Major Robert Anderson born June 14th 1805 was born as a soldier in a Soldiers retreat in Kentucky. He graduated from the United States West Point Military Academy. At West Point he earned a commission and became a second lieutenant in the 2nd regiment Artillery. And from there he joined Lincoln in and out of service. He was first lieutenant, then Seminole as assistant general to Winfield Scott, then captain in 1841. He was wounded in the Mexican American war where he was commanded and received a Brevet Major. He was the Major of the Union Army in 1957. Major Anderson was a slave owner back in Kentucky. He was a union commander officer of the US Army in Charleston SC. Him and Lincoln worked close in hand until one day Anderson wanted to take matters into his own hands, and move from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter to become the center of the Harbor. February 1861 the Confederate States demanded the fort to be turned over, and Anderson said no. Brid Gen PG Beauregard led the artillery attack on April 12th; it went on for 36 hours. Anderson had to be careful on how much the union fired back considering their supply ship has been captured. It was not til the 14th that Anderson raised the 33 American flag along with the white flag to surrender. On that day they got a 100 gun union salute, a union solider was skilled due to a misfire. Anderson became a nationalism hero when he put up that American flag with 33 stars. After that he was promoted to Brigadier general May 15th. He was then Commander of Kentucky. His last battle was August 1863, Fort Adams, Newport Rhode…
David Berkowitz also known as the “Son of Sam” and “The .44Caliber Killer” was born on June 1, 1953. Berkowitz was born Richard David Falco in Brooklyn, New York. His parents were Betty Broder and Joseph Kleinman. Broder was married to Tony Falco and had a daughter with him but Falco left her. She later had an affair with Kleinman and got pregnant, he told her to get rid of the baby but she had it anyway and put the baby under Falco’s name. A few days after his birth, he was adopted by Nathan and Pearl Berkowtiz. At an early age Berkowitz had an above average intelligence, but lost interest and became an infatuation with petty larceny and pyromania. He earned a reputation as the neighborhood bully. David was especially shy around girls. His mother Pearl, the only person he was ever close to, died of breast cancer in 1967. David wasn’t close to his father very well and disliked the woman his father later married. Berkowitz joined the U.S army in 1971, and was active until 1974. He wanted to die a glorious death in Vietnam but instead got shipped to Korea. He qualified as a sharpshooter especially with the M16 rifle. He was discharged and returned back to New York. Afterward he tried to search for his birth mother what he had found will then propel him on to the streets in search for blood. He learned his conception and birth, and soon he and his birth mother lost contact with one another. Berkowitz then joined a cult of Satan worshipers.…
5. Describe the appearance and the behavior of the group that Rip meets on the mountain. What causes him to fall asleep?…
A Social psychologist by the name of Robert Levine, once conducted a study of the tempo of life in 31 different countries. He collected data on 3 different things, these included the time it takes to buy a stamp, average walking speed of pedestrians during a rush hour and the accuracy of clocks on the walls of banks. In his study, he discovered that in places like london and New York, the times were the fastest. And also that there…
British scholar Colin Renfrew has brought many new ideas about the source for a "superfamily" of language. Colin Renfrew was a British scholar that proposed that there were three cultural hearths from the "Agricultural Theory." The source for a "superfamily" of language was found through language diffusion, theories of languages, and Colin Renfrew's ideas off of the "Agricultural Theory."…
In Barry Strauss’, “The Trojan War: A New History”, he discusses a topic that has been talked about for thousands of years, yet is able to bring new interpretations and arguments about it. While Strauss shows that many of the accepted ideas about the Trojan War can be disproved, he also fails to support his claims with adequate historical references and analyzes.…
ENGLISH POEM ASSIGNMENT!! QUESTION 1: composers use distinctive language choices to reflect distinctive experiences. To what extent do your texts support this view?…
There is no doubt about it that sex sells. In today’s world it is impossible to turn on the television without seeing a sexual-based commercial playing. Raunch culture is known as a sexualized lifestyle. Many businesses, advertisements, movies, and people partake in this lifestyle choice every day. Ariel Levy’s is a staff writer at The New Yorker magazine and author of the book Female Chauvinist Pigs she has appeared in big name magazines such as Vogue and the New York Times. Ariel Levy’s standpoint in “Female Chauvinist Pigs” is that raunch culture empowers women. I have mixed feelings about this article. I disagree that raunch culture empowers women however I agree there is just a certain way you have to do it.…
Robert Gray is an Australian poet whose work is closely linked with nature. He grew up in the post ww11 era, and lives on the north coast. The poems ‘The Meatworks’, and ‘Flames and Dangling Wire’, express how he feels about life, his experiences and his beliefs. His poetry has such an enduring nature because it can be understood in so many different contexts, and includes universal themes which remain relevant to societies past, present and future.…
