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Help With American History Papers
It Was For The Best: The Long Island Railroad Massacre
... the 90 passengers in his car. After Colin Ferguson used up the fifteen bullets in the clip struggled to reload it three of the passengers riding on the commuter train overpowered him. But by then it was too late, the car looked as if it had been painted red. This crazed gunman had shot 25 people. Six of them died and nineteen of them were injured. Carolyn McCarthy’s son Kevin, was among the passengers who were wounded and her dead husband Dennis was found slumped over his lap. Kevin was the most severely wounded of the survivors. He was left partially paralyzed as a result of the Long Island Railroad Massacr ...
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Hades
... about letting people out of the underworld. himself, rarely leaves the underworld. In one myth, however, we know of a time when he did leave his soulful domain. became very lonely in the underworld, and went above and kidnapped Demeter’s daughter, Persephone, for his wife.Persephone, nonetheless, was not ’ only significant other. had a mistress called Minthe whom Persephone later transformed into a plant. is also known as the god of wealth due to the precious metals mined from the earth. He has been said to possess a helmet that was given to him by the Cyclops. This helmet has been said to make ...
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The Civil War
... policies and Lincoln. But now he swore his loyalty with stirring words, "This is my flag, which I will follow and defend." This speech gave great assurance that the masses in the great cities were devoted to the Union and ready to enlist for its defense.
More than 400,000 European immigrants fought for the Union, including more than 170,00 Germans and more than 150,00 Irish. Many saw their services as a proud sacrifice. The first officer to die for the Union was Captain Constatin Blandowski, one of many immigrants who earlier had fought for freedom in Europe and then joined Lincoln's army. Born in Upper Sil ...
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The History Of Greek Theater
... The two worlds were not separate, as the gods lived in the same world
as the men, and they interfered in the men’s lives as they chose to.
It was the gods who sent suffering and evil to men. In the plays of
Sophocles, the gods brought about the hero’s downfall because of a
tragic flaw in the character of the hero.
In Greek tragedy, suffering brought knowledge of worldly
matters and of the individual. Aristotle attempted to explain how an
audience could observe tragic events and still have a pleasurable
experience. Aristotle, by searching the works of writers of Greek
tragedy, Aeschulus, Euripides ...
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King's "A Letter From Birmingham City Jail": An Analysis
... and the other is a speech, to be
heard by many.
A Letter from Birmingham City Jail is exactly that; it is a letter
King wrote to a group of clergy members who disapproved of his actions in
Birmingham City. The fact that this is a letter is blatantly apparent right
from the beginning, King's use of first person clearly defines it as him
talking to the clergy members, not a convention, or a rally, nothing
general.
In his first paragraph, King establishes why he is in Birmingham,
however, he is not clear, as he states, ". . . [he], along with several
members of [his] staff, [are] [there] because [he] was invited [t ...
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Russia
... work but were mostly kept n check until the reactionary movement in the late 20th century.
In this period there were some tremendous works of art that were completed. Lev Efimovich Kerbel finished his monument to Karl Marx, which was made of granite. He later would when the Lenin Prize for it a year later in 1962. Also a great limestone sculpture of B.L. Pasternak which is located at the Tret'iakov Gallery was finished by Sarra Lededeva. These exhibits helped make 1961 a great period for art. There were other publications that helped characterize this time. Many great works were done in architecture. Nik ...
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Hostile Takeover Of The New World
... United States government failed miserably in its attempt to deal with the Indians. By pushing them further and further West, they pushed the Indians to hate and distrust the white man to the point of war. These wars resulted in hundreds of white deaths. However, the wars resulted in the destruction of several entire Indian tribes and the near extinction of Indian spirit throughout America. The tale is a sad one, one that Americans should not be proud of. After every broken treaty, the Americans blamed the Indians for existing, despite the want of the Indians to simply live on their lands peacefully.
The "Trail of Tea ...
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Why Art Is Important To Religion
... history of religion as well as the future.
Religious art helps people that are looking for security and hope. Today society is looking for peace and an anchor to hold onto. This religious art lifts the spirit and brings peace within through a beautiful way. It helps reassure people that there is a life after this one. One needs not fear the power of God but to understand his actions and the way one should live his or her life.
Art through the ages has been a powerful voice for both secular and religious ideas, and the treasury of Christian art should not be relegated to museum viewing. The art should be displayed in ...
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The Declaration Of Independence
... the Mayflower Compact, the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, and the Massachusetts Body of Liberties as one in relation to it is clear to see how some ideas have survived and still impact us today.
As fledgling colonies the framers of these documents were out to create a society in which their needs could be satisfactorily meet, goals easily obtained, and wellbeing protected. The early colonials were loyalist whose sole purpose was to obey their king and spread the gospel and the society expressed such ideas. Every aspect of social life if not controlled by the king was determined by the Bible but by compari ...
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More About The 1968 Tet Offensive
... camp," I read a book published in the early 1980's in America
about the story of the 1968 Tet Offensive. It said that the North
Vietnamese Army supreme command had imitated one of the greatest heroes of
Vietnam, King Quang Trung, who won the most spectacular victory over the
Chinese aggressors in the 1789 counter-attack - in planning the 1968
operations.
The book quoted King Quang Trung's tactic of surprise. He let the troops
celebrate the 1789 Tet Festival one day ahead so that he could launch the
attacks on the first three days of the lunar new year while the Chinese
troops were still feasti ...
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