Ivan IV (or Ivan the Terrible) was the ruler of Russia from 1533-1584. Ivan IV is credited for creating an absolute monarchy in Russia. He gained Mongol land for Russia and expanded the Russian economy on a small scale. Although Ivan IV accomplished these goals for Russia, he does deserve his nickname, Ivan the Terrible. Ivan IV was a very intelligent man, but many people believed that he was mentally ill. This would explain his violent outbursts and his infamous behavior. His troubled childhood might be a possible explanation for his outburst issues.Both of his parents died before he was 8 years old. After his parents death he was faced with constant danger and neglect, which led to him hating the boyar class and torturing small animals as…
Candice Ivan IV, Tsar of Russia is better known as Ivan the terrible. In the following paragraphs I will depict major events in his life and the role he played in Russia. I will also exhibit the many positive things that he did. As well as the negative things that he did to Russian society during his reign of thirty-seven years. I will debate the fact that Ivan IV was nick named Ivan the terrible.…
SNC completed the 5 paragraph order ensuring all of the basic guidelines were covered. The loud and demanding voice of SNC illustrated that SNC was confident in his plan and knew and understood the mission. SNC used the hand and arms signals as the form of communicating with his fireteam. SNC provided a successful security plan that helped the fireteam during the time of friction. SNC and his fire team were engaged by enemy contact and SNC was able to locate the direction of the enemy and return fire and lead his fire team to safety but to also accomplish the mission. SNC made decisions without relying on other suggestions and executed the plan in a tactical manner SNC displayed a sense of urgency instructing his fireteam to move with caution.…
Donald L. Niewyk’s fifth and sixth chapters both deal more with outside perspectives and outside reactions than it does with those who were persecuted. The fifth chapter, “Bystander Reactions,” offers four different arguments as to why bystanders acted they way they did during the Holocaust. The sixth chapter, “Possibilities of Rescue,” discusses three different viewpoints on what foreign governments could have done to prevent the Holocaust. These two chapters conclude Niewyk’s book The Holocaust and wrap up the final sequence of events surrounding the Holocaust and the camps.…
McKenzy Hupke, a senior at the Performing Arts Academy in Lakehurst, NJ recently was diagnosed with stage four squamous cell carcinoma, a cancer that invaded her head and lungs. One day during school Hupke fell onto the ground after a long nosebleed which quickly made her lose consciousness. After all of this, the cancer rendered her completely deaf. Tumors in both ears forced the removal of her eardrums.Thankfully she hears because the creation of cochlear implants. Hupke is a strong teenage leader who, “You would never know she’s suffering from the level of illness that she is,” said Mary Kenny, vocal music instructor at the Performing Arts Academy. “She never allows it to hold her back.”…
Colonel Graff has arrived at Ender’s home to collect him for Battle School. Graff is given the duty of informing Ender of the choice that lies before him seeing as his parents cannot choose whether or not Ender goes because he is their third child and each family is only allowed two unless the government sanctions a third due to promising abilities in the other children.…
This is a third POV story, set when Juliet was sent away from England to the Bahamas "for the good of her health". As Juliet was disconnected due to her separation from her family, I used few emotions coming from her, herself. I used her obsession with the "king and queen" book as a subtle reference to Borovnia. I made the child, Richard, five years old because Juliet has a personality younger than her age, and she ends up copying Richard. With this piece I was portraying the origins of Juliet's melodramatic personality. Juliet thinking she had scars was a good thing was also started here by Mary's "pushover" personality.…
Thesis: Vladek’s experience during the Holocaust shapes his personality and relationships with family and friends and also plays a key role in his relationship with others.…
Hans Hubermann and the rest of the unit were entering a truck which was transporting them back to camp. During their travel Rein Zucker wanted to be seated at the exit of the truck. Since Rein already had a hatred for Hans he confronted him. Instead of Hans supporting the argument accumulating he decided just to sit in Rein’s reported seat. Hans explained that the back was a better because in his old seat there was a frigid wind going through his ears, in his perspective it would be a more efficient seat.…
On September 11, 2013, Vladimir Putin presented his viewpoint concerning the United States involvement with the country of Syria in the form of an article, respectfully titled, "A Plea for Caution From Russia." The opinion piece, which was submitted to The New York Times, makes an attempt to address the actions of the United States. Putin meticulously creates his argument by utilizing three fundamental methods of persuasion; these three methods incorporate ethos, pathos, and logos. Putin 's proficiency to include these methods when directing the citizens of American is impeccable. He…
No, I don’t agree with the sentencing because had the judge given the message sentence, that may cause Sandusky grounds for another appeal on the maximum punishment for the numbers of years that he’s already going to serve. The sentence that Sandusky received assures that he will never walk the streets again. The sentence is based on the person and the crime. Given Sandusky age, the sentence is long enough even he was able to walk in general population that would be his death sentence as well.…
Sandusky maintains his innocence regarding the 45 charges of molestation of 10 young boys. Sandusky’s felt that he was wrongfully convicted of a crime. Sandusky was a deranged man who never once will confess to the horrible crime that he committed for years on these young boys. Sandusky wants to overturn the verdict against him (Bohm & Haley, 2014).…
At the beginning of this section, Stuever talks mainly about the artificial side of Christmas, about how everything can be “better”, which is talked about repeatedly on page 306. “They suggest the lakeside lights… villages and quain sounding burgs in Minnesota and Vermont.(306)” “... people waiting in line to see one Santa tell me about Santas who are better (more beloved)... People point me to “better” people, too, by which they mean people having nobler, more storybook Noels…(306)” All around him there is unhappiness or dissatisfaction with what people currently have. He can find nothing else except people seeking for something “better” to fill their shallow hearts, and when that isn't enough, they move on again. Then, Stuever drops one tiny little bomb meant to touch our hearts on what Christmas is really about: the children.…
Light can still be found even in the darkest of times; Oskar Schindler shows this through his actions during the Holocaust. In the novel Oskar Schindler’s portrayed his motives and ways one man can help thousands of the struggling Polish Jews. What he did absolutely contradict what his country and leader wanted; they were planning to eradicate all Jews from the face of the Earth. By using his factory as a place for the helpless Jews to work, he avoided thousands from being sent to the concentration camps where they would work as slaves and eventually die. At first Schindler liked the idea of Polish workers but after he found out what Hitler’s true intentions were he quickly felt remorse for them and determined himself to save as many as humanly possible. He began employing more and more Jews, he saved thousands of lives but ruined his business in…
Kapuscinski’s “Emperor” tells a story of Ethiopia under the ruler Haile Selassie -- his rise to power, the strife that existed during his reign, and ultimately, his removal from the throne. Despite the embellished details present in “The Emperor,” Kapuscinski tells a story of the growing pains associated with the westernization of nations in the Global South. Furthermore, he shows how pressures from outside forces (in this case Europe) can lead to indirect “authoritarianism,” by making governments value its superficial image over the way its citizens are treated. However, this “authoritarianism” can be used to serve desirable ends that existed prior to westernization, such as the basal need to control and maintain a “natural order.” Throughout…