162.20868 Jefferson, Lewis and Clark and the American Indians
This paper contents two separate essays. One is on what motives other than exploration, President Jefferson might have had in sending out the Louis and Clark expedition. Here, it seems that Jefferson from the onset was thinking in terms of political and cultural assimilation of the Indians in the territory. The other is a commentary on a passage from Meriwether Louis' diary.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 20868
Price: US$26.85
163.20945 Skydiving as the Biggest Rush
When one talks about a ?rush? or a ?high?, exactly to what are they referring? This essay will take a look at the nature of rush, the various items that cause a ?rush? to the human system, and why skydiving is the biggest rush of them all. It progresses from the connection of adrenaline to rush, why certain things cause adrenaline, and how many of those things are encountered during skydiving.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 20945
Price: US$26.85
164.21008 Jackson and Boudinot: Two Views of the Cherokees
This paper discusses specific questions raised by Andrew Jackson's Address to Congress about the removal of all Indians east of the Mississippi and the observations about his tribe of a thoroughly acculturated Cherokee. Jackson evidently had very strong political reasons for his position in addition to a long-abiding enmity towards Native Americans. Boudinot, the Cherokee shared no such enmity towards white society and values.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 21008
Price: US$35.80
165.21187 Selected Issues in Early to Mid 19th Century America
The essay discusses a series of questions raised about two of the socio-economic trends that came to dominate early to mid nineteenth century America: the advent of an unskilled industrial labour pool in the fledgling textile mill of New England and the hue and cry for an expansionist policy in regards to Mexican held territory in the continental United States called "Manifest Destiny that became a cornerstone of American ideology for the next fifty years.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 21187
Price: US$35.80
166.21494 Racial Profiling: Not Necessary
Racial profiling is, at its core, a racist policy that allows the targeting of specific racial and ethnic groups for the purpose of greater and unequal governmental scrutiny ? with no legal or constitutional justification. The end result is that in jurisdictions in which racial profiling is in effect, the members of the profiled communities live under the constant threat of random and unprovoked harassment at the hands of the police. From the police point of view, profiling makes sense: it allows them to place special attention on the population of people statistically most likely to commit crimes. Opponents of profiling make a very clear argument against profiling on the basis that it is nothing more than a segregation list, racist, and prejudiced policy that serves no real or legitimate purpose in the effort to fight crime. It is the purpose of this paper to explore both arguments, and to support the conclusion that racial profiling is an ineffective method of fighting crime and terrorism and that it should not be used.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 4 source(s) listed
Filename: 21494
Price: US$35.80
167.21783 A Poetical Analysis of Individualism in The Road Not Taken and Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost
This paper will seek to understand the nature of American individuality through Nature as portrayed in The Road Less Taken and Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost. By analyzing Frost's natural symbolism within these poems, we can see the fierce sense of individuality that he exudes in his appeal for a greater understanding of Nature and the liberty that it offers.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 21783
Price: US$26.85
168.21803 Reform, Religion, and Economics: Changes to Family Roles in America 1650-1877
This 4-page undergraduate paper considers the changes to family roles as a result of economic change, reform activities, and western expansion. This essay traces changes in family life, and especially changes in the life of wives through this period in history. This essay concludes that while seventeenth century American families were depicted by contemporary writers as coherent and sanctified units, nineteenth century writers tended to depict families as contracted groups of loving individuals.