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Rosa Parks

... December 1, 1955 while coming home from work, she boarded a bus and sat down. According to Montgomery law, blacks had to sit in the back of the bus, and give up their seats to whites when they came on the bus. When she was asked to give up her seat, she refused. Immediately, the driver stopped the bus and called two policemen. Mrs. Parks was arrested and taken to jail. Edgar Daniel Nixon, head of the NAACP in Montgomery, posted a $100 bond to get her released. Although Mrs. Parks was not the first black person to get arrested for refusi ...

Number of words: 399 | Number of pages: 2

Princess Diana

... eighth Earl Spencer when his father died. Diana's new title was "Lady Diana Spencer." In 1969 Diana's parents got divorced. It hit her very hard and made her determined to have a happier marriage of her own. Her father won custody of her, her brother, and her two sisters. Then in 1976 Diana's father got remarried to the former Countess of Dartmouth and daughter of romance novelist Barbra Cartland. Diana remained close to her father but never had a friendly relationship with her stepmother. Her mother remarried too. To a man named Pete ...

Number of words: 731 | Number of pages: 3

Terry Fox

... nineteen out of nineteen on his basketball team. For that first season he was on the court for approximately one minute. This did not affect Terry and did not let it get to him, fore just two years later Terry was the starring player on his team. By the time he graduated he became one of two athletes to receive the schools highest athletic award. Terry knew that aches and pains are common in athlete’s lives. At the end of his first year of university there was a new pain in his knee. One morning Terry woke up to see that he could no longer ...

Number of words: 1236 | Number of pages: 5

Frederic Douglass

... the failure being the extremely more dominant, because of the color of his skin. The most fundemental of aspect of the American dream is that of freedom and liberty. Relative to other countries, America was going above and beyond the call of duty to give its citizens these freedoms and rights. The country was founded with a main focus on freedom from Tyranny. This is shown by the following excerpt from the Declaration of Independence: "The history of the present King of Great Britian is a history of repeated injuries and ununsurpations, ...

Number of words: 1314 | Number of pages: 5

Life Of A Roman Slave

... to his Greek parents. Here the boy was taught simple math and was told stories such as the Odyssey and plays by Sophocles or Aeschylus. However, one fateful day while walking the son to school, a vicious dog leapt out of an alleyway and bit into the boy's neck. Argus beat off the dog but it was to no avail. The attack left a gap in the boy's neck which would not heal. The boy died several days later. Furious that such horrors could happen to his son, Gnaeus blamed Argus for not stopping the attack sooner. Instead of death Argus was to live ou ...

Number of words: 537 | Number of pages: 2

Biography Of Galileo

... of Mathematics at the University of Pisa and received another job at the University of Padua as the chair of Mathematics. Galileo taught at the university for eighteen years. In 1584, Galileo discovered the principle of which showed that the period of a pendulum remains the same no matter what the amplitude is. Galileo discovered this while watching a chandelier swing in the cathedral next to the Tower of Pisa. He proved the isochronism theory in 1602. In 1606, he invented the hydro-static balance this device that found the specific ...

Number of words: 655 | Number of pages: 3

Ernest Hemingway 4

... story writer, whose style is characterized by crispness, childish dialogue and emotional understatement that has made him a major novelist and short story writer (Riley 231). Ernest Hemingway was born in Oak Park, Illinois on July, 21 1899 to his mother Grace Hall and his father Clarence Edmonds Hemingway (Rood 187). Even though he was born into a upper-middle class family, he single handedly revised the Byronic stereotype of the artist-adventurer (Lesniak 20). Hemingway’s childhood was rarely mentioned, other then that he tried to ...

Number of words: 1155 | Number of pages: 5

Surviving In The Market

... at the end of March when Bill Fields, Glass's heir apparent, told his boss he was quitting to become CEO of Blockbuster Entertainment. Fields headed Wal-Mart's main operations and was the company's closest link to the glory days. A hometown boy born and bred in Bentonville, Arkansas, Fields was hired by Sam straight out of the University of Arkansas 24 years ago. He became a sort of surrogate son, and was generally considered to be Wal-Mart's star manager in operations and merchandising. Fields earned $590,000 a year to run a $68 billion b ...

Number of words: 620 | Number of pages: 3

Adolf Hitler

... Hitler's forces killed about 11 million people under his rule. Six million European Jews as well as about five million other people that Hitler regarded as racially unfit. A large portion of the German community didn't agree with Hitler and also didn't take him seriously. But some how Hitler was able to 'hypnotise' those who listen to him. With his fiery voice he could capture an audience and show them his ways. Those who agreed with him believed he was a powerful protector. Hitler speeches led to an uproar of "Heil, Hitler!" Hitler k ...

Number of words: 1218 | Number of pages: 5

Michael Faraday

... fourteen he was apprenticed to a London bookbinder. Reading many of the books in the shop, Faraday became fascinated by science, and wrote to Sir Humphry Davy at the Royal Institution asking for a job. On 1st March 1813, he was appointed laboratory assistant at the Royal Institution. There Faraday immersed himself in the study of chemistry, becoming a skilled analytical chemist. In 1823 he discovered that chlorine could be liquefied and in 1825 he discovered a new substance known today as benzene. However, his greatest work was with electrici ...

Number of words: 635 | Number of pages: 3

Ray Bradbury: Literary Influences

... age, Bradbury was encouraged to read the classic Norse, Roman, and Greek myths (Johnson 1). “When he grew old enough to choose his own reading material, the boy rapidly developed a fondness for the stories of Edgar Rice Burroughs and the comic book heroes Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers, and Prince Valiant.” (Johnson 1). It was these comic book heroes who fueled Bradbury's fondness for science fiction. After moving to Tucson, Arizona Bradbury got a job a local radio station because of his experience in Waukegan as an amateur magician. “ ...

Number of words: 1044 | Number of pages: 4

Thomas Jefferson'S Life: Tell It The Way It Is!

... Jefferson, the third president of the United States and the author of the Declaration of Independence. Wood starts his essay with five negative essays by authors that picked Jefferson's life apart. Beginning with the one that spoke of how America is conforming to a nation like Jefferson wanted it to be like and how it is slowly deteriorating. The second states that Jefferson had a life that is full of hypocrisy and a lack of consistency. The third spoke of his slave ownership. The author spoke of the biracial relationships that he had ...

Number of words: 961 | Number of pages: 4

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