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» Biographies Essays and Papers
Al Capone
<view this essay>.... was a man who of the many prohibition leaders,
lead the way for the mafia in the early 19 hundreds. Due to the prohibition era,
Al Capone transformed the mafia into today's business like criminal organization.
Organized crime in the 19th century, was an ever booming scene for the average
citizen. Since the 19th century, crime and business seemed to have gone hand in
hand since the prohibition days of Capone. Long before Al Capone became involved
in bootlegging, his excitement in life was the economic opportunity of being a
gangster on the streets. As soon as Capone reached the legal age of fourteen, he
dropped out of school to live this economic dream of ma .....
Number of words: 1340 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Ernest Hemingway
<view this essay>.... are used to show the damaging psychological and physical effects of World War I.
Hemingway knew first hand the horrors of war. In May of 1918, Hemingway became an honorary second lieutenant in the Red Cross, but could not join the army because he had a defective left eye. Hemingway first went to Paris, and soon after receiving new orders he traveled to Milan, Italy. The day he arrived, an ammunition factory exploded and he had to carry mutilated bodies and body parts to a makeshift morgue. This was definitely a most terrifying moment for the young Hemingway. After being seriously injured weeks later, Hemingway found himself recovering at a hospital in Milan. .....
Number of words: 1599 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Salinger's Writing Style
<view this essay>.... how Holden feels and he can use his own
feelings to write the story. It is hard to know exactly how a person feels,
but you know your own feelings very well. Because Salinger's feelings are
the same as Holden, he can tell them directly to the reader. Feelings are
hard to make up and until you feel them, you cannot fully experience and
understand them. He also writes in a way as if he was talking to you
directly. I can almost hear Holden in my mind telling the story to me.
This makes it much more real and it seems as if I was taking part in the
story. I also like how the story moves on and does not stay on an incident
or topic for more than one chapter. .....
Number of words: 311 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Moll Flanders
<view this essay>.... or did the pain, paranoia, and emotional trauma that came along the way extract a price that is much greater then the wealth that she eventually achieved? The answer is that the suffering that Moll experienced was not worth the final outcome. Although Moll reached her goals in the end, she would have had a more fulfilling and gratifying life had she suppressed her vanity and price and accepted her role in society and lived accordingly.
Moll began life in the low class. Not much nobility or status was expected of the orphan born in Newgate Prison, and in English society, there was little chance for Moll to escape this class. But Moll had the blessing o .....
Number of words: 1164 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Czar Nicholas II
<view this essay>.... though seemingly right at the time, would later have a part in the death of his reign.
was short, only about five foot six inches tall. His other relatives seemed to tower above him. Though he worked out in his private gym daily, he would always be seen as slight and wiry. Because his legs were so short, most people agreed that he looked most regal when mounted on horseback. He always wore his brown hair parted on the left. His beard, also brown, was streaked with golden highlights as if the sun had reached out and stroked it with a kindly finger. The Czar had a nervous habit of brushing his mustache up with the back of his hand. In time, this gesture w .....
Number of words: 711 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Harriet Tubman 3
<view this essay>.... in the Underground Railroad and as a scout for the North in the Civil War made her a hero against slavery.
Araminta Ross was either born in 1820 or 1821 on a plantation in Dorchester County, Maryland. Records were not kept of slave births so her birthdate is a mystery. She was a fortunate slave girl because she had her mother by her side to raise her. It was common to have a slave mother and her children split apart by the slave trade. Araminta had barely any clothes to wear; usually just a soiled cotton dress. She slept as close to the fire as possible on cold nights and sometimes stuck her toes into the smoldering ashes to avoid frostbite. Cornmeal was her .....
Number of words: 2104 | Number of pages: 8 |
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Adolf Hitler
<view this essay>.... to the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna but was rejected for lack of talent. Staying in Vienna until 1913, he lived first on an orphan's pension, later on small earnings from pictures he drew. He read voraciously, developing anti-Jewish and antidemocratic convictions, an admiration for the outstanding individual, and a contempt for the masses.
In World War I, Hitler, by then in Munich, volunteered for service in the Bavarian army. He proved a dedicated, courageous soldier, but was never promoted beyond private first class because his superiors thought him lacking in leadership qualities. After Germany's defeat in 1918 he returned to Munich, remaining in the arm .....
Number of words: 1185 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Search
<view this essay>.... to St. Grigory of Nicea (Fuhrmann 1). Although the actual date and place of birth cannot be determined, one fact is known for certain: Rasputin had an influence over the health of the young Aleksey Nickolayovich, “hemophiliac heir to the Russian throne” (Rasputin). Grigory had been against war, but was recognized for his drunkeness (Radzinsky 271). Before Rasputin got his job with the Russian family, he lived off donations from peasants because of his claim of being a “self- proclaimed holy man” (Rasputin).
“[Grigory] underwent a religious conversion at 18, where he was introduced to the Khlysty sect” (Rasputin). Rasputin’s ideas were heretical from .....
Number of words: 542 | Number of pages: 2 |
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