Wednesday 1 June 2016
The timeline of Fred Hollows
Fred Hollows
1929-1993
1929 Fred Hollows was born in New Zealand
1960 Fred got a job in Australia
1965 Fred was head of the Eye Department at a Sydney hospital.
1970's Fred helped launch a national program to attack eye disease in Aboriginal Australians
In three years of 1970's Fred and his team travelled all over outback Australia. It treated 30,000 people, performed a thousand operations and prescribed more than 10,000 pairs of glasses.
By 1980, Fred was travelling all over the world to help set up eye health programs in developing countries.
By 1989 Fred was dying of cancer. It didn't slow him down...and instead of getting miserable
1993, Fred died at home surrounded by his friends, his wife Gabi and their five children.
The turning point and achievements of Hans Christian Acderson
Hans Christian Anderson
Turing Points:
Encouraged by his mother he composed his own fairy tales and arrange puppet theatre shows.
Andersen found supporters who paved his way to the theatre, succeeded in becoming associated with the Royal Theater,
When he was casually referred as a poet it changed his plans
In 1822, Jonas Collin, gave Andersen a grant to enter the grammar school at Slagelse.
Andersen gained admission to Copenhagen University, where he completed his education.
In 1828 Andersen wrote a travel sketch,
his journeys Andersen met in Paris among others Victor Hugo, Heinrich Heine, Balzac and Alexandre Dumas. In London he met Charles Dickens in 1847, to whom Andersen dedicated A Poet’s Day Dreams (1853). In Rome he met the young writer Björnson.
Andersen’s fame rests on his Fairy Tales and Stories, written between 1835 and 1872
Achievements:
The Improvisatore (1835) gained international success and during his life it remained the most widely read of all his works.
However, Andersen’s fame rests on his Fairy Tales and Stories, written between 1835 and 1872.
Andersen broke new ground in both style and content, and employed the idioms and constructions of spoken language in a way that was new in Danish writing.
Andersen’s tales were translated throughout Europe, with four editions appearing in the UK in 1846 alone.
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