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John Wilkes Booth

... seventeen which lead to him traveling a lot. His father died on a steamboat, of a heart attack, in 1852. When Booth was seventeen, he went to a military school. Booth loved Shakespeare. He wanted to be just like him. He became such a good actor, he was compared to his father and brother as an actor. He was called Romeo because the ladies thought he was so handsome. He was the "darling of the theatrical circuit". He was irresistible to women. He toured wildly. He was one of the most promising actors. Booth was a famous actor during the Civil W ...

Number of words: 728 | Number of pages: 3

Napoleon

... and much of his achievements were incomplete. ’s achievements in Europe were mainly for his own purposes – he wanted to enhance his prestige and make France a great nation. He appears to have had little interest in helping the European people. , although his main achievements centered on areas such as administration, had other remarkable, although minor, achievements in France. He improved the appearance of French cities such as Paris by building bridges and canals and by planting trees at the sides of roads to protect them ...

Number of words: 1964 | Number of pages: 8

The Life Of Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss

... 30, 1777 to a peasant couple. There exists many anecdotes referring to his extraordinary feats of mental computation. It is said that as an old man, Gauss said jokingly that he could count before he could talk. Gauss began elementary school at the age of seven, and his potential was noticed immediately. He so impressed his teacher Buttner, and his assistant, Martin Bartels, that they both convinced Gauss's father that his son should be permitted to study with a view toward entering a university. Gauss's extraordinary achievement which cau ...

Number of words: 2074 | Number of pages: 8

Blaise Pascal

... his schooling. His father was amazed at the ease his son was able to absorb the classical education thrown at him and "tried to hold the boy down to a reasonable pace to avoid injuring his health." (P 74,Bell) Blaise was exposed to all subjects, all except mathematics, which was taboo. His father forbid this from him in the belief that Blaise was strain his mind. Faced with this opposition, Blaise demanded to know ‘what was mathematics?' His father told him, "that generally speaking, it was the way of making precise figures and finding ...

Number of words: 1674 | Number of pages: 7

The Maturing Of Achilles

... people that he did not send to the House of Death he would take them to the holds of his ship. These people were either kept as slaves or were ransomed off to their families for large sums of treasure. Achilles was known to have taken entire towns by his-self, killing all that got in his way. All of this was done in the excuse of glory. Early in the Trojan War the Argives recruited Achilles and his aid Patroclus to assist the Argives in conquering Troy and getting Helen back. Achilles joined this fight not because the Trojans had ever wronged ...

Number of words: 842 | Number of pages: 4

Elizabeth Arden

... their own 's youthful complexion to advertise it. Later when Hubbard died Arden took over the company to own and manage with only a group of advisees, which she seldom listened to. was an astute businesswoman who not only focused on what the company already had but what it could have. Therefore, she spent much of her time perfecting current products and creating new and innovative products. Her downfalls though were her violent temper, she was a very demanding and difficult employer who easily blew up at hr employees and was often too proud ...

Number of words: 371 | Number of pages: 2

Martin Luther King

... view has utmost urgency. Dr. King stands strong on his view of non-violent protests saying, "Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred." (503) Dr. King tells the listener not to give up under pressure but to persevere because the day will come when King's dream is recognized. Dr. King's dream is "…a situation where little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls and walk together as sisters and brothers." In his speech Dr. ...

Number of words: 512 | Number of pages: 2

Michael Jordan

... only the top player of his Era, but is quite possibly the best player to wear the uniform of a NBA team. He is the most recognizable athlete in the world and is believed to be the best there ever was, is, or ever will be. (NBA.com) A person to this magnitude has obviously a success, being able to have a family of his own and, knowing that there are thousands of people looking up to him, and being many people’s idol. To be able to stand the pressure of being a national symbol of greatness, you have to have a driving force. This driving force ...

Number of words: 1164 | Number of pages: 5

Richard Lederer: His Works

... genesis of his or her ideas is as futile as asking a spider the source of its web and method of its construction." Richard Lederer Introduction and bibliography Richard Lederer was the kind of child who, almost as soon as he could talk, saw a butterfly and cooed, "Oh, goody. A butterfly will flutter by." Even as a high- school student, Richard knew that Elvis Presley, born three years before him, would become immortal because he recognized that "Elvis Lives" is a two-word anagram. ...

Number of words: 2192 | Number of pages: 8

Thomas Hobbes

... wee would be done to,) of themselves, without the terrour of some Power, to cause them to be observed, are contrary to our natural passions, that carry us to Partiality, Pride, Revenge, and the like. And Covenants, without the Sword, are but Words, and of no strength to secure a man at all." (Hobbes, pg.117) The laws that are enacted are contrary to our self-interest, so without the terror of some ever-present power to instill fear in all man, we would abstain from no measure in order to preserve our own well being. In a state of war man is i ...

Number of words: 1558 | Number of pages: 6

The Life Of William Shakespeare

... he married Anne Hathaway, the daughter of a farmer. She was eight years older than William. On May 26, 1853, their first child Susanna was baptized. The twins, Hamnet and Judith, were born in 1585. They were named after their neighbors who became the twins godparents. In 1591, William moved to London and became an actor. During the plague when theaters were closed, he wrote his poems, “Venus and Adonis” and “The Rape of Lucrece.” In 1597, he acted with the Lord Chamberlain’s company of players. When the company built the G ...

Number of words: 644 | Number of pages: 3

George Washington Carver

... College in Iowa where he worked as a cook to pay of his tuition. Carver wander to be an artist and he also showed promise as a painter. His art teacher steered him away from art and encouraged him to enroll at State Agricultural College in Ames. There he earned his bachelors degree. He then went to the Ames Experiment Station where he was employed by Louis Pammel. In 1896, Carver went to Tuskegee Institute to lead the newly established department of agriculture. For the rest of his life, Carver put together a laboratory, made useless and ov ...

Number of words: 442 | Number of pages: 2

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