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Sydney Lea’s “Ghost Pain”
A paper using Sydney Lea's poem "Ghost Pain" to look at how a poet persuades a reader to buy a poem's argument. Structure, setting and voice as tools. -- 1,700 words; MLA

"The Social Transformation of American Medicine"
A review of the 1982 book "The Social Transformation of American Medicine" by Paul Starr. -- 1,480 words; MLA

Artist Vassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)
This paper discusses Vassily Kandinsky, a Russian-born painter, who contributed greatly to German Expressionism. -- 995 words; MLA

Nursing Proposal
A doctoral student research grant application for a study of quantitative measure of chlamydia trachomatis. -- 1,188 words; MLA

Christianity and Buddhism
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REITERS SYNDOME

Equal Rights for Women
During the nineteenth century, the women suffrage movement was coming out full force to
demand the equal rights of women in the United States and Europe. The women who supported
the women's suffrage adapted a Declaration of Principles that simply stated that, "We
hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal" (Perry,
1995, p.194). The women suffrage movement not only was striving for equal rights of women
but also for voting privileges. Mary Wollstonecraft's protested against the
self-abasement of women to men. In the Vindication of the Rights of Woman, Wollstonecraft
emphasized that a well-schooled, dependable, and powerful woman would be useful in
society and able to manage a family. Women should be allowed to practice medicine as a
physician, or manage a store where they can hold their heads high instead wasting their
life away. In the writings of John Stuart Mill, he supported women' s rights in The
Subjection of Women. He believed that males abused their power over women, and sought to
have women partake in political affairs. After women decided they were getting no where
with simple demonstrations they decided to use some militant strategies by disrupting
political meetings and enforcing hunger strikes lead by Emmeline Pankhurst. Finally, in
1920 women were allowed to vote in the United States.
Women in the 20th century have come along way, although they will always be fighting for
the equal rights of women. Men still make a larger salary than most women do and they
become higher executives. Women are now allowed to vote and have as good an education as
a male. With this education women are becoming physicians and political figures in
today's society. Women can now hold their heads up high and be proud of who and what they
are.

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