...With The Queen, British director Stephen Frears sheds light on one of England's most misunderstood public figures. The film, set during the week after Princess Di's death in 1997, offers a glimpse into what might have happened behind palace doors, when Queen Elizabeth II was caught between a relentless media frenzy and the desire to protect the royal family. The death of Diana, affectionately referred to as "the people's princess," shook up the country and left legions of grieving fans desperate for someone to blame—the paparazzi came under fire for chasing her before the fatal car accident, and, shortly after, their rage shifted onto the Queen for keeping her grief silent and undetectable. In other words, they wanted their Head of State to radiate a bit more warmth than the nearest refrigerator. The Queen begins with Her Majesty (played with understated perfection by Helen Mirren) discussing politics with the man painting her portrait. The opening credits pop up as she is gazing off to the side, and then, unexpectedly, she stares fearlessly into the camera. It's a perfect introduction to how the movie plays out: honestly, straight-forwardly, and without any sugarcoating. When Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) is elected Prime Minister, his friendly demeanor ("call me Tony") contrasts with the icy exterior of the Queen. Their first meeting, awkward and abrupt, hints that they have different ways of doing business—and their contained oil-and-vinegar dynamic resurfaces following...
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...In the 1997 general election, Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) becomes Britain's Labour prime minister. However, the Queen (Helen Mirren) is slightly wary of Blair and his pledge to modernise Britain, but he promises to respect the Royal Family. Three months later, Diana, Princess of Wales died in a car crash at the Alma Bridge tunnel in Paris. Blair's director of communications, Alastair Campbell (Mark Bazeley), prepares a speech in which Diana was described as "the people's princess". Blair gives his speech the next day and the phrase catches on. Within the next few days after Diana's death, millions of people across London display an outpouring of grief at Buckingham and Kensington Palaces. Meanwhile, the Royal Family are still at their summer estate in Balmoral Castle. Diana's death sparks division among members of the family, in which they observe that since Diana was divorced from her husband, Prince Charles (Alex Jennings) a year earlier, she was no longer a part of the family. Diana's funeral arrangements were thus best left as a private affair of her noble family, the Spencers. Charles argues that the mother of a future king cannot be dismissed so lightly, while the Queen authorises the use of an aircraft of the British Royal Flight to bring Diana's body back to Britain. In London, flowers pile up before the palace railings, which forces the changing of the Queen's guard to use another gate. British tabloids become inflammatory about the lack of a statement from the Royal...
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...Stephen Frears, utilises the director's imagined memories of the events succeeding Diana's death to portray the Queen, and her actions, in a warmer light. A compelling and challenging view of Diana is also presented in the film, furthering Frears' purpose of convincing the audience of the difficulty of the Queen's position and hence softening the public image of her. Diana is initially presented through a montage of grainy archival footage, where Diana almost seems to be courting and teasing the media with her image. While this archival media footage adds authenticity to Frears' account, it also demonstrates how insulting this behaviour would have been to the rigid policies of the monarchy. Thus as Diana is depicted as causing trouble for the monarchy, sympathy for the Queen's position upon her death is created. This compelling portrayal of Diana, through historical footage, allows Frears to validate his personal memories and in this way the symbiotic nature of history and memory is revealed. insights into Queen Elizabeth II's emotions during the aftermath of Diana's death can be gained through observing the interplay between the collective and personal memories of the event. Frears' imagined interpretation of the Queen's vulnerability challenges the public's collective memory of Diana's death. Frears' perspective is immediately depicted in the opening intertextual quote from Shakespeare's Henry IV: "uneasy lies the head that wears a crown". Sympathy is created as Frears suggests...
