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Folly Beach, South Carolina is located just 15 miles south of world famous Charleston, SC. It's located on James Island, and is accessible from Charleston or Interstate 26.
By Katherine Barbee | Published 7/17/2007
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Approximately 300 feet off the Northeastern tip of Folly Island, SC stands the regal and proud Morris Island Lighthouse.
By Deanna Anderson | Published 6/12/2007
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Folly Pier has been burnt down twice in 20 years and been wrecked by a Hurricane. Folly Pier is still a popular tourist destination and always has been.
By AC writer | Published 6/12/2007
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Folly Island is a barrier island only 7 square miles but is packed with lots of family fun.
By Deanna Anderson | Published 6/11/2007
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The Praise of Folly, though difficult to get a firm handle on, is a fascinating and creative book. Erasmus manages to make bold allegations and criticisms within a humorous and almost passive context.
By Sterling Justice | Published 2/7/2006
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A funny look at a jolly man.
By Marsha Coles | Published 1/27/2008
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Why restrictive terms and conditions of use will see craft suppliers/manufacturers failing.
By Steve Smy | Published 11/7/2007
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The Gospel versus man's wisdom.
By Ethan Longhenry | Published 8/29/2007
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Decisions you have to make are sometimes difficult and it's hard to know what to do. This describes that.
By Marissa Stanfield | Published 5/14/2007
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the current war
By J Wu | Published 3/16/2007
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A play on assembly of words regarding Mark Foley. The major point is that 'this too will pass', but expect more in this degenerate society.
By Guy Michaud | Published 10/30/2006
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Are the beaches in your location overcrowded? Are you looking for a more down to earth nightlife? Looking to get involved with the locals while you're visiting someplace new?
By Calissa Leigh | Published 9/18/2005
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In mid October, the South Carolina Aquarium released a rehabilitated male sea turtle back into the Atlantic Ocean. From Folly Beach, the 310 pound logger head turtle, nick named "Edisto" swam back into the waters from which he was rescued in Edisto Beach.
By Charles Duncan | Published 10/24/2007
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To presume solidarity in a universe riddled with stars so numerous, and predictably billions of planetary systems would be the folly of the human race.
By Glen A. Richter | Published 9/20/2007
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How to get rid of mosquitoes the correct way.
By Stephen Joltin | Published 9/4/2007
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A young man's folly in the 1980s...read and learn!
By Carl Halling | Published 9/1/2007
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A call to clarify universal healthcare and get everyone involved now is tackling the American Healthcare crisis. These points hit home for millions of Americans.
By Richard L. Naran | Published 8/30/2007
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Often the most painful parts of our lives teach us the most important lessons.
By JD McVey | Published 8/22/2007
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What is the purpose of religion if it is about proving the Truth when the Truth is self-evident? There is no appropriate reason for spreading the gospels of any religion when even in itself are tumults void of a resolution. They say it was 'Folly's Dynasty' then....
By P. Princeton Prasad | Published 6/27/2007
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There are lots of beautiful beaches along the South Carolina coast. In the Charleston, SC vicinity there are three beaches that locals and tourists alike love to while away hot sunny days; Isle of Palms, Sullivan's Island, and Folly Beach.
By Laura Brady | Published 6/6/2007
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Alan Wolfe: "Conservatives cannot govern well for the same reason that vegetarians cannot prepare a world-class boeuf bourguignon: If you believe that what you are called upon to do is wrong, you are not likely to do it very well."
By Jim Stillman | Published 4/23/2007
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One of the rarest psychotic disorders is Shared Psychotic Disorder or folie a deux ("the folly of two"). This is a delusional disorder that is shared by two people that have close emotional ties.
By Cristina Olvera | Published 2/28/2007
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short fiction story about a 3rd grader's struggles with Valentine's Day
By Forrest Freeman | Published 1/26/2007
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Welcome to Ogden Utah. Our city government seems to be jumping from one scheme to another to put our city on the map..
By Stefanie Cragun | Published 8/23/2006
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Technology is obtuse stuff, as likely to irritate listeners as it is put them to sleep. By comparison, in politics, only the snappy explanations that fit on bumper stickers have worth.
By Robert Green | Published 7/19/2006
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Butte, Montana hosts the largest St. Patrick's Day celebration in the state of Montana.
By Eisla Sebastian | Published 2/2/2006
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"The Godfather Part III" came out in Christmas of 1995 and is a much maligned film
though, to be fair, expectations for it were so high that it was doomed to disappoint from the start.
