417 résultats pour "1968"
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Herman KEES
1954, « Zu den Annaleninschrift des Hohenpriesters Osorkon vom 11.
1984, «Family Relationship ofRamses IXand theLate Twentieth Dynasty»,SAK 11,127-134. 1985, «Les suites desguerres libyennes deRamses III», RdE 36,177-179. 1986, TheThird Intermediate PeriodinEgypt (1100-650 B.C.),seconde édition,augmentée, Warminster. 1987a, «The Titularies ofthe Ramesside KingsasExpression oftheir Ideal Kingship »,ASAE 71,131-141. 1987b, «Amenmesses inNorthern Egypt»,GM 99,23-25. K RI =K. A.KITCHEN, Ramesside Inscriptions. HistoricalandBiographical, 7vol., Oxford, 1968-1988 :ci...
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Fiche de synthèse sur les relations internationales de 1945 à nos jours
• Ostpolitik de W. Brandt inconcevable en dehors du contexte de la Détente• Négociations et accords sur la limitation des armements nucléaires :▪ Traité de Non prolifération 1968▪ SALT 1 : 1972• Conférence d'Helsinki : 1° conférence depuis la 2° GM qui rassemble des Etats européens de l'Est et de l'Ouest qui prennent des engagements visant à apaiser lestensions sur le continent (respect des frontières, respect des droits de l'Homme…) Les limites de la détente1° point important : deux zones de c...
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sud-africaine, littérature.
À ce courant se rattachent le romancier Arthur Nortje ( Dead Roots, 1973) qui se suicide en exil, et le poète Keorapetse Kgogotsile. Avec l’organisation de la résistance contre l’apartheid, la poésie se fait, elle aussi, instrument de révolte sous la plume de poètes tels que Sipho Sepamla ( The Soweto I Love, 1977), ou Miriam Tlali ( Amandla, 1980) qui se font les chantres de Soweto, symbole de la lutte contre l’apartheid et creuset de la littérature noire. Citons aussi, dans la même veine,...
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Bob Dylan - Musik.
To RamonaMy Back PagesIt ain't Me Babe 1965 Bringing It All Back Home/Subterranean HomesickBlues Subterranean Homesick BluesMaggie's FarmLove Minus Zero/No LimitMr. Tambourine ManIt's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)It's All Over Now, Baby Blue 1965 Highway 61 Revisited Like a Rolling StoneTombstone BluesIt Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes aTrain to CryHighway 61 RevisitedJust Like Tom Thumb's BluesDesolation Row 1966 Blonde on Blonde Rainy Day Women #12 & 35One of Us Must Know (Sooner orLater)I W...
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Jacksonville (Florida) - geography.
and southern sections and avoiding the downtown bottleneck where Interstate 95 crosses the Saint Johns River at the Fuller Warren Bridge. In addition to being a regional highway crossroads, the city is a railway hub, with Amtrak passenger service and several freight routes. The city’s expanding airport,located in northern Jacksonville, was the nation’s fastest growing in passenger volume in the mid-1990s. V GOVERNMENT Jacksonville has a mayor-council form of municipal government. The mayor and...
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Berlin.
cours de la Nuit de cristal (novembre 1938). Ce quartier est également célèbre pour ses galeries d'art, ses cafés, ses bars et ses ateliers d'artistes. À proximité du lac de Wannsee s'étendent les quartiers résidentiels et bourgeois (Zehlendorf, Charlottenburg, Grünewald), tandis que les quartiers industriels et ouvriers selocalisent au nord (Siemensstadt et Reinickendorf) et au sud de la ville (Marienfelde, Rüdow). Situé à proximité de l'ancien mur, le quartier ouvrier de Kreuzberg accueilledep...
- Insanity planning
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Discrimination.
Throughout United States history many other groups have suffered racial or religious discrimination. Since Europeans first came to America, Native Americans havebeen forcibly deprived of their lands and denied civil rights. Congress enacted the Indian Civil Rights Act in 1968, and the federal courts have entertained a number ofsuits designed to restore to Native American tribes ancestral lands and hunting and fishing rights. Many religious groups, including Roman Catholics, Jews, and others,have...
