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Search results 11871 - 11880 of 30573 matching essays
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11871: Hitler's Impact On Germany
Hitler's Impact On Germany How big was the impact Hitler had on Germany? Enormous, undescribable. When Hitler was 30, he joined the German Worker¡¦s Party, taking up the central position as the head of propaganda. This particular party strongly attacked Communism and was extremely anti-Semitic. All this of course caught the German people¡¦s awareness of fearing a Communist revolution. (e.g. Russia¡¦s influence) In 1920, when Hitler is 31, he produced the ¡§swastika¡¨ as a symbol for his party. Back then it was a wonderful symbol, ...
11872: A&P and The Bridge Comes to Yellow Sky: Don’t Believe Everything You See
A&P and The Bridge Comes to Yellow Sky: Don’t Believe Everything You See There are many instances where appearance can be deceiving. This act of a deceiving appearance can be helpful in some cases and not in other cases. In the stories “A&P ... a strong secure man to take care of her. She asks her husband several questions that she knows the answer to, but once again by doing this she makes her husband feel important. The bride’s husband feels important by the bride giving off a deceivingly wrong appearance of her acting nieve and stupid when in reality she is smart because she is acting this way to get what she wants ...
11873: The Grapes Of Wrath 5
... Grapes of Wrath was written by John Steinbeck in 1939. In 1940 it garnered him the Pulitzer Prize. The Grapes of Wrath has been called "The best example of the proletarian literature of the 1930 s." by Benet s Reader s Encyclopedia. The first chapter is a description of the land. This description of the great "dust bowl" gives us the background situation for the great migration to California. In the next chapter we are ...
11874: To Build A Fire - Significance
The significance of the words "dying and death" in Jack London's 1910 novel, "To Build a Fire" continuously expresses the man's dwindling warmth and bad luck in his journey along the Yukon trail to meet "the boys" at camp. London associates dying with the man's diminishing ability to stay warm in the frigid Alaskan climate. The main characters predicament slowly worsens one level at a time finally resulting in death. The narrator informs the reader "the man" lacks personal ...
11875: The Great Gatsby: The American Dream
... holds extravagant parties, hoping that she will attend. She does not, however, so Gatsby casually asks around to find out if anyone knows her. Eventually, Gatsby soon realizes that Nick Carraway, his neighbor, is Daisy’s cousin. Gatsby then devises a plan to at last see his beloved Daisy. Jordan sets up the meeting for Gatsby with Nick, “He wants to know if you’ll invite Daisy to your house some ... him come over.” By arranging this meeting, he displays his wealth, and he believes that he has acquired her affection once again as Daisy says, “ I certainly am awfully glad to see you again.” Gatsby’s delusion is that through wealth and power, youth and beauty can be incessantly recaptured. As a romantic dreamer, Gatsby fulfills his ideal by accumulating wealth as a racketeer. When Nick asks Gatsby about the business he was in, he quickly replies, “ That’s my affair.” Gatsby soon realizes that his reply was inappropriate. “ Oh, I’ve been in several things,” correcting himself in the presence of Daisy. “ I was in the drug business and then I was ...
11876: Once And Future King: Analytical Paper
Once And Future King: Analytical Paper Sir Lancelot's intense desire to perform heroic deeds was brought on by his lack of confidence and insecurity. His childhood was spent in seclusion, training for a job desired only to escape the hellish life that his hideous face would otherwise hold in store for him. Lancelot's adulthood was spent trying to overcompensate for this ugliness by performing Herculean feats and good deeds. And the twilight years of his life were spent in remorse for the bad things he had done. Although held up to almost godlike stature in T.H. White's novel The Once And Future King, Lancelot was truly the most human character of them all. Lancelot's childhood was spent sequestered, training to be a knight in order to escape ...
11877: The Economic Impact of The New Telecommunications Legislation
... GDP). In addition, in 1990 the telecom industry achieved a real growth rate (after inflation) of 8.6 percent compared to 0.3 percent for the Canadian economy as a whole. Telecommunications is also Canada's leading high-technology industry; its Research and Development costs of $1.4 billion in 1990 represent about 24 percent of total expenditures in this area. This shows how telecommunications has come to play such a ... 62 - the Telecom Act, passed in June of 1993, brought these principals to reality. In addition, the legislation gave Canadian Parliament legislative authority over the principal telecommunications "common carriers" (i.e. Bell Canada, Alberta Gov't Telephone, BC-Tel) in Canada. The new legislation defines the powers of the federal government and the regulation that is required to bring Canada's telecommunications policy into the twenty-first century. It ensures the efficient operation of our telecommunications system, maintains and promotes and internationally competitive telecommunications industry, and guarantees all Canadians access to reliable, affordable, and high- ...
11878: Rural Healthcare
... million Americans lived in roughly 900 rural counties, which together make up about 40% of the land mass of this country. These areas are characterized by low population density, a disproportionate share of the country's poor and elderly, and shortages of all kinds (Bayer, Caplan, Daniels, 1983). Most important, however, are the critical shortages of health manpower and health services delivery systems. In 1977 rural areas averaged less than one ... graduation and residency training, these graduates would return to practice in their home areas. Unfortunately, this was a disappointment. According to Lee, Estes, and Ramsay (1984), the federal government tried once again in the 1970's, on a larger scale, with much more money, and with what federal officials believed to be ironclad agreements. This agreement was if a young doctor trained under this program and failed to serve his obligated ... Rockingham Community Action (RCA) established a task force made up of physicians, nonprofit health and social service providers, local welfare administrators, and consumers to examine several health care delivery options. They determined that a physician's office-based model that provides care to children through a network of primary care doctors would be the most effective and practical way to ensure that low-income families receive the health care services ...
11879: Hemophilia
... philia, meaning: having a tendency towards. Knowledge of hemophilia has been around since biblical times (due to the age of hemophilia it is uncertain who the exact founder of the disease is) but it wasn't until the 1960's that scientists began to make new advances towards figuring out what hemophilia was. There are two types of hemophilia: hemophilia A or factor VIII deficiency, and hemophilia B or factor IX deficiency. Hemophilia A is ... would when injured, but they bleed longer because their blood is unable to form a firm clot. Small cuts are normally not a problem, but sometimes bleeding in the joints occurs due to a person's body growth. This results in swelling of the affected joint and extreme pain when the joint or muscle is moved. It is reported that one in ten thousand males get hemophilia A. It has ...
11880: British Control of the Caribbean and Its Allusion in Caribbean Literature
British Control of the Caribbean and Its Allusion in Caribbean Literature The British have influenced the perspective of the Caribbean people in many ways. The people's self awareness, religion, language, and culture has coped with the influx of British ideals and in coping, the people have changed to appease the islands' highly influential British population. Three excepts highly influenced by the British ideals are "Crick Crack Monkey" by Merle Hodge, "My Aunt Gold Teeth" by V. S. Naipaul, and "If I could Write This in Fire, I Would Write This in Fire" by Michelle Cliff. All three excepts show the among the people of the islands, whether native or foreign. In examining the three passages, each author presents a unique perspective. Hodge's story is presented through the eyes of a black , lower class girl of Trinidad in the 1950s. Naipaul uses an unidentified East Indian boy to tell his story. A young white girl becomes the ...


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