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Famous People

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Title: Famous People


1
Famous People
  • Fame is a bee.
  • It has a song
  • It has a sting
  • Ah, too, it has a wing.
  • Emily Dickinson, poet (1830-1886)

2
Famous People
  • Dreams pass into the reality of action. From the
    actions stems the dream again and this
    interdependence produces the highest form of
    living. -Anais Nin, writer (1903-1977)

3
The way we look on things
  • If you treat men the way they are, you never
    improve them. If you treat them the way you want
    them to be, you do. Goethe
  • Talent is only the starting point. Irving Berlin
  • You must be the change you wish to see in the
    world. Mahatma Gandhi

4
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
  • First they ignore you, then they laugh at you,
    then they fight you, then you win.
  • Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if
    you were to live forever.

5
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
  • I offer you peace. I offer you love. I offer you
    friendship. I see your beauty. I hear your need.
    I feel your feelings My wisdom flows from the
    Highest Source. I salute that Source in you. Let
    us work together for unity and love.

6
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
  • Seven social sins
  • 1. Politics without principles
  • 2. Wealth without work
  • 3. Pleasure without conscience
  • 4. knowledge without character
  • 5. Commerce without morality
  • 6. Science without humanity
  • 7. Worship without sacrifice.

7
Martin Luther
  • Martin Luther (November 10, 1483February 18,
    1546) was a German monk, theologian, and church
    reformer.
  • His translation of the Bible into the vernacular,
    making it more accessible to ordinary people, had
    a tremendous political impact on the church and
    on German culture.

8
Martin Luther
  • It furthered the development of a standard
    version of the German language, added several
    principles to the art of translation, and
    influenced the translation of the English King
    James Bible.
  • Great minds discuss ideas. Average minds discuss
    events. Small minds discuss people. (Eleanor
    Roosevelt)

9
Eleanor Roosevelt
  • When Eleanor was eight, her mother died of
    diphtheria and she and her brothers were sent to
    live with her maternal grandmother, New York
  • Just before Eleanor turned ten, she was orphaned
    when her father died of complications of
    alcoholism.

10
Eleanor Roosevelt
  • In his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of
    Eleanor Roosevelt, author Joseph Lash describes
    her during this period of childhood as insecure
    and starved for affection, considering herself
    "ugly".

11
Eleanor Roosevelt
  • At her memorial service, Adlai Stevenson asked,
    "What other single human being has touched and
    transformed the existence of so many?" Stevenson
    also said that Roosevelt was someone "who would
    rather light a candle than curse the darkness."

12
Eleanor Roosevelt
  • You gain strength, courage and confidence by
    every experience in which you really stop to look
    fear in the face. You are able to say to
    yourself, I have lived through this horror. I
    can take the next thing that comes along. You
    must do the thing you think you cannot do.

13
Think of this
  • Twenty years from now you will be more
    disappointed by the things you didnt do than by
    the
  • ones you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail
    away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds
  • in your sails. Explore. Dream.
  • Mark Twain.

14
The way we look on things
  • Once upon a time a man whose ax was missing
    suspected his neighbor's son. The boy walked like
    a thief, looked like a thief, and spoke like a
    thief. But the man found his ax while digging in
    the valley, and the next time he saw his
    neighbor's son, the boy walked, looked and spoke
    like any other child. -Lao-tzu, philosopher (6th
    century BCE)

15
Mother Teresa
  • Mother Teresa (Albanian, August 26, 1910
    September 5, 1997) was a Roman Catholic nun who
    founded the Missionaries of Charity in Kolkata
    (Calcutta), India in 1950.
  • For over forty years she ministered to
  • the poor,
  • sick,
  • orphaned, and
  • dying, while guiding the Missionaries of
    Charity's expansion, first throughout India and
    then in other countries.

16
Mother Teresa
  • Following her death she was beatified by Pope
    John Paul II and given the title Blessed Teresa
    of Calcutta
  • Be kind and merciful. Let no one ever come to
    you without coming away better and happier.
  • Be the living expression of God's kindness.

17
Diana, Princess of Wales
  • Diana Frances née Spencer July 1961 31
    August 1997
  • was the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales.
  • Their sons, Princes William and Henry (Harry),
    are second and third in line to the thrones of
    the United Kingdom and fifteen other Commonwealth
    Realms.

18
Diana, Princess of Wales
  • In April 1987, the Princess of Wales was one of
    the first high-profile celebrities to be
    photographed touching a person infected with HIV
    at the 'chain of hope' organization.

19
Diana, Princess of Wales
  • Bill Clinton
  • In 1987, when so many still believed that AIDS
    could be contracted through casual contact,
    Princess Diana sat on the sickbed of a man with
    AIDS and held his hand. She showed the world that
    people with AIDS deserve no isolation, but
    compassion and kindness. It helped change world's
    opinion, and gave hope to people with AIDS.

20
Diana, Princess of Wales
  • Anywhere I see suffering, that is where I want to
    be, doing what I can.
  • Everyone of us needs to show how much we care for
    each other and, in the process, care for
    ourselves.
  • I knew what my job was it was to go out and meet
    the people and love them.

21
Alexander Fleming
  • Sir Alexander Fleming (6 August 1881
  • 11 March 1955) was a Scottish
  • biologist and pharmacologist.
  • "When I woke up just after dawn on September 28,
    1928,I certainly didn't plan to revolutionize all
    medicine by discovering the world's first
    antibiotic, or bacteria killer," Fleming would
    write later, "But I guess that's exactly what I
    did."

22
Alexander Fleming
  • Fleming's accidental discovery and isolation of
    penicillin in September 1928 marks the start of
    modern antibiotics.
  • Fleming also discovered very early that bacteria
    developed antibiotic resistance whenever too
    little penicillin was used or when it was used
    for too short a period.

23
Louis Pasteur
  • he created the first vaccine for rabies.
  • He is regarded as one of the three main founders
    of microbiology,
  • He is buried beneath the Institut Pasteur, an
    incredibly rare honor in France, where being
    buried in a cemetery is mandatory save for the
    fewer than 300 "Great Men" who are entombed in
    the Panthéon

24
Think of this
  • Don't say you don't have enough time. You have
    exactly the same number of hours per day that
    were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur,
    Michaelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci,
    Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein. -H.
    Jackson Brown, Jr., writer
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