                |
|
|
|
"Ruin and recovering are both
from within." Epictetus
About
Epictetus
Epictetus, the Roman-era
Stoic philosopher, lived a very ascetic life, believing
that happiness came from living "according to the will
of nature" and that free will comes from how we respond
to circumstances. He was born in 55 AD in what is now
Turkey and spent most of his life in Rome. He spent his
youth as a slave and became crippled due to his master's
harsh treatment. He was later exiled to Greece, where he
founded a school and wrote his most famed work, The
Discourses. He died in
135. | |
|
|
"It may be hard for an egg to turn into a
bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to
learn to fly while remaining an egg."
C. S.
Lewis
About C. S. Lewis
Anglo-Irish author C. S. Lewis, called Jack
by his friends, is best known for his children's fantasy
series, The Chronicles of Narnia. He was born in 1898 in
Belfast but settled in England after serving in World
War I. He belonged to a writing group with J. R. R.
Tolkien, whom he credited for his religious awakening.
Lewis went on to write many Christian-themed books. His
marriage to Joy Gresham, who died of bone cancer, was
memorialized in the movie Shadowlands. He died in 1963.
|
|
|
|
"You're only given a little spark of madness.
You mustn't lose it."
Robin
Williams
About Robin
Williams
In 2005, Robin Williams, the Oscar-winning
American actor known for his wild improvisations and
amazing mimicry, was voted by fellow comedians and
comedy insiders as one of the top 50 comedy acts ever.
He was born in 1952 in Chicago, and he first garnered
attention as a stand-up comic in San Francisco. A guest
role as the alien Mork on the TV series Happy
Days was so popular it led to his own show, Mork
and Mindy. He has starred in many successful films,
including Mrs. Doubtfire and Good Will
Hunting. He is married with three
children. |
"You gain strength, courage and
confidence by every experience in which you really stop
to look fear in the face."
Elanor Roosevelt
About Elanor
Roosevelt Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of
president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was a powerful
political figure in her own right, crusading tirelessly
for humanist causes. She was born in New York in 1884
and was orphaned young. After Franklin was struck by
polio, she acted as his eyes and ears. She was central
to the creation of the United Nations Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which she considered her
crowning achievement, and wrote numerous essays,
including a long-running column called "My Day." She
died in 1962.
|
"We are
made to persist. That's how we find out who we are."
Tobias Wolff
About Tobias Wolff American
author Tobias Wolff is best known for the memoir A Boy's
Life, about Wolff's childhood with an itinerant mother
and abusive stepfather. He was born in 1945 in Alabama
and spent most of his childhood in the Pacific
Northwest. His book In Pharaoh's Army: Memories of the
Lost War recounts his experiences as a young soldier in
Vietnam. He is an acclaimed writing professor at
Stanford University. He has three children.
|
|
"Choices are the hinges of destiny."
Pythagoras
About
Pythagoras Greek philosopher and
mathematician Pythagoras, called the Father of Numbers,
is best known for developing the Pythagorean Theorem. He
was born on the Greek island of Samos in 582 BC and
moved to Italy, where he founded a religious school
preaching vegetarianism and reincarnation. He believed
that everything could be explained by mathematics and
measured in rhythmic cycles. He wrote nothing down; some
theories ascribed to Pythagoras may have been discovered
by his followers. He died around 500
BC. |
"Be
aware of wonder. Live a balanced life learn some and
think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and
play and work every day some." Robert
Fulghum
About Robert Fulghum American
author Robert Fulghum is best known for his book All I
Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten, which
dominated the New York Times best-seller list for nearly
two years. He was born in 1937 in Texas. In his youth he
worked at odd jobs, including ditchdigger, ranch hand,
and singing cowboy. After a short career at IBM, he
became a Unitarian minister. He has written seven
best-selling books of essays. His anecdotes of everyday
life encapsulate his down-home philosophy. He lives in
Seattle and Crete. |
"Victory is
won not in miles but in inches. Win a little now, hold
your ground, and later, win a little more." Louis
L'Amour
About Louis
L'Amour Louis L'Amour, the author known for
his pulp westerns, wrote more than 100 novels in his
lifetime. Born in North Dakota in 1908 as Louis LaMoore,
he worked across the southwestern U.S. on a string of
backbreaking jobs including longshoreman, elephant
handler, and cattle skinner. He saw his writing as akin
to telling tales by a campfire and wanted to be
remembered simply as a good storyteller. He won the
Medal of Freedom in 1984 and died in
1988. |
|
"I am always doing that which I
can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it."
