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Neve Cambell

... stage of her life, she preformed in "Sleeping Beauty", and "The Nutcracker". But her dancing was soon to be put to a halt, for after various injuries and lots of competitiveness, she had a nervous breakdown and quit dancing when she was 15 years old. She also had been a model for two months but found that modeling had no satisfaction and very low. After this she turned towards the theatre for a career, since she wanted to be a performer. Another contribution to her career was when Neve was involved in the theatre. A ...

Number of words: 693 | Number of pages: 3

Cornelius Vanderbilt

... Gibbons in 1818 to be part of ferryboat service on the Hudson. He charged less than a fourth of the going rate and was taken to court in Gibbons vs. Ogden where the supreme court nullified the monopoly New York had given to Fulton and Livingston. After that, Vanderbilt controlled most of the Hudson River shipping. He made himself and Gibbons a fortune. In 1829 he decided to start his own company and he met his biggest rival, Daniel Drew. Vanderbilt eliminated all his competition by lowering his prices to a mere 12 and ½ cent apiece. N ...

Number of words: 544 | Number of pages: 2

Lizzie Borden

... respectable, spinster- daughter, charged with parricide, the murder of parents, a crime worthy of Classical Greek tragedy. This is a murder case in which the accused is found not guilty for the violent and bloody murders of two people. There were the unusual circumstances considering that it was an era of swift justice, of vast newspaper coverage, evidence that was almost entirely circumstantial, passionately divided public opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused, incompetent prosecution, and acquittal. Not much ...

Number of words: 1961 | Number of pages: 8

Chief Seattle

... the Indians of the Pacific Northwest, perhaps the best known may be . (more correctly known as Seathl or Sealth) was born sometime between 1786-1790 on Blake Island at the campsite of his ancestors. Blake Island lies south and a little east of Bainbridge Island and west and a little south of Seattle. Seattle was the son of Suquamish leader named Schweabe and a Duwamish woman named Scholitza. He became Chief of the Suquamish, Duwamish, and allied Salish speaking tribes by proving his leadership qualities in a war that pitted his and other ...

Number of words: 1582 | Number of pages: 6

Margaret Hilda Thatcher

... to victory in 1979. Thatcher is the only British prime minister in the twentieth century to serve three consecutive terms. In 1990, controversy over Thatcher's tax policy and her reluctance to commit Great Britain to full economic integration with Europe inspired a strong challenge to her leadership. Ms. Thatcher was ousted from leadership, and resigned in November 1990 and was succeeded as party leader and prime minister by her protégée, John Major: who, consequently, only served one short term. Margaret Hilda Roberts was born October 1 ...

Number of words: 1942 | Number of pages: 8

Gillian Anderson

... one of the most popular candidates for a website to be created about. Nonetheless, has gone from virtually unknown to known all over the world, and that itself is reason enough for her to be written, and read, for that matter, about. Gillian Leigh Anderson began her life in Cook County, Chicago on August 9, 1968. By the time she was only a mere 6 months old, her and her family were residing in Puerto Rico. At the age of 1, she relocated once again, this time in London, England. At this point, it is safe to say that the Anderson fami ...

Number of words: 1247 | Number of pages: 5

John Lennon

... could make a difference. On October 9th 1940 at seven o’clock in the evening, John Winston Lennon was born in the maternity hospital on Oxford St. in Liverpool, England to Julia and Alfred Lennon. Throughout the week John was born, Liverpool was bombed multiple times during air raids. However, on the night he was born the bombing subsided. Since John’s father was always away at sea and his mother had a hard time supporting John and his 3 sisters, John’s mother sent him away to live with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George when he was young. ...

Number of words: 2200 | Number of pages: 8

Seperate And Unequal, Frederic

... with blacks of the pre civil war era. Blacks and white women were treated in a common manor, because neither group was really free. Both had to listen to what the white males told them to do without haste or incompetence. At the time, it would be safe to say that America was for the white males. Because they were the only people who had any say in the rules that governed peoples lives. Even from day one, the Constitution of the United States of America contradicts the way that things were and the way they would continue for some t ...

Number of words: 1180 | Number of pages: 5

Stephen Crane

... and the wind blows like a jet engine. They almost cannot hear themselves speaking to one another, so it is more of a shouting conversation. Then in the cold night, a seagull appears to the sailor’s sadness. The seagull has its freedom, and it can do as it pleases, but the men are bound to stay in their small dinghy. Then all of a sudden, land is in sight. All the men start to get their hopes up, because they think that they are now going to be saved. They see some people on the beach and try to get their attention, but unfortunately the crow ...

Number of words: 1465 | Number of pages: 6

Thoreau As A Prophet

... they had and did not find it necessary to indulge in such luxuries as men do today. “When a man is warmed by the several modes which I have described, what does he want next?” (Thoreau 1496). In today's society, most everyone has the necessities of life, but chooses to indulge in the luxuries of life. In America today, most all families have more than one car, own multiple numbers of televisions, and have far more clothing than necessary. We have become a society whose focus points to materialism. According to Thoreau, th ...

Number of words: 455 | Number of pages: 2

Amadeus

... entire reputation and boyhood prayer to attain fame thus rests on his ability to annihilate that child prodigy, Wolfgang Mozart.In analyzing the two composers, Salieri and Mozart, there is a distinct line that clearly divides them. Salieri’s operas receive astounding receptions, making them the “talk of the city,” shaking the roofs, buzzing the cafes, and even the name Salieri “sounds throughout all of Europe” (2,3). The reason for Salieri’s success, as well as many musicians of the eighteenth cent ...

Number of words: 2411 | Number of pages: 9

Toni Morrison Interview

... succeeded in killing one of her four children. Although the newspaper at the time depicted her as insane, Morrison described the photographs of her as serene, not mad. Abolitionists labeled her as a "product of her time" since they were opposed to everything that slavery stood for and how it ruined human beings. Morrison viewed her not with horror but with compassion. She believed that what Miss Garner did was an act of love, not one that was laced with evil. According to Morrison, "it was the ultimate gesture of a loving mother". Alth ...

Number of words: 440 | Number of pages: 2

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