Stamp collecting Essays

  • Philately and Stamp Collecting

    1405 Words  | 3 Pages

    Philately, the study of stamps, differs from stamp collecting, although both hobbies appear synonymous with each other. Not every philatelist collects stamps, however, and many collectors hoard rare stamps without getting involved with the tiny details behind each commemorative adhesive postmark. Building a comprehensive stamp collection may require a basic education in philatelic literature to assess the worth in its current form. Stamp collectors will accumulate postage stamps for their historical

  • Pez

    1501 Words  | 4 Pages

    Pez was invented in 1927 in Vienna, Austria by an already accomplished candyman named Edward Haas III. The word "Pez" comes from the German word for peppermint, which is phefferminz. You take the first, middle, and last letters, put them together and you get Pez.      When Edward Haas first invented Pez it was originally a breath mint for adult smokers, thus the first dispenser which came along in 1947, naturally, looked like a cigarette lighter. In 1952 Edward Haas brought his business to America

  • David Hille Research Paper

    598 Words  | 2 Pages

    David Hille, who is around 72 years old, lives in suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. He enjoys his days reading, playing chess, and garden care. In free time, he also likes to watch baseball. He is Indians fan, Cleveland’s very own baseball team. He lives with his wife, who is five years younger than him. His only son, lives with his own family nearby, GUY often visits them and tries to help his granddaughter with her homework. Unlike other elder people I know, he likes the computer up to certain extent

  • The Art of the Postage Stamp

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postage Stamp When I imagine an artist, I picture a Parisian dabbing at a sprawling masterpiece between drags on a cigarette seated in an extravagantly long holder. He stands amid a motley sea of color, great splashes of vermillion and ultramarine and yellow ochre hiding the tarp on the studio floor. Somehow, not one lonely drop of paint adorns his Italian leather shoes with their pointed toes like baguettes. In my grand visions, I overlook a slightly smaller medium: the postage stamp. Caught

  • The Journey of Education

    840 Words  | 2 Pages

    5th grade teacher, Mr. Eckle. Mr. Eckle taught me that learning and the development of the mind is not reserved to just reading, writing and arithmetic. Mr. Eckle taught us the critical thinking benefits of chess, the attention to detail of stamp collecting, the political, historical aspects and consequences of the Revolutionary War, the scientific aspects of rockets and most notably, the courage to petition against higher powers for redress. Mr. Eckle taught us that throughout life we will be

  • Interview Essay - Murray Meisels

    1704 Words  | 4 Pages

    wife spent winters in California. In 1996 they decided to make California their permanent home, and are very happy living here. They are proud parents and grandparents. Murray is very active and enjoys the Emeritus program, exercising regularly, stamp collecting, golf and craft works. He creates beautiful ceramic, glass and sculptured pieces. The key elements in Murray's definition of happiness are peace, quiet, a lack of arguing, good health, and security. His definition of happiness has changed

  • Family Coin Collection

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    handed down in our family for generations. I first gained interest in collecting coins when I was a young boy. I and my grandfather would look through each other’s collections often. I think between my own interests and the connection with my grandfather, I have gained a passion and love for coins and rare money. Not just for the passion of collection but also for the sake of keeping the tradition alive. I first started collecting coins at about nine years of age.That same year I started to expand

  • Richard III: The Tragedy of Isolation

    1206 Words  | 3 Pages

    The real tragedy of Richard III lies in the progressive isolation of its protagonist.   From the very opening of the play when Richard III enters "solus", the protagonist's isolation is made clear. Richard's isolation progresses as he separates himself from the other characters and breaks the natural bonds between Man and nature through his efforts to gain power. The first scene of the play begins with a soliloquy, which emphasizes Richard's physical isolation as he appears alone as he speaks

  • Crime And Punishment - Style

    1384 Words  | 3 Pages

    Raskolnikov knows in his heart what is wrong and right, and that he wants to be brought back down off his pedestal and enter back in to normal human society. Raskolnikov’s theory of the "superman" who is above all societal constraints and able to stamp out the weak and detrimental people in society for the common good, is one that is obviously skewed. This prompts Raskolnikov to doubt his reasoning for and consequent execution of the crime. He knows that his theory is wrong, but he has been created

  • Rembrandt's Painting An Old Man in Military Costume

    820 Words  | 2 Pages

    University of Leiden, Rembrandt left school to pursue painting. He studied under Pieter Lastman who introduced the young painter to the works of Italian masters, particularly Caravaggio. Even though Rembrandt never traveled to Italy, his works bear the stamp of Italian influence, especially in his preference for dramatic lighting over Dutch smoothness. Moving to Amsterdam in 1631, Rembrandt began working for commission and became very successful. He painted “An Old Man in Military Costume” in 1631, during

