NAVIGATE |
|
|
MEMBERS |
|
|
SUBJECTS |
|
|
|
The 1960s
Number of words: 1951 - Number of pages: 8.... get away, and others simply were
outcasts, who could only fit in with the Hippie population. "Under 25 became
a magical age, and young people all over the world were united by this bond"
(Harris 15). This bond was of Non-conformity and it was the "Creed of the
Young" (Harris 15). Most Hippies came from wealthy middle class families.
Some people said that they were spoiled and wasting their lives away. But to
Hippies themselves this was a way of life and no one was going to get in the
way of their dreams and ambitions.
Hippies flocked to a certain area of San Francisco on the corner .....
Get This Paper
|
|
The New Deal
Number of words: 1967 - Number of pages: 8.... People were investing and the country was on the rise. But with such problems as bad investments, bad income distribution, bad banking, bad foreign trade, and over-expansion of credit the stock market crashed and the U.S. was heading to a depression. One of the first Acts to affect the economy was the Emergency Banking Relief Act. This act authorized the Federal Reserve Board to issue more currency. It prohibited a private hoarding of gold and exporting of gold. In Roosevelt’s second day of term he issued a four-day holiday for the banks. The Treasury Department was directed to re .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Romaticism And Romantic Authors
Number of words: 810 - Number of pages: 3.... like everything else occurring naturally the individual is part of nature. The romantics stand as ambassadors of intuition and defenders of the heart, challenging the supremacy of the reign of reason; willing to resign themselves to nature, solitude, and perhaps even to the melancholia of alienation. They also take a stand to never relinquish the sovereignty of their own souls and passions to the rules of reason emphasized in the enlightenment age. A literary writer like Jean Rousseau defends the uniqueness of the individual when he emphasizes self-absorption and opposes self-judgement: “ .....
Get This Paper
|
|
The French And Indian War
Number of words: 693 - Number of pages: 3.... Ohio River valley forts. Whoever had control over fort Duquesne had a quite a strong hold over the Ohio River Valley.
The British had many strategic advantages over the French and Indians. They had a strong militia in their colonies that could fight at any given time. They also had many more people, about one million. They also had a very strong navy and control of the Atlantic Ocean. Having control over the Atlantic Ocean meant destroying French supply ships that tried to enter North America. The British colonies were self-supporting and did not need supplies shipped over from Europe. .....
Get This Paper
|
|
The New Deal
Number of words: 824 - Number of pages: 3.... that 20% of NYC school children were under weight and malnourished, made it clear immediate action was necessary.
In the first two years, was concerned mainly with relief, setting up shelters and soup kitchens to feed the millions of unemployed. However as time progressed, the focus shifted towards recovery. In order to accomplish this monumental task, several agencies were created. The National Recovery Administration (NRA) was the keystone of the early new deal program launched by Roosevelt. It was created in June 1933 under the terms of the National Industrial Recovery Act. The NRA permi .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Dead Sea Scrolls
Number of words: 830 - Number of pages: 4.... with the Qumran ruins and the Essenes.
Here are some facts about the the Dea Sea Scrolls:The were discovered in eleven caves along the northwest shore of the Dead Sea between the years 1947 and 1956. The area is 13 miles east of Jerusalem and is 1300 feet below sea level. The mostly fragmented texts are numbered according to the cave that they came out of. They have been called the greatest manuscript discovery of modern times. Only Caves 1 and 11 have produced relatively intact manuscripts. Discovered in 1952, Cave 4 produced the largest find. About 15,000 fragments from more than 50 .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Shoeless Joe And The Black Sox Scandal
Number of words: 408 - Number of pages: 2.... Before the trial for Jackson, Cicotte and Wilson, there was a turnover in
the Illinois State Attorney's Office and all the confessions mysteriously
disappeared. The three baseball players then said they didn't sign the
confessions so the case was dropped. The new commissioner for Major League
Baseball was Kenesaw Mountain Landis and he believed three players were
guilty. He also believed they weren't the only ones on the team that threw
the series. Kenesaw Mountain Landis kicked seven players from the White
Sox team of 1919 out of Major League Baseball for life. Eddie Cicotte,
Chick Gan .....
Get This Paper
|
|
French Revolution 3
Number of words: 1117 - Number of pages: 5.... itself a National Assembly with sole power to legislate taxation. The assembly then announced its intentions to draft a constitution. Some representatives of the nobility and clergy joined forces with the assembly, which soon renamed itself the National Constituent Assembly.
When Louis, reacting to pressure from the queen and others, concentrated loyal regiments in Paris and Versailles, the people of Paris reacted with open insurrection, storming the Bastille prison on July 14. The Parisian middle class, or bourgeoisie, fearful that the lower classes would seize power, hastily establishe .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Indus Valley Civilization
Number of words: 923 - Number of pages: 4.... notably burnt brick architecture and
town layouts composed of distinct and physically separated citadel and
residential quarters.
At Harappa, exposed an impressive defensive wall, some 9 meters (30
feet) high and 14 meters (46 feet) wide at the base. The great walls of the
citadel emerged for the first time in their majesty as picks cut through
the blocking debris, The historical character of the Indus civilization
was changing and developing.
At Mohenjo-daro - better preserved than Harappa - the buildings of
the citadel were erected on a massive mud brick platform 6 meters (20
f .....
Get This Paper
|
|
Ancient Greece: A Time Of Great Cities And Lives
Number of words: 579 - Number of pages: 3.... was in its time considered the beginning of the of a new era
that would be recognised as the centre of the worlds economy and was to be home
to more than twice as many shops and people than the city already held.
Although women in the world today are always talking about women and
their rights and how they deserve to be equal in everything that they do and
receive, it was not a problem to Greeks in their society which has been
described as a place where women's freedom was restricted and their lives were
restricted to that of a slave in some cases but was really no different than a
wo .....
Get This Paper
|
|