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Theodore Roosevelt

... At Harvard every ha to dress, walk, and have good manners, but Thoedore did do these things. Most students thought him odd. Later years at Harvard were better than the earlier years. He was a member to: Porcelain Club, Institute of 1770, Hasty Pudding Club , Alpha Delta Phi , O.K. Club , Natural History Society , The Harvard Advocate (editor) , Glee Club , and in the Class Committee. After he graduating from Harvard in 1880 , he married Alice Hathaway Lee of Boston. In the same year he entered Columbia University Law School. But histori ...

Number of words: 890 | Number of pages: 4

The Life And Work Of Nemerov

... men of writing. His subjects range from all parts of the human mind, from war to religion, and death to nature. Nemerov was born on March 1, 1920, in New York City. Until he moved to Vermont in 1948, New York influenced most of his poems. Nemerov's wealthy and culturally refined parents sent him to Fieldston School. At this private school, Nemerov was an impeccable student and a strong athlete. After graduating in 1937, he went to Harvard, where he received his Bachelor of Arts degree. At the start of World War II, Nemerov bec ...

Number of words: 1659 | Number of pages: 7

Ralph Waldo Emerson

... don't try to be like someone else. Be your own person and strive to be as different from everyone else as much as you can. Emerson said that your mind is your own, and no one can touch it. You can think what you want to think, and no one can change that. He describes this belief in the quote "Nothing is at last sacred, but the integrity of your own mind." People can mess with every other part of you, but your mind they can't reach. Emerson is quoted as saying "My life is for itself and not for a spectacle." I think that he mean ...

Number of words: 1019 | Number of pages: 4

Louis Riel

... to accuse Riel as a traitor. He tried to defend the traditional rights of Metis and made sure they treated as equally as the British subjects. Riel was a patriote, who passionately love, supported and defended his people. He was also a serious and thoughtful person who dedicated his life to help others. Metis, Native Indians and western setters were all very proud of and respected this leader because of his life long effort. He was a person who was willing to step up and told the government what they needed. Riel never wanted any vi ...

Number of words: 992 | Number of pages: 4

Michael Jordan

... Recently, His ‘Airness’, as he was dubbed, retired from the game of basketball. This development could mean any number of things to the basketball world. One thing that could happen is that with the loss of its most talented player, the NBA could crumble, but that is what they said would happen when Larry Bird and Magic Johnson left the league. Another route that may be taken is that he may actually enhance the sport of basketball by walking away from it. Other young stars may want to work harder to be “The Next .” This, howev ...

Number of words: 824 | Number of pages: 3

Constantine The Great

... course of western civilization. By making Christianity the religious foundation of his domain, he set the religious course for the future of Europe which remains in place to this very day. Because he replaced Rome with Constantinople as the center of imperial power, he made it clear that the city of Rome was no longer the center of power and he also set the stage for the Middle Ages. His view of monarchy became the foundation for the concept of the divine right of kings. Constantine, the son of Constantius Chlorus and Helena, seems to have be ...

Number of words: 1204 | Number of pages: 5

The Life And Work Of Anthony Burgess

... entry in "Who's Who" could not provide the exact number of books he wrote." (Baldwin A8). Some of Burgess's works include The Long Day Wanes, The Doctor is Sick, and, perhaps Burgess's most famous book, Clockwork Orange. A Clockwork Orange is an interesting novel that paints a picture of a gruesome violence in the not-so-distant future. The story is based on, and told by the narrator, the fifteen-year old Alex, but it shows many references to the life and experience of its author. In a series of five books, Burgess also focused on his life ...

Number of words: 1817 | Number of pages: 7

Johann Sebastian Bach - The Brandenburg Concertos

... brother’s education on that instrument, as well as on the harpsichord. After several years in this arrangement, Johann Sebastian won a scholarship to study in Luneberg, Northern Germany, and so left his brothers tutelage. A master of several instruments while still in his teens, Johann Sebastian first found employment at the age of 18 as a violinist in a court orchestra in Weimar. Soon after, he took a job as an organist at a church in Arnstadt (1703-1707). Here, as in later posts, his perfectionist tendencies and high expectations ...

Number of words: 586 | Number of pages: 3

Charles Dickens

... living at Warren’s Blacking Warehouse. Left after father’s release three years later. Attends Wellington Academy. · 1827 - Dickens starts to work as an officeboy at a law firm then work as a clerk at Ellis and Blackmore Firm. · 1832 - Started to work as a Parliamentary reporter at the True Sun for eight months. · 1833 - First publication of sketches called Dinner at Poplar in Monthly Magazine. · 1834 - Went to work for Morning Chronicle. · 1836 - Sketches by Boz are published in volumes. First Installment of Pickwick Papers pu ...

Number of words: 2027 | Number of pages: 8

Wendell Phillips

... right's, labor reform, and temperance. In 1865 he attacked the Constitution. He attacked it because it supported slavery. He had married Ann Terry Greene. Greene had been taught by William Lloyd Garrison. Garrison and Phillips became friends. As the Civil War approached he became more and more certain that violence must be employed to abolish slavery. When the war came he was at the head of the emancipation movement. In the years after the war Wendell Phillips demanded that actions be taken to protect blacks and loyal whi ...

Number of words: 180 | Number of pages: 1

Alfred Nobel

... French, and German, but was always proud of his Swedish Background. In his teens his father sent him to learn chemistry in France. He gained interest in explosive nitroglycerin. And studied until he founded the first ever nitroglycerin factory in the world, but found it was too volatile to work with, and too many miners were dying using it. He began experimenting on how to control the substance. He wanted something that could absorb the nitroglycerin and not still have the same power. He Found that a substance called Kieselguhr. This ...

Number of words: 469 | Number of pages: 2

Stefan Edberg

... mini-tennis in the early 70s. It said ”Day of tennis”.Luckily his mother Barbro read the article and liked it. The day after she sent her son to the tennis-school for beginners. At that time she didn't know how important this initiative would be to Stefan, to Swedish tennis and even to the world tennis. An incredible athletic career had seen the morning light. Was convinced to continue The seven year old Stefan struck his first hits at the tennis school in the sommer of 1973. To start with he played once a week. He liked his new sp ...

Number of words: 1009 | Number of pages: 4

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