Surviving the Vietnam War In the book Road of 10,00 Pains, Chapter 16, by Otto J. Lehrack, there is first hand experiences from different marines fighting the Vietnam War. As I read chapter 16, I learned that the Vietnam War was very gruesome. The U.S marines had to fight very hard everyday to stay alive, even though they were fighting a war they did not seem as necessary. During this battle the American soldiers used many tactics to survive. They relied on the help from air support, and the…
Just the “Tip” of the Iceberg Specific Purpose Statement: To persuade my audience that tipping in the hospitality industry should be banned and instead offer a living wage to its employees Central Idea: Because tipping is an undemocratic social norm we will discuss the history behind tipping, the minimum wage for tipped employees and its effects examine the correlation between different factors that influence tip sizes, and how we can remedy these maladies INTRODUCTION At some point in…
The Vietnam War originally did not involve America, and when they entered it in 1965, what began as a civil war became an international battle. The My Lai Massacre, one result of American intervention in the Vietnam War, caused immediate tension between the American soldiers and devastation for the Vietnamese, leading to escalating opposition on the home front, and ultimately the shattering trust in the United States’ government policy. The change of support for the War, particularly in America,…
In his book If I Die In A Combat Zone, Tim O'Brien shines a light on his time spent training and fighting in the Vietnam War. O’Brien makes it clear that he believes that the Vietnam War as a whole was unnecessary by attesting to the violence it brought, the lack of motivation of the soldiers, and the morals it brought into question. From the beginning of training to life in a non-combat position in the Vietnam War, O’Brien depicts and even sometimes argues against not only the unnecessary…
In the novella Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Steinbeck develops the theme that inequality leads to loneliness. Crooks faces a relentless form of inequality in the form of racism as he is separated into his own isolated room, kept from playing games with the other men, and threatened to be killed all because of his skin color which leads to his ongoing loneliness. Lennie enters his room one night when the rest of the men are out: “Lennie smiled helplessly in an attempt to make friends.…
7 Orobosa Omede Professor Epstein History 340-01 Paper 2 The Vietnam War: The battle of The Ia Drang Valley Orobosa Omede Professor Epstein History 340-01 Paper 2 The battle on Ia Drang Valley sets the foundation leading to numerous conflicts of American involvement in the Vietnam War. The engagement between American and North Vietnamese troops were significant in that it persisted even after the American troops withdrew from Vietnam. The…
One may be fathomed as to how a small army of Vietnamese were able to defeat the superpower of America during the Vietnam War. Within this war, America faced not only military challenges, but challenges towards their issued foreign policies as well. Furthermore, America’s excuse, of a communism threat, to enter the war not only appeared ambiguous but rather contradictory. By analysing the causes and course of the Vietnam war throughout 1954-1975, the following essay will dissect the difficulties…
1. Jonathan Maberry, the author of award-winning book Rot and Ruin, writes this story in a very eye-captivating way including interesting character development and plot through the theme of “Sometimes you have to be the change you want to see”. The story starts off with the protagonist, Benny, hating his brother, Tom, for his cowardly appearance in his first memory of his parents and the zombie-infested, ruin, outside of the encumbrance of the fence. As the story progresses Benny must find a job…
The Vietnam War brought many concerns to American Citizens. Protesters throughout the United States claimed America’s involvement in the war was both unjust and unethical. Likewise, Tim O’Brien, the author of many Vietnam based novels, expressed the same feelings of unjust and unethical means for America’s involvement in the war. In 1968, O’Brien graduated with his bachelor’s degree in Political Science and within the same year was drafted to the United States Army and served his time in…
History of the 44th Engineer Battalion “Broken Hearts” Nicolas J. Martines Bravo Company, 169th Engineer Battalion The history of the 44th Engineer Battalion is spread over eighty-eight years, three wars, and the Global War on Terror. The battalion served as a regiment with five companies and transportation corps to fit the National Army and Regular Army needs from 1917 to 1946. In 194, The 44th Engineer Construction Battalion was activated in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The…