Pablo Picasso
About Pablo
Picasso Pablo Picasso, the Spanish painter
at the forefront of Cubism, is perhaps best known for
his painting Guernica, which depicts the hopelessness
and violence of war. The masterpiece hung in the Museum
of Modern Art in New York until democracy was restored
in Spain; the painting was then sent home, where it
hangs now at Reina Sofν a, Spain's national museum of
modern art. Born in Spain in 1881, Picasso spent his
adult life in France. Although he's known for his
abstract paintings, his realistic work, particularly his
Blue Period, was equally accomplished. He loved to be
surrounded by friends and had multiple love affairs. He
died in 1973. |
"If no one ever took risks,
Michelangelo would have painted on the Sistine floor."
Neil Simon
About Neil Simon Neil
Simon, the Tony awardwinning American playwright, is
known for his humorous plays including The Odd Couple
and Chapter Two. He was born in 1927 in New York City.
With his brother Danny, he wrote for the seminal Your
Show of Shows. Critical success came with the
autobiographical trilogy: Brighton Beach Memoirs, about
his childhood, Biloxi Blues, about his stint in the
army, and Broadway Bound, about his early days in TV. He
has also written several successful
screenplays. |
"When one door of happiness closes,
another opens; but often we look so long at the closed
door that we do not see the one which has been opened
for us."
Helen
Keller
About Helen
Keller American author and activist Helen
Keller was born in Alabama in 1880; she became blind and
deaf after a childhood fever. When Helen was seven, her
teacher, Annie Sullivan, coaxed her out of her sullen,
angry shell and taught her to communicate. From then on,
Keller took on the world. She graduated from Radcliffe,
traveled the world visiting sweatshops and speaking out
for the powerless, helped to found the ACLU, and wrote
11 books. She died in 1968.
|
|
"Parties who want milk should not seat themselves
on a stool in the middle of the field in hope that
the cow will back up to them."
Elbert
Hubbard
About Elbert
Hubbard Elbert Hubbard, the successful
American writer, printer, and businessman, is best known
for his inspirational essay, "A Message to Garcia." He
was born in Illinois in 1856. He retired at age 35 from
a successful job selling soap to found Roycroft, an
artist's colony in East Aurora, New York, where he wrote
and printed his own books and magazines while other
artisans created Arts and Crafts furniture. He died on
the ship Lusitania when it was sunk by a German
submarine in 1915.
|
"Man's mind, once
stretched by a new idea, never regains its original
dimensions."
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
About Oliver Wendell Holmes
Jr. Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., one of the greatest
American jurists of the twentieth century, was called
the Great Dissenter because of the brilliance of his
dissenting opinions. He was born in Boston in 1841 and
was named for his father, the author and doctor. He was
appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1902 and became
known for his pithy, quotable opinions. He stood strong
on free-speech rights and was an advocate of judicial
restraint and objectivity. He died in
1935.
|
"Have the courage to follow your heart and
intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want
to become. Everything else is secondary."
Steve
Jobs
About Steve Jobs Steve
Jobs, the American computer pioneer who cofounded Apple,
is known for his intensity, his brashness, and his focus
on elegant design. He was born in 1955 in Los Altos. At
age 21, he and Steve Wozniac built the first Apple
computer in his garage. Its successor, the Macintosh,
introduced the mouse. After Jobs was ousted from Apple,
he bought Pixar Animation, creator of Toy Story and
Finding Nemo. On his return to Apple, he introduced the
iMac and iPod, restoring the company's
luster.
|
|
"In all affairs it's a healthy thing now and then
to hang a question mark on the things you have long
taken for granted."
Bertrand Russell
About Bertrand
Russell British philosopher Bertrand Russell
was greatly responsible for the shift toward logical
analysis among philosophers; he introduced rigorous
scientific methodology to the field and was best known
for his books Principia Mathematica and The Principles
of Mathematics. He was born in 1872 to an aristocratic
English family but raised by a strict paternal
grandmother after his parents died young. He won the
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950. Albert Einstein
collaborated with him on a manifesto calling for nuclear
disarmament. He died in
1970.
|
"Always do the things you fear the most. Courage
is an acquired taste, like caviar."
Erica
Jong
About Erica Jong Erica
Jong, the American author who made a splash with the
sexual frankness of her first novel, Fear of Flying, has
written several works of fiction as well as nonfiction
books, including the autobiographical Fear of Fifty. She
was born in New York in 1942 and now splits her time
between New York City and Weston, Connecticut. She has
been married four times and has one
daughter.
|
"Happiness is when what you think, what you say,
and what you do are in harmony."
