Anne Cox Chambers Essays

  • Cox's Mission Statement

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cox Communications Cox’s mission, vision and goals: Cox Enterprises was founded in 1898 by former schoolteacher and reporter James M. Cox, whose ambition was to own a newspaper. To realize his dream, he borrowed $26,000 from friends and family and purchased the Dayton Evening (now Daily) News. Cox Enterprises is a media broadcasting company located in Atlanta, GA and it serves many states. It is a third largest cable company in United States. It provides advanced digital video, internet, telephone

  • Cox Enterprises

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cox Enterprises Media Corporations in the Global Marketplace Cox Enterprises, Inc. (CEI) is an Atlanta-based media conglomerate that has ties into nearly all media forms today. Since the founding of Cox Enterprises by James M. Cox in 1898, CEI has been established as a media staple through newspapers, radio, television, cable, telephone, and Internet communications . As of 2000, Cox Enterprises was ranked seventh in AdAge’s “100 Leading Media Companies” . Cox Enterprises is listed on the

  • Mutiny On The Amistad Analysis

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    It is ranked 95th among world art museums, making this place a highly professional and appropriate building to showcase any artwork. Woodruff’s The Mutiny on the Amistad, along with four of his other works, is installed in the High Museum’s Anne Cox Chambers Wing. This piece is asymmetrically balanced and shows more movement and action on the left side of the painting than the right side. Woodruff depicts eleven slaves aggressively fighting and assaulting six of the white shipmen in attempt to

  • Role of Women in Sir Gawain and The Green Knight and The Wife of Bath’s Tale

    1648 Words  | 4 Pages

    ... middle of paper ... ... of Illinois Press. Cox, Catherine S. "Genesis and Gender in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." The Chaucer Review 35.4 (2001): 378-90. Print. Huppé, Bernard F. "Rape and Woman's Sovereignty in the Wife of Bath's Tale." Modern Language Notes 63.6 (1948): 378-81. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Trans. Brian Stone. The Middle Ages, Volume 1A. Eds. Christopher Baswell and Anne Howland Schotter. The Longman Anthology of British Literature