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Search results 1001 - 1010 of 3477 matching essays
- 1001: Animal Farm
- Animalism Vs. Marxism Characters, items, and events found in George Orwells book, Animal Farm, can be compared to similar characters, items, and events found in Marxism and the 1917 Russian Revolution. This comparison will be shown by using the symbolism that is in the book ... House, 1969. Golubeva, T. and L. Gellerstein. Early Russia - The Russie. Moscos, Press Agency Publishing House, 1976. Imse, Ann. Mass Grave Seen as Evidence of Massecure by Stalins Police. Hunstsville Times, 13, August. 1990. Orwell, George. Animal Farm. Signet 50th Anniversary Edition, Harcourt Brace & Company, 1996. Pares, Sir Bernard. The Fall of the Russian Monarchy. New York: A division of Random House, 1939. Russian Revolution of 1917. Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc. 1992 ed. Stalin, Joseph. Encyclopedia Britannica. 1917 ed. Zwerdling, Alex. Orwell and The Left. New Haven: Yale University Press. 1974. ANIMALISM VS. MARXISM OUTLINE Thesis: Characters, items, and events found in George Orwells book, Animal Farm, can be compared to similar characters, items, and events found in Marxism and the 1917 Russian Revolution. I. Leader Comparisons A. Old Major compared with Lenin and Marx B. Farmer ...
- 1002: The Reign of Terror
- ... but is it possible to rewrite history? In a way, the French, like many who have preceded them, and many who will proceed them have done the impossible, rewriting history. From trivial folklore, such as George Washington chopping down a cherry tree, to the incredibly wrong, the African slave trade; people's views of history can be shaped and molded. The French have done a superb job of instilling all of us ...
- 1003: The Reign of Edward VI
- ... hardened to the extent that it could not be swept away even more quickly than it had been enacted. Bibliography Guy, J. Tudor England, Oxford (1988), p203 Jordan. W, Edward VI, the Threshold of Power, George Allen & Unwin 1970, p240. Guy. J, Tudor England, Oxford 1988, p 204. Bush M., The Government Policy of Protector Somerset, Arnold 1975, p101. Jordan. W, Edward VI, the Threshold of Power, George Allen and Unwin 1970, p362. Jordan. W, Edward VI, the Threshold of Power, George Allen and Unwin 1970, p363. Dickens. A.G., The Reformation Crisis, Ed Joel Hurstfield, Edward Arnold 1965, p 53. Elton. G.R., The Tudor Constitution, Cambridge 1962, p335. Loades. D, Politics and the Nation, ...
- 1004: The Cuban Missile Crisis
- ... Chairman of the JCS General Maxwell Taylor, Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs McGeorge Bundy, Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon, CIA Director John McCone, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, Undersecretary of State George Ball, Special Counsel Theodore Sorensen, Deputy Secretary of Defense Roswell Gilpatric, and Soviet Specialist Llewellyn Thompson. In addition, the EX-COMM unofficially included: Deputy Under Secretary of State U. Alexis Johnson, Assistant Secretary of Defense ... forces boarded the Marcula. This Lebanese freighter was the first ship to be boarded and searched for contraband in conjunction with the crisis. Aleksandr Fomin, who was known to be the KGB station chief in Washington, requested a meeting with ABC News correspondent John Scali. Fomin told Scali that there might be a resolution. Fomin proposed the dismantling of Soviet bases under U.N. supervision in exchange for a public pledge ...
- 1005: Yours, Jack (about Jack The Ri
- ... leads. A growingly angry public began to seek a solution without the police. Samuel Montagu a member of the Home Office offered a 100 pound reward. In addition the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee was formed with George Lusk elected president. The Vigilance committee was essentially a neighborhood watch, but they also kept a look out for possible suspects. The committee would report any suspicious action to the police. The police however didn ... mythical Boss. The two letters spark a massive number of hoax letters written in the same style. Investigating all of the letters manages to tie up the city police for days. The very next day George Lusk petitions the Home Office requesting that the police offer a reward. He receives no reply. On that same day the self proclaimed "Clairvoyant" Robert James Lees offers his psychic assistance to the police. Although ... by Sir Charles Warren of the Home Office in Hyde Park. Unfortunately the dogs fail the test this time. Jack seemed remarkably unphased by the advancements in police crime stopping technology, as on October 16th George Lusk received a package in the mail. When he opened it he discovered that it contained half of a human liver. (Later identified a similar to the half missing from Catherine Eddows.) And the " ...
