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Adoph Hitler

... of 1907, and Hitler tried again at the Academy School of Fine Arts. He was, again, rejected due to severe competition of acceptance. Hitler sold his paintings on the streets in order to survive. In August 1914, Hitler volunteered for the army. Later in his army career he received two of the most honorable awards, the first class iron cross. A man told Hitler of a rumor stating the Bavarian government is going to break away from Germany and join Austria. Outraged, Hitler gave many persuasive speeches on why the government shouldn’t break aw ...

Number of words: 652 | Number of pages: 3

Henry VIII

... He was also very smart. He could speak French, Latin, and a bit of Spanish. He loved Hunting. His favorite sports were hunting ,of course, and wrestling. Henry had and an older brother named Arthur. He was he was the family heir to the throne. Therefore, his father arranged a marriage for him. He was to marry Catherine of Aragon when he turned sixteen years old. Arthur seemed to be healthy, in fact, he danced at his wedding for a long time without a bit of fatigue and weakness or sweat it was believed to be said by Royal Court Jester a ...

Number of words: 1556 | Number of pages: 6

Billy Sunday

... defenders, and they were just as loud in their praise as the critics were in their criticism. Whether people stood for or against the Reverend William A. Sunday, they all agreed that it was difficult to be indifferent toward him. The religious leader was so extraordinarily popular, opinionated, and vocal that indifference was the last thing that he would get from people. His most loyal admirers were confident that this rural-breed preacher was God’s mouthpiece, calling Americans to repentance. Sunday’s critics said that at bes ...

Number of words: 2343 | Number of pages: 9

Edward Gein

... La Crosse the year Eddie was born, so she could save enough money to move away from the sinners in the city. In 1914 they moved to Plainfield, Wisconsin to a one-hundred-ninety-five-acre farm, isolated from any evil influences that could disrupt her family. Eddie's father died in 1940. ( In the Beginning ) Eddie was average in school, but he loved to read. His schoolmates shunned Eddie because he was effeminate and shy. He had no friends. In 1944 Eddies brother Henry mysteriously died. ( In the Beginning) On December 29, 1945, Augusta died a ...

Number of words: 1533 | Number of pages: 6

Thomas Jefferson

... In small private schools, notably that of James Maury, he was thoroughly grounded in the classics. He attended the College of William and Mary--completing the course in 1762--where Dr. William Small taught him mathematics and introduced him to science. He associated intimately with the liberal-minded Lt. Gov. Francis Fauquier, and read law (1762-1767) with George Wythe, the greatest law teacher of his generation in Virginia. Jefferson became unusually good at law. He was admitted to the bar in 1767 and practiced until 1774, when the cou ...

Number of words: 3867 | Number of pages: 15

Colleen McCullough: Author Obsessed Over Love

... to Australia in the 1920s. Her mother was a New Zealander with a mixture of Irish Catholic and Maori ancestry. McCullough’s father was rarely in the McCullough home on account of his occupation. This left it up to Mrs. McCullough to raise the author primarily by herself. It also affected McCullough; she began to look for paternal substitutes in her mother’s nine unmarried brothers. Growing up McCullough attended twelve years in a convent school. She then went on to Holy Cross College and obtained honors in English, chemistry, and ...

Number of words: 437 | Number of pages: 2

J.D. Salinger's Personal Life

... letters from people who expect you to respond and then get angry when you don't? Even if every letter and every person just said "thanks for everything you gave me", I suspect it would get a bit old. Remember, he's not "the writer", he's a regular person who happens to have a talent for writing. The same goes for dishing the dirt on his life. He's a private person who wrote very personal stories. I feel that, even if there is not enough on the pages to satisfy, what is there is filling enough. He gave the world one novel and 35 short s ...

Number of words: 607 | Number of pages: 3

Mohandes Gandhi

... helped in him in his protest to abolish the injustices for Indians. Finally, after months, years of hardship & struggle, through the many protests he held, and after the hundreds of hours he spent in jail, the British finally gave in and India was declared a free country. I would believe that the freedom of India was the final accomplishment for Gandhi but ironically many more difficulties would lie ahead. Gandhi went through several times where he fasted for long amounts of time, to end the fighting and hatred that had began between Hin ...

Number of words: 302 | Number of pages: 2

Charles W. Chesnutt

... By 14 he had published his first short story in a Fayetteville newspaper. "I think I must write a book It has been my cherished dream and I feel an influence that I cannot resist calling me to the task."(1) At 15 Charles dropped out of school to support his family. By the age of 16, he had come to Charlotte to teach the city's black schoolchildren and also to support his family. He had an intense thirst for knowledge. At a time when few educational opportunities existed for black Americans, he studied math, music, litera ...

Number of words: 971 | Number of pages: 4

Calvin Coolidge

... him as the next president of the United States on the family Bible. In his six years as president of the United States, was considered to be a heroic president; not for what he did, but for what he did not do. Therein lies his political genius as Walter Lippmann, a White House advisor for Coolidge in 1926, pointed out: "... his talent for effectively doing nothing. This active inactivity suits the mood and certain needs of the country admirably. It suits all the business interests which wants to be let alone... And it suits al ...

Number of words: 1929 | Number of pages: 8

Raymond Mary Kolbe

... for both, and was filled thereafter with the most ardent desire to love and serve this Immaculate Queen. Also in response to this, Kolbe joined the Order of Friars Minor Conventual at Lwow in Austrian Occupied Poland, where he took the name Maximilian, and in 1910 he entered the Franciscan Order. Father Kolbe can be compared to the Whiskey priest as they both wanted to help others understand the importance of religion and faith. In 1912, after finishing preliminary studies at the junior seminary, Maximilian was sent to Rome where he st ...

Number of words: 1013 | Number of pages: 4

Frost

... grew-up he attended high school in that state, later would enter Dartmouth College, but would remain there less that one semester. Later he returned to Massachusetts where he would be a school teacher along with two other jobs he held as a mill worker and a newspaper reporter. Then in 1895 married Elinor White whom he had been co-valedictorians with in high school. Then between 1897 and 1899 felt the need to go back to college he attended Harvard as a special student only to leave without a degree. Over the next ten years he would wri ...

Number of words: 694 | Number of pages: 3

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