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Search results 691 - 700 of 712 matching essays
- 691: Review of Machiavelli's The Prince
- ... gain domain. If you are allies, then your people are welcome to other countries. And we should not emulate the great battle leaders of the past, we would then be following the example set by Hitler, Stalin, and Rommel. There is a bit of irony compared between modern day and the renaissance. In chapter XVII, Machiavelli is explaining that you can fight by means of law or by means of force ...
- 692: The Lord of the Flies
- ... Ralph's character was supported by the power of World War II. Jack, on the other hand, represents authoritarianism. He rules as a dictator and is the exact opposite of Ralph. Jack is exemplifying the Hitler's and Mussolini's of the world. He is what the world fears and yet follows. This struggle is born at the very beginning and escalates till the very end. The struggle in the book ...
- 693: Touch Wood: Rene
- ... helps Renée to miss Alsace a little less. Renée's parents had left Poland and then Hungary to find a freer, better life. They settled in France and thought they¹d be safe. Then Adolf Hitler, a German man who hated Jewish people, started trouble all over again. First, seven synagogues were blown up. Then, the Germans created a curfew prohibiting Jews to go during certain hours. Any Jew caught in ...
- 694: Night: A Summary
- Night: A Summary During World War II, Hitler formed many concentration camps throughout Germany and Poland. In these camps the people imprisoned, mainly of Jewish or Gypsy descent, were tortured, starved, put through horrific conditions, killed, and worked to death. One of these ...
- 695: Kent State University: May 4th 1970, Monday Bloody Monday
- ... dead is an idler, but the fault is not his You were a student. You studied fine arts. But there is another art-bloody, terrible. That hangman’s art too has its genius. Who was Hitler? A cubist of innovative gas chambers. On behalf of all flowers I condemn your creations, Architects of lies, Directors of murders Rise murdered Allison Krause Like an immortal of the epoch A thorny flower of ...
- 696: Nuclear Physicists And The Development Of A Nuclear Bomb
- ... time friend, Leo Szilard, and other physicists realized that uranium might be used for enormously devastating bombs. They had reason to fear that Nazi Germany might construct such weapons. Einstein, reacting to the danger from Hitler's aggression, had already abandoned his strict pacifism. He now signed a letter that was delivered to President F.D. Roosevelt, warning him to take action. This, and a second Einstein-Szilard letter of March ...
- 697: The End of the 20th Century
- ... Gold was discovered in California in 1848. The first half of the 20th century saw both WWI AND WWII. Unforgettable names like George Washington, Beethoven, Mozart, Thomas Edison, Christopher Columbus, Martin Luther King Jr., Shakespeare, Hitler, Joan of Arc, Einstein, Napoleon, The Kennedy’s, and da Vinci all led there lives during this millennium. So as we cap off such a memorial millenium, we will also see what is to come ...
- 698: Immigrants In 17th Century United States
- ... jobs, meanwhile founding numerous institutions to ease adjustment to American life. Countless immigrant women found their first American employment in shops. Despite such successes, the American Jewish community was not prepared for the catastrophe of Hitler’s Holocaust in Europe. Jews had long fought to convince their fellow Americans of their loyalty, and many now reared that a old advocacy of intervention in Europe during the isolationist 1930s would undo their ...
- 699: Assassination of JFK: Conspiracy or Single-Gunman?
- Assassination of JFK: Conspiracy or Single-Gunman? Adolf Hitler, the Nazi dictator of Germany during World War II, once said, "The bigger the lie, the more people will believe it.". Although this may sound ludicrous, we can see many example of this in the ...
- 700: Leo Szilard and the Atomic Bomb
- ... Years later in 1939 the atom was split and Dr. Leo Szilard would play a critical part in the making of the atomic bomb. April 24, 1939 physicist Paul Harteck and Lord Rutherford wrote to Hitler's war office telling him about the newest development in nuclear physics. Professor Hans Geiger co-inventor of the Geiger counter was shown this letter. In June of that year Geiger's close associates published ...
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