Adam J. Eisler was born in 1924 to Benjamin Hyman Eisler (1899-1970) and Susanna Roth Eisler (1902-1970) in Park Springs, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Pittsburgh when he was three and his father worked in a steel mill while his mother raised their only child. Eisler attended South Pittsburgh High School and graduated a year early, entering Pennsylvania State University at the age of seventeen in 1941.
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| - Adam Eisler (Napoleon's World)
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| - Adam J. Eisler was born in 1924 to Benjamin Hyman Eisler (1899-1970) and Susanna Roth Eisler (1902-1970) in Park Springs, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Pittsburgh when he was three and his father worked in a steel mill while his mother raised their only child. Eisler attended South Pittsburgh High School and graduated a year early, entering Pennsylvania State University at the age of seventeen in 1941.
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Period
| - 1959(xsd:integer)
- 1968(xsd:integer)
- 1971(xsd:integer)
- --01-20
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Position
| - President of the United States
- Governor of Pennsylvania
- Mayor of Philadelphia
- US Representative for Pennsylvania, 5th District
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succ
| - Caleb Michaels
- Carl Cobb
- Henry O'Kennan
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abstract
| - Adam J. Eisler was born in 1924 to Benjamin Hyman Eisler (1899-1970) and Susanna Roth Eisler (1902-1970) in Park Springs, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Pittsburgh when he was three and his father worked in a steel mill while his mother raised their only child. Eisler attended South Pittsburgh High School and graduated a year early, entering Pennsylvania State University at the age of seventeen in 1941. At Penn State, Eisler was a member of the Delta Kappa fraternity as well as the Young Democrats Club, where he was friends with future Governor of Pennsylvania Howard Kroomb (1979-1987). He completed his bachelors degree in 1944 and finished his doctorate in political science at Penn in 1949. While in college, Eisler learned to speak Greek and Latin, took an interest in Jewish mysticism, led a campus protest against the Kennedy administration's support for Emperor Edmond in the French Civil War, and edited the Penn newspaper while working on his doctorate. One of his professors, Martin Harris, commented that Eisler was "one of the brightest minds I have encountered in my career."
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