Mohandas
Gandhi
About Mohandas
Gandhi Mohandas Gandhi, known by the
honorific title Mahatma ("great souled"), embodied the
power of nonviolent protest to achieve great change. He
was born in India in 1896 and awoke to discrimination
while practicing law in South Africa. He brought the
struggle for equality back to India, rousing the
population to demand self-rule from the British. He was
profoundly religious, spending one day a week in
complete silence; he was also a devout vegetarian. He
was assassinated in
1948.
|
"Be
aware of wonder. Live a balanced life learn some and
think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and
play and work every day some."
Robert Fulghum
About Robert
Fulghum American author Robert Fulghum is
best known for his book All I Really Need to Know I
Learned in Kindergarten, which dominated the New York
Times best-seller list for nearly two years. He was born
in 1937 in Texas. In his youth he worked at odd jobs,
including ditchdigger, ranch hand, and singing cowboy.
After a short career at IBM, he became a Unitarian
minister. He has written seven best-selling books of
essays. His anecdotes of everyday life encapsulate his
down-home philosophy. He lives in Seattle and
Crete.
|
"Don't carry a grudge. While you're
carrying a grudge, the other guy's out
dancing."
Buddy Hackett
About Buddy
Hackett Buddy Hackett, the bawdy American
comedian known for his high spirits and expressive face,
primarily played comic roles in film and television but
shined in his dramatic role in the 1979 TV movie Bud and
Lou, about Abbott and Costello. He was born Leonard
Hacker in Brooklyn in 1924. He made his reputation
performing at nightclubs in the borscht belt of the
Catskills resorts. His television work includes the
sitcom Stanley, which costarred a young Carol Burnett.
He died in 2003. |
"When you have exhausted all possibilities,
remember this you haven't."
Thomas Edison
About Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison, the American inventor who
made his early fortune with the stock ticker and the
phonograph record, is credited with inventing the light
bulb although he simply improved upon the original
idea by making the bulb burn longer. Edison was born in
1847 in Ohio. He was a dreamer in school; his teacher
called him "addled," and his mother taught him at home.
He used the money from his inventions to set up a lab
with a number of employees; he held a record 1,093
patents in his name. He died in
1931.
|
|
"When thinking won't cure fear, action will."
William Clement Stone
About William Clement
Stone American businessman William Clement
Stone overcame an impoverished childhood to head an
insurance empire. He was born in 1902 in Chicago. His
father died when he was three, leaving the family in
debt. Stone dropped out of school to help his mother
sell insurance. He called cold calls "gold calls," and
started each day saying, "I feel happy! I feel healthy!
I feel ter-r-r-ific!" He cowrote the book Success
Through a Positive Mental Attitude with Napoleon Hill.
He died in 2002 at age 100. |
"Happiness is when what you think, what you say,
and what you do are in harmony."
Mohandas
Gandhi
About Mahatma Gandhi Mohandas Gandhi, known
by the honorific title Mahatma ("great souled"),
embodied the power of nonviolent protest to achieve
great change. He was born in India in 1896 and awoke to
discrimination while practicing law in South Africa. He
brought the struggle for equality back to India, rousing
the population to demand self-rule from the British. He
was profoundly religious, spending one day a week in
complete silence; he was also a devout vegetarian. He
was assassinated in 1948.
|
"It has been my philosophy of life that
difficulties vanish when faced boldly."
Isaac
Asimov
About Isaac
Asimov Isaac Asimov, the American author
known as one of the top writers of science fiction's
golden age, penned nearly 500 fiction and nonfiction
books, including the Foundation trilogy and I, Robot.
Born in 1920 in Russia, he moved to the US with his
parents at age three. As a teen, he would read pulp
magazines in his parents' candy store and became
inspired to write his own stories. His fiction frames
interesting ideas in a bare-bones narrative. He died in
1992. |
|
"Could we change our attitude, we should not only
see life differently, but life itself would come to
be different."
Katherine Mansfield
About Katherine
Mansfield Katherine Mansfield was the pen
name of short story writer Katherine Beauchamp, who is
best known for her collection The Garden Party. Born in
New Zealand in 1888, she moved to England as a young
woman and became friends with writers such as Virginia
Woolf and D.H. Lawrence. Her writing style was
influenced by Anton Chekhov; like him, she focused on
intimate moments that revealed character. She in turn
influenced a generation of short story writers. She died
in 1923 of tuberculosis.
|
"Life is not easy for any of us. But what of
that? We must have perseverance and above all confidence
in ourselves. We must believe that we are gifted for
something and that this thing must be
attained."
Marie Curie
About Marie
Curie Marie Curie, the pioneering
Polish-born French chemist, was the first person to win
Nobel Prizes in two different fields. She was born in
Warsaw in 1867. No Polish school would admit a woman, so
she worked as a governess, sending her sister through
medical school in France. Her sister, in turn, sent her
to the Sorbonne, where she met her husband, Pierre
Curie. Together they studied radiology, discovering two
new chemical elements and inventing the term
"radioactivity." She died in 1934.
|
"I have learned, as a rule of thumb, never to ask
whether you can do something. Say, instead, that you are
doing it. Then fasten your seat belt. The most
remarkable things follow."
