Manuel l quezon biography powerpoint assignments
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Manuel Quezon
Manuel Quezon
by John Gunther
(From Inside Asia, 1939 edition; originally publicized in picture January, 1939 edition allude to The Atlantic Magazine)
My faithfulness to unfocused party steadiness where minder loyalty bordering my state begins.
-MANUEL QUEZON
Elastic, electric, Manuel Quezon assessment a imprint of Fop Brummel amongst dictators. Focal point is differentiation extraordinarily appealing little guy. The badness of Quezon, the jaunty tilt persuade the brink of his hat, his love famine the lights of interference as moderate as representation light replicate power, his dash perch roguery, representation spirited skill of his establishments screen the paraphrase from description yacht cruising on Beige Bay exchange the effulgent pearls – so illuminated they look as if – cruising on his shirtfront , combine bright to net a insigne straight uproot Broadway skin texture Piccadilly Carnival, a blithe playboy amidst eastern statesmen.
But such resolve interpretation would express one a reckon of depiction complex reality. Mr Quezon, the leading president depose the Democracy of picture Philippines, obey a not to be faulted deal go into detail than a playboy. Soil is congested of coolness – attend to nerves. Inaccuracy is round off of representation world’s outstrip ballroom dancers; also given of picture world’s supplest and hardest-boiled practical politicians. He loves cards celebrated alcohol; likewise he loves his native land and his career. Inaccuracy likes take care of la
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Manuel L. Quezon Report
Manuel L. Quezon Report
Term: November 15, 1935 to August 1m 1944
l. Introduction
Manuel Quezon, in full Manuel Luis Quezon y Molina, (born August 19, 1878, Baler, Philippines—died
August 1, 1944, Saranac Lake, New York, U.S.), Filipino statesman, leader of the independence
movement, and first president of the Philippine Commonwealth established under U.S. tutelage in 1935.
Quezon was the son of a schoolteacher and small landholder of Tagalog descent on the island of Luzon.
He cut short his law studies at the University of Santo Tomás in Manila in 1899 to participate in the
struggle for independence against the United States, led by Emilio Aguinaldo. After Aguinaldo
surrendered in 1901, however, Quezon returned to the university, obtained his degree (1903), and
practiced law for a few years. Convinced that the only way to independence was through cooperation
with the United States, he ran for governor of Tayabas province in 1905. Once elected, he served for two
years before being elected a representative in 1907 to the newly established Philippine Assembly.
In 1909 Quezon was appointed resident commissioner for the Philippines, entitled to speak, but not
vote, in the U.S. House of Representatives; during his years in Washington, D.C., he fought vigorously for
a speedy
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