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Search results 241 - 250 of 22819 matching essays
- 241: The Ending of the Post War Boom
- The Ending of the Post War Boom World War II had caused the expansion of U.S. industrialization and also it had changed the U.S. corporations into a new global economy scale. The war had brought America in return a huge increase in its prosperity. In the U.S. society, most people believed in that big business and government can do just about everything. The period between 1948 to 1973 had been called the ˇ§long boomˇ¨ or the ˇ§postwar boomˇ¨. This period consolidated the United Statesˇ¦ position as the richest country in the world. At the end, the 1973ˇ¦s oil shock had ended this ˇ§long boomˇ¨ of economy growth. The new technologies and new scientific management had caused industrialized businesses increased their productivity and more efficiency, in ...
- 242: Student
- ... massive migration from Eastern Europe to America in the period between 1870 an 1920. In that period more than two million Jews left their homes in Russia, Poland, Galicia, and Romania and came to the New World. The heaviest volume of that wave of Jewish emigration came between 1904 and 1908, when more than 650 thousand Jewish emigrants came to the US. The Eastern European Jews fled from pogroms, religious persecution and ... eyes of a poor young Jewish woman who came from Poland and struggled to break out from poverty, from tyrant old traditions of her father, and to find happiness, security, love and understanding in the new country. The book is rich with symbolism. Different characters and situations in the novel symbolize different parts of the emigrants' community and challenges that they faced. The characters range from the father, the symbol ...
- 243: The Computer Underground
- ... has been dramatized by the media and enforcement agents, and evidenced by the rise of specialized private security firms to confront the "hackers." But despite this flurry of attention, little research has examined the social world of the "computer hacker." Our current knowledge in this regard derives from hackers who have been caught, from enforcement agents, and from computer security specialists. The everyday world and activities of the "computer hacker" remain largely unknown. This study examines the way actors in the "computer underground" (CU) organize to perform their acts. The computer underground, as it is called by those who ... under one banner. Phrack Inc's first issue was released in 1985, making it the oldest of the electronically distributed underground publications. CU participants are invited to submit articles to the editors, who release a new issue when a sufficient number (about nine) of acceptable pieces have been gathered. Phrack also features a lengthy "World News" with stories about hackers who have been apprehended and interviews with various members of ...
- 244: New Weapons and Technology In World War I
- New Weapons and Technology In World War I I researched the topic New Weapons and Technology during W.W.I. there were many new weapons and technology during W.W.I such as tanks, ships, airplanes, guns and trench warfare. The tanks were considered a great invention ...
- 245: To Kill A Mockingbird 2
- ... town where she lives with her father, brother Jem (four years older) and the family cook, Calpurnia. Scout's mother had died when she was two. When she was five, Scout and Jem found a new friend, Dill Harris ("Goin' on seven"), next door in Miss Rachel Haverford's collard patch. Dill was Miss Rachel's nephew from Meridian, Mississippi, who spent summers in Maycomb. In the summertime, Jem, Scout and ... included stories of crime, mutilation, curses and insanity. Dill was fascinated by these stories, and gave Scout and Jem the idea of making Boo Radley come out of seclusion. When Dill, always eager for some new adventure, dared Jem to run up to the house and touch it, Jem thought things over for a few days. Finally, filled with fear, he accepted the dare. He ran up, touched the house, and ... ran back. As the three children stared at the old house, they thought they saw an inside shutter move. Comment Many themes and plot-themes emerge in Chapter 1. Great emphasis is placed on the world of Scout, Jem, and Dill - a small world bounded by a few houses and composed of only a few people. From the limited knowledge of this small childish world at the novel's opening, ...
- 246: China Joining The World Trade Organization
- China Joining The World Trade Organization The agreement between China and the United States on China's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), is arguably the most important event in the mainland since Deng Xiaoping began to reform the economy and open the socialists giant to the outside world 20 years ago. It is a logical extension of his market reforms. In the long shot, China~{!/~}s entry into the WTO will help more economically. The human rights of the Chinese Communist Party ...
- 247: Evolution
- ... from species that were, perhaps, never fossilized - nevertheless it is relatively compatible with the theory of evolution13. It can be postulated that organisms evolving from the same ancestor will tend to have similar structural characteristics. New species will have modified versions of preexisting structures as per their respective habitats (environmental situations). Certainly these varying species will demonstrate clear differentiation in important structural functions, however an underlying similarity will be noted in ... he felt he must publish Wallace's work. Darwin was persuaded by friends to include extracts of his own findings when he submitted Wallace's work On the Law Which Has Regulated the Introduction of New Species to the Linnaean Society in 1858, feeling doubly horrible because he felt this would be taking advantage of Wallace's position. Wallace never once gave the slightest impression of resentment or disagreement, even to ... numerous scientists, including Lyell, Darwin and the developers of the Hardy-Weinberg theory cannot be denied. Jean Lamarck, a French biologist postulated the theory of an inherent faculty of self-improvement by his teaching that new organs arise form new needs, that they develop in proportion to how often they are used and that these acquisitions are handed down from one generation to the next (conversely disuse of existing organs ...
- 248: Discovery Of The New World
- There were many political and technological changes that prompted the world explorations and discovery of the new world. The Portuguese were the main contributors to the technological changes that lead to the discovery of the new world. However, the change of the political structure of Spain ultimately lead to the discovery. There ...
- 249: The Tempest. An Imperialist Heaven or Hell?
- The Tempest. An Imperialist Heaven or Hell? Shakespeare lived and wrote in the Elizabethan age, a time when his society was branching out and making itself known throughout the world by colonizing other cultures. Great Britain was reaching for new heights of power. In the play Shakespeare questions the value of this new concept of British imperialism. The Tempest is called Shakespeare's American play, because he calls into question England's right to colonize other nations, much as American colonists did with America 200 years later. ...
- 250: A Reflection Of Egypt In The 2
- ... Palace Walk: Analysis of the character of Fahmy · Palace of Desire: Analysis of the character of Kamal · Sugar Street: Analysis of III. Conclusion Bibliography · Beard, Michael,ed. Naguib Mahfouz: from regional fame to global recognition. New York: Syracuse University Press, 1993. · Boger, Allen. "World Literature in Review: Egypt." World Literature Today 68 (Winter 1994): 203. · Cole, Gregory. "Conversation with Mahfouz." Africa Report 35, no.2, May/June 1990, 65-66. · Dickey, C."A Baedeker to Egypt's Soul." Newsweek 115 (June 26, 1990): ...
Search results 241 - 250 of 22819 matching essays
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