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    Metaphors such as the mustard gas and roses. Billy uses Tralfamadore to explain how soldiers would try to escape from reality, it is a fictitious planet that takes Billy. Tralfamadore is Billy’s new reality. Like many soldiers trying to find some outlet to escape the horrors of…

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    collected from elution of the dry column chromatography Mobile Phase used in Column Color and Number of Spots Observed Rf Value Test Tube 4-12 Mixture: hexane (13 ml) and ethyl acetate (7 ml) 9 clear-mustard yellow spots 0.27 Test Tube 1-3 Mixture: hexane (13 ml) and ethyl acetate (7 ml) 3 mustard yellow-clear 0.49 Discussion Separation of the mixture of ortho and para nitroaniline indicates that the hypothesis is possible using the two techniques described. This can be understood by the…

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    combat. One of the most deadly forms of modern combat is the use of Chemical Weapons. Most of these weapons are now more sophisticated and complex than they were before. One of the earliest examples of the use of Chemical Weapons is when Germany used Mustard Gas to burn…

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    follows behind the wagon—painfully aware of his friend’s suffering—the reader begins to truly see the human toll of war, and the speaker continues to decry Horace’s words. The speaker employs graphic imagery to describe a young man, the victim of a mustard gas attack, after he is throw into a wagon when the group of soldiers in marching. The dying or dead soldier is grotesque to behold, and it is not enough to wake the speaker from his nightmare of war. The speaker describes the man’s face as…

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    Benito Mussolini Effects

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    Many health issues that soldiers face during World War II were from a range of environmental and chemical hazards. Many, along with civilians, encountered harmful sounds, radiation, and chemicals like mustard gas were health risks that many faced throughout and after war. Noise came from many different elements, like gunfire, explosives, rockets, machinery, and aircraft. Most of the problems included hearing loss and tinnitus, which is ringing in the ears…

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    Medical Advances in World War II Medical advances in World War II changed the outcome of the war to help the Allied forces based on the impact they had on those wounded or disease-ridden during battle. Many soldiers risked getting injured or even risked their lives in the war to save the lives of many others. The soldiers that got hurt needed to be helped as quickly as possible for the best chance of survival. There were many common injuries soldiers got because of the kinds of attacks on them.…

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    ISIS verse Al-Qaeda and Aum Shinrikyo—Using Chemical Weapons: In attempting to answer if ISIS’s apocalyptic views of the world paired with their willingness to acquire and use chemical weapons can prove to be evidence that the group will seek and use nuclear weapons, comparing ISIS to al Qaeda and Aum Shinrikyo is necessary. Al- Qaeda followed a similar trajectory as ISIS in their pursuit and use of chemical weapons. In 2001, a computer was found at an Al Qaeda safe house…

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    In in the black comedy novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut recalls and discusses the destruction of Dresden through the narration of the main character Billy Pilgrim, in order to highlight his perspective regarding the horrors of the war. When Dresden gets bombed, Vonnegut— who injects himself in his own novel as Billy— experiences sadness and sympathy rather than anger and resentfulness. Billy’s misery— due to being ambushed and witnessing the gruesomeness of the war— leads him to…

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    Experiment 5 Title: Mayonnaise production Objective: To determine the type of food emulsion obtained by varying the mixture sequence Introduction: A most important field of emulsion technology is that involving food preparations. Some of the oldest emulsions known to man, for example, butter, salad dressings and so on are included in this group, while the applications of emulsion theory to the baking process and to therapeutic feeding represent modern developments. Probably the most instructive…

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    During this time, research was done on vesicant war gases. In an accident, sulfur mustards were spilled on a group of troops. Observations of their bone marrow and lymph nodes showed marked depletion. Milton Winternitz of Yale began to study the chemistry of the mustard compounds in search of potential therapeutic effects through experimentation on mice. Regression was found through the use of nitrogen mustard, which spurred human testing. It proved successful in lymphoma patients in the 1940s…

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