Papers 19231-19240 of total 54444 found.
…Krupp, the owner of Krupp steel firm l<Tab/>Emil Kirdorf, the coal businessman l<Tab/>IG Faben, the German chemicals firm, gave half the funds for the 1933 elections l<Tab/>The German car firm Opel (a subsidiary…
Details: Words: 2453 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…of the car and retch, I wanted to go home to my parents' house and crawl into bed. Digby poked me in the ribs."(11) Prior to the events of this night at Greasy Lake, the narrator would not have admitted an urgent desire to return to the safety of his parents- bad…
Details: Words: 2595 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…with 40 tonnes of axle weight is about 60'000 times as high as that caused by a passenger car. Therefore it is the objective of the Federal Government to bring about a greater involvement of lorries into the financing of infrastructure measures by means…
Details: Words: 2282 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…was the Iranian refusal to pay for thousands of Chevrolet cars. These cars had to be brought back and sold at a discount in North America. (Kriplani, 1984) The scope of the legal environment is broadening at a rapid pace and is affecting many aspects of international…
Details: Words: 2518 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…are a substitute to air travel would be traveling by car and boarding a ferry or taking a train which runs throughout Europe in all major cities. As a no-frill airline RA can also of course be substituted by the current airlines. Because of the substitute threat…
Details: Words: 2712 | Pages: 10.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /Literature
…is brought to a standstill and all the passengers had to walk six miles back. They then went by another car which also got struck, a few meters away from the first. This proves how unbearable transport proved to be because of the dry and sandy conditions. H.V…
Details: Words: 2488 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…happy with their lives because everything was "perfect." In the 1950's most men had their wives, their kids, and their cars. That was pretty much all they needed to survive. The reason everyone had jobs is because the economy was doing so great. The economy…
Details: Words: 1984 | Pages: 7.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…an internal representation of the world that allows them to describe people, events, and feelings. Children at this time use symbols, they can pretend when driving their toy car across the couch that the couch is actually a bridge. Although the thinking…
Details: Words: 2336 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…train cars to carry four hundred tons of rail and timber, ties, bridgings, fuel, and food, which all had to be assembled in a depot on the Missouri River. But the Union Pacific had the twin advantages of comparatively flat land and a continuous supply…
Details: Words: 2626 | Pages: 10.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…of sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides into the air from industry, burning fossil fuels and car exhaust fumes. Much of this ends up in the sea causing permanent damage to life there. Agricultural run-off comes indirectly into the North Sea because it comes…
Details: Words: 2571 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)