By Daniel Tervoort | Published 1/25/2006
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A triumph in all aspects of cinema presented in a two-DVD set that would rival any independent film study course. It is near impossible to watch this set and not become more educated about the art form.
By El Bicho | Published 1/19/2006
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In Luc Besson's film, Le Dernier Combat, Freud's theory of the self may be applied to the three characters that appear in the interim of the main protagonist's flight from the desert world.
By Carmen Medici | Published 1/11/2006
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Scientists, according to Jose Ortega y Gasset, are the "modern barbarians." An appearance by Nobel Laureate James Watson does not disprove the point.
By Todd Ojala | Published 1/4/2006
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As we are deep in the middle of another end of year feeding frenzy at the shopping malls, the debate rages over what it should be called. In the final analysis, does it really matter?
By Jeff Musall | Published 12/23/2005
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During the beginning of the Restoration period, King Charles' infidelities seemed to condone promiscuous behavior amongst the populous. Seen through William Hogarth's work, the tendency for rake-like behavior lost momentum at the end of the Restoration.
By Abbe Miller | Published 12/9/2005
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E.M. Forster's novel, A Passage to India, not only looks into the effect of colonization on the colonized, but also the colonizer. This essay looks at the role of the colonizer and how the colonizer is affected by colonization.
By J.E. Newman | Published 12/9/2005
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The Arms Export Control Act, as it currently sits, is an effective management tool for arms deals, giving most of the control to the executive, where it should remain.
By B.Krisher | Published 12/6/2005
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The Boise Botanical Gardens don't shut down just because the bulbs are hibernating in the winter- check out their incredible christmas display.
By deide spencer | Published 12/5/2005
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Three new books for the holiday season take a look at Christmas and Santa Claus from the point of view of history, literature and humor.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 12/1/2005
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This paper will examine Shakespeare's Othello using Post-Colonial literary theory as its touchstone.
By Gregory Schneider | Published 11/26/2005
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The desires of the characters in George Moore's The Untilled Field are revealed through their dreams. A unified need is displayed to create a new Ireland for a kind of nationalistic nourishment of the soul.
By Carmen Medici | Published 11/21/2005
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Frankenstein's monster, forced to facilitate his own education, parallels the era's education of women, making the monster's murders of all the weak female characters equally significant: education will eliminate female inferiority.
By Katharine Swan | Published 11/15/2005
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The Hispanic American market is comprised of 39.9 million people, which makes it the largest minority market- with 13.7% of the US population. By 2050 there will be more than 102.6 billion Hispanic-Americans in the United States (www.infoplease.com)
By Cheri Esperon | Published 11/14/2005
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In "Somnambulism: A Fragment" the gothic style conveys terror: Sleepwalking Althorpe murders the woman he desires. Yet, to read the story as a curiosity would miss its parodying against Benjamin Franklin's ideals of industry and pragmatism.
By Gregory Schneider | Published 11/2/2005
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Renaissance England was a hierarchical and oppressive environment for women. In this paper, I'll uncover the layers of female gender-role resistance as represented in Thomas Middleton's and Thomas Dekker's The Roaring Girl.
By Gregory Schneider | Published 11/2/2005
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Othello is a complex play from which some of Shakespeare's most universal themes are conveyed. What makes men and women honorable, and why does their virtue drive others into envy? The essence of this message stands alone in two important characters.
By Jason Cangialosi | Published 10/26/2005
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This story begs two questions: do we really need more pictures of Brad Pitt and do we really need a western staring Casey Affleck?
By Lance Norris | Published 10/13/2005
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A new book explores the meaning of the Apollo space program by interviewing the last living astronauts who walked on the moon.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 10/2/2005
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People are so fascinated by the possibility of life in space that they tend to overlook the reality of life here on earth.
By F.R. | Published 7/6/2005
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Olfindo Pazette takes us on a tour of the streets of Saigon in this segment of the travel journal: A day in Saigon, Ho Chi Minh City.
By Pazette Olfindo | Published 7/2/2005
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"...in more than thirty-five animated features Disney has released...there is scarcely a mention of God as conceived in the Christian and Jewish faiths shared by most people of the Western world and many beyond.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/22/2005
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No one is immune to thoughts, both good and bad, that spread like a virus through whole sectors of society. Teens are in a particularly dangerous position where damage done can be forever.
By Joanne M. Friedman | Published 6/21/2005
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I was always interested in American Colonial and Civil War history as a child, but since I lived in Minnesota there wasn't much I could do about it except read books and go to movies, if any.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/7/2005
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