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Help With Biography Papers
Karl Marx
... His mother, a Dutch Jewess named Henrietta Pressburg, had no interest in Karl's intellectual side during his life. His father was a Jewish lawyer, and before his death in 1838, converted his family to Christianity to preserve his job with the Prussian state. When Heinrich's mother died, he no longer felt he had an obligation to his religion, thus helping him in the decision in turning to Christianity. Karl's childhood was a happy and care-free one. His parents had a good relationship and it help set Karl in the right direction." His 'splendid natural gifts' awakened in his father the hope that they would one da ...
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Charles Manson: Orgins Of A Madman
... often neglected Charles after her husband left her.
She tried to put him into a foster home, but the arrangements fell through.
As a last resort she sent Charles to school in Terre Haute, Indiana. Mrs.
Manson failed to make the payments for the school and once again Charles
was sent back to his mother's abuse. At only fourteen, Manson left his
mother and rented a room for himself. He supported himself with odd jobs
and petty theft. His mother turned him into the juvenile authorities, who
had him sent to "Boys Town," a juvenile detention center, near Omaha,
Nebraska. Charles spent a total of three days in " ...
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Theodore Roosevelt’s Domestic Accomplishments As President
... established many national parks. He strengthened the position of labor forces. Roosevelt reversed the traditional federal policy of Lassez-Faire, and sought to bring order social justice and fair dealings to the American industry and commerce. He expanded the powers of responsibility of the presidential office, establishing the model of the modern presidency, which has been followed by most of his presidential successors in the White House.
One of his greatest achievements was his work for conservation. During his tenure in office he designated one hundred and fifty national forests, the first 51 federa ...
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William Shakespeare
... grave reads
Good friend, for Jesus sake forbear
To dig the dust enclosed here
Blessed be the man that spares these stones
And cursed be he that moves my bones.
-seven years after his death his friends John Hemings and Henry Condell published a book containing 36 plays, which was called the "First Folio"
-"He was not of an age, but for all time." Ben Johnson
His Life in the Theatre
-considered to be the greatest dramatist in the world
-only the Bible is read more than Shakespeare's plays
-from 1593 - 1613 he wrote 37 plays, acted, helped manage an acting troup and was part owner of the "Old Globe Theatre"
-159 ...
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The Writings Of Cicero
... Rome itself, from the ideal
governing body to the place of divination. Cicero does not offer any
alternate answers to roman society, which robs him of being truly a unique
and bold political philosopher. This is not to say however some of his
doctrines are untrue, just that he is somewhat blinded by his roman beliefs
and assumptions.
The assumptions of Cicero can be noticed when one inspects his view of the
ideal governing body, which he expresses through Scipio (in the
commonwealth). Although Cicero presents very convincing arguments for a
Composite government, clearly his view is possibly only due towards his ...
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Winston Churchill
... He
graduated in 1894. After service in Cuba and India, he worked as a war-
correspondent in Northern India, Sudan and in South Africa, where he was
captured by the Boers. His daring escape made him an overnight celebrity.
Churchill always wanted to become a politician. His wish came true in 1900, when
he was elected to the Parliment as a Conservative, and he quickly made his mark.
His political sympathies began to change, however, and he "changed sides" in
1904, when he abandoned the Conservative party for the Liberals. When the
Liberals came to power in 1905, Churchill entered the government as secretary of
state f ...
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Biography Of Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
... was here
that he wrote his first novel, Player Piano. Vonnegut's next move was
resigning from his job to fulfill his dream. He moved to Provincetown,
Massachusetts so he could concentrate on his writing.
For the next seven years Vonnegut worked on novel titled "Upstairs and
Downstairs." He never did finish this novel. He received income by
starting a Saab dealership and writing short stories.
In 1957, his father died of lung cancer. His sister and her
husband soon died which would one day lead him to write the novel Slapstick.
Kurt Vonnegut's writing style is exemplified in the novel
Slaughte ...
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Nies Bohr
... Copenhagen, Denmark. His father, Christian, was a professor at the University of Copenhagen and his brother, Harold, was a great mathematician. He entered the university in 1903. In 1907, he earned his PhD went to England to study with J.J. Thomson and Ernest Rutherfurd. He returned to Copenhagen in 1916 as a professor at the university. He became the director of the university's Institute for Theoretical Physics in 1920, to which he attracted many world-renowned physicist. In 1922, he won the Nobel Prize for his work on the atomic structure. When he visited the United States in 1939, he brought the knowledge that t ...
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Karl Marx
... of harboring liberal ideals. Marx
himself seemed to be a devoted Christian with a "longing for self-sacrifice
on behalf of humanity." In October of 1835, he started attendance at the
University of Bonn, enrolling in non-socialistic-related classes like Greek
and Roman mythology and the history of art. During this time, he spent a
day in jail for being "drunk and disorderly-the only imprisonment he
suffered" in the course of his life. The student culture at Bonn included,
as a major part, being politically rebellious and Marx was involved,
presiding over the Tavern Club and joining a club for poets that ...
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Ferdinand Magellan
... farmed the land), raise the animals and harvest the crops. Ferdinand went to school at a monastery.
Both his parents died when Ferdinand was only ten years old. At the age of twelve, he was sent to live at the court of Queen Leonora and John II of Portugal. His older brother, Diago, had gone to court two years earlier. His cousin, named Francisco Serrano also twelve years old, came at the same time as Ferdinand did. At court Ferdinand learned music, dance, horsemanship and how to handle weapons, in addition to academic subjects such as reading, writing and religion. Also he learned algebra, geometry, astronomy and ...
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