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Native American Literature
I
INTRODUCTION
Leslie Marmon Silko
Native American writer Leslie Marmon Silko is perhaps best known for her first novel, Ceremony (1977), a coming-of-age
story about a young man of mixed Native American and white ancestry.
SequoyahNative Americans did not use a complex written language before the immigration of Europeans to the Americas. In theearly 1820s the Cherokee leader Sequoyah developed an alphabet and written language for his native tongue. ManyCherokee learned the new written language readily, and in 1828 they published the first Native American newspaper,written in both Cherokee and English.THE BETTMANN ARCHIVE Before Native Americans came into contact with Europeans, many tribes supplemented the spoken...
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Influenza.
days and disappear in seven to ten days. However, coughing and fatigue may persist for two or more weeks. Death from influenza itself is rare. But influenza can aggravate underlying medical conditions, such as heart or lung disease. Invading influenza viruses produceinflammation in the lining of the respiratory tract, damage that increases the risk that secondary infections will develop. Common complications include bronchitis,sinusitis, and bacterial pneumonia, occurring most frequently in olde...
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Toys.
I
INTRODUCTION
Toys, objects that serve as playthings for children. Although the
clay. These readily available elements were also used to make more elaborate toys as human society advanced. Archaeologists have found primitive, handmade toys such as wooden or cloth dolls, clay marbles, and terracotta figures that date back thousands of years. In ancientEgypt, Greece, and Rome, people placed dolls or clay figures in the graves or tombs of children for them to play with in the afterlife. The yo-yo may seem like a 20th-century fad, but it actually dates back at least 2,500 years...
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New York (city) - geography.
The Bronx is the fourth largest and the northernmost of the five boroughs, and the only one on the American mainland. Even so, it is surrounded by water on threesides: Long Island Sound on the east, the Harlem and East rivers on the south, and Hudson River on the west. Encompassing 109 sq km (42 sq mi), it had 1,332,650inhabitants in 2000. Largely residential, the Bronx includes dozens of vibrant neighborhoods. Fieldston is particularly elegant, with great stone houses set among spacious lawns a...
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United States History - U.
and improved upon the designs of Arab sailing ships and learned to mount cannons on those ships. In the 15th century they began exploring the west coast ofAfrica—bypassing Arab merchants to trade directly for African gold and slaves. They also colonized the Madeira Islands, the Azores, and the Cape Verde Islands andturned them into the first European slave plantations. The European explorers were all looking for an ocean route to Asia. Christopher Columbus sailed for the monarchs of Spain in 149...
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United States History - U.
and improved upon the designs of Arab sailing ships and learned to mount cannons on those ships. In the 15th century they began exploring the west coast ofAfrica—bypassing Arab merchants to trade directly for African gold and slaves. They also colonized the Madeira Islands, the Azores, and the Cape Verde Islands andturned them into the first European slave plantations. The European explorers were all looking for an ocean route to Asia. Christopher Columbus sailed for the monarchs of Spain in 149...
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Vietnam War.
rigged, since about 150,000 more people voted in Saigon than were registered. Diem then deposed Bao Dai, who had been the only other candidate, and declaredSouth Vietnam to be an independent nation called the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), with himself as president and Saigon as its capital. Vietnamese Communists and manynon-Communist Vietnamese nationalists saw the creation of the RVN as an effort by the United States to interfere with the independence promised at Geneva. III THE BEGINNING OF THE...
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Vietnam War - History.
rigged, since about 150,000 more people voted in Saigon than were registered. Diem then deposed Bao Dai, who had been the only other candidate, and declaredSouth Vietnam to be an independent nation called the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), with himself as president and Saigon as its capital. Vietnamese Communists and manynon-Communist Vietnamese nationalists saw the creation of the RVN as an effort by the United States to interfere with the independence promised at Geneva. III THE BEGINNING OF THE...
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Vietnam War - U.
rigged, since about 150,000 more people voted in Saigon than were registered. Diem then deposed Bao Dai, who had been the only other candidate, and declaredSouth Vietnam to be an independent nation called the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), with himself as president and Saigon as its capital. Vietnamese Communists and manynon-Communist Vietnamese nationalists saw the creation of the RVN as an effort by the United States to interfere with the independence promised at Geneva. III THE BEGINNING OF THE...