Journalism

UCLA surgeon wins civil case

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UCLA surgeon wins civil case Thursday, March 11, 2004 By David Kute BRUIN CONTRIBUTORdkute@media.ucla.edu A UCLA Medical Center surgeon and professor of cardiothoracic surgery accused of sexual harassment, retaliation, and creating a hostile environment won a judgement by a Los Angeles Superior Court last week. The civil lawsuit was filed last March by plaintiffs Judith […]

Essays

Chinese Immigration and the Exclusion Acts

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David Kute History 154 11/20/05 Professor Lytle This work is original and unpublished by David Kute         The incorporation of California as a state in 1850 coincided with the much publicized discovery of gold in 1848 along the American River. A great influx of immigrants was to follow, and amongst the many […]

Essays

The Problem of the Intellectual Writer

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David Kute Honors Section 03/24/04 Professor Baum                 From the very beginnings of the Chinese Communist Party, the role of the intellectual writer presented a problem to the party leadership. The intellectual writer, in fact, was the victim of two of the CCP’s great political campaigns in the […]

Essays

Dangers and Rewards for Renaissance Merchants

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David Kute Honors 107 Collegium 06/2006 Professor Ciavolella             In fourteenth century Italy, international trade was a driving sector of the urban economy (JN, pg.126). At the center of this trade, and the Italian Renaissance economy, stood the figure of the merchant. Oftentimes, the merchant acted as the intermediary between […]

Essays

Criticisms of Democracy

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David Kute PS 111A Professor Sissa 02/15/06               Within the ancient Greek world, the democratic form of government was associated with a set of principles that served as its raison d’etre. These positive attributes included freedom, equality, diversity, and justice. The importance of these democratic values is highlighted by an exchange from Euripides’ Suppliant […]

Essays

Gilgamesh and Immortality

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Gilgamesh and Immortality History 104, Professor Englund, 11/20/05 This work is original and unpublished by David Kute   For the people living in Mesopotamia during the third millennium B.C., the supernatural was a common part of life. Sumerians and the later Semitic speaking peoples of the region had substantial contact with rituals and esoteric methods […]

Essays

Tito and Stalin

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Tito and Stalin An analysis into why the Soviet response to independence differed in Yugoslavia              David Kute Honors Research Paper History 127 C 06/11/04 Professor Knudsen        In 1956, the political situation in Hungary emerged as a threat to Soviet hegemony in East Europe. In the post-WWII […]

Essays

Causes of the French Revolution

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David Kute Professor Summerhill History 191 03/2006 By late 1789, with the storming of the Bastille, the French Revolution had become irrevocable (WD, pg. 204). A return to the days of the Ancien Regime was unlikely, and the Revolution’s impact on the rest of Europe was extensive. Contemporary observers, witnessing events as they unfolded and […]

Essays

The Demise of the July Monarchy

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David Kute History 124B, Professor Ford, Honors Contract 04/11/05 This work is original and unpublished by David Kute The demise of the July Monarchy had, according to contemporaries, been unexpected. Alexis De Tocqueville had written that “the Revolution of February was unforeseen by all ….”(AT, pg. 229) Another contemporary, Karl Marx, had remarked that “the […]

Essays

Painting Superior to Sculpture

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David Kute Honors 107 06/05/06   In the Philosophy of the Art of Painting, Leonardo Da Vinci argues that painting is the ultimate art. This is due to the fact that the “eye, which is called the window of the soul, is the principal means by which the central sense can most completely and abundantly […]