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...Bryant Mata Professor James Kenney English 101 March 10, 2016 Raised in Manhattan, New York, or better known as The City That Never Sleeps, a rapidly developing city that is constantly busy and human activity revolves around skyscrapers and taxis. Therefore, it has always intrigued me to discover the calm and peaceful Marina in Queens, New York. Constantly driving by the alluring Marina on my way to Queensborough Community College sets my expectations to be immense. Driving by the beautiful blue water always made me curious about entering the Marina which led me to discover it. My intention for discovering the enticing Marina is to find calm and peace in the quiet Flushing Bay. Highly fascinated by the bay side view the Marina provides most likely will be an enjoyable experience for me. My initial feelings for discovering the Marina is ultimately a captivating feeling. The sun was as bright as a burning star and the clouds were as clear as a crystal, the afternoon my adventure to the Marina began. Cruising inside the parking lot was refreshing witnessing the captivating beauty of the colorful blue water. Immediately after exiting my vehicle a swarm of seagulls were flying above me chirping as loud as horn. Proceeding to walk closer to the water the potent smell of nature emerged it smelled like a breath of fresh air. Essentially the taste of salt was in the air. Sitting down by the nearby wooden bench made me feel truly at peace with Mother Nature. The sun smiled at me...
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...I. Find the word that has its underlined part pronounced differently from the othe three in each question 1. A. would B. should C. shoulder D. could 2. A. lose B. chose C. close D. rose 3. A. missed B. washed C. hoped D. removed 4. A. retreat B. thread C. peanut D. defeat II. Find the word with the stress pattern different from that of the other three words in each question 5. A. Competent B. computer C. compliance D. commuter 6. A.industrial B. experiment C. accidental D. professional 7. A. actually B. accurate C. satellite D. political 8. A. bookstore B. between c. theater D. superman III. Identify the one underlined word or phrase that must be changed in order for the sentence to correct. 9. Different species of octopuses may measure anywhere from two inches to over A B C thirty feet in long. D 10. When rainbows appear, they are always in the part of the sky opposite directly A B C D the Sun 11. A citadel, a fortress designed for the defense of a city, unusally standed on top A B C D of a hill. 12. Many people who live in New York city thinks that life in a large city offers A B C D special advantages 13. The scientific revolution of the early 1900’s affected education by change the A B C nature of technology. D 14. On May 20,1932, Amelia Earhart became the first woman fly solo...
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...every turn, no one batted an eye when a teacher entered a classroom. Once I saw a teacher struggle to pronounce foreign-sounding names from the attendance list while a boy in the front row French-kissed a girl wearing skintight turquoise Jordache jeans. In Korea, we wore slippers to keep the school floor clean, but here the walls were covered with graffiti, and some mornings, policemen guarded the gate and checked bags. My consolation was the English as a Second Language class where I could speak Korean with others like me. Yet it did not take me long to realize that the other students and I had little in common. The wealthier Korean immigrants had settled in Westchester or Manhattan, where their children attended private schools. In Queens, most of my E.S.L. classmates came from poor families who had escaped Korea's rigid class hierarchy, one dictated by education level, family background and financial status. Immigration is meant to be the great equalizer, yet it is not easy to eradicate the class divisions of the old country. What I recall, at 13, is an acute awareness of the distance between me and my fellow...
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...New York City has a capital budget. The budget includes funds required for city construction, repair projects, and purchases of land buildings, or equipment. Even though the size and the cost of the capital budget is important, the projects funded by this budget will determine how New York will grow in the future. It is important that New Yorkers learn more about our city budget. The planning and the disbursement of funds for capital projects occur over a period of years. In order the capital budge go forward with the Capital Budgets we will need three components. The documents that make up these components are: Ten-Year Capital Strategy- In November of every even-numbered year, the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the Department of City Planning both a draft Ten- Year capital strategy which presents the goals, policy constraints, assumptions, and criteria for assessing the city’s capital needs over the next ten years. The anticipated sources of financing, and the implications of the strategy, including any possible economic, social, and environmental effects is also provided in this document. The Capital Budget- This document is submitted by the Mayor as an Executive Capital Budget with the Expense Budget at the same time. Funding is proposed for capital projects for the coming fiscal year and estimates the funds needed in each of the three following years. The individual capital projects should not exceed a certain amount and needs an approval in the form...
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...and interests. Between April 1st and May 30th of this year, four new borough presidents and twenty one new city council members, along with their previously elected colleagues, will be making 1,475 appointments to 59 community boards spanning all five boroughs. This is a unique opportunity to evaluate and implement improvements to the recruitment and appointment system. On March 3, 2014, the Committee on Governmental Operations of the New York City Council held a hearing on “Best Practices for Recruitment and Appointments to Community Boards,” which included testimony from New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and Staten Island Borough President James Oddo, as well as community board chairs and district managers from all five boroughs, good government groups and youth advocacy organizations. This report covers three major areas in which community boards require improvement: outreach and recruitment; a standardized and transparent application process; and restoring the public trust by removing the politics from boards. 1. Outreach and Recruitment A community boards is only as strong as its members, and membership can only be as strong as the application pool from which members are selected. Improving outreach and recruitment will ensure that, like New York City’s neighborhoods, each community board has a diverse group of members with unique perspectives working together. Borough...
