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Search results 441 - 450 of 1074 matching essays
- 441: Reproduction: A Courting To Nature
- ... tailed males also carried a lower number of blood parasites. Sexual ornamentation seemed to be a means by which males could show of superfluous health and energy. All of which may bring us to fast sports cars, flashy clothes and other accessories of the human suitor. After all, if he can afford dinner at the city's most expensive restaurant, chances are he could finance a baby too.
- 442: Inventions of the Early 19th Century
- ... was served be the telegraph; by the end of the civil war more than 200,000 miles of line were used for business communications and personal messages as well as news of battles, politics, and sports results. The telegraph was a success. Samuel F. B. Morse died in 1872. While communications were important in the nineteenth century, there were some other inventions that made life a little easier. In April of ...
- 443: Mimicry In Nature
- ... also involve acting the same. In the Philippine jungle there is a nasty little bug, the bombardier beetle. When threatened by a predator, it sticks its back end in the air, like a souped-up sports car, and lets out a blast of poisonous fluid. In the same jungle lives a cricket that is a living xerox of the bombardier beetle. When approached by a predator, the cricket will also prop ...
- 444: Reproduction: A-Courting to Nature!
- ... tailed males also carried a power number of blood parasites. Sexual ornamentation seemed to be a means by which males could show of superfluous health and energy. All of which may bring us to fast sports cars, flashy clothes and other accessories of the human suitor. After all, if he can afford dinner at the city's most expensive restaurant, chances are he could finance a baby too.
- 445: The Great Imposters
- ... also involve acting the same. In the Philippine jungle there is a nasty little bug, the bombardier beetle. When threatened by a predator, it sticks its back end in the air, like a souped-up sports car, and lets out a blast of poisonous fluid. In the same jungle lives a cricket that is a living xerox of the bombardier beetle. When approached by a predator, the cricket will also prop ...
- 446: Buddhism
- ... burned by the monks. Wesak is a Tibetan holiday. It is celebrated in may to honor the birth, enlightenment and death of the Buddha. Some people fast, but others are picnicking, dancing, acting and playing sports. Buddhism sounds like a funny religion, but in fact there are about 300 million Buddhists in the world.
- 447: Bar Mitzvah
- ... believe they can lead this country, but they can't even keep their moral standards or oaths. Wherever we look at people as leaders, they do something to prove they are unfit for this title. Sports figures, politicians, actors, and actresses, have been looked up to as role models and leaders, and many of them have been brought down by their own immoral standards. Some of today's lawyers bend the ...
- 448: Siefried Sassoon And Counter-Attack
- ... Wood in Kent. After Marlborough College he went to Clare College, Cambridge but left without a degree. For the next eight years lived the life of a country gentleman. He spent his tie hunting, playing sports and writing poetry. Published privately, Sassoon's poetry made very little impact on the critics or the book buying public After being wounded in April 1917, Sassoon was sent back to England. While recovering at ...
- 449: Best of Van Halen: Volume I
- ... a best of album. The album cover is simple and to the point. It consists of Van Halens signature logo; the VH connected to the circular swooping lines, in the middle. The black background sports the words VAN HALEN BEST OF on the top and VOLUME I on the bottom. There is not any fancy art work or anything. I think Van Halen is strong enough to let their music ...
- 450: Reflections on the Bocelli Concert, April 15, 1999
- ... student, I was able to observe things with a new awareness; details which I had previously considered insignificant. When I first entered the Arrowhead Pond, I was extremely disappointed at the unaesthetic appearance of this sports arena turned classical concert stage. People were arriving in limousines, wearing tuxedos, gowns, and furs, to attend a classical concert in an ice hockey rink, a place where spectators traditionally drink beer and participants beat ...
Search results 441 - 450 of 1074 matching essays
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