
- 359: Internet In Our Lives
- A new day on Wall Street. The Internet is changing the way the brokerage industry does business. Today more and more investors are electing to trade via the Internet and avoid contact with a broker all ...
Search results 351 - 359 of 359 matching essays
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