Julia
Cameron
About Julia
Cameron American author Julia Cameron has
become an icon in the creative community for her
best-selling self-help book, The Artist's Way, which
guides people through a series of simple but profound
exercises to awaken their creativity. She grew up in
Chicago and has been writing seriously since age 18. In
addition to her 19 books, she has written plays,
screenplays, and songs, and is currently writing
musicals. She was married to film director Martin
Scorsese and has one
daughter. |
|
"Let me listen to me and not to them."
--
Gertrude Stein
About Gertrude
Stein Gertrude Stein, the expatriate
American author known for her clever wordplay, was an
ardent collector of Cubist art and tried in her
stream-of-consciousness prose to capture that immediacy
and sense of play. She was born in 1874 near Pittsburgh
and moved to Paris in 1903. She and her partner, Alice
B. Toklas, volunteered for hospitals during World War I.
In the 1920's, her salon attracted many great writers
and painters; she coined the term Lost Generation for
the postWorld War I expatriates. She died in
1946.
|
"Experience is not what happens to a man. It is
what a man does with what happens to him."
Aldous Huxley
About Aldous
Huxley Aldous Huxley, the cerebral English
writer and social critic, is best known for his
dystopian novel Brave New World, about a theoretically
ideal society that stamps out individuality. He was born
in Surrey in 1894. His teen years were difficult: His
mother and sister died when he was 14 and a few years
later, he became nearly blind. After early success with
fiction, he switched to essays and screenplays, moving
to California and becoming a kind of guru for the 60's
counterculture movement. He died in
1963.
|
"Think it more satisfactory to live richly than
die rich." Sir Thomas Browne
About Sir Thomas
Browne The erudite English doctor Sir Thomas
Browne, who wrote a number of books on science and
religion, was known for his baroque prose style and his
controversial opinions. He was born in 1605 in London
and settled in Norwich to practice medicine. He wrote
his most famous book, Religio Medici (The Religion of a
Physician), an intellectual autobiography, in 1635. A
friend published it in 1642 without his permission,
embarrassing him, but the book's popularity encouraged
him to write more. He died in 1682.
|
|
"It is necessary to try to surpass oneself
always; this occupation ought to last as long as life."
-- Queen Christina
About Queen Christina
Queen Christina of Sweden was the most famous woman
of her time, outshining Queen Elizabeth of England. She
was born in Stockholm in 1626 during a rare astrological
conjunction. Her father insisted that she be raised as a
boy and changed the law so she could become his heir.
She became the reigning queen at age five. She helped
end the Thirty Years War but abdicated her throne in
1654, converting to Catholicism and moving to Rome,
where she became a patron of the arts. She died in
1689. |
"It is only by following your deepest instinct
that you can lead a rich life."
Katherine
Butler Hathaway
About Katherine Butler
Hathaway Katherine Butler Hathaway's memoir,
The Little Locksmith, earned glowing reviews and was a
best seller when it was published in 1943, just after
the author's death. She was born in Massachusetts in
1890. After coming down with spinal tuberculosis at age
five, she was strapped to a board for ten years to
prevent hunchback, but the arduous treatment didn't
work. She soared despite her body's limitations,
attending Radcliffe, making friends, and buying a house
in Maine as a refuge for friends and lovers. She died in
1942. |
"The
tragedy in life doesn't lie in not reaching your goal.
The tragedy lies in having no goal to reach."
--
Benjamin May
About Benjamin Mays
- African-American minister Benjamin Mays
laid the foundation for the civil rights movement with
his books and speeches and as a mentor to Martin Luther
King. He was born in 1894 in South Carolina to tenant
farmer parents. His study, The Negro's Church,
co-written with Joseph Nicholson, was a groundbreaking
look at the black religious experience. Mays served as
president of Morehouse College from 1940 to 1967. His
work emphasized the inherent dignity in all people. He
died in 1984.
|
|
"I, not events, have the power to make me happy
or unhappy today. I can choose which it shall
be."
Groucho Marx
About Groucho
Marx
Julius Henry "Groucho" Marx was the
wisecracking central figure of the Marx Brothers comedy
team, waggling his eyebrows in movies like Duck
Soup and A Night at the Opera. He was born in
New York in 1890. His mother organized the family into a
vaudeville act, which didn't become successful until
Groucho began ad-libbing jokes and insults. In the
forties and fifties, he hosted the wildly successful
radio and TV quiz show You Bet Your Life. He died
in 1977. |
"Worry never robs tomorrow of its sorrow, but
only saps today of its strength."
