YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Journalistic Perspectives on World War II
Essays 571 - 600
the propaganda proliferated relied on fear and questionable facts in order to gain the sympathies of the people. In retrospect, th...
World War I resulted from a variety of causes, the most prominent of these was the rise of nationalism. People of common geograph...
most of whom were U.S. citizens or legal permanent resident aliens. They were detained for up to 4 years, without due process of l...
of Britain, France and Russia, US President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation declaring American neutrality (Kennedy, 1991). Ho...
meant the sacrifice of thousands of their own men in failed attacks) (MacKenzie, 1990). This also meant that the leadership had no...
In five pages this essay discusses this controversial case in an overview that also examines a previous Japanese American curfew d...
to the Caribbean. Caribbean art has always been, and still is, a very private thing that truly relates to the region itself. In mo...
power of the individual states was making them reluctant to accept federal regulations, and making most fear that the unrest that ...
the United States make it as clear as possible that there was to be no more armed conflict. This second attack was instrumental i...
the sacrifices were necessary. While the events changed things sociologically as people lived quite differently than they were u...
nations? Or do we continue to have a presence in these nations, despite poor publicity and the risk that mothers may not use the f...
women. Working outside the home was not an easy task for married women with children. Mary T. Norton, congresswoman from New Je...
for. When Pug was about to resume command of the U.S.S. California, he was, in a sense, home: "The iron deck underfoot felt good....
In five pages this paper examines the Cold War, globalization, and communism's collapse in this conceptual view of the 'New World ...
the waging of war, but by the ability to wage war; not necessarily by the demonstration of our defense capabilities, but by the vi...
in many economies to strengthen banking sectors and work on non-performing loans, and also at multilateral institutions. The IMF, ...
example, are real-life characters. Rivers was a well known psychologist during the war. Serving in Scotland and England he treat...
removed from the shores of the U.S. itself. Never-the-less, these years became a time of tremendous opportunity for Mexican Ameri...
that rather than being simple distractions, the cartoons offered a means of expression for soldiers to both define and understand ...
members of the Serbian government who had been associated with it, and to reinforce the idea that Austria wielded ultimate power i...
that the other poppy "I gave to you" (line 8). In the third stanza, Rosenberg writes that the "sandbags narrowed" (line 9). The t...
order to develop at a faster pace. However, the neo-liberal perspective argues for less state intervention, and it is argued that ...
were in fact two peas in a pod or two halves of the same coin. In general, historians like to compartmentalize World Wars One and ...
At the initiation of their invasion of Poland, the British government began to put into place strategies for addressing the defens...
on a number of factors. The intent of this paper is to explore those factors and to consider how they have changed since the end ...
refugees from the Soviet zone to where some had fled during the war ("Germany"). Also among the refugees were individuals who had ...
power in what was known as the Russian Revolution (1988). The war in chronology appears rather matter of fact. Events happe...
themes of love, this became the preferred style of World War I poets like Edward Thomas. One of his most poignant verses is "Febr...
of the progress which the process of democratisation was making in America in the eighteenth century. It could be asserted that Ma...
The assumption was that Germans were working as feverishly on atomic power as was the U.S. - and it was only late in 1944 that the...