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Search results 1761 - 1770 of 3467 matching essays
- 1761: Drinking Water Contamination
- ... a Special Approach," World Health Organization, 1986. 11. EPA, Fact Sheet: National Primary Drinking Water, "National Primary Drinking Water Regulations for Lead and Copper," May 1991. 12. Reilly, W., "Aiming Before We Shoot: The Quiet Revolution in Environmental Policy," U.S. EPA Administrator, speech, September 26, 1990. 13. Morris, R. and R. Levin, "Estimating the Incidence of Waterborne Infectious Disease Related to Drinking Water in the United States," Assessing and Managing ...
- 1762: An American Tragedy: Comparing "The Crucible" and "The Scarlet Letter"
- ... that can be answered. Miller's the Crucible was written in the nineteen-fifties, with a definite purpose, to remind Americans of the horrible witch trials that took place in Salem, even before the American Revolution was a thought. It served as a tool to warn against the same thing happening with the Communist hearings going on in our country at the time it was written. Miller wrote a play, which ...
- 1763: A Critical Analysis of Herman Melville's Moby Dick
- ... dame of power a social queen. (Melville 211) Herman's father's side originally Scots with connections in the peerage, were Boston merchants. Herman's father, Allan Melville, was a merchant and importer dealing with French goods. Allan Melville's family was not as high on the social ladder as the Gansevoorts were. “Allan Melville seems to have been socially charming and sensitive, but basically weak, with a long standing dependence ...
- 1764: Lt. Colonel Jay R. Jensen's "Six Years In Hell"
- ... and when it became apparent that he was not going to say any more they took him on a long journey to Hanoi where he would stay at the "Hanoi Hilton" which was an old French prison. The "V" (Viet Cong) referred to it as Hoa Loa meaning "Hell Hole." He was later moved from Hoa Loa and into a place called the ZOO, a more comfortable and welcoming camp than ...
- 1765: The Grapes of Wrath: Symbolic Characters
- ... her as that indestructible woman because he wants to convince the migrants of the 1930's to follow in the footsteps of Ma Joad, and ultimately, mirror the journey of the entire Joad family. Warren French explains exactly what Steinbeck's intent with having the characters, especially Ma Joad, develop the way they do throughout the novel: The story that Steinbeck sought to tell does end, furthermore, with Ma Joad's ...
- 1766: Gustave Flaubert and Madame Bovary: Comparisons
- ... it's easy to notice that Flaubert is a perfectionist. In fact, he sometimes rewrites his books 3-4 times to establish perfection. When he finished Madame Bovary, he said, “C'est Moi,” meaning in French, “that's me” (Kunitz 281). This could symbolize the incredible comparison between Flaubert and the character Emma Bovary. Although Flaubert detested the thought of being famous, his work titled him France's most renowned writer ...
- 1767: David Korten's "When Corporations Rule The World"
- ... unaccountable for the polluting and driven by an addiction to economic growth, the serve the interests of a very small international elite and are harming the rest of us. He hopes on the co-existence revolution that is bound to come. He also looks to an awakening of civil society and the growth of more social movements.
- 1768: A Tale Of Two Cities - Charact
- ... life demonstrate her evilness. In the novel it seems as though she is the “bad guy” who is starting up all the trouble. It is her need for revenge, in the book, that starts the revolution. While Dickens presents Sydney Carton as a worthless drunk, in contrast to Madame Defarge, he is the Christ-like noble figure of the novel. He appears to the readers of A Tale of Two Cities ...
- 1769: Imperial Presidency: Overview
- ... was what provided a viable and secure base for the future of the presidency. After his discussion of the founders, Schlesinger shifts to the president's powers of war. He analyzes every war, excluding the Revolution, that the United States has participated in up to and including the war in Vietnam. He discusses the specifics of each scenario and the way in which the president handles it. Schlesinger develops the slowly ...
- 1770: Catch 22 And Good As Gold - Sa
- ... New York: Dell, Aug 1963. Heller, Joseph. Good as Gold. New York: Simon,1979. Karl, Frederick R. Barron’s Book Notes Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 (1983). American Online. Merrill, Robert. Joseph Heller. Ed. Warren French. Twayne’s United States Olderman, Raymond M. "The Grail Knight Departs." Beyond the Waste Lands: A Study of the American Novel in the Nineteen-Sixties. Rpt. in "Heller, Joseph." Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Carolyn Riley ...
Search results 1761 - 1770 of 3467 matching essays
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