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...complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. Preamble to the Constitution of the World Health Organization, 1948 (the Definition has not been amended since 1948) What is Public Health? Public health is the science and art of preventing diseases, prolonging life, and promoting health through the organized efforts of society. Smoking Prevalence in the Bronx, 2002 35 Healthy People 2010 Goal: 12% 30 25 25 29 25 25 22 20 20 17 15 10 5 NY C Br on x Br on x h So ut Pk rd ha m -B ro nx Fo Pe lh a m -T h ro gs Ne c k ge sb rid Ki ng NE Br on x 0 NYC Smoking Reduction 2002-2004 6.2% 10.0% 5.0% -5.1% -15.0% -20.0% -25.0% -18.7% -18.9% -23.1% Staten Island Queens Manhattan -10.0% Brooklyn -5.0% Bronx 0.0% 2002-2004 decline Cancer Screening in the Bronx vs. NYC, 2002 Bronx 100 NYC Healthy People 2010 Goal: 90% 80 85 78 80 77 60 50 49 40 20 0 Colon Screening Mammogram PAP Smear HIV & AIDS Cases in the Bronx, 2003 25000 20000 19504 15000 10000 5000 774 0 # Living w/HIV & AIDS Figures as of 9/30/2003 # New HIV Diagnoses Rates of People Living w/HIV & AIDS in the Bronx vs. NYC vs. US, 2001 18 17.0 17.0 15.6 16 Rates per 1,000 Population 14 12 11.1 10.7 9.2 10 7.9 8 6 5.1 3.9 4 3.2 2 Figures as of 12/31/01 S U YC N ro nx B lh rd am ha m -B ro nx C Pk ro to na -T re m on t H un ts Po in t H ig hb r id ge Fo Pe Br on x E N K in g sb rid ge 0 Rates...
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...and memory work together in order to generate compelling and unexpected insights into the past. Stephen Frears' film The Queen allows the audience to gain unexpected insights about the titular character, and thus gain sympathy for her position. Likewise, The Outsider, a painting by Gordon Bennett, uses his own emotions to impact on his painting, creating a highly personal artwork that provides insights into the Indigenous Australia hardships endured during assimilation polices. Hence it can be seen that history and memory are interconnected and together portray a more cohesive picture of past events. Insights into Queen Elizabeth II's emotions during the aftermath of Diana's death can be gained through observing the interplay between the collective and personal memories of the event. Frears' imagined interpretation of the Queen's vulnerability challenges the public's collective memory of Diana's death. Frears' perspective is immediately depicted in the opening intertextual quote from Shakespeare's Henry IV: "uneasy lies the head that wears a crown". Sympathy is created as Frears suggests the difficulty of the Queen's role of being a leader, a role that she interpreted as having to be stoic and strong. This is supported by Robin Janvrin's confession to Blair, body language and expression secretive: "this public reaction has completely thrown her". The Queen came onto the throne at the age of 27, and it was a role that she had become accustomed to by the time of these events,...
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...FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY To purchase this visit here: http://www.activitymode.com/product/fin-350-week-11-quiz-10-chapters-22-23-strayer-university/ Contact us at: SUPPORT@ACTIVITYMODE.COM FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY FIN 350 Week 11 Quiz 10 Chapters 22,23 - Strayer University NEW Activity mode aims to provide quality study notes and tutorials to the students of FIN 350 Week 11 Quiz 10 Chapters 22 & 23 Strayer University in order to ace their studies. FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY To purchase this visit here: http://www.activitymode.com/product/fin-350-week-11-quiz-10-chapters-22-23-strayer-university/ Contact us at: SUPPORT@ACTIVITYMODE.COM FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY FIN 350 Week 11 Quiz 10 Chapters 22,23 - Strayer University NEW Activity mode aims to provide quality study notes and tutorials to the students of FIN 350 Week 11 Quiz 10 Chapters 22 & 23 Strayer University in order to ace their studies. FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY To purchase this visit here: http://www.activitymode.com/product/fin-350-week-11-quiz-10-chapters-22-23-strayer-university/ Contact us at: SUPPORT@ACTIVITYMODE.COM FIN 350 WEEK 11 QUIZ 10 CHAPTERS 22 & 23 STRAYER UNIVERSITY FIN 350 Week 11 Quiz 10 Chapters 22,23 - Strayer University NEW Activity mode aims to provide quality study notes and tutorials to...
