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Search results 751 - 760 of 1584 matching essays
- 751: The Holocaust
- ... not have the personal experience. By understanding the Holocaust, we will lessen the likelihood of history repeating itself. The Holocaust was a world shattering event, that change the social structure of the civilized world. By teaching the Holocaust, students will understand the far-reaching effects of this event. When the subject is brought up, they will understand what it is and know how to relate to it. A poll of high ...
- 752: World War 2
- ... knowing how the Japanese knows the perfect time to launch the surprise attack without being detected? Could it have been any different if the US noticed at the first sight of the Japanese attack? The teaching style of this subject in this class was great, more to say it's incredible, and fascinating. Showing the class all the clips pictures, maps, and interviews with veterans who involved, whose are there during ...
- 753: Stalin and The Soviet Union
- ... 20 million in the 1980s, or roughly 10 percent of the adult population. Second, the party created its own authoritative decision-making organs at all levels at which the state functioned. Adhering to Lenins teaching of "democratic centralism," these bodies allowed some discussion of issues prior to making a decision but formed a submissive hierarchy once policy had been set. In shape, the CPSU resembled a pyramid. At its base ...
- 754: The Mongol Invasion of China
- ... own isolated elite groups that, though powerless, believed in their inherent superiority over the outsiders. The Chinese scholar-gentry, excluded from official service by the rulers or by their own volition, made their living by teaching or unofficial community service; those talented enough turned to writing, poetry, calligraphy, and especially to painting, sometimes intimating in their subject matter ideas of protest against the alien rule. Chinese theater also made dramatic changes ...
- 755: The Hellenistic Age
- ... said that Alexander had the face of a god, the physique of an Olympic athlete, was a brilliant general which he inherited from his father and very intelligent; his intelligence was acquired somewhat by the teaching of his tutor Socrotes. Under Alexander a great cosmopolitan culture developed. The new culture has thus been termed "Hellenistic" - not purely Greek, because of all the towns under his control, it was a melting pot ...
- 756: The Reign of Edward VI
- ... had not known definitively where it stood. Only the appearances were beginning to change considerably. Catholic religious groups, chantries, educational establishments such as chantry schools seemed to remain untouched, except for their now increasing Protestant teaching. Such was the hardening of Protestantism in England, moderate Lutheran influences had given way to the more radical church-state ideals of Calvin and Zwingli by the end of the reign, ideals that would never ...
- 757: The Holocaust - The Way It Was
- ... times, the ineffectiveness of the Weimar Republic, and international indifference, and catalyzed by the political charisma, militaristic inclusiveness, and manipulative propaganda of Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime, contributed to the eventuality of the Holocaust." (USHMM Teaching Guidebook). What exactly does that all mean? Let's find out. World War I never totally resolved Ravaged by World War I, the German State was already in poor economic shape before the Depression of ...
- 758: RISE AND FALL OF THE HITLER REICHT
- ... the party's ideas. To follow up with his job, he joined the group to make sure t Hitler finally found his talent as a great orator. He first became aware of his talent while teaching at the University of Munich. When he talked, he held his audiences spellbound. He would sometimes lose five pounds a night by getting so active in his He persuaded the other party members to rent ...
- 759: Life In The 1900s
- ... freedom to enter pool room's, taverns and even bowling allies. Choices for women were working in stores and factories. Even if you came from a rich family your choices would have been nursing or teaching. Coming from a poor family women tended to just become a domestic servent. Women didn't have the right to vote like the men. In 1876 Dr Emily Stowe formed Toronto Women's Literary Club ...
- 760: The Indians of New France
- ... to the Europeans survival in a land which was new to them. R.J. Surtees claims that "Iroquois people probably saved Cartier's party from complete extinction during the winter of 1535 and 1536, by teaching the Frenchmen a cure for scurvy."21 The Indians, being the only other human beings and the most welcoming in New France, were the only ones who could help the perplexed Frenchmen: "Indians were the ...
Search results 751 - 760 of 1584 matching essays
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