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Search results 341 - 350 of 359 matching essays
- 341: Oskar Schindler - A Saint in Disguise?
- ... for Oskar Schindler to be considered a saint. Bibliography 1. Hertling, Victoria. "The Making of Schindler's List." April 4, 1995. http://www.unr.edu.80/chgps/makeschn.htm. 2. Paldiel, Mordecai. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. Oskar Schindler. 1982. "Schindler's List." 1995. http://members.aol.com/rockycd/obstacle.htm. "Schindler's List." 1995. http://members.aol.com/rockycd/why.htm. 3. Gleick et al. "Requiem for a Hero." People. MAR ...
- 342: The Life of Anne Frank
- ... well as other personal belongings of the residents, which they took away for safe- keeping. Miep put Anne's diary in her desk drawer, to await Anne's return. Anne Frank did not survive the Holocaust. Her father, Otto Frank, returned to Amsterdam after the war ended, the sole survivor among those who had hid in the Secret Annex. When he found out that Anne had died in Bergen-Belsen, Miep ...
- 343: Albert Einstein 1879-1955
- ... and produce only a small number of functional bombs. The Soviet Union was thought to have spent about equal amounts. By the late 1950's what we now know as the Cold War erupted. Nuclear Holocaust seemed inevitable. Tensions between the Communists and the States reached monumental highs. The whole United States suddenly went into a panic mode that would stay resident until the 1980's. Children on the first day ...
- 344: Miller's Incident at Vichy
- Miller's Incident at Vichy I think Arthur Miller is an interesting writer. He is well versed in the Holocaust. He wrote Incident at Vichy which takes place in France in 1942, it has been a very important play that has well written scripts. In 1915 Arthur Miller was born in New York City. He ...
- 345: The Writings of Pat Conroy
- ... writing (Votteler 47). The Beach Music plot is too similar to Prince of Tides. Every problem in Prince of Tides' format is magnified in this book . Too much time is wasted on telling about the Holocaust in Beach Music. The book spends 11 pages in a convent, 17 pages fighting Cossacks, and 27 enduring Nazis (Budman 1). In conclusion, Pat Conroy has no specific genre. It could be classified under auto ...
- 346: Charles Lindbergh
- ... honor, and act for which he was widely criticized. Lindbergh even considered moving to Germany because he considered the German civilization advanced to that of the rest of Europe. Although he never really understood the holocaust and what was happening in Germany at the time, Lindbergh never recants this view of Germany and the German people. Lindbergh never returned the medal given to him by Hitler, which further alienated him from ...
- 347: The Life of Anne Frank
- ... well as other personal belongings of the residents, which they took away for safe-keeping. Miep put Anne's diary in her desk drawer, to await Anne's return. Anne Frank did not survive the Holocaust. Her father, Otto Frank, returned to Amsterdam after the war ended, the sole survivor among those who had hid in the Secret Annex. When he found out that Anne had died in Bergen-Belsen, Miep ...
- 348: The Life of Sylvia Plath
- ... the best the medical world could offer and included electro-shock and psychotherapies. Plath tells her side of the story in the poem Lady Lazarus where she likens her experience to a victim of the Holocaust. But her apparent recovery enabled her to return to graduate summa cum laude the following year. Ted Hughes met and fell in love with the writer while she continued her studies at Cambridge on a ...
- 349: Hiroshima And Nagasaki Bombing
- ... city of Hiroshima (and later on Nagasaki) ushered to the Nuclear Age. It was a moment full of horror, in which the eyes of the whole world were opened to the unimaginable possibility of nuclear holocaust. The experience on what happened to those cities and what is still happening to many of the survivors there, leads to explore what happened to America as a consequence of Hiroshima; both the bomb's ...
- 350: Explain the U.S. & Russian Positions In The Cold War
- ... instincts resulted in many avoidable confrontations as either side held firm to their ideals. The US and Soviet struggle for supremacy held the entire world in a panic as it was known that a nuclear holocaust would spell the end of civilization as we know it. The eventual outcome helped ease the fears of either side as the arms race began to slowly end.
Search results 341 - 350 of 359 matching essays
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