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...DIVERSITY IN SPRINGFIELD GARDENS, NY Diversity in Springfield Gardens, NY Nakisa Frazier Excelsior College COM/Communication and Diversity Professor Regina Luttrell 01/06/2013 I am currently residing in Springfield Gardens which is a part of a borough that is considered the most diverse nation, Queens, NY. According to the webpage www.bestplaces.net/people/zip-code/new_york/springfield_gardens/11413 there is a populations of 38.826 in which 2.37% of people are White, 91.98% are Black, 0.89% is Asian, 0.39% is Native American, and 4.37% claim as 'Other'. Even though there are mostly blacks and very few Whites where I live, there are still many similarities. I live close to JFK International Airport and my community is mainly middle class. In my community I see a very diverse mixture of those from the Caribbean such as Haitians, Jamaicans, and Guyanese residents. I also see a lot of African Americans which I am, very few Whites, Asians, and Hispanics. Most people think you should travel the world to see diversity but living in New York you exposed to cultural diversity. There are hundreds of different cultures in other state of United States. Diversity has a lot to do with the mixture of cultures, people, and traditions that come together to make up a community. Diversity also plays a part of how we all are unique individuals with our own cultures and traditions. It provides opportunities that would allow people to learn about other cultures and traditions...
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...The Queen is an admirable villainous character in “Snow White” because she is determined, cunning, and malicious. The Queen is determined to kill to Snow White no matter what, she proves this because she says: “Snow-white shall die,” cried she, “though it should cost me my own life!” (Grimm 5). This shows that she is determined because she is so set on killing Snow White, that she claims that it shall cost her her life. The Queen is also cunning because she is very clever in her schemes to get rid of Snow White. Knowing that Snow White will not let anyone in because she tries to kill her twice, the Queen says, “Are you afraid of poison?” said the woman, “look here, I will cut the apple in two pieces; you shall have the red side, I will have...
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...There is a quote that says, “good triumphs over evil”, in the origin story “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”, this is shown to be true throughout. In the German fairytale, titled “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” by Jacob and Willhelm Grimm who lived during the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century, the protagonist, Snow White, luckily escapes from the Queen, the antagonist, merely getting killed by the huntsman, Snow White seeks shelter in the Dwarf’s House, however Snow White is soon discovered again and that enrages the Queen to attempt to kill her (Grimm). The idea, that good always triumphant over evil can be seen in the origin story, which is why Disney targeted it as an inspirational children’s movie during the 1930s....
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...Cristian Uribe The war without end, selfishness, nothing to do against death and the scars of the war in Men without women In this essay I’m talking about the main issues present in the following short stories in Men without women by Ernest Hemingway (1928): In another country (25-29), Hills like white elephants (29-33), The killers (33-40) and Now I lay me (83). In another country is about a wounded American soldier recuperating from an injury by receiving treatments from machines in a hospital in Milan, Italy. Machines. With him there’s an Italian major receiving treatment for a shriveled hand. There is a strong optimism of a physician employing the new machines which is contrasted with the skepticism of Italian major who, disbelieving in the machines, nevertheless comes regularly for therapy to his hand. That daily attendance is interrupted only with the sudden death of the major’s wife. The machines were new, as result, the narrator and the major were trying them. And although they both didn’t trust in the machines they were under their treatment because they really wanted to recover. The major wanted to be his wife and the narrator probably wanted to clean his pride because his wound and medals were “fake”. What I think can be infer from the text is that even if the machines have success healing the soldiers, the war for them won’t end because is not just facing enemy on the front line but also picking up the pieces of their damaged lives and facing the prospect...
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