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John Steinbeck

... nice home they did not have to many financial problems, but then economic difficulties forced John’s father dismissal from the mill. Steinbeck’s father deiced to open a feed and grain store and go into business himself. The store struggled to survive and eventually failed completely. A close friend of John’s father got him a job as an account for the Spreckles Sugar Company. “Although he had a job, John’s father was extremely devastated by the lose of his business”(Stephen) “Encouraged by his pare ...

Number of words: 949 | Number of pages: 4

Dr. Seuss: The Great American Children's Poet

... While at Dartmouth he got into a bit of trouble when the police arrested him for drinking. (This was during the Prohibition.) As punishment he was kicked off the school magazine, The Jack O'Lantern, to which he contributed as a cartoonist. To get around the rule he began to sign his work as Dr. Seuss. And that is why Ted Geisel became Dr. Seuss. While at Oxford he met his first wife Helen Palmer to whom he was married for 40 years until her death. They moved to New York. While in New York he worked drawing cartoon advertisments for Flit, an ...

Number of words: 561 | Number of pages: 3

Aristotle And Kant

... one’s function and happiness. Aristotle claimed that if one fulfilled ones function well, then one was virtuous. If you fulfilled your function, then you could reach the highest good. So that essentially by being virtuous one could reach the highest good. In this case the highest good is happiness. Happiness was something that Aristotle believed was done within and when you’re full of happiness within, that happiness shines outward and therefore bettering society. Immanuel Kant, a Western philosopher had many interesting ideas on ethi ...

Number of words: 794 | Number of pages: 3

History Of Willian Shakespeare

... His father was a whittawer, which is a maker, worker and seller of leather goods such as purses, belts, and gloves. His father was a well-known man in society, occupying such positions as a member of council, constable, chamberlain, alderman, and also a high bailiff. Shakespeare's father died in 1601 and his mother died in 1608. William was married at the age of 18 in 1582. His bride Anne was three months pregnant and eight years' older then William when they wed. His wife Anne was the daughter of Richard Hathaway. Richard w ...

Number of words: 703 | Number of pages: 3

Yasujiro Ozu (1903--1963)

... first film in 1927 Ozu has won the best film award of Kinema Jumpo three times for I was born(1932), Passing Fancy (1933) and A story of floating weeds(1934). After 1934 he was sent to Singapore to make propoganda films. As we said above Ozu's cinematic style is very different from most of the directors. First of all his camera placement is very importent, in his films the camera is always close to the ground the height is not importent as long as the camera stays lower than the object being shot. Ozu developed his own tranzition system, ...

Number of words: 1161 | Number of pages: 5

Almost A Woman

... from "I Love Lucy" and Rita Moreno from "West Side Story". She hated those assumptions; they were inaccurate. Desi Arnaz played to role of a Cuban musician who was married to an American and was always put as the dumb, ignorant Hispanic who was sometimes lost in the ideas of the American. Some of that is true, but she didn’t like the idea that people thought she was dumb just because the American culture was new to her. The other person that most people related her to was Rita Moreno’s character in "West Side Story". Esmeralda ...

Number of words: 573 | Number of pages: 3

D.H. Lawrence

... opposition of society was used to write books, stories, poems of the heightened sensation and emotion he felt. believed in organic writing. Most of Lawrence’s writing reflected nature. The nature in his book came from his own experiences he had while traveling abroad with his wife or just on the nature of where he grew up. His most original poetry, published in Birds, Beasts, and Flowers, flowed from his own experience of nature in the southwestern U.S. and the Mediterranean region. Also, the most significant of his early fiction, Sons ...

Number of words: 779 | Number of pages: 3

Lewis And Clark

... family's Virginia plantation, Lewis joined the state militia in 1794 to help put down the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. He continued his military career as an officer in the regular army, serving on the frontier in Ohio and Tennessee, and rising to the rank of captain by 1801, when he accepted an invitation from President Thomas Jefferson, an old family friend, to serve as his private secretary. Even before the Louisiana Territory was purchased from France, Jefferson was ready to send an expedition into the frontier. In January of 1803 ...

Number of words: 2269 | Number of pages: 9

The Work Of Stephen King

... always dies. Horror fiction "Lets you become a child again" (King 220). King can bring out the fears that are kept deep down in our souls. He knows that we have been set down in a frightening universe, full of real demons like death and disease, and perhaps the most frightening thing is the human mind. Horror is "one of the ways we walk our imagination" (King 218). King takes ordinary emotional situations and translates them into violent tales of vampires and ghosts. "You never have to ask yourself who's afraid of the big bad wolf?- ...

Number of words: 1381 | Number of pages: 6

Benedict Arnold

... Peggy Shippen. Throughout this book, Boylan suggests that the reader should view Arnold without the general stereotype of him being a traitor. That way you can see the man truly was, and read of the reasons that he lost his love for the Colonial army, and its government. The Battle of Saratoga was a major battle in the American Revolution; it helped persuade the French into signing a Treaty with the United States that helped turn the tides on the British. Major General Horatio Gates was the commander of the Army of the North. His Eng ...

Number of words: 1834 | Number of pages: 7

Lucille Ball

... an extraordinary personality. "In short, 's unique brand of wacky physical comedy made her the queen of TV. . ." (Dziemianowicz 54). Her hit television show, I Love Lucy, was one of the most watched television shows of all time. The success of I Love Lucy was due mostly to Ball's comic brilliance (Zoglin 188). "With near perfect timing, and a genius for sightgags, red-haired Ball careened through nineteen episodes of the original sitcom as a ditzy housewife" (Biography 1). Her show was so successful and popular that, "the 1953 epi ...

Number of words: 1128 | Number of pages: 5

John Steinbeck

... writer, influenced by an English teacher, and faintly remembered by schoolmates for spending so much time in his room writing. After graduating from high school, he went to Stanford University in 1920. While he was there for five he contributed to the school paper by writing poems and comics. He took courses in science and writing, but never received a degree. In 1925, when he left Stanford, he became a marine biologist. He moved to New York in 1925 to work as a reporter for a newspaper. Always being a non-conformist, he was fired from the ne ...

Number of words: 849 | Number of pages: 4

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