  • Donald Duck

    2218 Words  | 5 Pages

    almost unpredictable and yet so predictable. One can almost guarantee a rise in temper, but why? We'll just have to wait and see. More About Who Donald Duck is "Whenever the corners of Donald Duck's eyebrows begin to meet and his webbed foot begins to stamp, most audiences squirm in pleasant anticipation of Donald's forthcoming anger. Never in motion pictures has there been such a funny fury as Donald's." Richard Tobin, 1935 "Make the duck kinda cocky. And since he's a duck and likes water, how about

  • Television And Race

    1144 Words  | 3 Pages

    Homer and Apu, the writers do not overlook a single Indian stereotype. First of all they have an Indian man as a convenience storekeeper. The episode starts with Apu committing the usual convenience store stereotypes. For example he sells a $0.29 stamp for $1.85, $2 worth of gas for $4.20, etc. Next he changes the expiration dates on rancid ham and sells them. When his customer gets sick from it, he offers a 5 pound bucket of thawing shrimp. Later he picks up a hotdog that he dropped and puts it

  • Ogden Nash: An Amazing Poet

    732 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ogden Nash was a poet that used nonsensical and humorous verse to draw people into reading his poems. Then, he would slip in insightful poems that speak a lot about life. His light verse even earned him a place on a postage stamp. His poems contain uneven lines that all rhyme, and he even made up spellings to words to achieve the best effect. Frederick Ogden Nash was born August 19, 1902, in New York. His family thought that education was very important, and this was the basis for his love of languages

  • Active Intellect In Aristotle,

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    through our encounter with the particular. What follows is a series of events which leads to knowledge. The passive intellect receives the image from the sense data and it is stamped upon the passive intellect from the material impression. From this stamp the active intellect is to draw out of it and somehow make a universal concept from this particular experience. But there is something more at work here. There is something in the mind ( more specifically in the soul) that somehow comprehends and makes

  • Right Before My Very Eyes

    1161 Words  | 3 Pages

    unavoidable sense of insecurity in those beliefs that are not supported by vision. Do you believe in Ghosts? Angels? Out of body experiences? Would you believe if you could see them? Maybe not. But it is possible to offer those who are withholding there stamp of approval on things that exist but cannot be seen, a better summary of evidence, which could make the inability to see something an invalid criteria for belief. Could a summary of evidence be compiled that would support this: Our vision is incomplete

  • The Reality of War in John Knowles' A Separate Peace

    3319 Words  | 7 Pages

    or "life" or "reality" he will assume that you mean this moment, even if it is fifty years past. The world, through his unleashed emotions, imprinted itself upon him, and he carries the stamp of that passing moment forever. (32) This statement explains that Gene must have something that is his "stamp." This stamp appears to define an individual-exemplifying what he stands for. It is found that this is true in the next paragraph where Gene continues, "For me, this moment-four years is a moment in

  • Deculturalization

    1239 Words  | 3 Pages

    form of deculturalization (Spring 49). "The problem was the assumption that U.S. institutions, customs, and beliefs were the best in the world and they should be imposed" (Spring 42). Throughout much of the past century, the United States sought to stamp its cultural ideal upon almost all peoples who existed within its realm of influence. It is only through the relatively modern ideology of multiculturalism and the celebration of diversity that the United States has begun to make amends for the injustices

  • Humanism

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    the lessons one needed to lead a moral and effective life. It was the profound respect for nature and scientific knowledge and of course the reevaluation of classical thought, literature, and art that gave the Renaissance its distinctively secular stamp. Many accomplished artists and intellectuals studied during the roughly 200 year period of the Renaissance, and while some are more recognized than others, it is their combined wisdom that created many of foundations on which modern society is based

  • The Spherical Image as the Central Paradox in Valediction: for Weeping

    1086 Words  | 3 Pages

    thy face coins them, and thy stamp they bear, And by this mintage they are something worth," (1-4) Both the coins and his tears have "worth," literal and figurative values respectively.  His tears fall from his face because he hurts for leaving, something no amount of coins can pay to alleviate. Like coins being stamped out of a sheet of metal, his tears are pressed from his eyes.   Because water reflects her image and tears are made out of water, the stamp image has a double meaning too

  • Food as Symbol and Symbolism in Toni Morrison’s Beloved

    1038 Words  | 3 Pages

    become so full from the food that flows endlessly that they become angry at Baby Suggs extravagance. Baby Suggs thinks it was this overfullness that caused them all to not notice the coming of Schoolteacher and his sons. The narrator of one passage is Stamp Paid and he recounts to Paul D. what happened at the party – what they ate and how it made everyone feel. These two passages rely on the retelling of stories from the Bible – the story of the Fall from Grace in the Garden of Eden in the Old Testament