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Martin Luther King Jr.

... Luther to appear before the diet in the Worms, Germany .In May 1521 , the emperor signed the Edict of the Worms , a document which declared Luther to be an outlaw whom anyone could kill without protest . Frederick the Wise protected Luther. Luther continued to the Protestant movement until his death in 1546. Reformation Reformation was a religious movement of the 1500's that led to Protestantism . This movement had an impact on social, political, and economic life . Before the reformation , Europe had been held together by ...

Number of words: 330 | Number of pages: 2

Life Of Charles Robert Darwin

... uncle, for whom he was named. Charles was not interested in becoming a doctor. From an early age he had an interest in nature. He would go on long walks near his home, collecting beetles, insects, birds eggs, shells, rocks, coins, and flowers. He learned the names of the species he found, and recorded the differences in the same kinds of species. Nature fascinated him. When Charles was only eight years old, his mother died. She had had poor health since the birth of her second child, Caroline. Dr. Darwin became grumpy, and impatient aft ...

Number of words: 1232 | Number of pages: 5

Al Capone

... true influence of the mob or mafia today. Capone was a man who of the many prohibition leaders, lead the way for the mafia in the early 19 hundreds. Due to the prohibition era, Al Capone transformed the mafia into today's business like criminal organization. Organized crime in the 19th century, was an ever booming scene for the average citizen. Since the 19th century, crime and business seemed to have gone hand in hand since the prohibition days of Capone. Long before Al Capone became involved in bootlegging, his excitement in life was th ...

Number of words: 1340 | Number of pages: 5

William Carlos Williams: A Poet On A Mission

... to the poetic world. THE SIMPLE THINGS IN LIFE William Carlos Williams; born on September seventeenth, 1883, in Rutherford, New Jersey; was the first of two sons born to the middle class status of George and Raquel (Helene) Williams. Having an English father and a Puerto Rican mother, with ancestry from the French, Dutch, Spanish, and Jewish sides, Williams had an interesting mix of culture from birth (Bloom 4338). As he grew older in his middle class household, his father provided him with a fertile background in the arts and li ...

Number of words: 1418 | Number of pages: 6

John Locke 3

... His father's discipline to the young philosopher John Locke was very strict. This helped John later in life disciplining him self to his essays and his thoughts. But as a child raised in a bookish home, he had received a good private education before entering school. His family was visited by very wealthy and influential people. These influential visitors would challenge Locke's mind and have him express is feelings on certain topics at a very young age. This I believe helped Locke in his future in philosophy and his wri ...

Number of words: 1640 | Number of pages: 6

Halberstam

... daily journalism because this is a level way above what I and everybody I know has been doing, and I want to try to do something like this. It's a very influential piece." Halberstam has since gone on to become one of the most respected observers of our time, penning sports books including "The Summer of '49" (reissued in 1997) as well as political jewels like "The Best and the Brightest" (1973, and a 20th-anniversary edition in 1993). Now he's paying tribute to some of the top sports reporting ever put on paper. His most recent project ...

Number of words: 931 | Number of pages: 4

Abigail Adams

... When Abigail was sixteen, her father added a wing that was bigger than the original building to make room for the children, servants, and visitors. When I say servants it means that they were probably slaves but were called servants to avoid the dehumanizing effect that the word 'slave' can mean. Their house was a sight of luxury in the eyes of the common folk in the parish. Though they lived well, the Smiths had no fortune. Abigail's father often worked with his own hands, planting corn and potatoes, gathering hay, sowing barley ...

Number of words: 763 | Number of pages: 3

Biography: Anne Sullivan (1866-1936)

... when her family broke up. Eventually she attended the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston. She was nicknamed "Spitfire" because she behaved badly and was very rude; however the school's director realized that she could become a talented pupil. Several years later, after two operations, she regained her sight and graduated with honours. Life with Helen She came to work with Helen when she was 20 years old and a graduate of the Perkins School for the Blind. Her persistence in trying to reach the deaf-blind child was rewarded in the now fa ...

Number of words: 212 | Number of pages: 1

Oprah Winfrey

... joins the elite company of Lucille Ball and Mary Pickford, as the only woman in T.V and film to own their own production studios. Through HARPO productions, she produces and hosts America's number one popular show, "The show". ( talk show bio 1997 p.1) Today many woman in America envies her life; her popularity, intelligence and her great fortunes. Though her success was gained from her hard work and education. She did not have any special background to be a most loved woman in America. She has overcame number of obstacles that most peopl ...

Number of words: 1152 | Number of pages: 5

Cark Gauss

... family, raised as the only son of a bricklayer. Despite the hard living conditions, Gauss's brilliance shone through at a young age. At the age of only two years, the young Carl gradually learned from his parents how to pronounce the letters of the alphabet. Carl then set to teaching himself how to read by sounding out the combinations of the letters. Around the time that Carl was teaching himself to read aloud, he also taught himself the meanings of number symbols and learned to do arithmetical calculations. When Carl Gauss reached the age ...

Number of words: 1515 | Number of pages: 6

Gangster Dutch Schultz's Life

... first prison sentence. At the age of eighteen, Arthur Flegenheimer opened a saloon. By his early twenties, Schultz had already established his Bronx based bootlegging rackets and was close with many crime bosses. He also had close ties with Italian crime bosses. Schultz even sat on the “National Crime Syndicate,” a governing board that was ethnically diverse. The Syndicate was the co-founder of the all-Italian “La Cosa Nostra” governing board known as the “National Commission.” During his short career, the Dutch man was respons ...

Number of words: 309 | Number of pages: 2

Eleanor Holmes Norton

... as the chairmen of the New York Human Right’s Commission. Before joining the Georgetown University Law Center faculty in 1982, she came to Washington, D.C. to chair the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission. As a tenured professor at Georgetown she still teaches a course there. Even before she began her career as an elected official, was named one of the 100 most important women in America and one of the most powerful women in Washington, D.C. She has received sixty honorary degrees. Norton has been recognized nationally as a ...

Number of words: 323 | Number of pages: 2

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