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Causes Of The Civil War
Number of words: 386 - Number of pages: 2.... When the Republican candidate, Abraham Lincoln was elected in 1860,
the South felt threatened, and because expansion was vital to the survival
of slavery they also felt their way of life was being threatened. Because
slavery was such an important part of Southern society, the South felt that
they could not survive without it. That's why they were not willing to
compromise with the north. To own slaves was a sign of wealth and social
prestige and poor farmers who could not afford slaves had a goal to work
for. In the election of 1860 you can see that Lincoln only secured 4% of
the popular vot .....
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Great Depression
Number of words: 1624 - Number of pages: 6.... in 1923 to $89 billion in 1929. However, the rewards of the "Coolidge Prosperity" of the 1920's were not shared evenly among all Americans. In 1929 the top 0.1% of Americans controlled 34% of all savings, while 80% of Americans had no savings at all. Automotive industry mogul Henry Ford is one example of the unequal distribution of wealth between the rich and the middle-class. Henry Ford reported a personal income of $14 million in the same year that the average persons income was $750. By present day standards Mr. Ford would be earning over $345 million a year! This lack of distribution .....
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The Civil War
Number of words: 2485 - Number of pages: 10.... seceding from the Union to keep their slaves, but also to protect their way of life. Because they did not want to change their lifestyles like the North.
On February 4, the seceding states met in Montgomery, Alabama. There, they formed the Confederate States of America. They also made Montgomery their capital. They wrote a constitution, chose a legislature, and elected a president. The president that was elected was Jefferson Davis from Mississippi, and a vice-president, Alexander Stephens.
Jefferson Davis was born in 1808 in Christian County, Kentucky. As a boy he grew up i .....
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Ku Klux Klan
Number of words: 1156 - Number of pages: 5.... on their heads. They also draped the linens over their horses. The was going to ride for the first time. In the beginning, the men wanted to do nothing more than play pranks on people. However, the people were more frightened than they were cheered up. They soon realized what they could do with these fear tactics. The South had turned into a place that was no longer theirs. The slaves were now free (many of these men were slave owners) and carpetbaggers were coming from the North to take advantage of the southern people. They saw the opportunity to set back the South to what it had been. .....
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Who Was To Blame For The Cold War?
Number of words: 1591 - Number of pages: 6.... western view of the time saw Stalin as doing one
of two things: either continuing the expansionist policies of the tsars
that preceded him, or worse, spreading communism across the world now that
his "one-state" notion had been fulfilled. It also must be mentioned that
Stalin is seen as wanting "unchalleged personal power and a rebuilt Russia
strong enough to withstand 'caplitalist encirclement.'"1
Admittedly, the first view of Stalin, as an imperialist leader, may
be skewed. The Russians claim, and have always claimed, that Stalin's
motives were purely defensive. Stalin's wished .....
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General George Patton
Number of words: 461 - Number of pages: 2.... 1942. He was
promoted to the rank of lieutenant general in March 1943 and
led the U.S. 7th Army in Sicily, employing his armour in a
rapid drive that captured Palermo in July. The apogee of his
career came with the dramatic sweep of his 3rd Army across
northern France in the summer of 1944. Prior to the
Normandy Invasion, he was publicly placed in command of
the 1st U.S. Army Group, a fictitious army whose supposed
marshaling in eastern England helped to deceive German
commanders into thinking that the invasion .....
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Piranesi Carceri Xi
Number of words: 420 - Number of pages: 2.... Renaissance and baroque period as well. John Welton-Ely, in The Mind and the Art of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, went one step further in suggesting the Carceri was
...a gesture of defiance to the partons and
architects of Rome who had failed to measure
up to the creative possibilities suggested by
the ‘speaking ruins’ surrounding them.
This particular print is an excellent example of the etching method. It represents an intensely private work, far ahead of its time in the usage of dramatic design elements. The most relied on element is that of perspective. The walls and stairs are .....
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The Coming Food Crisis
Number of words: 459 - Number of pages: 2.... in developing countries being unable to import food. In addition to importing food China has also been researching and developing so called “super rice”. This “super rice” has an increased amount of seeds on it when it matures. Thus increasing food production. The “super rice” is supposed to increase production by some 20 percent.
If China’s problem keeps increasing and China can’t figure out a way to support itself they may have to turn to importing. This can have a dramatic effect on the rest of world. China may begin importing a lot of its food, which can drive up tra .....
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Great Man Theory Analysis Juli
Number of words: 1748 - Number of pages: 7.... Man Theory, a ‘Great Man’ is an event-making man. A person who, through conscious will and extraordinary shows of leadership skills and intelligence, influences the flow of history. An event-making man does not cause events to happen by chance, such as through inheritance. He purposely alters the flow of history immensely from that which it would have been without his existence1. On the contrary, an eventful man is one who also alters the flow of history, yet did so through no incredible shows of his own talent. He is not unique in any way, and any other man would have done the same in hi .....
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Is Einstein About To Be Dethro
Number of words: 1298 - Number of pages: 5.... physics," as he calls it, set him on a course that took him to the University of Lisbon, then Cambridge as a research fellow at St John's, and now London. But if he is right, Einstein's conviction that light travels at a fixed and unalterable speed is about to be dethroned.
Dr Magueijo and colleagues with whom he has worked - Dr Andy Albrecht, of the University of California at Davis, and Professor John Barrow, of Cambridge - were not quite the first to have this idea. Dr John Moffat of the University of Toronto had floated it, but they were unaware of his work until he complained it hadn .....
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