...Miller depicts a similar image of a perfect housewife, Linda Lowman: she is always supportive to every decision her husband, Willy Lowman makes and protects Willy’s illusions and pride. However, her expectations to Willy and the pressure she...
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...Death of a Salesman by Riley Thorpe The book Death of a Salesman, written by Arthur Miller is about a man, who hallucinates and has illusions of the past, but his hallucinations mix into the past illusions. This mans name is Willy Loman, he has two children and a wife Linda. His wife is very supportive to Willy, she trys her best to make him feel good about life. His sons Biff and Hap are very different people, Hap is more like his father, when Biff wants to be more of a outdoors man. Biff a confused man he is stuck between doing what he loves, or following his fathers footsteps and be a miserable old man. He wants his father to be proud of him, Happy: ''he's not mocking you, he-'' Biff: '' Everything I say there's a twist of mockery on his face. I can't get near him.'' Biff has a hard time telling his father what he wants to do in his life, he just wants to do what he loves, Biff: ''when all you really desire is to be outdoors, with your shirt off. And always to have to get ahead of the next fella. And still that's how you build a future.'' Biff has a hard time finding a steady job that he enjoys, ''I stole myself out of every good job since high school!'' He feels he can't keep a job because his father fills him with such ''hot air'' that he can't stand taking orders from anybody. Linda is a sweat old lady married to Willy, Willy's problem scares her but she won't confront it. She encourages Willy and his ideas, Willy: '' You wait, kid, before it's all over were gonna...
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...from them is too weak. 2. Sun clock Place a flowerpot with a long stick fixed into the hole at the bottom in a spot, which is sunny, all day. The stick’s shadow moves along the rim of the pot as the sun moves. Each hour by the clock mark the position of the shadow on the pot. If the sun is shining, you can read off the time. Because of the rotation of the earth the sun apparently passes over us in a semi-circle. In the morning and evening its shadow strikes the pot superficially, while; it midday, around 12 o’clock, the light incidence is greatest. The shadow can be seen particularly clearly on the sloping wall of the pot. 3. Watch as a compass Hold a watch horizontally, with the hour hand pointing directly to the sun. If you halve the distance between the hour hand and the 12 with a match, the end of the match points directly to the south. In 24 hours the sun ‘moves’, because of the earth’s...
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...Is childhood disappearing? There have been many studies and research put into the question ‘is childhood disappearing’ but first lets define what childhood actually is... childhood is considered to be the time in which a person is a child or too young to be considered an adult, this time in most cultures is 0-12 years old. Many sociologists believe that childhood is rapidly disappearing, for example Phillip Aries was a historian who argued that in the middle ages childhood didn’t exist. In the middle ages things were a lot different, children were a lot different and besides from size there was little defining children from adults. There is many sources such as paintings which show children to not only be dressed as adults, but engaging in adult behaviour such as drinking and attending brothels. Aries discovered that children were sent to work, just like adults as soon as they were capable of doing so. Law also made very little distinction between children and adults, with children being allowed to participate in adult activities because they were just seen as ‘mini’ and then sharing the same burden as adults when it came to punishments. At this time Phillip Aries believe that childhood didn’t exist. In 1880 the compulsory education act came into procedure in England and Wales, this created a big turn over in the history of childhood. It became compulsory for children to go to school, meaning they couldn’t work. Before this law came into action children were seen to be...
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...Back to Contents Tutorial ADOBE PHOTOSHOP 5.0 Photo Retouching Adobe® Photoshop® provides you with a variety of tools and commands for improving the quality of a photoreserving an extensive body of work assembled by a team of photographers from 1991 to 1995, The Architecture of Italy CD-ROM disc is a compilation of more than three hundred sumptuous photographs. With crossreferenced text provided for each photograph, this collection can be used as a resource for many endeavors. Much more than a "digital coffee-table book, "you are free to modify, rent, lease, distribute, or create derivative works based upon the original images found in this collection. Included in this collection are St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice; the Tower and Baptistry at Pisa; the Colliseum, the Forum, the Vatican, and highlights from the Vatican Museum in Rome; the Duomo, the Medici Palace, the Ponte Vecchio, and the Gates of Heaven in Florence. More than 75 superb architectural examples, which have received little recognition, have also been included. Gina Antonelli is known for her works on Italian fine art, as well as several previous photographic publications: "Italy's Best Loved Gardens," the series "Italian Tradition in Color and Form" (Dress; Cuisine; Architecture; Pastimes), and two editions of the book "Italian Traditional Patterns." In addition to completing the Rome and Naples photography assignment, photographer and art historian Tomas Panini assembled and edited the explanatory notes for...
