His most noteworthy inventions were the wire precision resistor and a control unit for the pacemaker. Who is the man that invented these items? This man name is Otis Frank Boykin. He was born on August 29, 1920, in Dallas, Texas. His mother Sarah was a homemaker while his father Walter was a carpenter, who later became a minister. He didn’t have any siblings. Otis attended Booker T. Washington High School in Dallas, Texas where he was a valedictorian. He graduated in 1938 and then went on to Fisk University on a scholarship. Boykin only went to the university for three years and he graduated in 1941. Within the same year, he worked as a lab assistant with the Majestic Radio and TV Corporation in Chicago, Illinois. He served as a supervisor there. Eventually he took a position with the P.J. Nilsen Research Laboratories while trying to start his own business, Boykin-Fruth Incorporated. While trying to start up his own business, he decided to continue his education at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, Illinois. He had to drop out in 1947 because he couldn’t afford tuition. Boykin had an interest in working with resistors and he began researching and inventing on his own. He received a patent for a wire precision resistor on June 16, 1959. The resistor would later be used in radios and televisions. In 1961, he created a cheaper device that could withstand extreme changes in temperature and pressure. This device was used by the United States military for guided missiles and IBM for computers. He moved to Paris in 1964, where he created electronic innovations for a new market of customers. His most famous invention was a control unit for the pacemaker. It wasn’t easy for Boykin to achieve all of these accomplishments. The problems he faced was not having enough money to stay in college, his business he owned failing and growing up in a segregated time. I benefited from his efforts by now having a choice to get a pacemaker if something bad goes wrong with…
Marshall Applewhite, was a music professor at first known for his musical and dramatic talents, he sang opera, and was a very good public speaker.…
gentleman that would change the course of the war for the better. Most of these men came from…
Have you ever really loved a sport, game, or activity so much that you would do anything to succeed? Well this amazing chess team from I.S. 318 did the impossible and won nationals. While having to face many challenges along the way. A school from Brooklyn, NY has a great chess team, but is experiencing money loss. Which can put the team in danger. Many of these student don’t have a lot in there personal lives, so chess can give them many new opportunities in having a better life.…
John Boyne represents the different perspectives of society in World War II through the representations of characters in the fictional novel The Boy in Striped Pyjamas. Bruno’s childlike perspective is represented through his malapropism of “the Fury” and “Out-With” and his reaction to unexpected events, “mouth making the shape of an O”. The irony of Bruno’s narrow view, “it’s so unfair...” confronts the audience with the ignorance of some German citizens to the horrific events of the Holocaust. The characters of “Mother” and “Grandmother” are utilised by Boyne to represent the differing perspectives of the society during the Holocaust. Grandmother exercises constructive disobedience in dissenting with the Nazi regime and perceiving Fathers role as “a puppet on a string”. This is juxtaposed to Bruno's Mother through the euphemism of "[Bruno] had never known anyone to need quite so many medicinal Sherries" showing her complacency to do nothing about the knowledge of the concentration camp. Boyne positions an older audience to see the dangers of naivety and the cost of inaction.…
According to Richard Wright, “All literature is protest. You cannot name a single literary work that is not protest.” This means that literature is usually based on a reflection on society which is protest. Literature exposes the dark side of society. I agree with this quote because literature is one of the protruding ways to understand how one thinks about an idea. The author’s opinion is a protest against what other may believe. Coherently, in the bildungsroman Black boy by Richard Wright portrays how literature is protest.…
American composer Leroy Anderson was an early childhood musical prodigy. With his parents help, Leroy learned piano, and later music composition, and became famous around the world for his works. In his time, he was most famed for Blue Tango, but today is most famous for his Christmas carol “Sleigh Ride.”…
This book is about a young man who attends a small West Virginian High School. He lives in a house that is located off of the coal mine that the town rests on. Homer’s dad is the manager of the mine. Homer doesn’t receive much appreciation from his father. Homer sees on television the launch of the satellite sputnik, and after seeing this he is driven to be a part of the space race. He convinces some of his friends to help him build a rocket. They used terrible materials, and the rocket blew up their mother’s fence. They go to many different people for help on ideas, math and materials. After much hard work they finally build a rocket that launches into the air.…
