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Search results 9091 - 9100 of 30573 matching essays
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9091: Investing In Canada
... Investor confidence is high. International companies are discovering what firms in the United States have known for decades: it pays to invest in Canada. There is a government commitment to attract foreign direct investment. Canada's government provides a competitive, welcoming climate for international business. It is committed to fiscal responsibility, deficit reduction and job creation. The following are some essential points all of which prove Canada is a favorable choice: Domestic market; wage competitiveness; work force quality; International business skills; raw materials; energy costs; infrastructure; business services and legal environment. Domestic Market Canada's per capita purchasing power is second only to that of the United States, among the G-7 countries, and the OECD expects Canada to lead the industrialized countries in near-term economic growth. Inflation is ... it has been for decades. Exports are at record high, having increased by 14 per cent in 1993 over 1992. Under free trade, Canadian-based companies have increased their market share of the Canada-U.S. market. Further, the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (FTA), together with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) which came into force on January 1, 1994, gives Canadian-based companies an unparalleled access ...
9092: George Washington: Summoned By A Country; One Man Stood Strong
... our expectations as Washington. Into whatever part of his life the historian puts his probe, the result is always satisfactory” (Callahan IX). This is why Washington is more than just a man in our nation's history, he is a symbol for future leaders of this nation (Callahan 21). In 1752 Washington began his military career taking over the office of adjutant of the local military district. This office, one of ... terrain in inclimate weather to the Ohio Valley, to warn the French to stay off the British land. The French refused and the war began (Meltzer 34-40). Necessity, a small fort built by Washington's forces 40 miles from the French Territory was the sight where the first bloodshed of the French and Indian War occurred. This battle belonged to Washington's forces. This victory raised George's confidence in himself and captured him a promotion to Colonel of the Virginia Regiment. It also gave him an unwarranted contempt for the French (Meltzer 40). The Seven ...
9093: Old Man And The Sea - Santiago Is Hemingway
There is an old saying in the english language, "Every piece of writing is at least a little bit autobiographical." This may be true in all cases, but it is clearly predominant in Ernest Hemingway's "Old Man and the Sea." It is evident that Hemingway modeled the main character, Santiago after his own person, and that the desires, the mentality, and the lifestyle of the old man are identical to Hemingway's. Santiago is an old fisherman who lives in a small coast town in Cuba. At the time that Hemingway wrote the story, he was also an elderly gentlemen and was such an avid fisherman throughout his life, that books such as "Ernest Hemingway, The Angler As Artist." were written on the sole subject of how this obsession influenced Hemingway's writing. Furthermore, he fished off the coast of Cuba so much that he decided to "buy the 'Finca Vigia' in Cuba, a substantial estate located about fifteen miles from downtown Havana . . ." For entertainment Santiago ...
9094: Catch 22 Analysis
Comical in style and language, the message that Catch-22 introduces to its reader is one of a grim world’s decay. Heller’s fictional story portrays absurd characters and situations, but the underlying theme of human decadence is clearly visible, especially in the last portion of the book. Heller’s attitude towards his characters also gives way to an overwhelming tone of pity and sorrow for the world and its population. The overall theme of the novel depicts a decline in individuality, decay of ...
9095: Isolationism
... acquisitions, attempts to maintain neutrality in European struggles and broad policy statements by Washington and Monroe. Several treaties were established to resolve outstanding differences with European countries, which displayed the clear intention for isolation. Jay’s Treaty of 1794 was made by John Jay, the chief justice at the time, to settle the conflict with the British after their assaults on American shipping. This treaty was very long and complex and also gave more to the British then had hoped. Jay’s Treaty led to the signing of the Pinckney Treaty (1795), which was a settlement of America’s important conflict with Spain. The Spanish feared a joint Anglo-American challenge to Spanish possessions in America and so were willingly ready to comply with U.S. terms. Under the treaty, Spain was to ...
