Daylife Select
A point & click tool to create dynamic content portals. Learn More »
There is no pinned content in this Editor's Picks module.
Click here to learn more about content pinning.
Picking out a book for a boy, I find there's a strong bias towards work by and about men. Full Article at Comment Is Free
A bust of Julius Caesar, recovered from the Rhone riverbed, is now on display as part of an exhibition of artefacts discovered in the bed of the Rhone river over the last 20 years, at a museum in southern France. Full Article at Webindia123
Roman sculptures and fragments, a Neptune or Jupiter head (C, not yet identified by expert) and a full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the... View Photo »
Barack Obama is the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar.
1The Boys' Crusade By Paul Fussell Modern Library, 2003 In 1944, during the run-up to D-Day, two million young American men were given 17 weeks of basic training and shipped to Europe. Full Article at Wall Street Journal
A bust of Julius Caesar, recovered from the Rhone riverbed, is now on display as part of an exhibition of artefacts discovered in the bed of the Rhone river over the last 20 years. Full Article at The Telegraph
WHICH came first, the yew tree or the church? This question is prompted by a more common question that asks: why are there so many yew trees in British churchyards? First, a look at the tree itself. Full Article at Darlington & Stockton Times
Roman amphoras sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France. View Photo »
ROME is a dingy and desolate place in the eyes of director Lucy Bailey, as two hapless souls, representing Romulus and Remus, battle to the death. Full Article at The Northern Echo
The chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, Rocco Landesman, provoked ridicule when he said last week that "Barack Obama is the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar." Full Article at Jihad Watch
Julius Caesar (Godalming, Surrey, 25 March 1830 – 6 March 1878) was a Surrey cricketer who played 194 first-class cricket matches between 1849 and 1867. Full Article
Roman sculptures and fragments, a Neptune or Jupiter head (C, not yet identified by expert) and a full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern Fra...
View Photo »Roman amphoras sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »A Roman Neptune or Jupiter head (not yet identified by expert) sits at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »Roman amphoras sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »A Roman Neptune or Jupiter head (not yet identified by expert) and sculptures fragments sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »Roman sculptures and a Neptune or Jupiter head (at R, not yet identified by expert) sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »French patrimony chief curator at the DRASSM (Department of subaquatic and submarine archeological searches) Luc Long holds on October 6, 2009 a Roman Neptune or Jupiter head at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, sou...
View Photo »Roman sculptures and fragments, a Neptune or Jupiter head (C, not yet identified by expert) and a full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern Fra...
View Photo »A Roman Neptune or Jupiter head (not yet identified by expert) sits on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »Roman sculptures and a Neptune or Jupiter head (at R, not yet identified by expert) sit at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »Roman sculptures and a Neptune or Jupiter head (at R, not yet identified by expert) sit at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »French patrimony chief curator at the DRASSM (Department of subaquatic and submarine archeological searches) Luc Long holds a Roman Neptune or Jupiter head at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »A man dressed as Julius Caesar, left, stands next to a giant picture of a bust of Roman Emperor Vespasian which is on display to highlight an exhibition being held to mark the 2000th anniversary of his birth, inside the Colosseum in Rome, Thursday, March 26, 2009.
View Photo »A life-size bust of Julius Caesar is seen at new buildings of the Department of the underwater and submarine archaeological (DRASSM) in Marseille, January 22, 2009.
View Photo »A life-size bust of Julius Caesar is seen at new buildings of the Department of the underwater and submarine archaeological (DRASSM) in Marseille, January 22, 2009.
View Photo »A life-size bust of Julius Caesar is seen at new buildings of the Department of the underwater and submarine archaeological (DRASSM) in Marseille, January 22, 2009.
View Photo »Roman sculptures and architectural fragments and amphoras sit on the deck of the 'Neptune' barge on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries made during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river, southern France.
View Photo »Roman sculptures and a Neptune or Jupiter head (at R, not yet identified by expert) sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »A full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France sits on the bank of the river during a press presentation by Luc Long (not in picture) patrimony chief curator at the DRASSM (Department of subaquatic and...
View Photo »A full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France sits on the bank of the river during a press presentation by Luc Long (not in picture) patrimony chief curator at the DRASSM (Department of subaquatic and...
View Photo »A full-scale marble head of the Roman god Mars and fragments of Roman sculptures found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France sit on the bank of the river during a press presentation by Luc Long (not in picture) patrimony chief curator at the DRA...
View Photo »Italian and British Police officers pose for photographers next to a statue of Julius Caesar in downtown Rome, Wednesday, May 27, 2009, hours before the Champions League soccer final match between Manchester United and Barcelona, scheduled at Rome's Olympic stadium.
View Photo »Italy's coach Nick Mallett attends a press conference in Julius Caesar hall during a Six Nations rugby tournament presentation, in Rome's Capitol Hill, Thursday, Jan. 29. 2009. The first match of the tournament is England playing Italy at Twickenham on Feb. 7.
View Photo »Italy's coach Nick Mallett attends a press conference in Julius Caesar hall during a Six Nations rugby tournament presentation, in Rome's Capitol Hill, Thursday, Jan. 29. 2009. The first match of the tournament is England playing Italy at Twickenham on Feb. 7.
View Photo »French Culture Minister Christine Albanel poses beside a life-size bust of Julius Caesar as part of submarine discoveries in Marseille, January 22, 2009. Albanel inaugurates the new buildings of the Department of the underwater and submarine archaeological (DRASSM).
View Photo »Roman amphoras sit on October 6, 2009 at a press presentation of discoveries found during the last archeological digs in the Rhone river in Arles, southern France.
View Photo »Barack Obama is the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar is historically the last person in the world that American presidents would want to be compared to
If Obama is indeed the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar, then Vanneman is most powerful hat tipper since Caesar Romero.
actually writes his own books since Teddy Roosevelt and arguably the first to write them really well since Lincoln. If you accept the premise, and I do, that the United States is the most powerful country in the world, then Barack Obama is the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar. That has to be goo...
Julius Caesar is very much the story of Brutus (Neal A. Ghant) who must weigh his loyalty to his country against his loyalty to his good friend Caesar ... Brutus convinces himself that his deeds will ultimately benefit Rome. When that doesn't happen, when the 'dogs of war' are unleashed, he must reconci...
There are no results for this module. Edit the module to change the search term used to query Twitter.