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...the landscape from behind impenetrable sunglasses. In his hand, a metallic attaché case. Members of a SWAT team manoeuvre silently behind a fence. The driver takes out his cell phone and dials. A man’s voice answers. The driver says simply ‘I’m here.’ The latest Hollywood blockbuster? A prime-time TV drama? Neither. It’s advertising. Or, more accurately, advertising on steroids, aka branded entertainment. This is the opening of ‘The Hostage’, produced by BMW and their former ad agency, Fallon, employing A-list director John Woo. To understand why this and seven other BMW films were made, one need only look to the challenges facing the long-time prime brand-advertising venue: TV. Media platforms are multiplying; the internet moves ever closer to being our primary source of information, music and entertainment; and TV recording technology allows for easier ad-skipping. Advertisers worldwide are searching for new ways to use the power of film to reach increasingly elusive viewers. It is easy to be drawn in to these films and forget that they had, from their inception, a purpose beyond brilliant entertainment. Our question, and that of many, is did they work as advertising? FADE IN: We hear a clicking camera shutter and rapid breathing as we peer through TABLE 1 tall grass. Across the field, a gang of men carrying automatic weapons force a group of people from the back of truck. Click. The thugs line the locals up, hands on head. Click, click. It’s over quickly: one woman screams...
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...Livingston’s bulky lifeless legs begin to shiver and kick, heart strong as an ox, not close to being dead. Kim glances at Myra and screamed at her, “Don’t just fucking stand there -- Myra! Fucking help me?” Myra snaps out of her daydream, “Just say ‘help me’, bitch! I’m not a fucking mind reader! How the hell am I supposed to know you wanna suffocate the bastard! Myra quickly rushes to the other side of the bed and aids Kim in sealing the deal. A defiant Livingston with his last ounce continues to fight for life as if his senses took over. Lifting themselves off the floor -- shoving the pillow over Livingston’s face with all their might, Kim and Myra hold the pillow for ten long seconds. Livingston’s will to live expires, he becomes lifeless, hands crumpling, the body now wilting. The last dying gasp of a muffled groan is heard, then a long silence. The two women glanced at one another, Kim checks Livingston’s pulse. His heart beats no more; a smile engulfs her face as if she’s won a fifty-dollar scratcher on a dollar ticket. Myra, also relieved mercifully removes the pillow from Livingston's dead motionless body and said in a subtle tone, “Too bad we had to kill him, Garland liked him a lot.” Kim’s unemotional eyes blaze at Livingston’s eyes, now in a cold, dead freeze stare and said mockingly, “Yeah, Garland really liked Livingston, he liked him enough to con him out of twenty million bucks,” Kim glares at Myra, “Give me a break, Myra, Garland hated Livingston’s guts.” Kim’s eyes...
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...Does the film Huang tudi (Yellow Earth) offer a critique of the Communist revolution? If so where and how? Chen Kaige and Zhang Yimou’s Yellow Earth is a meaningful and controversial film that highlights the young and old, realist and idealist, as well as the ideal utopia and bounded bureaucracies – touching on the notion of fate. Set in early 1939 in China, Yellow Earth follows the story of Gu Qing, a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) soldier sent out among the peasants in Northern Shaanxi to collect folksongs, to which the Communists intend to rewrite new lyrics to help inspire soldiers and peasant followers to fight the Japanese invasion and work towards the revolution. Gu Qing comes across a village holding a wedding procession and is invited to join the feast. He stays at a peasant’s home, and meets a father with a daughter (Cuiqiao) and a son (Hanhan). There are several significant scenes in the film that suggests the filmmaker’s potential critique of the Communist revolution (CR). The film begins with a magnificent panning view of the vast and mountainous landscape. As with many nationalistic films, landscape plays a very important role, as it indirectly depicts the village peasants as slaves to the land, and a sense of hopelessness that comes with working the land. The several slow scenes focused on the horizon and landscape also represent the notion of an ‘unchanging China’, and it’s backwardness with it’s social and political margins. The film has many scenes depicting...
