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Theodore Roosevelt

... He felt in for us to be a strong forces to back us up. Three examples of things that he did with foreign relations where that while he was president he strengthened the navy, kept European countries from fighting with Latin America and he also began the construction of the Panama Canal. The Panama Canal was especially important because it is now much easier for trade to go on. Instead of having to go around all the islands you can now cut through the canal and have a much quicker traveling time. At the time that the Cubans were figh ...

Number of words: 613 | Number of pages: 3

Ralph Waldo

... siblings. At the age of 18 he graduated from Harvard University and was a teacher for three years in Boston. Then in 1825 he entered Harvard Divinity School and preached for three years. At the age of 29 he resigned for ministry, partly because of the death of his wife after only 17 months of marriage. In 1835 he married Lydia Jackson and started to lecture. Then in 1836, he helped to start the Transcendental Club. The Transcendental Club was formed for authors that were part of this historical movement. Emerson was a big part of this and ...

Number of words: 654 | Number of pages: 3

Winston Smith

... Goldstein who questioned party doctrines. Winston dreams of an idyllic Golden Country which represents freedom from the drabness of London, and from the always pervading presence of the Party, the Thought Police and Big Brother. A Golden country in which any form of expression is considered natural. The party discourages sexual fulfilment and makes any love affair with a party member impossible. Winston notices two people, O`Brien a party leader, and a young girl by the name of Julia. Winston hates Julia for what she represents and yet h ...

Number of words: 720 | Number of pages: 3

Should Eisenhower Be Praised For His Foreign Policies?

... aid and liberal trade policies through tariff reduction as a deterrent to communism was praised, as well as his “food for Peace” program and the Inter-American Development Bank. He was always willing to negotiate with the Soviets and was even scared to use nuclear weaponry. Although all of these factors seem to make for a clever and peaceful leader they would have been more effective if Eisenhower had backed them up to the end and not allowed his plans to become corrupted. He claimed to have halted nuclear weapon testing and yet ...

Number of words: 875 | Number of pages: 4

Alfred Tennyson And His Work

... in 1843. In the late twenties his father's physical and mental condition got worse, and he became paranoid, abusive, and violent. In 1827 Tennyson escaped his troubled home when he followed his two older brothers to Trinity College, Cambridge, where his teacher was William Whewell. Because each of them had won university prizes for poetry the Tennyson brothers became well known at Cambridge. In 1829 The Apostles, an undergraduate club, invited him to join. The members of this group would remain Tennyson's friends all his life. Arthur Ha ...

Number of words: 922 | Number of pages: 4

Pete Rose

... If it wasn't for Pete's uncle, who was a scout for the Cincinnati Reds, he would never nave played baseball. His uncle saw him play in high school and signed him to a contract with the Reds farm system. Pete started out at the class "A" level. He rose up quickly making the starting roster for the Reds opening day team in the same year, 1963. On opening day Pete said he wasn't nervous at all until about 10 minutes before the game. It hit him that he was now starting for the Cincinnati Reds, when not more than a year ago he thought foo ...

Number of words: 2670 | Number of pages: 10

Nicholas Romanov

... have been a leader at the wrong time, but if he had related better to the Russian peopale for the time he was in power his leadership may have been more effective. Russia before 1917 was the largest country under one empire. In economic terms it was backward, as it was late industrialising and late to emerge from feudalism. In political terms it was also backward, there was no legal political parties nor was there any centrally elected government . Russia at this time was under tsarist rule by Nicholas II of the Romanov empire. Nicholas II w ...

Number of words: 1509 | Number of pages: 6

Charles Manson

... 9, 1969..." wrote Didon in The White Album. On August 8,1969, director Roman Polaski's housekeeper found five bodies, slashed and bloody. Manson was the metaphor of evil! To many, symbolized the end of civilized society and the dawn of a new age of terror. (Lagarde) On November 12, 1934, Charles Milles Manson was brought into this world by Kathleen Maddox and Colonal Scott. At the time Kathleen was a 16 year old troublemaker. Charlie never knew his father and never really had a "father figure." His mother was the kind that children are ...

Number of words: 2772 | Number of pages: 11

Emily Dickinson

... with her father. There, Emily met a Presbyterian Minister. Soon enough, she deeply fell in love with this man , whose name was Charlies Wadsworth. Even though the two were acquaintances, Emily felt a bond between herself and the much older and already married minister. However, although Charles was kind to her, he did not return her love. Eight years later, in1862, Charlies left for San Francisco, Calafornia with his family. It was about this time that Emily totally secluded herself from the world and started what would be world famous ...

Number of words: 746 | Number of pages: 3

De Tocqueville

... aristocratic nations, as families remain for centuries in the same condition,”. Stationary families have the stability to resist most circumstances and become fixed. This also allows families to gain power that they have no real right to hold. Old things often become stagnant and rotten, as did the aristocracy when families intermarried beyond their genes capacity, as well as becoming corrupted. ’s second point is that the aristocracy have great lineage and pay homage to their ancestors, “A man almost always knows ...

Number of words: 1234 | Number of pages: 5

Doc Holliday

... he had, which led to his untimely demise. Doc contracted this disease while traveling the west, staying up long hours, drinking, smoking, and gambling most of the time he was awake. This handkerchief would have helped Doc wipe up any blood, and ordead lung tissue he might have coughed up on his last day of life. Doc was not only a very sick man, he was also a very cultured man. Being cultured might have provoked Doc to wear a handkerchief as a fashion accessory, because rumor has it that although Doc was a mans man, he still liked ...

Number of words: 1383 | Number of pages: 6

E. E. Cummings

... effectively to life” (Triem 2). He also grew up in a rich neighborhood. “He virtually grew up in Harvard Yard and was surrounded by the most traditional aspects of Cambridge culture” (Smelstor 455). E.E. Cummings’s parents not only provided him with creative surroundings, but also provided him with the best of educations. “Educated at Cambridge High School and Latin School, he entered Harvard University in 1911 and remained there until 1916, when he received his Master’s degree” (Ulanov 565). I ...

Number of words: 819 | Number of pages: 3

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