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Lou Gehrig

... to play in the minor leagues and gain some experience until the Yankees needed him. Gehrig was 22 when he became a big league rookie. He sat on the bench until one day in June in the 1925 season when he finally broke into the Yankees' line up as a first baseman. It happened because the team's veteran first baseman couldn't play because of a severe headache. He stayed first baseman for fourteen seasons, five thousand eighty-two playing days, he played a total of two thousand, one hundred and thirty major league games. It was a record that w ...

Number of words: 773 | Number of pages: 3

Nevil Shute

... for writing and describing things on paper, which would later help him in his studies, engineering career, and his future writings (Locker 396). Some years after graduating from Oxford he became Chief Engineer for the famous airship R100. During this time is when he completed his first novel, Marazan. When the R100 disaster occurred, the company ended the building of airships and Nevil Norway turned his devotion to the manufacturing of airplanes and created his own business, Airspeed Limited. His second novel, So Disdained, was publishe ...

Number of words: 1226 | Number of pages: 5

Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev

... died when Dmitri was still very young and Dmitri’s mother, Maria was left to support her large family. Maria needed money to support all her children, so she took over managing her family’s glass factory in Aremziansk. The family had to pack up and move there. Maria favored Dmitri because he was the youngest child and started saving money to put him through college when he had still been quite young. As a child, Dmitri spent many hours in his mother’s factory talking to the workers. The chemist there taught him about the concepts behind ...

Number of words: 3016 | Number of pages: 11

The Life Of Claude Monet

... fond of creating. By the age of fifteen, he was receiving commission for his work. It was at Le Havre that Monet met the painter Eugène Boudin. While Boudin's own paintings have never been held in that high regard, he is seen as having played a critical role in the education of Monet. Born of a seafaring family in 1824, Boudin was obsessed with the idea of painting outdoors or en plein air . The two painters met in 1856 and, at first, Monet resisted Boudin's offer of tuition but he eventually relaxed his protestations and before lon ...

Number of words: 1531 | Number of pages: 6

Bill Gates: Biography

... Way International. Gates attended public elementary school and the private Lakeside School. There, he began his career in personal computer software, programming computers at age 13. In 1973, Gates entered Harvard University as a freshman, where he lived down the hall from Steve Ballmer, now Microsoft's executive vice president for sales and support. While at Harvard, Gates developed the programming language BASIC for the first microcomputer -- the MITS Altair. In his junior year, Gates dropped out of Harvard to devote his energ ...

Number of words: 649 | Number of pages: 3

Steven Speilberg

... (Reed/Cunneff 139) His father Arnold was a computer engineer, and his mother Leah was a restaurateur. Stephen was a practical joker, who constantly played tricks on his sisters. Stephen found his best mode of expression however, through an old eight-millimeter camera that he had found in his garage. Spielberg focused all of his time and effort into this new form of expression he had found, even at the expense of other things in his life. In an article in Time magazine Spielberg said "From age twelve or thirteen I knew I wanted to be a m ...

Number of words: 848 | Number of pages: 4

Mark Twain 5

... Apprenticed first to a printer, he soon joined his brother Orion's Hannibal Journal, supplying copy and becoming familiar with much of the frontier humor of the time, such as George W. Harris's Sut Lovingood yarns and other works of the so-called Southwestern Humorists. From 1853 to 1857, Twain visited and periodically worked as a printer in New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Cincinnati, corresponding with his brother's newspapers under various pseudonyms. After a visit to New Orleans in 1857, he learned the difficult art of steamboat pil ...

Number of words: 752 | Number of pages: 3

Aaron Kornylos Struggle In Crossbar

... his victories brought him. Aaron recalls, “standing proud on the dais... being vested with his Commonwealth Games gold by Prince Charles himself” (Gault 61). To Aaron it was a perfect life, or “his personal vision of the best of all possible worlds” (Gaul 62). He was an accomplished athlete, “the best... Willow Creek had ever produced” (Gault 62). Then people revered Aaron, and he was completely satisfied with his life. All of this changes abruptly and violently when a farming accident almost kills Aar ...

Number of words: 760 | Number of pages: 3

Malcolm X

... and its leadership still preaching black separatism, Dischord looks back on the legacy left by the Nation's most famous spokesman, . was one of the most controversial figures of recent times, branded a 'racist', a 'hatemonger' and a 'terrorist' by America's Establishment, he spent the last years of his life struggling to free the American negro from the misery and oppression that White America had forced them to suffer for over four hundred years. The X represented the African tribal name his ancestors had lost when they were brought in thei ...

Number of words: 2440 | Number of pages: 9

Walt Disney

... in Sat. morning classes at the Kansas City art Institute. His family decided to move back to Chicago in 1917. Walt finished up school and then joined the family and enrolled at McKinley High School (Finch 39-40). Walt’s brother went into the army in 1918. Walt wanted to join his brother, but he was too young. Instead he applied for an ambulance driver and ended up in France. In 1919 Walt came back to the US (Finch 40). When he returned new he wanted to pursue a career in the commercial arts fields, so he got a job at a local studio. At ...

Number of words: 1140 | Number of pages: 5

The Dark Romantics: Poe, Hawthorne, And Melville

... a serious impact on American literature. His style has inspired thousands of writers. It is thought that he uses one person over and over again in his literature as the main character, himself. He uses these main characters simply as a way to express his emotions and innermost feelings. His life was full of pain and agony. From the beginning when he lost his mother to the end when reality and the dream-world became intertwined. The loss of many so-called loves and jobs placed him in a world where only him and his writing existed. It i ...

Number of words: 1687 | Number of pages: 7

Nathan Bedford Forrest

... a self-made millionaire. In June of 1861, enlisted as a private in the Confederate Army. He raised and equipped a mounted battalion at his own expense. Just before the war ended, he was promoted to Lieutenant General. Forrest was the most feared cavalry commander of the Civil War. He was wounded four times in battle, killed 30 Union Soldiers hand to hand, and had 29 Horses shot out from under him. His famous saying was, "War means fightin,' and fightin' means killin'." Forrest led the Battle of Chickamauga and forced the Feder ...

Number of words: 738 | Number of pages: 3

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