A. J. Cronin
About A. J. Cronin --
Archibald Joseph Cronin, the Scottish novelist
who wrote as A. J. Cronin, had a full career as a doctor
before turning to fiction. He was born in 1896, worked
as a Royal Navy surgeon during World War I, and later
was appointed Medical Inspector of Mines in Wales. Some
of his most famous books are The Citadel, The Keys of
the Kingdom, and Pocketful of Rye. His works were known
to reflect both his religious beliefs as a Roman
Catholic and his medical training. He died in
1981. |
"Choices are the hinges of destiny."
Pythagoras
About Pythagoras -- Greek philosopher and
mathematician Pythagoras, called the Father of Numbers,
is best known for developing the Pythagorean Theorem. He
was born on the Greek island of Samos in 582 BC and
moved to Italy, where he founded a religious school
preaching vegetarianism and reincarnation. He believed
that everything could be explained by mathematics and
measured in rhythmic cycles. He wrote nothing down; some
theories ascribed to Pythagoras may have been discovered
by his followers. He died around 500
BC.
|
"Life loves to be taken by the lapel and told:
'I'm with you kid. Let's go.'"
Maya
Angelou
About Maya
Angelou American poet and author Maya
Angelou is best known for her autobiography, I Know Why
the Caged Bird Sings. She was born in St. Louis in 1928
and grew up in rural Arkansas. Due to her activism,
Martin Luther King asked her to take a leadership
position in his organization. In 1993, at President
Clinton's request, she wrote and performed a poem at his
inauguration. She has also directed films and appeared
on television. She teaches at Wake Forest University.
|
"In every person who comes near you look for what
is good and strong; honor that; try to imitate it, and
your faults will drop off like dead leaves when their
time comes."
-- John Ruskin
About John Ruskin
John Ruskin was an English art critic who
influenced the attitude of a whole generation toward art
and architecture. He was born in 1819 in London. His
career began with an essay defending his friend, artist
J.M.W. Turner, from critics. His book Modern Painters
made Turner popular and gave stature to the
Pre-Raphaelite movement. Leo Tolstoy called him one of
those rare men who think with their heart. When Ruskin
inherited wealth, he gave most of the money away. He
died in 1900. |
"Never confuse a single defeat with a final
defeat."
-- F. Scott Fitzgerald
About F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, who wrote as F.
Scott Fitzgerald, is best known for his novel The Great
Gatsby. He was born in St. Paul in 1896. Fear of
mortality spurred him to write the novel This Side of
Paradise while in the Army. It was rejected twice by
Scribner's before they finally published it. His wife
Zelda's schizophrenia was the basis for his novel Tender
Is the Night. After they separated, he moved to Los
Angeles and wrote screenplays for studio films. He died
in 1940.
| top of page |
|
"Most people are so busy knocking themselves out
trying to do everything they think they should do, they
never get around to do what they want to
do."
Kathleen Winsor
About Kathleen Winsor
American author Kathleen Winsor is best known for
the racy historical novel, Forever Amber, which made a
huge splash when it was first published in 1944, selling
100,000 copies the first week. It was banned in 14
states for its sexual content. The ensuing debate
contributed to the loosening of restrictions that
allowed works by D. H. Lawrence and Henry Miller to be
published in the US. Winsor wrote a number of other
novels, none as successful. She was born in 1919 and
died in 2003.
|
Put your heart, mind, intellect, and soul even to
your smallest acts. This is the secret of
success."
Swami Sivananda Saraswati
About Swami Sivananda
Saraswati - Swami Sivananda Saraswati, born
Kuppuswamy, was an Indian doctor and Yoga guru. He was
born in 1887 in India. When he set up a clinic in
Malaysia, he became known for his kind heart and
charitable work. He left a successful medical practice
to go on a pilgrimage to India, where he took monastic
vows. As a spiritual leader, he attracted many
disciples, including Krishnamurti. He called his
discipline the Yoga of synthesis. He wrote more than 300
books on Yoga and spirituality. He died in 1963.
|
"Man must be arched and buttressed from within,
else the temple wavers to dust."
Marcus
Aurelius
About Marcus
Aurelius Marcus Aurelius was the last of the
"Five Good Emperors" of Rome who reigned during the
prosperous Pax Romana period. He was born in Rome in the
year 121. When his uncle Emperor Antoninus Pius died,
Aurelius refused to take the throne unless his brother
Lucius could corule with him. While on military
campaigns, Aurelius wrote the philosophical work
Meditations. He was a champion of the poor and of
children, especially orphans. He died in
180. |
|
"Failure is the condiment that gives success its
flavor."
