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Search "Dee Brown"
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Dee Brown | |
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About 4 pages (1,314 words) in 3 products |
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Encyclopedia and Summary Information
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Dee Brown Information
714 words, approx. 2 pages
 Dorris Alexander "Dee" Brown (February 29,1908 – December 12, 2002) was an American novelist and historian. His most famous work, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1970) details the violent relationship between Native Americans and American expansionism....


summary from source:
 The Boston Globe
Dee Dee dishes Tina Brown
07/08/1992: 675 words, approx. 2 pages Like everybody else in the English-speaking world Dee Dee was positively poleaxed by the news that trendy Vanity Fair editrix Tina Brown has been appointed to the helm of the venerable and hitherto sacrosanct New Yorker. As a subscriber, if not exactly a...
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 The Boston Globe
Dee Brown
03/15/1998: 1,000 words, approx. 3 pages Former Celtics guard Dee Brown, 29, says he wants to be respected above all for community service. To that end, he and his wife created the Tammy and Dee Brown Foundation last year. How does being traded feel? We were about to build...




Literary Criticism
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Critical Essay by Mary Anne Norman
309 words, approx. 1 pages
 The story of Creek Mary's blood opens in 1905 at a White House luncheon hosted by Teddy Roosevelt in honor of Mary Dane, "a young Indian woman from Montana, the first of her race and the first of her sex to graduate from Columbia Medical College." A young reporter, who has been sent by his newspaper to cover the event, becomes fascinated with the story of Creek Mary and her descendants. He travels to Montana at the invitation of Dane, Creek Mary's grandson, to learn of the remark...
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Critical Essay by Margaret Wallace
291 words, approx. 1 pages
 This intelligent and totally unpretentious novel, "Wave the High Banner," contains, so far as the knowledge of the present reviewer runs, the first full-length portrait in fiction of Davy Crockett. "Wave High the Banner" is a novel, in the sense that fact and invention are discreetly combined to suit the purposes of the story teller. But Dee Brown has given us what must be accounted, nevertheless, an exceptionally shrewd and just evaluation of a picturesque frontiersman who has b...


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Dee Brown | |
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About 4 pages (1,314 words) in 3 products |
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