The self discovery of an unknown or veiled environment can be new and reinvigorate or denouncing and encountering. Self discovery involves the process of an individual, which inaugurate’s new features of an certain status. Robert Gray and Christo Erasmus, both explore the concept of self discovery but alter the discovery to being either new and refreshing or challenging and confronting. “Journey, North Coast” written by poet Robert Gray, demonstrates the self discovery of a concealed environment. This influences the persona’s demeanour to an undulate and stimulating psyche. However, the poem “The meatworks” by Robert Gray, and short film “The Pencil” (TROPFEST) directed by Christo Erasmus, exposes the threats of a discovery. The persona in both text feel challenged and confronted by these discoveries. Therefore discoveries can be new and refreshing or challenging and confronting.…
"The right of people to live where they want to, without fear, is more important than my science." is a quote from African American chemist, inventor, and the greatest African American, Percy L. Julian. Percy's research and studying helped the creation of drugs to treat glaucoma and arthritis. A Percy lived during a time of racism and segregation, he never let racism and it's many challenges get in the way of his shaping of our world today. With his many achievements and awards, I personally believe Dr. Percy L. Julian is the Greatest African-American.…
In the article, “Bullying and School Liability-Implications for School Personnel,” Nathan Essex believes, public schools should be “free of fear, threats, and intimidating behavior by bullies” (192). According to Essex bullying in the public schools are an intense and expanding problem. In fact, there are thousands of children that are frightened to attend class every day. Essex reports that victims of bullying often leads to physical and mental scars for a lifetime.…
One of the most influential black politicians in American history, Andrew Young has made countless contributions towards the advancement of civil liberties across the globe. In the third chapter of Andrew J. DeRoche’s biography Andrew Young: Civil Rights Ambassador, he successfully details how Young applied his experience in the Civil Rights Movement to his political career to help achieve peace and promote human rights in the United States and throughout the developing world. DeRoche’s research uses many primary sources such as a personal interview, excerpts from Young’s own autobiography, and direct quotes from speeches he made in Congress, making his study both thorough and reliable. Ultimately, DeRoche’s biography helps to signify the impact Andrew Young made in the broader context of the aftermath of the Civil Rights Movement and United States’ foreign policy in the 1970s.…
Throughout the colonial period and the time leading up to the American civil war, one of the most important and controversial topics facing Americans was the idea of slavery. The notion of slavery is an odd and incredibly horrifying concept, that one man can own another man, or two men, or an entire family, just because of the color of their skin. No doubt the idea was racist and repulsive, but to many Men and Women in history, across the country and across the world, slavery was just a part of everyday life: they knew no different. So when those people who were being stripped from their homeland and brought over on ships to be sold at auction to the highest white bidder, began to question the sacredness of this terrible operation, it should have come as no surprise when a rebellion ensued like that of Nat Turner in South Hampton County, Virginia in August of 1831. Stephen B. Oates’s account of this gruesome slave rebellion was put into text in “The Fires of Jubilee: Nat Turner’s Fierce Rebellion.”…
In his poem “Sympathy,” Paul Laurence Dunbar develops the conceit of a caged bird to retain humanistic understanding of what slavery truly does to a person. Dunbar induces sympathetic emotions and calls for his readers understand his emotions through the use of the conceit. Dunbar backs up his feelings with vivid images while addressing slavery as the clear evil that constrains African Americans of their human rights.…
Eavan Boland is my favourite modern poet. There are many reasons for my positive response to her poems. What I love about Boland’s work is how revolutionary it is. Jody Allen Randolph, the American critic, once said that Boland “single-handedly challenged what was a heavily male-dominated profession”. What really appeals to me about Boland’s work is how she offers me fresh insight on old topics. In particular I like her reflections on love and relationships, the polemical/political dimension to her work and also the unique voice she has in Irish poetry: lending fresh input on old Irish topics, such as the Famine. Although I thoroughly enjoy Boland’s diverse range of themes, it is also the way in which she presents these themes to the reader which appeals to me. I find her poetry has an evocative, warm and lyrical quality with an impressing economy of language. I love how she uses banalities as symbols for emotions and ideas that otherwise would be completely ineffable. I also find her poetry contains suspense and tension of the best narrative.…