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...GENERAL SIR JOHN KOTELAWALA DEFENCE UNIVERSITY CLASS ASSIGNMENT SUBJECT: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY POLICY & PLANNING (MEG 3123) Prepared by Name | Number | | | MBA IN E-GOVERNANCE Programme 111 Year 2 Semester III Report Submission Date : 15 October 2015 Lecturer: Lt Col (Retd) Athula Samarasinghe Student declaration: | I declare that: | * I understand what is meant by plagiarism * The implications of plagiarism have been explained to me by our institution * This assignment is all my own work and I have acknowledged any use of the published or unpublished works of other people. | Student's signature: | Date: | Total number of pages including this cover page | | Submission Date | | Due Date | -10-2015 | Lecturer's Name | Lt Col (Retd) Athula Samarasinghe | OFFICIAL USE ONLY MARKER’S COMMENTS | Marker’s Name | Marks Awarded (100%) | Analysis of Topshoes Company Introduction This is an analysis of make-believe company called “topshoes”, with aim of drafting/imposing IT policies in each area where IT has been used. This hypothetical “topshoe” brand focuses on all age groups of the company. Products of this company maintain high demand in the local market as well as foreign markets. The company is very much concerns with the quality of the products and cost effective ways of manufacturing by using cutting edge technology as well as appropriate IT applications witch effects both quality and cost...
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...Closing down creativity and standardising knowledge in education Bottom of Form Details Amongst the well-drilled headlines that define what is happening inside the British education system in the 21st century, one might be forgiven for not noticing what happened to freedom, the space that once existed for individual creativity and personal goals. It is not that in bygone times the system ever aimed to create that space where those values could take root - a state education system was never going to do that - rather, it is the way a space that existed by default has been progressively and ruthlessly closed down. Increasingly, those who run the system are actively on the lookout for any space where their writ does not run. Under the corporate flag of improving the quality and performance of everyone involved in the education process, an increasingly intrusive multi-headed bureaucracy has been quietly transforming the place where it is embedded into the behaviour and units of performance that it alone specifies. As its language and systems become the lingua franca, the values that were once possible to realise within state education, irrespective of its overall purposes, have fallen by the wayside and with them, the integrity of what is being done in the name of ‘education’. This article offers an insight into the backroom of a part of that bureaucracy – a private company that sets and assesses subject knowledge and understanding in examinations. These are the companies that...
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...Office of Human Resources Diversity & Inclusion Activities Diversity and Inclusion activities are simple ways to get people talking and listening to one another. It is only through understanding each other that we truly gain knowledge and can move forward together. While we can’t always walk in someone else’s shoes, we can take the time to inquire about how the shoe fits and if its path is smooth or riddled with pebbles. Social Justice • PO Box 6031, 412 Knapp Hall • Morgantown, WV 26506 • 304-293-8948 http://socialjustice.ext.wvu.edu/ Objectives Office of Human Resources There are many reasons you may choose to use and icebreaker or activity: to warm up or relax your group, to bring your group back together after a break or intense session, to introduce the next segment or to present your group with challenges that, as a team (together or divided into small groups or teams), your group must either overcome or address. Age & Appropriateness Icebreakers and activities are adaptable to your group and situation. When considering an icebreaker or activity, be sure to keep specifics about your group in mind, such as age and meeting focus. Please don’t overlook an icebreaker or activity because you think the group is too mature for it. Many groups, once aware that it’s ok to relax and have fun, will enjoy the experience of “being able to let go,” if only for a moment. Icebreakers Icebreakers are exercises that are intended to help a group of people begin the...
