Sevan bomar biography of martin luther
Prince Henry of Portugal is born
- Period: Jan 26, 1350 to
chapter 19-20
- Period: Mar 2, 1350 to
chapter 21
- Period: Mar 27, 1350 to
Chapter 22 time toast
- Period: Dec 19, 1350 to
History
- Prince Henry the Navigator. Born March 4, 1394; died November 13, 1460; he was the fourth son of John I, King of Portugal, by Queen Philippa, a daughter of John of Gaunt. In 1415 he commanded the expedition which captured Ceuta, Portugal's first oversea conquest
- Yonglo was the third emperor of the Ming Dynasty in China, reigning from 1402 to 1424.
- Between 1405 and 1433, the Ming government sponsored seven naval expeditions. The Yongle Emperor disregarding the Hongwu Emperor's expressed wishes designed them to establish a Chinese presence and impose imperial control over the Indian Ocean trade impress foreign peoples in the Indian Ocean basin
- Not known exactly when the movable type printing press was invented it appears around 1439 or 1440 it was very impotant and made it more simple to copy and make books, It also helped poor people have a few books instead of just rich people.
- The siege lasted from Frideay April 6 1453 till Tuesday May 29 1453 Marked the end of Bryzantine empire an empire that lasted over 1,100 years. Some mark the end of Middle ages by the fall of city and empire.
- Ended on October 19th 1453 when Bordeaux surrendered Calais as the last English posession in France it was not a single war that lasted for one hundred years but a sporatic succession of wars on the same theme.
- He was the first European to reacch india by sea, linking Europe and Asia for the first time by ocean route as well as the Atlantic and Indian oceans
- In 1488, Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias (c. 1450-1500) became the first European mariner to round the southern tip of Africa, opening the way for a sea route from Europe to Asia.
- December 31, 1491, in Saint-
Muambo Martin Luther Kabongo (86-4078), Mesu Kabongo(86-4079), Petitioners, v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, Respondent, 837 F.2d 753 (6th Cir. 1988)
Petitioners seek review of the Board of Immigration Appeals' ("the Board") dismissal of their appeal from the decision of the Immigration Judge ("IJ") ordering deportation and denying a request for the discretionary relief of voluntary departure. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the Board.
Petitioner Dr. Muambo Martin Luther Kabongo is a thirty-five-year-old national of Zaire who first entered the United States as a student in 1971. He last entered the United States on May 8, 1984. When he entered this country in 1971, he entered as a student with an F-1 student visa. See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a) (15) (F). Petitioner attended King College in Tennessee from September 1971 through May 1973. He then went to the University of Paris in Paris, France, for two years and then returned to the United States again in 1975. At that time, he attended the Eastern Mennonite College in Harrisonburg, Virginia, where he received a bachelor's degree. He then attended Penn State University for one year in a nondegree program.
Petitioner subsequently transferred to Cincinnati Medical College. This transfer was in violation of his F-1 student status. Deportation proceedings were commenced against petitioner in 1978, but he was granted the relief of voluntary departure by the Immigration & Naturalization Service ("INS"). Pursuant to his voluntary departure agreement, petitioner left the United States in June 1979 and relocated in France. In September 1979, he again returned to the United States with another F-1 student visa allowing him to study at the St. Thomas Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Petitioner completed his doctoral studies at the St. Thomas Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio, on September 21, 1982. Petitioner, however, remained in Cincinnati through May 1983. At that time, he depa
Memoir
Kindergarten
I was four years old when I started kindergarten in September 1962 in a suburb of Chicago. Since the birthday cut-off date was in December, and my birthday was in November, I was one of the youngest in my class—and would remain so through college and graduate school.
Although a shy boy, I was intent on going to my first day of school unaccompanied by my mother. I crossed the street and walked past one house on my way to Edgewood Elementary School, a small four-classroom school. Other children were lined up outside in two rows, so I stood at the end of one of the rows. The children laughed at me. I was in the girl’s line. Humiliated, I switched rows.
I don’t recall the name of my first teacher; I just remember that she was young and pleasant. But she seemed determined to forget me. Each day began with a child being chosen to come up to the front of the classroom and cross off the appropriate day on the wall calendar. Every day I swung my hand wildly in the air, and every day the teacher called on someone else. Since there were about 220 school days in a year, and my class consisted of about 22 students, I should have been called on about ten times. I remember crossing off the day only twice.
Memories are hazy about that first year. On one occasion I ate an apple I was supposed to have given to the teacher. On another occasion the teacher told me to close the door to the classroom bathroom when using it. On many occasions I draped my arm over the top of my head which often led to the teacher coming around to ask me what I wanted, and me answering, “Nothing, I’m just resting my arm.”
At the end of the year mothers were invited to come to the classroom to see the progress their children had made. The teacher pointed at the “J” of the alphabet and asked me what letter it was. I said, “G.” She pointed to another letter which I also misidentified. I sensed embarrassment from my teacher and my mother.
First Grade
Mrs. Funk was a hu
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