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  1. Mar 10, 2009 · And so, though it was really an awful break for me to do it, I went away, and the only thing I wanted to happen did, only more. Oh, yes! more than I wanted—because I didn't want you to marry—not yet!

  2. Apr 30, 2024 · Clyde Fitch was an American playwright best known for plays of social satire and character study. Fitch graduated from Amherst College in 1886. In New York City he began writing short stories for magazines. A prolific writer, he produced 33 original plays and 22 adaptations, including Beau Brummel

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Oct 31, 2008 · Clyde Fitch was the most famous playwright of the early twentieth century, but today no one studies him. The disconnect between his fame in his lifetime and his obscurity after death points to a major historiographical problem, a problem that began in Fitch’s own day.

  4. When you look at the world around you, how do you categorise or group what you see? One of the broadest groupings is 'living' and 'non-living'. This may sound simple, but it is sometimes difficult to decide whether something is truly alive or not. Here we look at the characteristics of living things – using earthworms as an example.

  5. His career would barely span 20 years, but he proved extremely prolific, writing 36 original plays and 24 adaptations from other works. Fitch graduated from Amherst College in 1886, rejecting a career in business. He spent the next four years, supported by his mother, learning the craft of writing.

    • May 2, 1865
    • September 4, 1909
  6. Bonnie and Clyde, robbery team that became notorious in the United States through their flamboyant encounters with police and the glorification of their exploits by newspapers. Their crime spree occurred at the height of the Great Depression, and many viewed the pair as ‘Robin Hood’ figures striking back against banks.

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  8. In the intro to biology video, we defined biology as the branch of science concerned with the study of living things, or organisms. That definition is pretty straightforward. However, it opens the door to more difficult—and more interesting—questions: What is life? What does it mean to be alive?

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