The relationship between Richard Rodriguez and Richard Hoggart is supremely that of a student to a teacher with Rodriguez as the student and Hoggart as the teacher. In moments when Rodriguez says that Hoggart’s opinion of what a “scholarship boy” entails is “more accurate than fair,” Rodriguez is learning more as if he is a student (547). Of course Rodriguez now, after having written “The Achievement of Desire,” understands his place as a “scholarship boy” student; however, there are brutally honest aspects that Hoggart is able to recognize and Rodriguez does not want to acknowledge. Rodriguez lived through his education as a “bank,” as Paulo Freire would say, and there are many negative impacts that this had on his future and actual knowledge.…
“God made you this way for a reason”, this was told to a young boy by his mother who would later become something that no one would ever expect.…
Rodriguez faces a few tensions in his personal experience such as being a "scholarship boy" as oppose to a well rounded student and and his life at home compared to a more friendly home environment. Rodriguez says that "I was a very good student, I was a also a very bad student. I was a scholarship boy, a certain kind of scholarship boy. Always successful, I was always unconfident. Exhilarated by my progress. Sad. I became the prized student - anxious and eager to learn. Too eager, too anxious - an imitative and unoriginal pupil." ( Rodrigues #283 ) Rodriguez describes himself here as imitating his teachers too much and being a perfect student instead of thinking for himself and taking in the knowledge he is given by his teachers and analyzing it and putting it to use. He is unoriginal and and uninteresting compared to a student who can use their knowledge in their own way and gets more involved. The other tension Rodriguez faces his the tension he has with his family, mostly his mother and father. At home his mother and father both support and encourage what he is doing very much but they didn't like the fact that he would always be in his room and the fact that the only thing he was involved with was school. "He permits himself embarrassment at their lack of education." (Rodriguez #286) This quote shows that Rodriguez's amount of knowledge of the english language and other subjects he had compared to his parents and therefore he was somewhat embarrassed by them and it created a tough home environment to live in because he didn't communicate much with his parents. This contrasts the home environment where their is a strong relationship between the family and their is communication.…
Robert Moses was the creator of New York City, Long Island, and Westchester County, NY throughout the 1 1930s and 1950s. He had transformed neighborhoods into shorelines and highways/roadways. He was very successful and changed NYC forever. However, some believed that he had removed lower-class residents from their homes to benefit the rich. I believe that he had helped the people of the future by making their life easier and untroublesome. But he was also very inconsiderate with the people who he had displaced to create a better future for the working society today. He had ignored the people of New York City, who had made the city up. Streets, playgrounds, and pools do not make a city, but the people who live within it do. Michael Powell wrote an article in the New York Times called “A Tale of Two Cities”. In his article he discussed the two view points of what Robert Moses had built. He uses Robert Caro’s article, “The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York”, to show that he had disregarded public input to overcome his desire for power. Powell tells us that Caro believed that Moses neglected public transit and destroyed many neighborhoods to build his renewal projects. Powell quotes Caro, “We don’t need a new Robert Moses because he ignored the values of New York”. In other words, Caro thinks that the city would have been a different place (a better place) if Moses never existed. His 1,200 page article also includes that he was racist not only to the poor but to the black people as well. This opened the eyes of many people. People started to look outside the box and not only at these “acres if sterile public housing towers, parks and playgrounds for the rich and comfortable, and highways” that he built. They realized that he ignored the voices of the people whose houses he ruptured. He forced them out of the homes and only gave them a 90 day notice. Everyone was clueless as to why this was happening and they did not have enough time to leave.…
Samuel Slater was born in Belper, Derbyshire, England on June 9, 1768. He became involved in the textile industry at the age 14. Samuel Slater worked in the industry for 8 years, which is why he is an English-American industrialist. Mr. Slater is known as the “Father of the American Industrial Revolution”, a phrase brought up by Andrew Jackson. He also was known as “Father of the American Factory System” and “Slater the Traitor” (In the UK) because he brought the British textile technology to America with a few modifications. Slater began the Textile industry all by himself. By the end of Slater’s life he owned thirteen spinning mills, established tenant farms, and towns around his textile mills such as Slatersville, Rhode Island. Slatersville was one of his first mill villages.…
Absolutely not, Identity and heritage are two different things with a very distinctive definition. The meaning of the word heritage is deeply linked with past, loads of family traditions, roots and culture. The identity associates more with personality, own choices, opinions and mainly how we differentiate from other people in all aspects.…