New York Post Essays

  • Post 9/11 Counter-Terrorism in New York City

    1433 Words  | 3 Pages

    is unbelievable. As long as the government has probable cause they can listen in to any ones phone calls, view their phone logs, text messages, and emails. They have also tightened security at all airports and also train stations and large cities. New York City has made the most changes since 9/11. They have a couple thousand undercover police officers, many that are bi-lingual, cameras around the whole city, security checkpoints, radiation detectors, and even a small military (Kramer). NYC has many

  • Media Coverage From The Washington Post And New York Times

    1225 Words  | 3 Pages

    passionate about women’s rights, my topic is birth control and how it is portrayed and represented in different media sources that have liberal and conservative views and beliefs, I followed this topic by tracking coverage from the Washington Post and New York Times. Before I started

  • Nap Pod Compare And Contrast Essay

    839 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nap Pod There has been big talk on a new invention called the Nap Pod. This new technology lets anyone be able to sleep for 20 minutes with relaxing music, sounds, and vibrations. The New York Post and the NPR have different sides on the Nap Pod; the reasons these two articles are different is because of the amount of bias, the audience, and the order of information that is being presented. New York Post and NPR are alike because they talk about the same topic, but the difference in amount of bias

  • Informative Essay On Michael Vickk

    568 Words  | 2 Pages

    experience. Excitement can drive people to do intense things. On April 25, 2007 Michael Vick’s excitement ended. Michael Vick is a famous Quarterback in the NFL for his speed and skill. He played for the Atlanta Falcons, Philadelphia Eagles, and New York Jets. But his career came to a halt in 2007 when he was arrested for dogfighting. Excitement drives people to make decisions that they wouldn't normally make. Although Michael Vick is a famous NFL player, desires for excitement drove him to make

  • Shirley Jackson

    1432 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Wall” (1948) was set in the same suburb she spent her early years; Burlingame, San Francisco, California. In 1934 her family moved to Rochester, New York. She dropped out of the University of Rochester and three years later, Jackson enrolled into Syracuse, University where she met husband Stanley Edgar Hyman. As an editorial assistant for The New Republic he helped her publish “My Life with R.H Macy” (1941) as her first nationally published story. Jackson is most famous for writing “The Lottery”

  • Abstract Expressionism

    1808 Words  | 4 Pages

    Abstract Expressionism "New needs need new techniques. And the modern artists have found new ways and new means of making their statements ... the modern painter cannot express this age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture." Jackson Pollock Rarely has such a massive transfer of influence has ever touched the world as did in the Paris to New York shift of the 1940's and 1950's. All of the characters of American art were

  • Lost Gen And Harlem

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Artists of the Harlem Renaissance and the Lost Generation diverged from the mainstream to begin a separate cultures. Harlem was an area in New York with an extensive African American population. During the ‘20s poets, writers and musicians like Langston Hughes, Claude Mckay and Zora Neale Hurston made the Harlem area the center of black art and culture. The lost generation was based mainly in Paris, France. It consisted of war torn men who could not re-enter society after World War I. In Europe

  • Freedom and Independence for Women in the 1950's

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    Freedom and Independence for Women in the 1950's Having invested 27 million dollars and eleven years of research, Du Pont de Nemours Inc. roused world-wide interest when the company displayed the first ever nylon stockings in the New York World Fair in 1938. Nylon apparel, including women's lingerie and foundation garments, soon appeared on the American market in wide varieties. Unfortunately, the quantities were limited. Women paid deathly high pre-war prices to obtain a pair of these famous

  • The New Netherlands

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    As main question I chose; what was the influence by the Dutch on the New Netherlands? I chose this question because I thought this would be an interesting thing about the history of the New Netherlands. I’m going to use sub questions to answer the main question. The three sub questions are about the drive for the Dutch to look for new colonies, what did the Dutch get from the New Netherlands and what did they bring to the New Netherlands and what was the influence of the colony on the hinterland

  • Social Impact Bond

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    New York State Social Impact Bonds The recidivism issue Based on the statistics, there are nearly 700,000 individuals are released from prisons nationwide annually. Moreover, many of them would continue to engage in criminal behaviour and back to prison which consists two-thirds rearrested and half return to prison within three years of their release. Since they have fewer connections in the community (such as family engagement), and less support on the residence and job-seeking for the prejudice

