War and the many stories of the Academy Ernest Hemingway are sarcastic and can be read at different levels; soldier 's house is no exception. The story is talking about a young man, Harold Krebs who recently returned from World War I and returned to his parents house when he figured out how to handle his life. Indeed, he does not have a house, the middle class lifestyle of his parents once felt like a house, but now it is gone. This is actually not a common situation among young people, especially when university students return to the womb.
Before the college war there was a war at the university or at least many college students. In 1964, a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley Mario Savio urged him to "wear his body with gears and wheels" in the era of college student protests, and embarked on virtually protesting actions. The aircraft is Bloody business. In 1969, the student was shot in Berkeley 's protest. The following year, four students were shot dead by Ohio State Guard at Kent State University. Approximately four months later, bombs planted by radicalists exploded for the US military at the University of Wisconsin research center. Researchers were killed
Professor Knot is a professor of the National Security Bureau of the US Naval War College. Prior to joining War College he served as Project Director of Ronald Reagan and Edward M. Kennedy Oral History Program at the Mirror Public Relations Center.
Nearly 30 politically conservative student publications were published nationwide in the early 1980s when Ronald Reagan took office as President and the country was in the midst of the cold war. Starting with the creation of the Dartmouth Review of 1980, the campaign spread to top countries in several countries, including Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University, University of Chicago, Northwestern University, Columbia University, University of California, San Diego, Stanford University It was. In Stanford University, the creator of the first Stanford review in 1981 wanted that his newspaper was a magazine useful for balancing political discourse in most liberal schools. According to Lew Davies, former chairman of this publication, the comment was "correspondence to a small, free liberal group" and protested that Jimmy Carter resumed mandatory registration in 1980.