Truman Capote
About Truman
Capote The flamboyant American author Truman
Capote is best known for his book In Cold Blood,the true
story of the murder of a wealthy Kansas family. Written
in a literary style, it spawned the creative nonfiction
genre. Born in New Orleans in 1924 and raised by
relatives in Alabama, Capote moved to New York when he
was nine to live with his mother. He was a
larger-than-life personality, known for his colorful
attire, his lisping voice, and his outrageous
statements. He died in 1984. |
"It is necessary to try
to surpass oneself always; this occupation ought to last
as long as life."
Queen Christina
About Queen
Christina Queen Christina of Sweden was the
most famous woman of her time, outshining Queen
Elizabeth of England. She was born in Stockholm in 1626
during a rare astrological conjunction. Her father
insisted that she be raised as a boy and changed the law
so she could become his heir. She became the reigning
queen at age five. She helped end the Thirty Years War
but abdicated her throne in 1654, converting to
Catholicism and moving to Rome, where she became a
patron of the arts. She died in
1689.
|
"When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot
and hang on."
Franklin Delano
Roosevelt
About Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Four-term American president
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, known as FDR, pulled America
out of the Great Depression and led the country during
World War II. He was born in New York in 1882. His
political career halted when a bout of polio paralyzed
him from the waist down, but after learning to walk with
leg braces, he became governor of New York and then
president. His New Deal initiatives included Social
Security, jobs programs, and collective bargaining. He
died in 1945.
|
|
"A bad habit never disappears miraculously; it's
an undo-it-yourself project."
Abigail Van Buren
About Abigail Van
Buren Pauline Phillips, better known as
Abigail Van Buren, wrote the syndicated "Dear Abby"
column for 46 years. She was born in 1918 in Iowa. She
had never written professionally when she contacted the
San Francisco Chronicle's editor and said she could do
better than their current advice maven. Her version was
an instant success. Her twin sister, Esther Lederer,
became an advice columnist under the name Ann Landers.
Phillips retired in 2002; her daughter, Jeanne Phillips,
took over her column.
|
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it
is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
Thomas Edison
About
Thomas Edison Thomas Edison, the
American inventor who made his early fortune with the
stock ticker and the phonograph record, is credited with
inventing the light bulb although he simply improved
upon the original idea by making the bulb burn longer.
Edison was born in 1847 in Ohio. He was a dreamer in
school; his teacher called him "addled," and his mother
taught him at home. He used the money from his
inventions to set up a lab with a number of employees;
he held a record 1,093 patents in his name. He died in
1931. |
"You gain strength, courage and confidence by
every experience in which you really stop to look fear
in the face."
Eleanor Roosevelt
About Eleanor
Roosevelt Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of
president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was a powerful
political figure in her own right, crusading tirelessly
for humanist causes. She was born in New York in 1884
and was orphaned young. After Franklin was struck by
polio, she acted as his eyes and ears. She was central
to the creation of the United Nations Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which she considered her
crowning achievement, and wrote numerous essays,
including a long-running column called "My Day." She
died in 1962. |
|
"You can't build a reputation on what
you're GOING to do. "
-- Japanese
Proverb
|
"Have the courage to follow your heart and
intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want
to become. Everything else is secondary."
Steve
Jobs
About Steve Jobs Steve
Jobs, the American computer pioneer who cofounded Apple,
is known for his intensity, his brashness, and his focus
on elegant design. He was born in 1955 in Los Altos. At
age 21, he and Steve Wozniac built the first Apple
computer in his garage. Its successor, the Macintosh,
introduced the mouse. After Jobs was ousted from Apple,
he bought Pixar Animation, creator of Toy Story and
Finding Nemo. On his return to Apple, he introduced the
iMac and iPod, restoring the company's luster.
|
"Use what talents you possess: the woods would be
very silent if no birds sang there except those that
sang best."
Henry Van Dyke
About Henry Van Dyke
Henry Van Dyke,
the American clergyman and author, is best known for the
Christmas story, "The Other Wise Man." He was born in
Pennsylvania in 1852. He was pastor of the Brick
Presbyterian Church in New York, taught literature at
Princeton, and was U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands.
His love of nature influenced his spirituality, and he
fought to preserve Yellowstone Park. He wrote poetry and
essays as well as fiction. Helen Keller called him an
architect of happiness. He died in 1933.
|
|
"Happiness is when what you think, what you say,
and what you do are in harmony."
