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Albert Camus

... But his journalistic activities had been chiefly a response to the demands of the time; in 1947 Camus retired from political journalism and, besides writing his fiction and essays, was very active in the theatre as producer and playwright (e.g., Caligula, 1944). He also adapted plays by Calderon, Lope de Vega, Dino Buzzati, and Faulkner's Requiem for a Nun. His love for the theatre may be traced back to his membership in L'Equipe, an Algerian theatre group, whose "collective creation" Révolte dans les Asturies (1934) was banned for polit ...

Number of words: 366 | Number of pages: 2

Elie Wiesel

... of Signet”(Wiesel 3). He was Elie's teacher until he was forced to leave Signet by the Hungarians because he was a foreign Jew. After several months Elie saw Moshe the Beadle once again. Moshe the Beadle told his story about his journey that the Jews were forced to get out and dig grave which would become final resting places for prisoners who were killed. Luckily, Moshe the Beadle was able to escape. He pretended that he was dead in order to escape being killed. Not only did Moshe tell his story to Elie, he wanted to warn the Jews of ...

Number of words: 2392 | Number of pages: 9

Pablo Picasso

... poor at this time. Picasso's most important work of his Blue Period was La Vie (Couple Nu et Femme avec Enfant) of 1903. During this period, he would prefer to paint beggars because it allowed him to see both sides of the world. Picasso's Blue period ended in 1904, when he fell in love with a girl named Fernande. This was the beginning of the Rose Period. In the Rose Period, his works were filled with delicate reds and bright pinks. During this period, the figures in Picasso's paintings became more robust. In these paintings, f ...

Number of words: 470 | Number of pages: 2

Margaret Thatcher

... the Conservative party to victory in 1979. Thatcher is the only British prime minister in the twentieth century to serve three consecutive terms. In 1990, controversy over Thatcher's tax policy and her reluctance to commit Great Britain to full economic integration with Europe inspired a strong challenge to her leadership. Ms. Thatcher was ousted from leadership, and resigned in November 1990 and was succeeded as party leader and prime minister by her protégée, John Major: who, consequently, only served one short term. M ...

Number of words: 1948 | Number of pages: 8

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

... man into the world with a bright future. (Freedman, p.8-11) While growing up, Roosevelt never attended public schools, always private. In 1896, Franklin’ s parents placed him in Groton, a very exclusive prep/boarding school, located in Massachusetts. (Freedman, p.13) It was at Groton, where Roosevelt would learn about manners, etiquette, as well as how to be successful later in life, which he soon would be on his way to political fame. After leaving Groton, Roosevelt would go on to attend Harvard, in the fall of 1900. He would exce ...

Number of words: 1911 | Number of pages: 7

My Secret Confessions From The Grave: Al Capone

... from the brother of an ugly girl I had insulted which left three scares scars on my face. Soon after, I joined the James Street gang, which was headed by a guy named Johnny Torrio. In 1920, Torrio asked me to go to Chicago and work with his uncle who controlled the city’s largest prostitution and gambling ring at the time, and boy did I like that idea. Later that year the Prohibition act came into affect and I became interested in selling illegal whiskey and other alcoholic beverages. Torrio’s uncle did not agree with this idea but w ...

Number of words: 906 | Number of pages: 4

Josef Stalin

... In 1899, Stalin began working as a propagandist for the Social- Democratic party (A Marxist revolutionary group). He was caught and arrested by the police in 1902, and spent more than a year in prison before being exiled to Siberia. Stalin escaped in 1904, and married his first wife, Yekaterina Svanidze. She died six years later, in 1910. After her death, Stalin was subsequently arrested eight times, six in which he escaped. He was last arrested in 1913, in which he spent four years in exile and was released in 1917. ...

Number of words: 558 | Number of pages: 3

Modibo Diarra

... human being. At a recent hoop tournament that I was covering, I was amazed to see how much excitement there was when Modibo stepped onto the court. At first, I thought well, everybody in the gym must be here to see this extraordinary 6'9" shot blocker perform. It is true a lot of people did want to see him perform on the court, but there is a different type of fan cheering when Modibo is out there. Friends close to him will tell you that Modibo has a following in and around Boston. People who don't even follow basketball still go to games and ...

Number of words: 670 | Number of pages: 3

Machiavelli - The Prince

... paid for writing The Prince, it wasn’t even originally a book, but a series of letters to the Prince Lorenzo de Medici. He wrote it during exile, after he had been arrested and tortured by Medici’s people, so it is doubtful that they had a bountiful relationship. Machiavelli’s intent, it would seem to the naked eye, was not to taunt the Prince, but to give him advice about how to survive on the throne and to also keep the dynasty in his family after his death. It appeared that he wanted to help the Prince to kee ...

Number of words: 820 | Number of pages: 3

Escher

... Echer lived in Italy in 1922 and settled in Rome in 1924. He stayed in Rome for 10 years but went on many tours to such places as Calabria, Sicily, Corsica and spain. In 1934 he moved to Switzaland for 2 years and then he moved to brussles for 5 years. Then finaly in 1941 he stayed in Holland for the rest of his life. THE WORK... 's art work was usally buildings that confused you, he also did lots of architecture. The work he did was very mind boggaling and quite imposible, an example of this imposibillityis demonstraited in the peice Asce ...

Number of words: 264 | Number of pages: 1

John Dalton

... laymen and candidates for the ministry. The Universities of Cambridge and Oxford were only open at that time to members of the Church of England. He resigned this position in 1800 to become secretary of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society and served as a public and private teacher of mathematics and chemistry. ’s first scientific work was to keep a diary, which he began in 1787 and continued until the end of his life. It ultimately to contained 200,000 entries of meteorological observations recording the changeable climate o ...

Number of words: 733 | Number of pages: 3

John Fitzgerald Kennedy

... America and his presidency had an importance beyond its political achievements. was born in Brookline, Massachusetts where he was one of nine children. The Kennedy family was very wealthy and provided means for the Kennedy children to pursue whatever they chose and John F. Kennedy chose politics. John F. Kennedy was elected to Congress in 1942 and as a new member Kennedy supported legislation that would serve the interests of his elements. Kennedy usually backed bills sponsored by his party but would sometimes show independence by v ...

Number of words: 1595 | Number of pages: 6

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