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Search results 13481 - 13490 of 14240 matching essays
- 13481: Animal Farm Theme
- ... and apples (this has been proved by Science, comrades) contain substances absolutely necessary to the well being of a pig. We pigs are brainworkers. The whole management and organization of this farm depends on us. Day and night we are watching over your welfare. It is for your sake that we drink the milk and eat those apples. Do you know what would happen if we pigs failed in our duty ...
- 13482: To Kill a Mockingbird
- ... from his point of view
until you climb into his skin and walk around in it" (34). She then realizes that Mrs. Caroline did not know Maycomb, and could not just learn it in one day. Scout comes to terms that it was wrong to become upset with Mrs. Caroline. Scout learns several other lessons. For example, on page 94, Atticus says his most important line in the book, "
remember it ...
- 13483: To Kill A Mockingbird: Innocence to Experience
- ... the niggers and trash he works for!" not only show us her own views, but they also represent the views of the rest of Maycomb County. As they were going by the house later that day Jem snatched Scout's baton and "ran flailing wildly up the steps into Mrs. Dubose's front yard...He did not begin to calm down until he had cut the tops off every camellia bush ...
- 13484: All Around The Town By Mary Hi
- ... drifted off into another personality who floated in the air and made fun of the little girl crying in front of the school. Years passed and Laurie was returned to her parents on that fateful day in front of the school. Ever since she was taken away Laurie was taught to forget whom her parents and family were. She had a lot of rehabilitation to deal with but her parents decided ...
- 13485: The Thief's Journal: The Prince of Thieves - Genet
- ... feel- that the translucent bugs were swarming; though not tamed, they were so much a part of us that a third person's louse disgusted us. We chased them away but with hope during the day that the nits would have hatched. We crushed them with our nails, without disgust and without hatred. We did not throw their corpses -or remains- into the garbage; we let them fall, bleeding with our ...
- 13486: 1984: Satire of the Middle Class
- ... the party wanted the citizens to disgust. Winston hates the party and Big Brother. He hates the "pure" ones, also. Everthing about Winston's life drives him closer and closer to a suicidal point each day. What makes things worse, hte Party makes Winston think that he is crazy for wanting to be free to think and for wanting to remember. These simple things are taken for granted today. George Orwell ...
- 13487: Ecodisc
- ... year. For example, you could view the reserve in the middle of winter and see what it looks like in summer. Ecodisc is one of the first interactive programmes, and there are hopes of some day there being interactive broadcast television. This is a breakthrough in visual entertainment, because while television lets you see a place, interactive video will let you explore it. Interactive video is where the viewer decides the ...
- 13488: Does Microsoft Have Too Much Power?
- ... point was already made, not well known and not very popular. Ironically, Bill Gates worked closely with IBM in 1983, to help develop OS/2, even conceding to IBM that their OS/2 would one day overtake Microsoft's own attempt at a graphical interface, Windows. However, Windows advanced in its versions and graphics capabilities as well as DOS. In 1995, Microsoft announces its new creation which will revolutionize computers everywhere ...
- 13489: Development of Computers and Technology
- ... the only benefits were the editing tools available with the word processors. But, since these first two dinosaurs of software, they have gone through some major changes. Video games are now placed in fully 3-D environments and word processors now have the abilities to change grammar and check your spelling. Hardware has also undergone some fairly major changes. When computers entered their 4th generation, with the 8088 processor, it was ...
- 13490: Cyberspace and the American Dream: A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age
- ... for a second reason: We are at the end of a century dominated by the mass institutions of the industrial age. The industrial age encouraged conformity and relied on standardization. And the institutions of the day -- corporate and government bureaucracies, huge civilian and military administrations, schools of all types -- reflected these priorities. Individual liberty suffered -- sometimes only a little, sometimes a lot: In a Second Wave world, it might make sense ...
Search results 13481 - 13490 of 14240 matching essays
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