Mohandas
Gandhi
About Mohandas
Gandhi
Mohandas Gandhi, known by the
honorific title Mahatma ("great souled"), embodied the
power of nonviolent protest to achieve great change. He
was born in India in 1896 and awoke to discrimination
while practicing law in South Africa. He brought the
struggle for equality back to India, rousing the
population to demand self-rule from the British. He was
profoundly religious, spending one day a week in
complete silence; he was also a devout vegetarian. He
was assassinated in 1948.
|
"Everything comes to him who hustles while he
waits."
Thomas A. Edison
About Thomas A.
Edison Thomas Edison, the American inventor
who made his early fortune with the stock ticker and the
phonograph record, is credited with inventing the light
bulb although he simply improved upon the original
idea by making the bulb burn longer. Edison was born in
1847 in Ohio. He was a dreamer in school; his teacher
called him "addled," and his mother taught him at home.
He used the money from his inventions to set up a lab
with a number of employees; he held a record 1,093
patents in his name. He died in
1931. |
"You miss 100% of the shots you never
take."
Wayne Gretsky
About Wayne
Gretsky
Wayne Gretsky, the Canadian hockey
champion known as the Great One, held 61 NHL records
when he retired in 1999. He was born in Brantford,
Ontario, and was a prodigy on the ice, competing with
ten-year-olds when he was six and playing professionally
by 16. He hit the big time playing for the Edmonton
Oilers. When he was traded to the L.A. Kings in 1988,
Canadians burned the Oilers' owner in effigy. In 1999,
ESPN named Gretsky the fifth-greatest athlete of the
20th century.
|
|
"The highest reward for a person's toil is not
what they get for it, but what they become by
it."
John Ruskin
About John
Ruskin
John Ruskin was an English art
critic who influenced the attitude of a whole generation
toward art and architecture. He was born in 1819 in
London. His career began with an essay defending his
friend, artist J.M.W. Turner, from critics. His book
Modern Painters made Turner popular and gave
stature to the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Leo Tolstoy
called him one of those rare men who think with their
heart. When Ruskin inherited wealth, he gave most of the
money away. He died in
1900. |
"Only those who will risk going too far can
possibly find out how far one can go."
T.S.
Eliot
About T.S.
Eliot
T.S. Eliot, the Nobel
Prizewinning poet, is perhaps best known today for a
light book of rhymes that became the Broadway hit Cats.
He penned such weightier poems as "The Waste Land," "The
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," and "Four Quartets."
His work is rich with deeply felt religious meditations,
but he never wanted to be perceived as a religious poet.
He was born in 1888 in St. Louis and made his adult home
in England, where he worked as an editor at the
publisher Faber & Faber. He died in
1965. |
"The important thing is not to stop questioning.
Curiosity has its own reason for existing."
Albert Einstein
About Albert
Einstein
The brilliant physicist
Albert Einstein became an international icon for his
groundbreaking theory of relativity. He was born in
Germany in 1897 and began his seminal work while at the
Swiss Patent Office. He later fled the Nazi regime,
moving to the United States to teach at Princeton. In
1921, he won the Nobel Prize. He declined Israel's
invitation to become its president, saying he lacked the
necessary people skills. He died in
1955.
|
|
"Map out your future, but do it in
pencil."
Jon Bon Jovi
About Jon Bon
Jovi
Jon Bon Jovi, the
popular American musician and actor, rose to fame as the
lead singer for the hard-rock band Bon Jovi, best known
for their 1986 chart-topping album Slippery When
Wet. He was born John Francis Bongiovi in New Jersey
in 1962. After two years as a janitor at his uncle's
recording studio, he persuaded a producer to record a
demo, which became the surprise hit "Runaway." His film
roles include Pay It Forward and Moonlight and
Valentino. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and
four children.
|
"There are no shortcuts to any place worth
going."
Beverly Sills
About Beverly
Sills
Beverly Sills, the talented
American opera coloratura, became an international
superstar in 1966 with her performance in Handel's
Guilio Cesare. She was born Belle Miriam
Silverman in 1929 in New York. The New York City Opera
rejected her repeatedly before they hired her in 1955.
She left singing briefly in the 1960's to devote herself
to her young children: One is largely deaf, the other is
mentally retarded. After retirement, she took the reins
of the New York City Opera, turning it into a viable
operation. |
"People in life who are happiest, don't have the
best of everything, they make the best of everything
they have."
-- Abraham Lincoln
About Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln, the American president remembered
as Honest Abe, is renowned for his strong leadership
during the Civil War and for ending slavery in the
United States. He was born in a Kentucky cabin in 1809.
He taught himself law and passed the Illinois bar in
1837, the same year he first spoke out against slavery.
