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The Life Of Edgar Allen Poe

... his frequenting liquor, he could never hold it well. He would easily become ill from the alcohol. Allan angrily withdrew Poe from school, and a few months later Poe left home. For the next four years Poe struggled to earn a living as a writer. He returned to Mrs. Clemm's home and submitted stories to magazines. His first success came in 1833, when he entered a short-story contest and won a prize of 50 dollars for the story "MS. Found in a Bottle." By 1835 he was the editor of the Southern Literary Messenger. He married his ...

Number of words: 384 | Number of pages: 2

Thomas Edison

... of carbon varied accordingly to the pressure it was under. This was a major theoretical discovery, which enabled Edison to invent a "pressure relay" using carbon rather than magnets, which was the usual way to vary and balance electrical currents. In February of 1877 Edison began experiments designed to produce a pressure relay that would amplify and improve the audibility of the telephone, a device that Edison and others had studied but which Alexander Graham Bell was the first to patent, in 1876. By the end of 1877 Edis ...

Number of words: 1445 | Number of pages: 6

Henry Ford 2

... reincarnation came out of a book that he purchased for twenty-five cents, instead of a trip halfway around the world to find his beliefs. From this chapter we can conclude that Doctorow sees Ford as a simple man and someone who is concerned about not only himself but his workers as well. Henry Ford was born on July 30, 1863 in Dearborn, Michigan. His father, William Ford, and his mother, Mary Litogot Ford, lived and worked on their family farm. Henry also had three brothers, John, William, and Robert, as well as two sisters, Margaret, an ...

Number of words: 1628 | Number of pages: 6

The Style And Influences Of Lewis Carroll

... math and logic, including Euclid and His Modern Rivals (Parkins). He also wrote the much more famous book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland under the pseudonym Lewis Carroll. He used the alter ego of Lewis Carroll as a release for his creativity (Bassett 10). Peter Heath compares this idea to a schizophrenic, in that Carroll is "a rebellious escapee from the tedious sobrieties of Dodgson . . .". If this is so, then the nonsensical aspects of his writings are the product of a quest to cast away the constraints of ordinary logic (46). Nevert ...

Number of words: 1987 | Number of pages: 8

Origins Of Louis Leakey

... was his childhood. Leakey grew up in Kenya, more African than English. He played with African children, learned to hunt and even spoke the Native language as well as he spoke English. When he was 13, he found some ancient stone tools. After this discovery he became very intrigued by the life of early man and promised himself to learn about them. So, when he was 14, he read a book about the Stone Aged man, and he was hooked. After reading the book he began to search for, and collect these tools and classify then by the book as ...

Number of words: 724 | Number of pages: 3

Cleopatra

... 69 BC She was the last Ptolemaic ruler. Her father was the Ptolemy XII. She was very, which added to her popularity of the Egyptian and Roman world. tried to preserve the country’s independence from Rome. Roman senators threatened Egypt’s independence and prosperity. In 55 b.c. Berenic IV was executed leaving the oldest child. In 51 b.c. her father died. Caesar chased Pompey to Egypt where Pompey was beheaded in Alexandria. This is where met Julius Caesar. She smuggled herself into a rug and snuck in to his room. married ano ...

Number of words: 464 | Number of pages: 2

Alan Dean Foster

... was bought by Betty Ballantine and published by Ballantine Books in 1972. It incorporates a number of changes suggested by famed SF editor John W. Campbell. Since then, Foster's sometimes humorous, occasionally poignant, but always entertaining short fiction has appeared in most of the major SF magazines as well as in original anthologies and several "Best of the Year" compendiums. Three representative collections, With Friends Like These, Who Needs Enemies?, and The Metrognome have been published by Del Rey books. Foster's work to date in ...

Number of words: 670 | Number of pages: 3

Harriet Tubman 3

... the Civil War as a nurse and scout. Harriet's work in the Underground Railroad and as a scout for the North in the Civil War made her a hero against slavery. Araminta Ross was either born in 1820 or 1821 on a plantation in Dorchester County, Maryland. Records were not kept of slave births so her birthdate is a mystery. She was a fortunate slave girl because she had her mother by her side to raise her. It was common to have a slave mother and her children split apart by the slave trade. Araminta had barely any clothes to wear; usually just a ...

Number of words: 2104 | Number of pages: 8

Stalin

... gold-platted teeth, though others were blackened by rot. His complexion was sallow, the result of spending nearly all his time indoors in offices. Everyone called him Vozhd-leader. His full name was Joseph Vissarionvich Djugashivli. He was born on December 27, 1879. He was born in the town of Gorion the southern slopes of the Caucasus Mountains. This is glorious country. Swift rivers, fed by runoff from snow capped peaks, course through fertile valleys. His father was a very aggressive low life drunk cobbler. His mother was a houseclea ...

Number of words: 1662 | Number of pages: 7

Galileo

... fortunes. Regardless of his father's opinion, had no inspiration in the medical field, but was motivated in the field of mathematics where he thought he could improve on the theorems of levers proposed by the Greek mathematician Archimedes. Growing up with curiosity and determination integrated in his mind, was unsatisfied with the boring views of philosophers like Aristotle. MacLachlan gives an example. Natural philosophers taught a set of precepts about the causes of all earthly actions and the nature of the whole universe. They did no ...

Number of words: 637 | Number of pages: 3

John Gotti: The Man Behind The Mob

... to be eaten once a week. The only clothes he had, were hand-me-downs from his older brother (Davis 60-61). As a child John impressed his teachers as having an uncontrollable temper. A trait which he would someday value. He was constantly getting into fights with older boys who tried to take his lunch money. He soon got the reputation as one you didn't cross for fracturing an older boys skull in a classroom. Gotti began running with smalltime gangs at the age of twelve, after noticing a mobster named Albert Anastasia. He soon joined a street g ...

Number of words: 1420 | Number of pages: 6

Joel Poinsett

... mainly for her harbours San Frasisco and San Diego. The American policy towards Mexico which ensued in the following years was governed almost exclusively by President James Polk's personal opinions and actions, as well as Nicholas Trist's defiant behavior; a manifestation of the state-centric theory in which key individual decision makers govern policy. In addition, Polk's policies were secondarily influenced by the consideration of relative power, American mass ideology, and Public opinion. In 1845 President Polk began, cofidentially fro ...

Number of words: 540 | Number of pages: 2

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