|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 3201 - 3210 of 4745 matching essays
- 3201: The Broadcast of "War of the World" in 1938
- ... 1938, a nationwide radio station broadcast a radio show that was based on the best seller, War of the Worlds, by H.G. Wells. The play was performed by many people, namely Orsen Wells and John Houseman. It was during a time when the radio was the primary source of entertainment. People throughout America tuned in to listen to their favorite radio show or for some music to dance to, but ...
- 3202: The Titanic
- ... as the Lusitania, Olympic, and the Mauritania. For this, the tender Nomadic was chosen to bring passengers and mail to the Titanic. Here, the famous millionaire and his wife get on. This millionaire is Colonel John Jacob Astor and his wife, Madeline. The next day the Titanic was at Queenstown on her last stop before anyone would ever see her again for eighty years. The ship was tested on the way ...
- 3203: Causes of The First World War
- ... hands bulge his intestines; we see men without mouths, without jaws, without faces … The two biggest and horrifying battles of the World War I are the Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme. John Keegan, a military historian in his interview tells about the Battle of Somme: "It was the biggest barrage that had ever been. So, they were firing over 100,000 shells a day; relentless, relentless banging ...
- 3204: A Seperate Piece
- By: Chad A Separate Peace by John Knowls Is a classic struggle of man vs. himself and man vs. society. Taking place as a flashback, the narrator Gene Forrester tells of his struggles as a prep school student in the years of ...
- 3205: How the 60's Changed Our Lives
- ... at Arlington Street Church, where William Sloane Coffin spoke. There, 87 men burned their cards over an altar, and 200 others turned theirs in. Other similar demonstrations happened in Cincinnati, and Philadelphia's Independence Hall. John Chancellor of NBC-TV remarked "If men like this are beginning to say things like this, I guess we had all better start paying attention.(DeBenedetti 195-6)" In a much larger protest, fifty thousand ...
- 3206: The Effects of the Great War
- ... for "normalcy". It also provoked what many call the second industrial revolution. Overall the nation endured a great economic change. We saw greater production, a steady climb in wages, and average work week declined. Bibliography John Mack Faragher, Mari Jo Buhle, Daniel, Czitrom, Susan H. Armstong, Out of Many: A History of the American People. Second Edition, New Jersey 1997
- 3207: Agenda Setting
- ... Models of Agenda-Setting in Television.” Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media 36 (1992): 5-24. Cook, Fay Lomax et al. “Media and Agenda Setting.” The Public Opinion Quarterly 47 (Spring 1983): 16-35. Leckenby, John. “Agenda Setting Theory.” Internet. 10 Nov. 1999 Weise, Elizabeth. “Does the Internet Change News Reporting? Not Quite.” Media Studies Journal 11 (1997): 159-163. Word Count: 1677
- 3208: The Root Of Western Civilization
- ... conquerors of Rome accepted Christianity as their religion, as well as all of Rome's culture. Christianity was widely spread throughout the Roman Empire by groups of missionaries led by the Apostles Peter, Paul and John. All of the people who had previously practiced the Roman religion now would practice Christianity. The expression, “Love thy neighbor” was a very essential lesson for the Christians. It formed their bases of living (Fenton ...
- 3209: The Scientific Revolution & the Enlightenment in Europe
- ... rank should be abolished. He thought tittles of nobility should be abolished also. Rousseau admired the “noble savage” who lived in a state of nature. He brought civilization together during the enlightenment with his arguments. John Locke also thought that all people were equal, and that all people had natural rights; to life liberty and property. He had an optimistic view o human nature; he thought people were basically reasonable and ...
- 3210: The Causes of World War 1, and the Battles
- ... hands bulge his intestines; we see men without mouths, without jaws, without faces … The two biggest and horrifying battles of the World War I are the Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme. John Keegan, a military historian in his interview tells about the Battle of Somme: "It was the biggest barrage that had ever been. So, they were firing over 100,000 shells a day; relentless, relentless banging ...
Search results 3201 - 3210 of 4745 matching essays
|