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Search results 3631 - 3640 of 4262 matching essays
- 3631: Emily Dickinson 2
- ... of the world she knew. For Dickinson life was kinesthetic; she recorded the impressions of experience on her Said 3 nerves and on her soul. Rather than being linear and progressive, it was circular: My business is circumference, she wrote, and she often described the arcs and circles of experience. As carefully as Whitman defined himself by inclusion, Dickinson defined herself and her experience by exclusion, by what she was not ...
- 3632: Emily Dickinsons Private World
- ... a poet whose imagination was fed by her solitude but who also desired tangible sensual experiences. It is unlikely that her poems would be so insightful and perceptive had she been engaged in the daily business of dealing with people, for it is only by removing herself from the world that she could analyze it. Dickinson's poems reflect the cloistered and enclosed world in which she lived-- they are rarely ...
- 3633: U.S. and Swedish Trends in Tax Reform
- ... cheat on taxes. Also, the high corporate tax rate, which originally was intended to encourage investment, created a capital lock in for corporations. This prevented companies from reinvesting their profits in different areas of their business to adapt to changing market conditions. Originally, it was believed that TR-91 would cost the Swedish government a 6% GDP loss in revenue. In actuality it cost about 1-2% of GDP in revenue ...
- 3634: Roosevelt
- ... worshiping the same divine prophets. Some remain of the ancient celebrities are still famous to this day, many of them now shrouded in the mists of time and have become slightly warped by literature and business. For example, the charitable St. Nicholas, warped by language translations and commercialism, is now a large gift giving elf by the name of Santa Claus. But in this day and age, where anyone can record ...
- 3635: Edgar De Gas
- ... eventually ended his efforts at history painting and devoted more attention to portraiture, turning images of relatives and friends into complex psychological studies. His oils and pastels depict the inhabitants of the world of sports, business, ballet, and the cafes in their self-conscious posturing and characteristic gestures. He has numerous paintings of jockeys, dancers, laundresses and prostitutes. Another favorite subject was a model at her bath. Degas' observation of movement ...
- 3636: Unemployment
- ... that they can stay unemployed and on welfare for their whole life and get a fair amount of money from our government. "Permanent unemployment is BAD. It's bad for people, it's bad for business and industry, it's bad for productivity and therefor prosperity" (Sartorius, unemployment 4-5). Some citizens believe that even though the current unemployment rate is only about five percent, that still is not that good ...
- 3637: Unemployment
- ... with below average educational attainments, and for some other groups in the labor force. The third form of unemployment is cyclical unemployment. Cyclical unemployment results from a general lack of demand for labor. When the business cycle turns downward, demand for goods and services drops. Consequently, workers are laid off. In the 19th century, the United States experienced depressions roughly every 20 years. A long and severe depression occurred in the ...
- 3638: Managing Information Systems
- ... pag. Online. Internet. 17 Nov. 1999. Available: http://www.davesite.com/webstation/net- history.shtml Morgenstem, Steve. Get ready for Internet 2 Rolling Stone June 1999: 71. Nickels, William, James Mchugh, and Susan Mchugh. Understanding Business. Boston: Irwin McGraw- Hill, 1999. Pfeiffer, Eric. The next network. Forbes 24 August 1998: 30-32. Phillips, William. Are you ready for Y2K? Popular Science Dec. 1999: 55. Rooney, Paula. Imposing order from chaos. Computerworld ...
- 3639: Eisenhower 2
- ... General Dwight David Eisenhower to a stream of prominent visitors to Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers, Europe, near Paris during the last half of 1951. Despite Eisenhower's often-repeated declaration against holding political office, American business leaders and politicians continued to urge him to run for the White House. They told him that the "stalemated" Korean War, and scandals in Washington divided the nation and took away from it's prestige ...
- 3640: Elie Wiesel
- ... Elie Wiesel was born in the town of Sighet in northern Transylvania on September 30, 1928. His real name was Eliezer Wiesel. His family spoke Yiddish at home; they read newspapers and conducted their grocery business in German. Elie had begun religious studies in classical Hebrew almost as soon as he could speak. Elie s life centered entirely on his religious studies. He loved the mystical tradition and folk tales of ...
Search results 3631 - 3640 of 4262 matching essays
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