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Essays On Papers Covering More Than One Period In U.S. History
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Article Comparison #2: Kerwin & Cameron
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3 pages in length. Civilized societies are rarely without a cause of the moment whereby certain populations either need to be eradicated completely or oppressed to the point of no longer being a threat to the sanctity of the parent society. However, it is this alarmist approach that oftentimes borders on the fringe of hysteria that causes one to question just how civilized people are who can so easily condemn with faulty reasoning. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: TLCArticComp2.rtf
Essay Title: Article Comparison #2: Kerwin & Cameron
Article Comparison #3: Kerwin, Culhane Speck & Kelm
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4 pages in length. Culhane Speck (1987) and Kelm (1999) both discuss how the natural selection afforded by widespread disease helped to aid European settlement by helping the white colonists eradicate what they viewed as an impediment to their progression as a race. The omnipotent superiority exuded by the white race, as each writer's passages clearly illustrates, set in motion a chain of events that even if the colonists knew in advance would occur, no preventive measures would have been taken. In effect, the diseases responsible for killing off indigenous peoples proved to be the final straw for these culturally compromised populations who were underfed, overworked and victimized by various abuses. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TLCArticComp3.rtf
Essay Title: Article Comparison #3: Kerwin, Culhane Speck & Kelm
ARTILLERY IN U.S. WARS
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This paper examines changes and types of artillery used in four major U.S. wars: the American Revolution, the War of 1812, the Civil War and World War I. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: MTartill.rtf
Essay Title: ARTILLERY IN U.S. WARS
Barbara Tuchman: The March of Folly (1984)
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(5 pp) 'Don't confuse me with facts!' is a cry
heard throughout the world when it comes to
governmental decisions. Barbara
Tuchman, the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, and one
of the best American historians, wrote in her book
The March of Folly (1984) that 'a phenomenon
noticeable throughout history regardless of place
or period is the pursuit by governments of policies
contrary to their own interests' . According to
her, 'self-interest is whatever conduces to the
welfare or advantage of the body being governed;
folly is a policy that in these terms is
counter-productive'. Tuchman considered folly to
be the most dangerous act of mis-government and
saw it as a 'self-destructive act carried out
despite the availability of a recognized and
feasible alternative'.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BBtuchmn.rtf
Essay Title: Barbara Tuchman: The March of Folly (1984)
Benjamin Franklin and the Constitution
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An 8 page paper which examines how Benjamin Franklin contributed to the constitution of the United States. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: RAbencoo.rtf
Essay Title: Benjamin Franklin and the Constitution
Book Report on Alvin Kernan’s Memoir Crossing the Line: A Bluejacket’s World War II Odyssey
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In five pages this book report discusses how boot camp today is as opposed to how it was in 1941, how today’s sailors still encounter prostitution and bars just like they did on liberty in the 1940s, and compares and contrasts the similarities and differences between World War II and the War in Iraq. There are no additional sources listed in the bibliography.
Filename: TGbluejack.rtf
Essay Title: Book Report on Alvin Kernan’s Memoir Crossing the Line: A Bluejacket’s World War II Odyssey
Boston + Brahmin = White Anglo Saxon Protestant
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(5 pp) The term "Boston Brahmin" is associated
with -- among other things -- the American premiere
of Brahms' Second Symphony. It was performed by
the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the historic
Orpheum Theatre built in 1852, on Hamilton Place
off Tremont Street. Many in the audience walked
out, and music reviewers called those who stayed
"Brahmins." Oliver Wendell Holmes called Boston
"The Hub of the Universe." Some of the so-called
"Boston Brahmins" referred to the city as
"The Athens of America." Those are some notes of
the past concerning the Brahmins, but where are
they now?
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: BBbosbra.doc
Essay Title: Boston + Brahmin = White Anglo Saxon Protestant