My son was doing a homeschool assignment using the Grolier website, and was supposed to use the search feature to locate information. Well, apparently it didn't go so well. In frustration, he entered the following in the search box:
bbbbbb b vfjbdfhkjdfhgkhfdkjghfjghghdhghghfuuffngjkhgjfjjhdfjghjhghfjhghufughrjihgjfhdfhjkghdfhgkjshgie utuiyhriertuoyrohgiouwytoytpwhyo
and here's what he got:
Search Results
Found 24305 document(s) on 973 page(s) in your search for:
bbbbbb b vfjbdfhkjdfhgkhfdkjghfjghghdhghghfuuffngjkhgjfjjhdfjghjhghfjhghufughrjihgjfhdfhjkghdfhgkjshgie utuiyhriertuoyrohgiouwytoytpwhyo
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Encyclopedia Americana B'nai B'rith
founded in New York City in 1843 as an organization in which Jews seek to work together to intensify and to raise the level of Jewish community life.
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Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia B'nai B'rith
B'nai B'rith, which means "sons of the covenant," is the oldest and largest American Jewish service organization.
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The New Book of Popular Science Aristotle (384 B.C.-322 B.C.)
Aristotle (a-ri-stot-el), the son of Nicomachus, physician at the court of Mayntas II of Macedon, was born in Chalcis and moved to Athens in 367 B.C., where he was a member of the academy until Plato's death in 347 B.C. For the next 12 years he worked in Assos in Asia Minor, Mytilene on Lesbos, and, from 342 B.C. until 335 B.C., in Macedon as the tutor of the young Alexander the Great.
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Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith:
see B'nai B'rith.
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Encyclopedia Americana Greece, Ancient >> 1. History of Greece to 330 A.D. >> Culture of the Greek City-State (1000–322 B.C.)
The history of ancient Greece can be broadly divided into two eras—before and after about 1000 B.C.
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Encyclopedia Americana Rome, Ancient >> 1. From the Foundation of Rome to 264 B.C.
The Latin-speaking peoples of Latium, a region centering on the lower valley of the Tiber River and the Alban Hills, evolved a common culture in the centuries following 1000 B.C.
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Encyclopedia Americana Rome, Ancient >> 2. Growth of Roman Power: 264–133 B.C.
In 264 B.C., Rome dominated all of Italy south of the Po Valley by means of its somewhat liberal alliance system.
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America the Beautiful B.B. King
Riley ("B.B.") King is among the best-known American blues guitarists and singers in the world.
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Encyclopedia Americana B
the second letter of the English alphabet and of nearly all ancient and modern alphabets.
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La Nueva Enciclopedia Cumbre B.B.C.
Siglas con que se conoce a la British Broadcasting Corporation o Corporación Británica de Radiodifusión.
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Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia King, B. B.
The blues singer and guitarist Riley "B. B." King, b. Itta Benna, Miss., Sept. 16, 1925, is acknowledged as a major influence on the development of rock music.
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Encyclopedia Americana Rome, Ancient >> 3. Civil Strife and the Fall of the Republic: 133–31 B.C.
Rome confronted a social, economic, and political crisis in the late 2d century B.C.
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The New Book of Popular Science Plato (ca. 428 B.C.-347 B.C.)
Plato apparently came from an established Athenian family active in politics.
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The New Book of Popular Science Hippocrates(ca. 460 B.C.-ca. 377 B.C.)
Very little is known of the life of Hippocrates (hi-pok-ra-teez), except that he was born on the Greek island of Cos and he was a physician.
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The New Book of Popular Science Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (ca. 500 B.C.-428 B.C.)
Anaxagoras (an-ak-sag-o-rus) left his birthplace in Asia Minor (now Turkey) in about 480 B.C. and taught in Athens during its most brilliant period under Pericles, who was himself one of Anaxagoras's pupils.
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The New Book of Popular Science Pythagoras (ca. 580 B.C.-ca. 500 B.C.)
Pythagoras (pI-thag-or-as) left his birthplace, Samos, in about 520 B.C. to settle in Croton (now Crotone), in southern Italy and, as a result of political trouble, made a final move to Metapontum in about 500.
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The New Book of Popular Science Socrates (ca. 469 B.C.-399 B.C.)
Socrates (sok-ra-teez), born the son of a stonemason in Athens, Greece, has become one of the best known figures of antiquity, thanks to Plato's writings.
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The New Book of Popular Science Epicurus (ca. 341 B.C.–ca. 270 B.C.)
Epicurus, who was born on the Greek island of Samos, traveled to Athens when he was about 18 years old, and received military training.
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The New Book of Popular Science Callippus (ca. 370 B.C.-ca. 300 B.C.)
Callippus (ka-lip-us), who was born in Cyzicus (now in Turkey), was possibly a student of the astronomer Eudoxus of Cnidus.
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Encyclopedia Americana Europe >> History >> 11. Classical Civilization: 900 B.C.–200 A.D.
From about 900 B.C., small city-states began to emerge on the Greek mainland, ruled first by hereditary kings and nobles and then by aristocratic magistrates chosen through some form of election.
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Encyclopedia Americana Rome, Ancient >> 4. Establishment of the Principate: 31 B.C.–68 A.D.
After the Battle of Actium (31 B.C.) and the suicides of Antony and Cleopatra (30 B.C.), Octavian emerged as the unchallenged master of the Roman world.
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The New Book of Knowledge King, B. B.
See: Mississippi (Profiles)
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Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia d'Estournelles de Constant, Paul H. B. B.
French diplomat, politician, and peace activist Paul Henri Benjamin Balluet d'Estournelles de Constant, b. Nov. 22, 1852, d. May 15, 1924, shared the 1909 Nobel Peace Prize with Belgian statesman Auguste Beernaert.
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The New Book of Popular Science Lucretius (ca. 95 B.C.–ca. 55 B.C.)
Lucretius (loo-kree-shush; full name Titus Lucretius Carus), was born in Rome. He presented his materialistic (Epicurean) philosophy in his On the Nature of Things, published in 56 B.C.. One of his main aims was to demonstrate the natural origin of the universe and its physical, biological, and social development, in which, he may be said, to have anticipated modern evolutionists.
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The New Book of Popular Science Hipparchus (ca. 190 B.C.-ca. 127 B.C.)
Hipparchus (hi-par-kus), born in Nicaea, which is now in Turkey, observed solstices, equinoxes, and lunar eclipses in Rhodes, Greece, where he built an observatory, and spent time in Alexandria, also in Greece.
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(Too bad none of this had anything to do with his assignment!)
