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Search results 1051 - 1060 of 1444 matching essays
- 1051: Bowling Speech
- ... you didn t know that the lowest game ever bowled by a man on ABC men s league is two. Mike Kappa, of Racine, Wisconsin, accomplished his outrageous score by throwing 18 gutter balls. However Richard Caplette, of Danielson, Connecticut, who threw nineteen in one game, holds the record for the most gutter balls. II. Orientation Phase A. Point: I would like to inform my fellow classmates about bowling and how ...
- 1052: Cults 2
- ... organizations, others are destructive and dangerous to society. As long as the First Amendment exists it appears that little can be done to stop the leaders of these cults before tragedy happens. Works Cited Behar, Richard. The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power. Time 6 May 1991: 50-55 Bill of Rights Page. Cornell Law School. Apr 1994 http://www.law.cornell.edu/ constitution/constitution.billofrights.html Groenveld, Jan. Ex-Cult ...
- 1053: A Breif History Of Comics
- Comics: In the Beginning The modern comic, as we know it, began in Joseph Pulitzer's New York World on February 17,1895. The comic, drawn by Richard F. Outcault, was based on the life of Mickey Dugan, an Irish immigrant child in the city. Although the strip had no name, people have dubbed it the "Yellow Kid" because the nightshirt worn by ...
- 1054: Aristotles The Poetics
- ... Trans. Richmond Lattimore. Greek Tragedies, Vol. 1. Ed. David Grene and Richmond Lattimore. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969. 1-60. Aristotle. "From the Poetics." Trans. Ingram Bywater. Tragedy: Plays, Theory and Criticism. Ed. Richard Levin. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1960. 131-144.
- 1055: Benefits Of Pet Ownership
- ... potentially deadly (Schellenberg 3).Consequently, pets may not be for everyone. Thus, successfully having a pet requires balancing the benefits and risks of sharing one s life with an animal (Schellenberg 3). Works Cited Avanzino, Richard. Pet Owners Are a Healthy Breed. Burlington Boutique and Villager. 20 Nov. 1996. Schellenberg, Diana. A Friend Indeed. Harvard Health Letter. Dec. 1993: 1-3. Simross, Lynn. Pets on Duty. DollarSense. Summer 1996: 14+. Whitaker ...
- 1056: Alcohol An Issue Within Colleg
- ... the majority of these students are underage, illegal drinkers according to our laws. The point being that trying to tell students not to drink and hoping that they will listen does not work very well. Richard P. Keeling, author of an article titled "Drinking in College: the Politics of Research and Prevention", writes The very nature of the academy is to encourage exploration, discovery and the testing of new ideas and ...
- 1057: Monroe Doctrine
- ... would never recover their colonies, only time will allow the new nations to be recognized and that England does not want the colonies nor wants to see anyone else take control of them (Perkins 37). Richard Rush, an American Minister, had been asked the question, by George Canning, if he could make a joint declaration between the United States and Great Britain. Rush was startled by Cannings proposition, since it ...
- 1058: McCarthyism
- ... senator. He was guided by money from lobbyists, and the most interesting of these are stints with Pepsi-Cola and the real estate-prefab home industry. At the time, sugar was strictly rationed. According to Richard Rovere in his book Senator Joe McCarthy, the Allied Molasses Company, sugar supplier for Pepsi, somehow got a hold of a million and a half gallons of high-grade sugar-cane syrup, which it refined ...
- 1059: Manhattan Project
- ... University of Rome teaching chemistry and biology. Fermi played a major role in the development of the bomb by creating a sustained nuclear fission chain reaction, which was critical to making the atomic bomb.4 Richard Feyman was another scientist which worked on the atomic bomb. Feyman graduated from Princeton where he excelled in physics and other scientific studies. Feyman's big duty on the Manhattan Project was to break big ...
- 1060: Jimmy Carter
- ... and resolve a number of difficult and outstanding problems. Ratification of the Panama Canal treaties was an important step in that direction. It signaled Jimmy Carters willingness to take on issues that Eisenhower, Johnson, Nixon, and Ford had considered too tricky (Dumbrell 212). Some saw losing the canal as a major loss to the United States because estimated construction costs were around $387 million and the United States had invested ...
Search results 1051 - 1060 of 1444 matching essays
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