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Henrietta Edwards
Number of words: 405 - Number of pages: 2.... on how they could
best use it. They decided on the formation of a Provincial Laws Committee where Henrietta Muir
Edwards was elected to be the Chairman and Irene Parlby as Vice Chairman. With her new
responsibilities she began to change federal and provincial laws concerning women, marriage,
divorce, adoption, property and dower rights, child protection, minimum wage and widows
allowance.
In 1916 she published the first edition of "The Legal Status of Women in Alberta", which
was the same year women achieved the right to vote. In 1921 and 1924 she published to .....
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The Pikes Peak Gold Rush
Number of words: 320 - Number of pages: 2.... way. Most of the people who did make it returned home without the riches that they came for. The people that returned home were called "Go Backs". The other men stayed behind and continued panning or opened up shops in nearby towns.
The picture that the newspapers portrayed Colorado as a rich place for gold. Newspaper reporters traveled to Colorado to see what all of the hype was about. The reporters helped the population grow in the mining towns. During the winters the miners would go down to the supply towns to wait until spring so that they could return to carry on the search for go .....
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Saving Private Ryan
Number of words: 866 - Number of pages: 4.... like Michael Herr and filmmakers like Oliver Stone and Francis Ford Coppola, Vietnam flickers in and out of our imaginations as a minor piece of hell, a torn-out fragment from a Bosch painting. But World War II, the Good War, the Heroic War, the war that saved the world, is different. Yes, we know it was dreadful, but we don't really want to know: We'd rather cling to the image of jutting-jawed John Wayne firing his machine gun at a collapsing line of Axis dummies.
After "," the myth of World War II will never be the same. Using the overpowering techniques of modern film, Steven Spielberg h .....
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American Dream Of African Amer
Number of words: 979 - Number of pages: 4.... who went into battle fought and died among men of many different races, although their battalions were different. They realized that the country they were fighting, and dying for was not giving them any rights at all. They were fighting for their country yet they did not receive the same treatment as all the other people did. “The race riots broke out in 29 American cities as African - American soldiers returning from Europe and demanding greater civil rights were opposed by mobs of whites.” (Jackson 25)
The rest of the United States had people left behind who did not change and .....
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Normandy
Number of words: 2154 - Number of pages: 8.... of Omaha Beach, as a second Lieutenant in the 29th Division Artillery. Drawing on his own experiances as a solider in World War II, he wrote two other Landmark Books about the war; From Casablanca to Berlin and From Pearl Harbor to Okinawa. Since the war he has written The American Revolution as well as many other books articles, and reviews. He lives with his wife and co-author, Naomi, and his college-age son in New York City. Summary Strategy D-Day began with the concept of the "Second Front." When Stalin's Russia was invaded in 1941, he immediately demanded that his new allies atta .....
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The Downfall Of The Middle Ages
Number of words: 612 - Number of pages: 3.... see, that didn't leave much of a place for the nobles, who were rapidly
losing power. Another thing that contributed to their loss of power was the
enforcement of Common Law, which applied throughout the kingdom.
The effects of the Hundred Years' War hastened the decline of the feudal
system. The use of the longbow and firearms made the feudal methods of fighting
obsolete. Monarchs replaced feudal soldiers with national armies made up of
hired soldiers. Finally, threats to the monarchy decreased as a result of the
large number of nobles killed in the war.
Another major factor that co .....
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Vietnam
Number of words: 1818 - Number of pages: 7.... elect their leaders. When the United States entered after the French lost the war in 1954, why did it feel, it was necessary to choose to fight the Ho Chi Men lead communists, without even allowing the ese people a chance to elect their own leader under a free parlimentory electoral system. The Secretary of Defense from 1961 to 1968 Robert McNamara saw the conflict escalate from 100 American advisors in 1961 to over 275,000 troops during the time of his departure. was caught in a revolution, not unlike the civil war, split in two, north versus south. The battle lines where drawn, .....
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Industrial Revolution 5
Number of words: 976 - Number of pages: 4.... fields fertile so they would waste a year of planting. So instead of letting the field be barren was to grow a different crop each year so it would stay fertile and you could still grow crops. The next improvement in farming was when Robert Bakewell began trying to raise his quality of livestock; by allowing only the best animals to breed he increased the weight of his sheep and also greatly improved the taste of the mutton. This improvements in farming had great effects on the population, since there was a more food more children were born and that fuel more workers for the factories. .....
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Civil War: Northern Attitudes
Number of words: 3302 - Number of pages: 13.... more economic ties with the North than with the South; by 1860 fewer than 2000 of the almost 22,000 blacks in the state were slaves, and most Delawareans opposed the extension of slavery. There was never any movement in Delaware to secede from the Union, and it remained loyal during the American Civil War (1861-1865) that followed the secessions. More than 13,000 Delawareans, nearly one-tenth of the state’s population, served in the Union Army, and several hundred fought for the Confederacy. Fort Delaware, on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware River, was garrisoned by Union Army soldiers an .....
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Evaluation Of The Agricultural
Number of words: 885 - Number of pages: 4.... he introduced measures which allowed peasants to leave the mir. The mir operated a system like England in the Middle Ages.
Every village had a number of fields which were divided into long thin strips. Each family would have at least one strip in each field so that everyone got a share of the best and the worst land. However, this system was very inefficient, because of the following facts. A lot of time was wasted by travelling between the stripes. Also all farmers didn't like the idea of growing the same crop in each field.. The small field area of the stripes didn't encourage an ambiti .....
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