An analysis of the Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) company.
Case Study # 121382 |
1,500 words (
approx. 6 pages ) |
8 sources |
APA | 2008
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$ 29.95
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Abstract
This paper provides an analysis of Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), including the history and background of the company, competitive analysis, human resource analysis and outlook for the organization.
From the Paper
"Numerous companies engage in communications activities designed to promote goodwill and awareness of the company as a whole. Sometimes this is done to attract investors, other times it is done to create good feelings between citizens and politicians so that they are favorably disposed to a company in case a critical issue arises. It is likely that few Americans would be able to identify exactly what Archer Daniels Midland provides or produces, yet many might well recognize the slogan supermarket to the..."
Tags:Archer Daniels Midland, ADM
An overview of the poems by American poet, Jim Daniels.
Analytical Essay # 39601 |
900 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
4 sources |
2002
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$ 19.95
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This paper will critically review the poems of Jim Daniels. By assessing the poems "Show and Tell", "Factory Cool", "Factory Stud" and "Midnight Date (for Alice)", we can learn about Detroit life from a worker's perspective.
An analysis of a Jack Daniels ad in a special collectors' edition of "Rolling Stone" magazine.
Essay # 23265 |
646 words (
approx. 2.6 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 13.95
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This paper first describes the magazine; its demographics and target market. It then analyzes the whiskey ad and gives possible interpretations.
From the Paper
"The November edition of Rolling Stone Magazine is quite eye-catching. They have printed special collectors' editions with not one, but three different covers. All covers use characters from "The Simpsons" television cartoon.
The magazine I purchased features the backside of character Homer Simpson. He is in a pose much like that of music artist Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A." release. Homer wears a white t-shirt and has a red baseball cap tucked into his rear pocket. It was a well-remembered album cover, which is important to note because the other magazine covers also reflect memorable albums. Nirvana had a cd cover of "Nevermind" with a baby under water, eyes wide-open and reaching out to grab paper money in front of him. Rolling Stone used Bart from "The Simpsons" to duplicate this idea, grabbing a dollar bill with Krusty the Clown pictured on it. The third collectors' cover features the entire Simpsons family walking across the British crosswalk, as in the Beatles' "Abbey Road" cover."
This paper is a chapter-by-chapter review of John Daniels and Lee Radebaugh's "International Business: Environments and Operations": Theories, corporate policy, environmental frameworks, cultural issues, trade and the role of the government.
Book Review # 18809 |
6,975 words (
approx. 27.9 pages ) |
1 source |
1991
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$ 94.95
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From the Paper
"In their textbook International Business: Environments and Operations, John Daniels and Lee Radebaugh address the complex problems which face companies doing business on a global basis. The textbook is designed to accompany an introductory course in international business, and the authors are careful to present information of use to those who will never take another course in the subject as well as to those who are destined to study the subject in depth. As a result, information is presented in a broad context providing information which the authors deem essential to a basic understanding of international business.
Daniels and Radebaugh have divided the text into seven multi-chapter parts: Background; Comparative Environmental Frameworks; Theories and Institutions -- Trade and Investment; World Financial Environment; International Business in ... "
A review of the book of Daniel in the Bible.
Term Paper # 120793 |
2,000 words (
approx. 8 pages ) |
20 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 38.95
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This paper discusses Daniel and the book of Daniel in the Bible, touching on various incidents in the book, such as the interpretation of the king's dreams, the handwriting on the wall, and the lion's den.
From the Paper
"The Bible relates the history of many great men and women of God but none with more diverse talents than Daniel, whose life is a model of faith and whose book in the Bible is compelling and strategic. According to the scriptures, Daniel was a prophet, an interpreter of dreams, an interpreter of unknown writing, a scientist, a lion tamer, an intercessor and even-according to Daniel, a president. Daniel's life was an exemplary one. As a youth he pledged himself..."
Tags:Daniel, Bible, book of Daniel, prophecy, Nebuchadnezzar
This paper studies the books of Zechariah, Daniel, and Isaiah.
Analytical Essay # 123049 |
3,000 words (
approx. 12 pages ) |
77 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 53.95
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In this article, the writer examines the books of Zechariah, Daniel, and Isaiah. Bullock's evaluation of Zechariah is summarized, and in Daniel, Chapters 2-7 are delineated and compared with the rest of the book. In Isaiah, the purpose and theology of the book is described, referencing Bullock.
