Links:
- ClassMates Online
- Alumni Search Service; Helps You Find US High School Alumni And Friends From Around The World. -
(Added: 6-Jul-2000) [Rate It]
- Crime Library
- The Crime Library is a rapidly growing collection of more than over 500 nonfiction feature stories on major crimes, criminals, trials, forensics and criminal profiling, as well as award-winning fiction short stories by prominent writers. The stories focus mostly on recent crimes, but an expanding collection also delves into historically notorious characters, dating back to the 1400s and spanning the globe. -
(Added: 26-Jun-2003) [Rate It]
- Dictionary.com
- If you're among the grammatically challenged, you might want to bookmark dictionary.com for future term papers, presentations, or important e-mails. Dictionary.com hubs all the top dictionaries, thesauri, style books, and more, and it also offers some basic English language tutorials. -
(Added: 28-Jun-2003) [Rate It]
- Distinguished Women of Past & Present
- This site has biographies of women who contributed to our culture in many different ways. There are writers, educators, scientists, heads of state, politicians, civil rights crusaders, artists, entertainers, and others. Some were alive hundreds of years ago and some are living today. We've heard of some of them, while many more have been ignored by history book writers. -
(Added: 17-Jul-2003) [Rate It]
- e-thepeople
- If your car is swallowed up by a pothole the size of Poughkeepsie, E- The People can help you find the person you need to tell about it. You simply come to our site, click on "streets," type in your address and we'll forward your note to the right officials in your city. And if your public works commissioner doesn't have Internet access, we'll convert your concern to a fax. Users can send a letter or a petition to over 140,000 federal, state, and local officials. -
(Added: 19-Jul-2003) [Rate It]
- ebrary
- Search Books Online. ebrary lets you search, browse, and read the full-text of over 20,000 in-copyright books, and there is no charge for the service. You pay only if you choose to print or copy the text. Prices for printing or copying a page depend upon the title, but normally, they are about $0.25 per page. The service is designed to help students and researchers sift through textbooks and other titles. -
(Added: 17-Jun-2006) [Rate It]
- eHow - How Things Get Done
- In the past, when people wanted to know how to do things, they found answers from a variety of sources: friends and family, store clerks, instruction manuals, reference books and Internet sites. Their experiences became complicated tasks, comprised of figuring out how to accomplish the project, making an itemized list of necessities, remembering what is already on-hand, finding what products or services are needed, and making numerous purchases with multiple payment methods to get everything. And all of this was done before they could even start their projects. -
(Added: 11-Sep-2004) [Rate It]
- Einstein
- It's hard to think of him as anything other than a brilliant and quirky genius. However, the man with the world's most famous brain faced personal struggles just like everyone else. He grew up poor, wasn't the best of students, and lived through an adulthood with a series of marriages and love affairs gone sour. Despite his trials and tribulations, Einstein never frittered away his powers of observation or his passion for unraveling nature's ultimate secrets.
The most famous equation ever, E=Mc^2, and his breakthroughs on gravity, the speed of light, time, and special relativity all came in his twenties while he clerked at a rather boring patent office in Bern, Switzerland. Einstein was not always at ease with his celebrity, yet he used it to better humanity and show how intelligence isn't just about an IQ, but choosing to live a productive life with no excuses. -
(Added: 6-Dec-2002) [Rate It]
- Ellis Island records
- Ellis Island has put all their records online. The site has been a bit user-unfriendly, due to the massive amount of people trying to find out if their Uncle Fiorello did indeed come over on the boat in 1902. Keep trying to get on, though - the wealth of information is staggering and will easily make this one of the most beloved sites on the Web. -
(Added: 24-Apr-2001) [Rate It]
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