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You must let the reader know where this came from! Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people.

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Presentation on theme: "You must let the reader know where this came from! Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people."— Presentation transcript:

1 You must let the reader know where this came from! Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people being held at Auschwitz were put into barracks, which were over crowded and dirty. Prisoners would sleep in bunks closely packed together which caused disease to spread rapidly. Some diseases among the people were dysentery and typhoid. Early prisoners brought to Auschwitz were photographed, but this was stopped because supplies ran low during the war. Auschwitz was the only camp to tattoo a number on the prisoners for identification. This assigned number would become their name for their entire stay at the camp, though the remains would disfigure their skin forever. Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people being held at Auschwitz were put into barracks, which were over crowded and dirty. Prisoners would sleep in bunks closely packed together which caused disease to spread rapidly. Some diseases among the people were dysentery and typhoid (Lawton 26) Early prisoners brought to Auschwitz were photographed, but this was stopped because supplies ran low during the war (Shuter 31). Auschwitz was the only camp to tattoo a number on the prisoners for identification. This assigned number would become their name for their entire stay at the camp, though the remains would disfigure their skin forever (32). This information came from Page 26 in a book by Clive Lawton Insert In-Text Citation here! Once you insert the citation PUT THE PERIOD AT THE VERY END OF THE SENTENCE AND CITATION

2 Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people being held at Auschwitz were put into barracks, which were over crowded and dirty. Prisoners would sleep in bunks closely packed together which caused disease to spread rapidly. Some diseases among the people were dysentery and typhoid (Lawton 26). Early prisoners brought to Auschwitz were photographed, but this was stopped because supplies ran low during the war (Shuter 31). Auschwitz was the only camp to tattoo a number on the prisoners for identification. This assigned number would become their name for their entire stay at the camp, though the remains would disfigure their skin forever (32). Lawton, Clive. Auschwitz. Cambridge: Candlewick Press, 2002. Shuter, Jane. The Camp System. Chicago: Heinemann Library Inc., 2002. Works Cited

3 The day finally came when the few prisoners remaining were liberated by the Russians. On this day, January 27, 1945, the Soviet army arrived at Auschwitz finding many atrocities. There had already been 58,000 prisoners evacuated by the Nazis. They were marching toward Germany on a final death march. The army liberated the 7,000 prisoners that survived the camps harsh treatment (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum). Troops found weak prisoners that were left behind, dead bodies not yet burned or buried, and destroyed crematories. Some of the corpses were so badly damaged that you could not distinguish if the prisoner was male or female (Whiting 7). The survivors liberated were skin and bones because the Nazis did not give them proper food. Some prisoners died within hours or days of liberation. Others that were given food by the Soviet army could not hold it down due to the heavy starvation they faced (8). The Russians quickly buried the dead bodies so they wouldn’t catch any of the diseases obtained by them (Lawton 35-36). For websites, there will be no page number. Instead of an author’s last name, there may be a company or organization name. You don’t have to keep repeating an author’s last name if the citation before came from the SAME AUTHOR. If you are using a range of pages, this is what it should look like

4 Prisoners were forced to live in brutal conditions, where many died or became fatally ill. The people being held at Auschwitz were put into barracks, which were over crowded and dirty. Prisoners would sleep in bunks closely packed together which caused disease to spread rapidly. Some diseases among the people were dysentery and typhoid (Altman Impact 26). Early brought to Auschwitz were photographed, but this was stopped because supplies low during the war Auschwitz was the only camp to tattoo a number on the prisoners for identification. This assigned number would become their name for their entire stay at the camp, something not forgotten (Altman Resisters 63). There had already been 58,000 prisoners evacuated by the Nazis. They were marching toward Germany on a final death march. The army liberated the end (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum “Ghettos”). Altman, Linda Jacobs. Impact of the Holocaust. Cambridge: Candlewick Press, 2002. Altman, Linda Jacobs. Resisters and Rescuers. Chicago: Heinemann Library Inc., 2002. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Camps”. March 21, 2011 <http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article. php?lang=eng&ModuleId=1 0005180>. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Ghettos”. March 21, 2011 <http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article. php?lang=eng&ModuleId=1 00763529>. Works Cited If your Works Cited page has more than 1 source by the same author, you have to be more specific in your in-text citations about from WHICH SOURCE the information came.


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