- 1006: The Bay of Pigs Invasion
- ... the late 1950s and early 1960s has its origins in American's economic interests and its anticommunist policies in the region. The same man who had helped formulate American containment policy towards the Soviet threat, George Kennan, in 1950 spoke to US Chiefs of Mission in Rio de Janeiro about Latin America. He said that American policy had several purposes in the region, . . . to protect the vital supplies of raw materials ... and Company, 1990. The New York Times. 16 April to 22 April, 1961. New York: The New York Times, 1961. United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Cuba. Map, 22 by 52 cm, No. 502988 1-77. Washington, D.C.: Central Intelligence Agency, 1977. Vandenbroucke, Lucien S. "Anatomy of a Failure: The Decision to Land at the Bay of Pigs." Political Science Quarterly, Volume 99, Number 3, Fall 1984.
- 1007: The Witches In Macbeth
- ... August Wilhelm. Criticism on Shakespeare s Tragedies . A Course of Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature. London: AMS Press, Inc., 1965. 6. Shakespeare, William. Tragedy of Macbeth . Ed. Barbara Mowat and Paul Warstine. New York: Washington Press, 1992. 7. Snider, Denton. Macbeth . The Shakespearean Drama, A Commentary: The Tragedies. New York: Sigma Publishing, 1887. 8. Steevens, George. Shakespeare, The Critical Heritage. Vol. 6. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981. 9. T.W. Shakespeare, the Critical Heritage. Vol. 5. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979. 10. Watson, Robert. Thriftless Ambition, Foolish Wishes, and the Tragedy ...
- 1008: The Great Gatsby: The American Dream
- ... and her were driving toward the death of Myrtle, and death becomes nearer and nearer as time passes on in your life. As they approached Wilson's Garage, Myrtle was struggling to escape her husband George, who had found out shortly before about his wife's secret other life, although he did not realize it was with Tom. Myrtle, thinking Gatsby's car contained Tom, because he drove on the way ... are, they just retreated back into their money and let someone else take the blame and pick up the pieces. Gatsby was the unlucky one to take the blame for this incident. Myrtle's wife, George Wilson inquired around about the yellow car that ran over Myrtle, then questioned Tom Buchanan who told him it was Gatsby who ran her over. Wilson then proceeded to Gatsby's house in West Egg and shot him to death in his pool, which he had not swam in all year. Wilson, mentally unstable, then shot himself. Gatsby, although innocent of Myrtle's death, was implicated by Tom and George and fatally paid the consequences. This obviously ended his hope of obtaining the American Dream. In conclusion, there is a question to be answered. What is the value of the American Dream? In my ...
- 1009: Beringia to the Revolution
- ... again to tighten control, but colonists were not going to give up. They formed the First Continental Congress to elect a governor and a military head. In 1775 a Second Continental Congress was formed and George Washington was elected commander of chief of the army. Next, the American colonists and the British government found themselves in a major war, The American Revolution. The American Revolution lasted for eight years. France later intervened ...
- 1010: World War I
- ... In short, no one really quite knew what to expect in the effort for war preparation. Before anything else, mobilizing people's minds for war, both in America and abroad, was an urgent task facing Washington. For this purpose, the Committee on Public Information was created. Headed by an imaginative journalist named George Creel, the Committee's job was to sell the war to America. The Creel Organization, employing about 150,000 workers, sent out "armies" of men who delivered countless patriotic speeches. Creel also concentrated on various ...
Search results 1001 - 1010 of 3477 matching essays
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