9096: The Use Of “Nature” in Shakespeare’s Macbeth
The Use Of “Nature” in Shakespeare’s Macbeth Nature is the vital part of life. It creates and destroys every living thing. Many ancient cultures relied on Nature as a source of food, shelter, and security. The environment was the foundation for ... to provide or deny necessities, was impressive as well as intimidating. Nature, though a necessary element of life, was often thought of as a tormenter. People began to be afraid that disobeying or challenging Nature’s design would result in discipline. They were concerned that Nature might hold back the things that they needed to survive. In order to avoid punishment people began to worship and glorify Nature. The mysticism that ... deity. In Macbeth, Nature plays the role of a divinity, as significant as the role of God and religion. The evil and frightening quality of the play is derived from the ancient fear of Nature’s encompassing power. The way each character addresses the word “Nature” reveals that character’s assumed personality. A character who is cruel and traitorous might speak against Nature and leave himself unguarded against Nature’s ...
9097: Louis Leakey
By: sean smith E-mail: rock100739@aol.com Louis Leakey Discovering the Secrets of Humankind's Past Louis Leakey was born to be an archaeologist, for his childhood in Africa truly prepared him for the field life he would later lead. The son of missionaries Harry and Mary Leakey, Louis grew ... of eleven he not only built his own traditional hut in which to live but was also initiated as a member of the Kikuyu tribe. It was within this hut that the beginnings of Leakey’s archaelogical aspirations took place. In one section he started a personal museum, collected all things naturalistic, from bird eggs to animal skulls. It was in 1916, at the age of fourteen, when Leakey first truly ... in Africa, not in Asia as most scholars believed at the time. He became fascinated with the Olduvai Gorge site and the Homo sapiens skeleton discovered by German paleontologist Hans Reck. Great controversy surrounded Reck’s find because the age of the skeleton could not be proven. Further, Reck could not return to the site because, as he was German and Britain had won that region of Africa in World ...
9098: Hesiod's "Works and Days" and Virgil's "The Georgics": Working the Land
Hesiod's "Works and Days" and Virgil's "The Georgics": Working the Land To work the land as a form of living and to gain sustenance as a result of this work, this is the issue addressed by both Hesiod in Works and Days and Virgil in The Georgics. However, while each poet advocates the same lifestyle, each poet's true meaning lies in what they hope to achieve through an agricultural existence. For Hesiod, a bucolic existence is a means of attaining plentiful stores, making life easier both socially and physically, as well ...
9099: A Queen Adored: England's Elizabeth II
A Queen Adored: England's Elizabeth II Countess of Longford, Elizabeth Pakenham, was born in London England in 1906. She attended Lady Margaret Hall and Oxford University where she studied classical history and philosophy. She later married Oxford professor and politician, the seventh Earl of Longford in 1931, with whom she had eight children. She worked as a tutor from 1930-36 in the Worker's Educational Association, and was a member of the Paddington and St. Pomcras Rent Tribunal from 1946-51. She was also a Labour party candidate for Cheltenham, and later for the City of Oxford. After both ... of the Year Award twice with Wellington,1969, and The Royal House of Windsor, Winston Churchill in 1974. It is with this same thoroughness and true human interest that she captures the life of England's reigning monarch in The Queen; The Life of Elizabeth II. Though surveys have revealed that at any one time between 15 and 30% of the English people claim they would prefer a republic, the ...
9100: Nathaniel Hawthorne Weaves Dreams into Reality in Much of His 19th Century Prose
... manifested in the souls of man during the firm Christian precepts of the Era in which he lived. As a visionary in an extremely conservative Puritanical society, he carefully and successfully manages to depict humanity's propensity for sin and secrecy, and any resulting punishment or atonement by weaving dreams into his tales. The dreams he refers to in many of his writings are heavily symbolic due to his Christian foundation, and they imply that he views most dreams as a pigmentation of reality. Hawthorne's ability to express and subsequently bring to fruition the true state of man's sinful nature by parallelling dreams with reality represents not only his religious beliefs but also his true mastery of observation regarding the human soul. An examination of Hawthorne's own narrative in his short ...


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