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...CONTE NTS Introduction 1 WHY YOU SHOULD VISIT CEMETERIES: Survivorship Bias 2 DOES HARVARD MAKE YOU SMARTER?: Swimmer’s Body Illusion 3 WHY YOU SEE SHAPES IN THE CLOUDS: Clustering Illusion 4 IF 50 MILLION PEOPLE SAY SOMETHING FOOLISH, IT IS STILL FOOLISH: Social Proof 5 WHY YOU SHOULD FORGET THE PAST: Sunk Cost Fallacy 6 DON’T ACCEPT FREE DRINKS: Reciprocity 7 BEWARE THE ‘SPECIAL CASE’: Confirmation Bias (Part 1) 8 MURDER YOUR DARLINGS: Confirmation Bias (Part 2) 9 DON’T BOW TO AUTHORITY: Authority Bias 10 LEAVE YOUR SUPERMODEL FRIENDS AT HOME: Contrast Effect 11 WHY WE PREFER A WRONG MAP TO NO MAP AT ALL: Availability Bias 12 WHY ‘NO PAIN, NO GAIN’ SHOULD SET ALARM BELLS RINGING: The It’llGet-Worse-Before-It-Gets-Better Fallacy 13 EVEN TRUE STORIES ARE FAIRYTALES: Story Bias 14 WHY YOU SHOULD KEEP A DIARY: Hindsight Bias 15 WHY YOU SYSTEMATICALLY OVERESTIMATE YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND ABILITIES: Overconfidence Effect 16 DON’T TAKE NEWS ANCHORS SERIOUSLY: Chauffeur Knowledge 17 YOU CONTROL LESS THAN YOU THINK: Illusion of Control 18 NEVER PAY YOUR LAWYER BY THE HOUR: Incentive Super-Response Tendency 19 THE DUBIOUS EFFICACY OF DOCTORS, CONSULTANTS AND PSYCHOTHERAPISTS: Regression to Mean 20 NEVER JUDGE A DECISION BY ITS OUTCOME: Outcome Bias 21 LESS IS MORE: The Paradox of Choice 22 YOU LIKE ME, YOU REALLY REALLY LIKE ME: Liking Bias 23 DON’T CLING TO THINGS: Endowment Effect 24 THE INEVITABILITY OF UNLIKELY Events: Coincidence 25 THE CALAMITY OF CONFORMITY: Groupthink 26 WHY...
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...DEATH OF A SALESMAN Study Guide for Teachers World-Class Theatre in the Heart of Vermont 703 Main Stre e t , W eston, V T 05161 www.westonplayhouse.o rg The Weston Playhouse Theatre Company The 2010 WPTC Teacher’s Workshop and the School Matinee and Touring Production is made possible in part by grants from: The Bay and Paul Foundations Mountain Room Foundation National Endowment for the Arts The Shubert Foundation The Vermont Country Store and The Orton Family Vermont Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities With additional contributions from: Black River Produce Berkshire Bank Clark’s Quality Foods Price Chopper’s Golub Foundation Ezra Jack Keats Foundation Okemo Mountain Resort Thrifty Attic …and an ever growing family of individuals who believe in the impact that the performing arts can have on its community. This Teachers Study Guide was compiled and edited by Rena Murman. Credit and thanks to the following theatres for materials used or referenced from study guides created for Death of a Salesman: Guthrie Theatre, Minneapolis, MN; Kennedy Center, Washington, DC; Lyric Theatre, London; Royal Lyceum Theatre Company, Edinburgh; Yale Repertory Theatre, New Haven, CT. © 2010 Weston Playhouse Theatre Company, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) educational and cultural institution. WPTC Performance Guides may be duplicated at no charge for educational purposes only. They may not be sold or used in other publications without the express written consent...
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...Through the course of American history there are names that stand out, names that represent more than just a person, but represent an era in American history. The list of important and influential figures in American history is too long and numerous to list. Yet there is always one name, one man who stands above all the rest. Abraham Lincoln has come to define the American experience. His beginnings as a poor farmer in Kentucky to his rise in politics to his Presidency, his story fascinates everyone who reads and studies it. Abraham Lincoln is the epitome of what America is. He is Americas most cherished and beloved President and he may be the most well known American President in the world. Despite all the praise bestowed upon Abraham Lincoln there are those who do not buy into the ‘official’ Lincoln legacy. A small, but growing group of Lincoln detractors claim that Lincoln was not the father of freedom and liberty, the great emancipator and the savior of the union; they see Lincoln as a diabolical dictator. A man who took advantage of America in its darkest hour, a man who had no respect for the Constitution, he instead sought to destroy and undermine it every chance he got. Abraham Lincoln was President during America’s darkest hour; he saved the union and kept the country together. Lincoln was justified in the actions he took, despite attempts to paint Lincoln as a tyrannical dictator there is no question that Lincoln’s status as America’s greatest President is deserved and...
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...Physics PHYSICS FORMULAE AND PRINCIPLES Fundamental quantities and SI units The standard units were set up by the international system of units, SI The fundamental quantities, there symbols and there SI units a listed below Quantity symbol SI unit & unit symbol Length l metre (m) Mass m kilogram (k g) Time t second (s) Temperature T Kelvin (k) Current I Ampere (A) Amt. substance mol mole 6.02 x 10 23 (molecules) Luminous intensity - candela (c d) MULTIPLES AND SUBMULTIPLES Multiples are larger than the base units and submultiples are smaller than the base units Multiples Symbol Prefix Meaning Example Deca d 10 1 0 Decameter Hecto h 102 100 Hectometer ...
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