dark because no light can make a way inside it. 71 % portion of the earth is occupied by water and people are utilizing ocean for various purposes such as transportation, fishing, exploration and many more. However, the deep part of the sea is still remains untouched. Seeing the situation majority of the scientist thought that life would be scant in the deep sea, but almost each search has discovered that life is plentiful in this reason. The deepest layer of ocean has lots of unthinkable stories, secrecy and legends that make mankind more curious about the life that is surviving bottom of the sea. Deep sea animals Deep sea animals live in the marine ecosystem or in oceans. If you look at the marine biology, you will find millions of species of sea animals. The marine life is a large resource that offers tourism, research and recreation for many countries across the globe. Marine life helps to determine the very nature of our planet. All the Deep Sea Animals along with other
Stages of democratization The old regime breaks down. New democratic structures are built. Initial fragility These new structures become embedded; their removal is unthinkable: `consolidation'. Structural factors : Factors that are `unchangeable' or change slowly; `preconditions' · Historical · Economic · Political W. Germany 1950s: educated, literate population, but residue of authoritarian attitudes, poor experience of Weimar democracy? E
During this time he obviously has many other complicated relationships with other French women and therefore makes his life even more complicated. Plus the ghosts from the past come haunting again and his feelings towards Alexa become stronger by the day. Everything would be less complicated if Alexa had not found herself a new boyfriend and had not moved to England. Basically the last stage of this book concentrates on his pursuit of happiness. He makes unthinkable efforts and stupidities to prove Alexa that he loves her and that he wants to be with her. He even goes back to England, but discovers that he has become more of a Frenchman than an Englishman and he starts to dislike English manners. "Merde Actually" ends with him going alone to a Christmas holiday in France, since Alexa stands him up, or that is what he thinks. Finally they still meet, because Alexa just runs late, like all the French do
Transition Why did NP leaders not fight to the end to retain power? Why was it possible to negotiate a transition instead of fight a civil war? Authoritarian to democratic 1. The old regime breaks down. 2. New democratic structures are built. 3. These new structures become embedded; their removal is unthinkable: `consolidation'. Structural factors : Factors that are `unchangeable' · Historical · Economic · Political Agential factors: Decisions and calculations made by individuals Or the personalities of certain individuals
Rev in 1960s-70s about Eur, not SU. Everywhere but SU, records about ind Js on pathways, ghettoization, labor, murder. SU, no Ger records, system fundamentally diff. Still probs w #s. 2/3 killing in camps, ghettos. 2 mill SU Js. Slave labor complex not known until recently, extensive throughout Europe. Not a straightforward subject, several subjects intertwined, SU Holocaust. Js dying en masse certainly at top. Context of total national mobilization for defeat of fascism. Unthinkable human suffering. Tens of mill SU citizens died, many more suffered. Yet regime would never admit, defeat of Germany meant taking up cause of Js. Rise in popular anti- Semitism, as Red Army losing battle, turns around 42-43. Decrease in anti- antisemitism. Dramatic shifts in J demography, not just deaths; color map, location of Js will change, no longer in Eur Russia. What is written about first year or two of war? Why so hard to find info about what happened
This is a drama about helplessness before foreign brutal forces. As a grotesque “revolutionary” comedy, Minu Leninid (All My Lenins, 1997) of director Hardi Volmer (b.1957) laughs with black humour at the falsity and fallacious ideas of past times. At the international festivals, the existentialist-symbolist drama Georgica (1998), director Sulev Keedus (b. 1957), a search for humanity and eternal values, won wide attention. The documentaries cast light on topics unthinkable during Soviet times (the lives and fate of President Konstantin Päts, statesman and Head of State Jaan Tõnisson, Estonian partisan movement against the communists etc.). Some social problems never touched upon before made an appearance: the gypsies, criminals, political terrorism, clergymen, accusations from East and West about alleged discrimination of Russians in Estonia. The Tallinnfilm Studio produced more than 100 feature films in addition to 20 short films between 1955 and 1993
T h r o u g h the first half of Act Two, there is no one else to identify with except the drippy innkeeper, N o r m a n Bates (Anthony Perkins), and no audience wants to identify with h i m — he's weird. In a conventional film, the hero always survives the Ordeal and lives to see the villain defeated in the climax. It's unimaginable that a star like Janet Leigh, an immortal heroine of the screen, will be sacrificed at the midpoint. But Hitchcock does the unthinkable and kills our hero halfway through the story. T h i s is one Ordeal that is final for the hero. N o reprieve, no resurrection, no curtain call for M a r i o n . T h e effect is shattering. You get that odd feeling o f being a disembodied ghost, floating around the frame as you watch Marion's blood pour down the drain. W h o to identify with? W h o to be? Soon it's clear: Hitchcock is giving you no one to identify with but Norman