he sailed .he also spend time with young children.
i am drunk
Albert Einstein grew up in Germany. He was born in 1879 and died in 1955. He refused life support at the end of his life.
a nerds life!
Yes, Albert Einstein dropped out of school at a young age but later achieved great academic success through his groundbreaking work in physics.
Albert Einstein first married on 1903, when he was 24 years old. His second marriage was on 1919, at age 40.
Albert Einstein was jewish and lived in Munich,Germany
Albert Einstein only went to a formal school for eight years, but later served five years of college
she was special because she loved him They were cousins. When Albert got sick Elsa helped him. Then later in life they married!
Albert Einstein lived in various cities throughout his life. However, he is most commonly associated with living in Bern, Zurich, Prague, Berlin, and ultimately Princeton, where he spent the later years of his life.
No, Albert Einstein was not blind, but he was dislexyic.
No, Albert Einstein was not deaf. He is known to have had hearing loss later in life, but he was not deaf.
Yes, Albert Einstein was bald later in life. He began losing his hair in his early 20s and by the time he was in his 30s, he was mostly bald.
Yes, Albert Einstein was bald later in life. He had significant hair loss as he aged, leading to a mostly bald appearance.
Einstein used approximation methods in working out initial predictions of the theory. Einstein later declared the cosmological constant the biggest blunder of his life.
Ideas and opinion The Born-Einstein letters Sidelights on relativity Einstein's Annalen papers Albert Einstein/Mileva Marić--the love letters The World As I See It Out of my later years Bite-size Einstein Albert Einstein, Hedwig und Max Born, Briefwechsel Essential Einstein
He seems to have become a vegetarianin his later years, but I can't find any evidence that he was ever vegan.
Einstein moved to the U.S. In 1933 and was granted citizenship in1940. His greatest achievement in later life was convincing Franklin Roosevelt to start the Manhattan project, the creation of the atomic bomb. Though he did not work on the project himself, without him we may have lost WW2