respect or a privilege. He invented the Bunsen Burner- a small adjustable gas burner used in laboratories/a piece of laboratory equipment that produces a single open gas flame, which is used for heating, sterilization, and combustion. Bunsen burner flames depend on airflow in the throat holes (on the burner side, not the needle valve for gas flow): 1. air hole closed (safety flame used for lighting or default), 2. air hole slightly open, 3. air hole half open, 4. air hol Conclusion Yes, his achievements are honorable, because he does what he loves and he does it so that people can live there e fully open (roaring blue flame). Was Robert Bunsen honorable? Yes, I think Robert Bunsen is honorable or at least people honored
I hope I have answered the question “What was his personal life like?” good in here and would like to summarize by saying that he was able to overcome all odds to become a famous inventor that even had a movie made by him. I would also like to say that He made many, many products that we still use all from simple plants like peanuts in summary to the answer of the question “What did he actually do?”. He also had many hobbies that ended up in helping many people (“What did he like to do when he wasn’t working?”). I have found that this man that I knew nothing about before the report is one of the few real life people I know of that overcame so many things in his life that almost no one even knows
In 2003, Roy Blount Jr. published the book Robert E. Lee through the Penguin Group Inc. This book is different then other books published about Lee due to the fact that this book looks behind the man in uniform, and shows how Lee became the legend that we know today. Blount brings an element of humor that some would not expect to find when writing about Lee. Through this type of writing, Lee transforms into the everyday person who we all can relate to.
Robert E Lee is very quick and smart. He knows how to improve the quality of troops and to nullify the Union’s advantage. Lee is willing to make bold and risky moves, and does not let his defeats hinder his performance. General Lee has great relations with his soldiers, and uses his engineering experience to his advantage.
Robert Olen Butler Robert Olen Butler, Jr., was born January 20, 1945, and grew up in Granite City, Illinois, a steel town near St. Louis, Missouri. His father, Robert Olen Butler, Sr., was chair of the theater department at St. Louis University, and his mother, Lucille Hall Butler, an executive secretary. Butler graduated from the University of Illinois with a B.S. in oral interpretation. He went on to the University of Iowa, receiving his M.A. in playwriting in 1969. While in Iowa, he married, and then divorced Carol Supplee. When Butler finished graduate school he enlisted in the Army. He was assigned to Military Intelligence, given intensive training in the Vietnamese language, and sent to Vietnam. Butler’s “professional proficiency” was gained in a year’s immersion course, taught by a Vietnamese exile who also gave him insight into the Vietnamese culture and the struggles of an exile. His tour of duty was served in Saigon until 1972. It is felt by many that his war time training and experiences deeply influenced his life, writing, and thinking. In July 1972, he married the poet Marilyn Geller and worked as an editor and reporter in New York City for a year. When his wife became pregnant with their son, Joshua, the family moved back to Illinois. Butler taught as a substitute in his hometown of Granite City in 1973 and 1974, then became a reporter in Chicago. He moved back to the New York City area in 1975 and took a job as editor-in-chief of Energy User News, an investigative newspaper he created. According to Butler, every word of his first four published novels was written on a legal pad, by hand, on his lap, on the Long Island Railroad as he commuted back and forth from Sea Cliff to Manhattan. In 1985, Butler assumed an assistant professorship at McNeese State University in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Louisiana is home to several Vietnamese communities, and the Louisiana Vietnamese provided Butler with material for his Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of short stories, A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain. Butler once said that he finds that much fiction about Vietnam fails to portray the Vietnamese people with sufficient depth, perhaps because it focuses more on the military action. His early work is dominated by the “Vietnam trilogy,” novels in which a minor character in one shows up as a major character in another.
John Ford directed many well-known western films that brought back the vibrancy of that era. One of which is, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. Back in 1962, when the film was made, many dismissed it as a petty, disappointing work. Much of the criticism leveled against The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance focused on its look. The majority of films were done in color that gave it a bright, upbeat tone that the public loved. The “look” present in Liberty Valance was black and white, which went against the normal film characteristic of its time. This was an artistic choice made by Ford, because it is known that the film had a extensive budget, which would of made it easy to make in color. One can inference that Ford's intention was to suggest a sense of reminiscence. To some extent, this movie is about the passing of the old ways. The West is changing. The frontier is deteriorating. The present is dissolving not into history, but into legend, which removes facts and puts in what we want to know.
He has saved the world from being plunged into slavery, and secured for us the right to live life as we please. The first time, he organised an army by his lonesome within a day to stop the evil forces who roamed free, pillaging anything that they came across. He then led the battle, not one to sit in a command tent and throw around orders, while his friends put their lives at risk.
...xtent Gandhi achieved a moral victory as well as a political one. For adherents of faiths that encourage peace, it is also a religious one.
“Is everybody alright?” were the last words Robert Kennedy spoke a few seconds after he had been shot four times by Sirhan Sirhan in Los Angeles. Kennedy “waited for his election results” to see if he would be the next presidential canidate and was later shot. “Bobby” Kennedy’s assassination was unexpected and most likely occured because of political reasons. Many believe Sirhan Sirhan killed mister Kennedy because of his possible relationship with Palestine, but journal entries of Sirhan’s proved differently. “RFK must die” and “My determination to elimate RFK is becoming more of an unshakable obession” are both examples found in Sirhan’s diaries before Kennedy had any known associations with Palestine; they gave direct evidence that was used to prove he was guilty in trial. Kennedy’s assassination was certainly not justified.
I think he was a hard worker and a noble man. He was able to accomplish a lot in his time. If he was the complete opposite I wouldn't hire him as a worker and he wouldn't have accomplished anything in his life. If all this happened in a different time I think the outcome would be completely
...a massacre of approximately a thousand people is another example of his strong moral ethics. As a leader you must be able to lead, especially when others falter. After this event Gandhi’s stance grew even stronger. Though really proves his ethical leadership was his consistent preaching on remaining peaceful.
It was the birth of their second child taht inspired one of Skinner's inventions. He invented the ""baby box"" to ease the burdens of chilcare for his wife. The box is still used today, but is not so widespread because changes in childacare are hard to make. Another of his most famous endeavors was ""project pigion."" This was an experiment designed to teach pigions to guide missles in the 1930's.
the historical events, mixed his good will, explored truth behind the events, and created a peaceful
portrayed him as an innocent and a noble man. I feel that he is one of
... and degrees in his lifetime, and the Nobel Peace Prize was one of them. This among many other medals shows his influence on the world.
Some of his inventions were improvements on other inventions, like the telephone. He didn’t “invent” the telephone he just made it better. Some of his inventions he did try to invent, like the light bulb and the movie projector. The one he is most proud of was pretty much an accident--the phonograph.