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Search results 561 - 570 of 1444 matching essays
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561: The Beast in the Jungle: The Beast of James
... to bore my reader with the tediousness of exploring all of the critics' rather redundant passages, I will dwell on just a few of what I find the more interesting explanations. Immediately I find that Richard Hocks views the beast unlike the rest of my critics in that he says "the beast that springs in the tale is not so much any particular point in the story as it is a ... had a relationship with Ms. Woolson, (which I can't help but think of as the source for his Bartram-Marcher relationship) and wrote this story some twenty-odd years after his brother William married. Richard Hall explains that it wasn't until the early 1900s that Henry was able to deal with the inferiority complex that he felt in regard to his older brother (Hall, part II, p. 26). Henry ...
562: The War Between the States
... in 1824, Charles Edmiston and his twin sister, Ellen Ann, were the third son and second daughter, respectively, of newspaper editor Joseph Whilden and his wife, Elizabeth Gilbert Whilden. The births of two more sons, Richard Furman in 1826 and William Gilbert in 1828, would complete the family, making seven children in all. Young Charles' roots ran deep into the soil of the lowcountry. His Whilden ancestors had settled in the ... and brought up additional units. The Army of Northern Virginia settled into a defensive line at Spotsylvania that bulged northward in the center to form a salient or "mule-shoe," with elements of Lieutenant General Richard Ewell's Second Corps defending the mule-shoe. At first light on May 12, nearly 19,000 men of the Union II Corps, taking advantage of ground fog, attacked the tip or apex of the ...
563: Falsely Accused
... you wonder about the possibility of legal restrictions on the amount of information that the media can put out before the actual case is proven and solved. I mean after all in the case of Richard Jewell , there was a definite issue of false accusations . This man was treated unfairly under the false assumption that he was guilty of a crime that he did not commit. I think that Jewell should ... can we the public trust if we can't even trust a government legal authority? Who are we to go to at that point when the government agencies are falsely accusing us ? I guess that Richard Jewell was just lucky enough to have a brave lawyer that cared and new there was nothing right about the way this man was being treated. I just think that is a serious problem , there ...
564: Hate Crimes
... reject acts of bigotry (Levin viii). Society as a whole must accept the fact that we are all a part of the problem, if we are not a part of the solution. Works Cited Bragg, Richard. “For Jasper, Just What It Didn’t Want.” New York Times 27 June 1998: A8. Bragg, Richard. “In Wake of Texas Killing, Black Militants and Klan Trade Words.” New York Times 28 June 1998: A17. Cropper, Carol Marie. “Black Man Fatally Dragged In a Possible Racial Killing.” New York Times 10 June ...
565: B.f. Skinners Walden Two
... artists and composers aren't patronized, they generally get a modicum of leisure by becoming irresponsible. Hence their reputation with the public." He doesn't mention examples but one that seems to fit would be Richard Wagner who had a reputation for irresponsibility due to his habit of accumulating debts. Of course, Wagner was, indeed, suffering from a lack of patronage. So far, Skinner is right. But Wagner was just as ... years to complete. The artist must be borne up by more than an appreciative audience that he may or may not find once the work is ready for his public. Of course, if a composer, Richard Wagner, for example, knows that there is a public for a certain kind of art, he could take encouragement from this knowledge. But Wagner expanded on his chosen medium, Opera, to such an extent that ...
566: The Vietnam Era
... went into Civil War after the U.S. had invaded it and left. Well over one million people were killed in the fighting. Pol Pot was the leader of the Khmer Rouge. Vietnamization was President Nixon's plan to get the U.S. out of the war with honor, by letting South Vietnam replace U.S. soldiers. Nixon resigned in 1974 because Watergate. It was the presidential scandal ending his career. He had ordered break ins on democratic offices. Vietnam fell to North Vietnam in 1975. This brought an end to the Vietnam ...
567: RAP CENORSHIP
By: MAVERICK E-mail: MAVERICK@YAHOO.COM *.INHEAD* *.AD* Music and Censorship Victor Lombardi December 1991 Second Reader: Alan Stuart Instructor: Richard Hixon Introduction Our society today largely views censorship as a method that has disappeared from liberal cultures since the enlightenment with the exception of restrictions in time of war. The enlightenment served to cripple the ... 000 units is considered firmly profitable for the record company and for the distributor. Sales figures for the "100 Miles and Runnin’" album have gone over 600,000 units where it is available (Verna 1990). Richard Griffin’s album has been pulled from Record World, a chain of 80 stores. Record Bar, a chain of 170 stores, does not stock any 2 Live Crew Albums. Griffin and 2 Live Crew are ...
568: Dracula-play Review
Dracula Dracula is a penetrating look at the novel written by Bram Stoker in 1890. This is just to let you know right up front that The Stratford Festival's Dracula, is a keeper. Richard Ouzounian, who creates an evening of theatrical magic, directed this thrilling production. You, yourself can experience this astonishing play from May 19 to November 7 1999 at the Avon theatre in Stratford. This fairly modernized ... those over the age of 10. Excellent spacing was used throughout the play. All parts of the stage were used at all times. The scenes flowed very well and were easy to understand. I think Richard Ouzounian did an extraordinary job directing and I would definitely see another of his plays. Fireworks added an extra "umph" to the play's special effects area. They made the play come alive. Simon Marsden ...
569: Martin Luther King Jr ]
... Fuggers and Hochstetters. After 1500, however when the medieval cities started to decline, the status of the patricians became much less flexible. BIBLIOGRAPHYAtkinson, James. Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. (Baltimore, MD: Penguin Books, 1968).Richard L. DeMolen. The Meaning of the Reformation. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1974).Arthur Dickens, Martin Luther and the Reformation. (London: Oxford University Press, 1967).Richard Marius, Luther. (New York: Erdicott Press, 1973).Olin, John C. Luther, Erasmus and the Reformation. (New York: Fordham University Press, 1969).Parsons, Talcott. The Theory of Social and Economic Organization. (New York: Oxford University Press ...
570: Bioethics In A Brave New World
... Ethical thoughts are blunted in a country with immoral values (McCormick, 21). More and more doctors forget the gift of life and make inhumane decisions. As in the medical procedures of euthanasia and abortion. As Richard A. McCormick stated, "The most basic value in the practice of medicine is obviously the sanctity of live." (21) Alodus Huxley’s novel, A Brave New World deals with many controversial moral conflicts. From the ... continue. Works Cited Moore, John, et al. Biological Science: An Inquiry Into Life. New York: Havcoury, Brace, and World Inc., 1963 Huxley, Alodus. A Brave New World. New York : Harper Collier’s Publishers, 1989 McCormick, Richard A. How Brave A New World : Dilemmas In Bioethics. London: SCM Press, 1981 Surtz, Edward, Hexter, John, ed. Complete Works of St. Thomas More. Forge Valley, 1965 Bioethics For Beginners. U of Pennsylvania. 15 November ...


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