Housefull biography of albert
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GENIUS ALBERT EINSTEIN'S THEORY OF INFIDELITY
By Patrick J.Kiger
For The Physicist, Monogamy Was A "Bitter Fruit"
As he detailed in his letters, Einstein over the years developed a complicated view of male-female relationships.
In a June 1953 letter, Albert Einstein tried to console a female friend who had discovered that her husband was having an affair, by advising her that she should resist taking it personally. Cheating, he explained, was the norm among humans.
“I AM SURE YOU KNOW THAT MOST MEN (AS WELL AS QUITE A NUMBER OF WOMEN) ARE NOT MONOGAMOUSLY ENDOWED bygd NATURE."
“I am sure you know that most men (as well as quite a number of women) are not monogamously endowed by nature,” he wrote, according to a translation from the original German published decades later. “Nature will come through even stronger if convention and circumstances are putting resistances in the way of the individual.”
It was a subject that the great physicist knew something about from personal exp
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Commentary |
Albert and Sophie Adler
Memories of My Father and Mother
Albert Adler was born in his ancestral house in Bad Mergentheim, Württemberg, Germany, to Adolf Adler and the second wife of Adolf. When Albert was three years old, his father died of typhoid fever, leaving his mother with many stepchildren. The first Mrs. Adler and Mrs. Fanni Adler, second wife of Adlolf Adler, had given birth to seventeen children.Approximately thirteen survived. Albert's mother continued their "Spezereien Geschäft" grocery and "sundry" item store singlehandedly.
Those children that were almost fully grown or very poorly behaved were sent to America on a boat to seek their fortune as best as they were able. One "full" older brother, Siegfried, was sent to the "Land of Opportunity,” amerika, since the mother could not handle him. He was lost, never to be heard from again. Among other misdeeds, Siegfried had taken Albert's earning
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Matthew Labyorteaux
(1966-)
Synopsis
Born in December 1966, Matthew Labyorteaux was adopted as a baby. Though he didn't speak until he was 5 and often threw tantrums, he was supported by his family and went on to be a successful child actor. From 1978 to 1983, he appeared as Albert Ingalls on Little House on the Prairie. Labyorteaux later became a voice actor whose credits include animated series and films, including 1998's Mulan, as well as video games.
Early Life and Acting Career
Matthew Charles Labyorteaux was born in Los Angeles, California, on December 8, 1966. As a baby, he was adopted by Frankie and Ron Labyorteaux.
The future actor faced many challenges as a youngster: He had a hole in his heart at birth that doctors felt would heal on its own. In addition, he didn't walk until he was 3, never spoke until the age of 5 and often threw tantrums. He was diagnosed as being autistic, and experts told his parents that Labyorteaux might never lead a normal life.
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