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Search results 9511 - 9520 of 14240 matching essays
< Previous Pages: 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 Next >

9511: Treatments of Alcoholism
... help ease withdrawals (and later must wean patients off of them), HRC's formula is entirely natural. "The sum total of it all is that people go from consuming half a quart of alcohol a day to consuming none at all - without drugs." (Ewing, 1978) Following the IV, HRC patients are supplied with bottles of the vitamins and minerals they have been deficient in for so long and put on a ...
9512: The Bluest Eye: Summary
... in the playground, four young black boys hold Pecola hostage inside a small circle that they have formed. They call her names such as "black e mo" (as if they are not black themselves). Every day different people have to deal with outside racism, and that hurts a great deal, but when the racism is coming from your own race, I imagine it hurts worse, and the bruise left is more ...
9513: The Great Gatsby's Theme
... Buchanans, therefore, filled with material comforts and luxuries, and empty of purpose, represents this condition. Daisy's lament is especially indicative of this: 'What'll we do with ourselves this afternoon?' cried Daisy, 'and the day after that, and the next thirty years?' Fitzgerald stresses the need for hope and dreams to give meaning and purpose to man's efforts. Striving towards some ideal is the way by which man can ...
9514: Theories of Knowledge and Psychological Applications
... neural networks. Cambridge, MA: MIT press. Lusebrink, V. (1990). Imagery and visual expression in therapy. New York: Plenum press. Martindale, C. (1991). Cognitive psychology a neural-network approach. Belmont,CA: Brooks/Cole. McClelland, J., & Rumelhart, D. (1988). Explorations in parallel distributed processing. Cambridge, MA: MIT press. Paivio, A. (1986). Mental representations a dual coding approach. New York: Oxford University Press.
9515: Psychology: Dreams and Dreaming
... of breath, and with a pounding heart. Such dreams usually occur during the second half of the night, when REM periods are longer and dreams are more intense. Psychiatrists such as Stanley Palombo of Washington, D.C. , believe that a nightmare (mare means goblin in Old English) dramatizes problems or anxieties one has recently encountered in waking life, in addition, it evokes related unconscious memories and images, creating an emotionally powerful ...
9516: Down's Syndrome
... ed. Melboune: Churchill Livingstone. Kingsley, J. and Levitz, M. (1994). Count us in: Growing up with down syndrome. New York: Harcourt Brace & Company. Newton, R.(1992). Down's syndrome. London: Optima. Platt, L. and Carlson, D.(1992). Prenatal diagnosis - when and how? NEJM 327 (9):636-638. Pueschel, S.(1990). Clinical aspects of down syndrome from infancy to adulthood. Am J Med Gen Supp 7: 52-56 Pueschel, S. and Pueschel ...
9517: Breast Implants
... a more appealing appearance (83%), and a boost in self confidence (76%)" (Bruning 27). The ideal woman started to become taller and thinner. Men desired slim hips and large breasts. This image screams at us day and night on TV, at the movies, in magazines and newspapers, and at the health clubs. Women have fallen into the epitome of "buy this product and you will belong to the club of the ...
9518: Gwendolyn Brooks
... is completely good, but does not necessarily add a negative connotation. A separation of the eventfulness of the past and the repetition of the present is shown by the lines Two who have lived their day / But keep on putting on their clothes / And putting things away. Twinklings and twinges remind the reader of youthful memories and stars, but also harsh memories. The use of alliteration ties the two opposites together ...
9519: Harriet Tubman
... a slave trader. She was taken from her husband and didn¡¦t know where she was going to end up. She escaped that night. She traveled only when it was dark and slept during the day. She would hide in haystacks, barns, and houses. Harriet would always carry a revolver during her many trips to the South because a slave who returned to slavery could reveal people who facilitated the passages ...
9520: The Harness Conspiracy
... the clues himself when he sees Ed Chappell at the Ramona Hotel and in his drunken stupor, almost reveals the entire plan. His reasoning behind all of his "business trips" is release. He says, "I'd'a busted if I hadn't . . . " (55). He feels that he needs escape and time away from his wife. It is peculiar, to say the least, that he gives the same reason for his trip ...


Search results 9511 - 9520 of 14240 matching essays
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