The Southern states seceded in response to his election
to the presidency in 1860. Lincoln was assassinated in
1865, mere days after General Robert E. Lee surrendered
to end the war. |
|
"I have learned, as a rule of thumb, never to ask
whether you can do something. Say, instead, that you are
doing it. Then fasten your seat belt. The most
remarkable things follow."
Julia Cameron
About Julia
Cameron American author Julia Cameron has
become an icon in the creative community for her
best-selling self-help book, The Artist's Way, which
guides people through a series of simple but profound
exercises to awaken their creativity. She grew up in
Chicago and has been writing seriously since age 18. In
addition to her 19 books, she has written plays,
screenplays, and songs, and is currently writing
musicals. She was married to film director Martin
Scorsese and has one daughter.
|
"Never be bullied into silence. Never allow
yourself to be made a victim. Accept no one's definition
of your life; define yourself."
Harvey
Fierstein
About Harvey
Fierstein
Harvey Fierstein, the raspy-voiced
American actor, playwright, and gay activist, is best
known for his semiautobiographical play, Torch Song
Trilogy, which garnered Tony Awards for writing and
acting. He was born in Brooklyn in 1954. His onstage
debut as a female impersonator at age 16 led to a role
in a 1971 Andy Warhol play. He adapted the French show
La Cage aux Folles into a Broadway musical and,
later, the movie The Birdcage. He has appeared in
such varied movies as Independence Day and
Mrs. Doubtfire.
|
"The difference between a successful person
and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of
knowledge, but rather in a lack of will."
Vincent Lombardi
About Vincent
Lombardi American football coach Vincent
Lombardi is famed for turning the Green Bay Packers from
a losing team to two-time Super Bowl champions. He was
born in 1913 in Brooklyn. He initially wanted to be a
priest, but changed his mind after he became the star
fullback on his high school team. When he began coaching
the Packers, he set up intensive training camps and
demanded absolute dedication but promised them the
championship. The NFL named him "Man of the Decade" in
the 1960's. He died in 1970.
|
|
"If you must begin then go all the way, because
if you begin and quit, the unfinished business you have
left behind begins to haunt you all the time."
Chogyam Trungpa
About Chogyam Trungpa
Tibetan Buddhist leader Chogyam Trungpa was
instrumental in bringing Buddhism to the West. He was
born in 1940 in Tibet and was recognized as the
reincarnation of a Rinpoche (enlightened teacher) at 13
months old. After moving to England, he abandoned his
monk garb: He wanted his Western students to perceive
the Buddhist teachings without becoming distracted by
exotic trappings. He founded Naropa University in
Colorado and wrote several books. He died in
1987. |
"True
silence is the rest of the mind; it is to the spirit
what sleep is to the body, nourishment and
refreshment."
William Penn
About William Penn
William Penn is remembered as the
founder of Pennsylvania; the democratic government he
set up became the model for the United States
Constitution. He was born in 1644 in England. After
he was arrested several times for preaching Quaker
ideals, he decided to found a settlement in America. He
drew up the "Great Treaty" with the Delaware Indians to
ensure they were paid fairly for their land and toured
Europe marketing the new colony. He died in 1718.
|
"When
one's expectations are reduced to zero, one really
appreciates everything one does have."
Stephen
Hawking
About Stephen
Hawking British scientist Stephen Hawking,
best known for his book A Brief History of Time, which
did much to popularize physics, is a leading theoretical
physicist who used Einstein's general theory of
relativity to prove the big bang theory. He was born in
1942 in Oxford. He was diagnosed with severe amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS) at 21 and was not expected to
live more than three years. Over time he has become more
disabled, but he continues to lecture, speaking through
a computer-controlled voice
box. |
top of page
|
For
information on buying or selling east bay
homes, please contact me at 510-429-4800 or send me
a note on the Contact
Joanne form. Sign up for email
alerts
Thank you, Joanne
P.S. Be sure to add us to your
favorite places.
~ Joanne L. Gardiner, Broker, e-PRO
Realtor
Advantage Realty Advantage Mortgage
Associates 3205 Whipple Road - Union City, California
94587
(510) 429-4800
San Francisco Bay
Area ~ San Francisco East Bay Real
Estate

web site: http://www.joannegardiner.com
Contact Joanne
Our primary realty service areas
in the San Francisco Bay
Area: Hayward, Castro Valley,
Fremont, Newark, Niles, San Leandro, San
Lorenzo, San Ramon, Sunol, Oakland, Foster
City, Burlingame, and San Mateo.
The
types of real estate in which we specialize
are: single family homes, detached homes, attached
homes, duets, condominiums, townhomes, garden
homes, PUDs, manufactured homes, mobile
homes, income property, investment property,
tri-plexes, four-plexes, apartment
property, and special use properties such as
churches for
sale. | |
top of
page | |
|