From the Paper
"Bullock starts out his analysis of the book of Zechariah by identifying the man Zechariah in his period and providing some historical background on the book. He then examines the book's structure pointing out that it is divided into two parts and has a matching chiastic structure in both parts. Bullock sees this structure as no more than a literary similarity however and does not engage a discussion about any profound meaning implied by it beyond the establishment of an orderly structure. Bullock spends ..."
Tags:Bible, religion, Israel, Judah, theology, Bullock, Zechariah, Daniel, Isaiah, Old Testament, OT
A discussion on Daniel Ortega, current president of Nicaragua.
Term Paper # 141633 |
1,500 words (
approx. 6 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA |
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$ 29.95
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The paper relates that Daniel Ortega, current president of Nicaragua, waited 17 years to regain his presidency. The paper discusses how in the meantime, he was accused of raping his stepdaughter for 10 years and frittering away the socialistic ideals he had as a revolutionary that overthrew the fascist government before his first presidency. The paper posits that it seems he has now come full circle.
From the Paper
"Jose Daniel Ortega Saavedra is the current President of Nicaragua. Mr. Ortega hailed from a politically active background: his parents, Daniel Ortega and Lidia Saavedra, opposed the 40-year Anastasio Somoza regime in Nicaragua, which had his mother arrested for possessing "love letters" which the police accused her of using as underground coded political missives (Columbia, 2008). As a university student in 1963, Ortega joined the clandestine Sandinista National Liberation Front, a Marxist guerrilla coalition that opposed the..."
Tags:daniel, ortega, nicaragua
Explains how author E.L. Doctorow uses events from history to write his novel, "The Book of Daniel".
Analytical Essay # 31455 |
1,900 words (
approx. 7.6 pages ) |
6 sources |
2002
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$ 36.95
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Abstract
E.L. Doctorow has always been a writer who juxtaposes fictional events with historical ones. "The Book of Daniel" is no exception. While the character of Daniel is fictional, the events depicted--a thinly disguised version of the Julius and Ethel Rosenberg trial, the communist scare fanned by Senator McCarthy, the Viet Nam War--are all rooted in history. Daniel's journey then is both historical and personal, ricocheting between the past and the present as he attempts to find meaning in the events of his own life and those of his culture. "The Book of Daniel" is like its Biblical counterpart, part lamentation and part exhortation. History is a catalogue of a "time of trouble" in which some figures of the past will awake to 'everlasting contempt' while others turn to righteousness. Daniel struggles with both, an inherited past and an uncertain future. In the end, however, he finds his way.
Discusses audience and imagery in Samuel Daniel's 'Sonnet III' from "Delia" and argues against C.S. Lewis who dismisses Daniel's work.
Analytical Essay # 31248 |
2,650 words (
approx. 10.6 pages ) |
8 sources |
2002
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$ 47.95
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Abstract
C.S. Lewis, in "English Literature in the Sixteenth Century", dismissed Daniel's "Delia" on the grounds that: "It offers no ideas, no psychology, and of course no story: it is simply a masterpiece of phrasing and melody" (Lewis 491). Samuel Daniel's sonnet sequence, "Delia" (1592), is undeniably remarkable for its phrasing and melody. However, one can take issue with Lewis' depiction of Daniel's achievement. This essay will argue that, contrary to Lewis' statement, Daniel's "Delia" reveals a complex level of interlocking patterns of thematic ideas and imagery. One cannot assert broad generalizations about a poet's entire work, much less the poetic production of an entire era, from the textual analysis of a single work. Includes annotated bibliography.
This paper discusses the importance of Samuel Daniel's "Delia" through its structure and the creation of the modern sonnet.
Analytical Essay # 4312 |
2,810 words (
approx. 11.2 pages ) |
8 sources |
2001
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$ 50.95
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This paper discusses the importance of Samuel Daniel's "Delia" through its structure and the creation of the modern sonnet. The author explores Daniel's influences including Sir Philip Sidney and Shakespeare, and his use of the Petrarchan writing mechanisms. Further this paper examines the significance of the sonnet to the English Renaissance and European poetry.
From the paper:
"Samuel Daniel's Delia presents to the modern reader a nearly perfect mechanism through which to contemplate the structure of the sonnet in English as it first came to be incorporated into the common practice of this language. His use of Petrarchan forms and metrical traditions demonstrates that the sonnet when it first entered into wide use in the Renaissance was indeed a direct carry-over from the Italian, a mimicking by English writers of the Italianate structure of neoclassicism, a harkening back to Rome and so to Athens."
Tags:Petrach, sonnet, peotry, English