  • Theodore Roosevelt

    1493 Words  | 3 Pages

    century. In the following paper I will explain several of Theodore Roosevelt’s progressive polices. Specifically I will deal with his labor policies and his new nationalism policy. My thesis will be that these policies had a genuinely positive effect on America as a whole nation. Theodore Roosevelt was born on October 27, 1858 in New York City, New York. He was the second of four children and showed at an early age an aptitude for leadership. When Roosevelt was 18 he entered Harvard University and graduated

  • The Sociological and Political Subtleties of Woodstock

    1284 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Sociological and Political Subtleties of Woodstock The Woodstock festival descended on Bethel, New York promising three days of peace and music. Event organizers anticipated 15,000 people would attend but were overwhelmed by the 300,000 people that flooded this rural area of New York state from August 15 -17, 1969. While these facts are well known and indisputable, the festival itself has proven to be a controversial endeavor. What began as a small business venture was soon brimming with

  • Charles Lindbergh

    1697 Words  | 4 Pages

    The flight of Charles A. Lindbergh was actually three phases. The preflight that was step of obtaining the plane, the arrangements of sponsors, and making a list of land marks. Probably the most important phase out of all was the actual flight from New York to Paris, France. The final phase would consist of a man turning into a hero when he finally reaches Paris. The preflight arrangements for Charles A. Lindbergh’s flight began in early 1927. Charles A. Lindbergh presented his proposal to Knight

  • Alcoholics Anonymous

    1363 Words  | 3 Pages

    fellowships and meetings held in Akron, Ohio. These meetings took place between 1935 and 1939 when Alcoholics Anonymous was an integral part of “A First Century Christian Fellowship” (Pitman 56). A.A. was the outcome of a meeting between Bill W., a New York stockbroker, and Dr. Bob S., an Akron surgeon. Both had been hopeless alcoholics (Fingarette 14). Before this time, Bill and Dr. Bob had each been in contact with the Oxford Group, a mostly nonalcoholic fellowship that emphasized universal spiritual

  • George Orwell's Coming Up for Air

    1298 Words  | 3 Pages

    with Germany. They are practicing for air raids and bombers are constantly flying overhead. The marketplace where all the shops were during his childhood is now called the “Old Market”. George could not even find his way around town because of all the new streets. He recognized many of the shops but they all had different names and owners. This difference startles George but also shows an important difference between England in 1900 and 1939 England. Towns were becoming cities, the war had industrialized

  • Herman Melville: A Biography And Analysis

    2567 Words  | 6 Pages

    towering talent, with intellectual and artistic brilliance, and a mind of deep insight into human motives and behavior, it is certainly a disgrace that his true greatness was not recognized until nearly a generation after his death. Born in the city of New York on August 1, 1819, Melville was the third child and second son of Allan Melvill(it wasn't until Allan's death in 1832 that the “e” at the end of Melville was added, in order to make a more obvious connection with the Scottish Melville clan), a wholesale

  • Analysis of Angela's Ashes Narrated by Frank McCourt

    4634 Words  | 10 Pages

    America at the age of nineteen. First published in 1996, McCourt's memoir won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize in the category of best Biography/Autobiography, and has gone on to become a worldwide bestseller. McCourt, who for many years taught writing in a New York public high school, waited for over forty years to write about his troubled youth. Arguably, waiting for years before writing his autobiography allowed Frank McCourt to talk about his childhood in the most objective way possible. McCourt treats the

  • Front Page News

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    of whether or not the story is news worthy. The editor uses various different values to help him/her in their decision of what actually goes on the front page. Sometimes this judgment by the editor can be based solely on whether or not the story is going to grasp a lot of readers’ attention which would then boost newspaper sales. Other times the value system that is used is not so vague and meaningless. Some of these values that make stories news worthy are: its news values, prominence of the person

  • Jay Mcinerneys Bright Lights, Big City: You Are The Coma Baby

    799 Words  | 2 Pages

    visiting many bars and nightclubs during the night. He manages to accomplish this through the help of his use of cocaine, to which he is powerfully addicted. Throughout the novel McInerney employs the use of the Coma Baby, a current story in the New York Post, a local tabloid, as a symbolic representation of the main character. The Coma Baby has been residing in its mother's womb after the mother suffered a car accident and entered a coma. The debate is to whether the Coma Baby will see the "light of

  • Only Yesterday

    1598 Words  | 4 Pages

    long stockings, long hair and usually wore a dress. Preparing and take care of chores around the house, while the men who's role were to be the leaders of the household. The newspapers that were popular and most accurate during this time were the New York Tribune and the Chicago Tribune. Sports were considered to be interesting to men back then as they are today. Baseball and Boxing were the main two. Golf and Tennis were coming along, but wasn't as popular yet. The cost of living, food, vehicles