...THE POWER OF THE PENNY Only in America, with its epidemic commercialism has consumerism risen to the echelons of the ridiculous and bizarre. Bargain hunting is ubiquitous, seen in its many forms and transmutations: couponing, run deals, clearance blasts. You name it- we are running for it. The constant revolving door of new merchandise in stores being marked down to clearance has resulted into what I call the “Penny Phenomena.” Clearance gets clearanced and an overwhelming push for new inventory created a wormhole straight thru Shopper’s Paradise. Thanks to a beautifully flawed pricing system where merchandise automatically goes through a series of markdowns, all the way down to the lowest decimal known to man- a penny. But c’mon, 1 cent!? Where will that take you? It used to be and always- nowhere. No one in proper headspace would think you can go far with a penny or a bunch of pennies jingling in your pocket. But go ahead, type in #pennyfinds, #pennyhunting, #pennydeals on Instagram and you will be taken to a nether space in the universe full of amazing, whowudathunk deals. The purchasing power of a singular coin has marked the online collective consciousness and “pennyhunters” boast of a ludicrous following on social media. We’re not talking about cheap crap either. $200 designer shoes for a penny! Ding! A Rag & Bone sweater that retails for $350 for a penny? Ding, ding! A Dyson vacuum for $0.01 cents? Ding, ding, ding! Toys, clothes, shoes, jewelry, appliances, home...
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...because I liked the movie I thought it would be a nice book to read. I also picked it because it seemed easier to just pick a book that was on Moodle, so I could be sure that it would be okay to use it. My expectations were not very high because it is a pretty old book and I never really like old books. Summary Chapter one – Down the Rabbit Hole A little girl named Alice and her sister were sitting on a bank when Alice saw a white rabbit with pink eyes running close by her. At first, she didn’t think much of it, but when it took a watch out of its waistcoat-pocket she realised this wasn’t natural and she ran after it. She saw the rabbit disappear into a hole under the hedge and jumped right after it. After a very long fall, she ended up in a dark hall with a table and a tiny golden key on top of it. The key belonged to a tiny door but she knew she would never fit through. Then she found a bottle labelled with the words ‘DRINK ME’. When she took a sip it appeared to be a shrinking potion and she shrunk until...
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...Rabbit Hole, by David Lindsay-Abaire, premiered on Broadway in 2006. It follows a grieving family as they attempt to deal with the death of their five-year-old son. Danny was killed after running out in front of a car chasing his dog, Taz. Danny’s parents, Becca and Howie, are in a difficult place in their relationship after the loss of their child. Becca’s sister, Izzy, has just found out she is pregnant. Becca’s mother, Nat, is constantly reminded of the loss of her own son, and Jason, the 17-year-old who hit and killed Danny, just wants to talk to Becca and Howie about their son. Everyone in the family is mourning differently, and this causes conflicts. I really enjoyed Rabbit Hole. It felt very real. When I was reading it, I felt like...
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...Joel yawili Forensic science Vincent Maher Spring 2010 The CSI: New York episode “down the rabbit hole” starts off with a maintenance guy discovering a body lying on the floor of a inventory room full of mannequins. Next, the first officer arrives on the scene of the crime and, as explained on page 39 of the textbook, he isolates and secures the crime scene and we also see the maintenance guy being questioned. Later, the walk through of the scene is made and the photography unit proceeds in the capture of photos (p.). the forensic pathologist examines the stage of decomposition of the body and determines by evaluating the rigor mortis (p.21) that the victim has been dead for 5 hours. They also find out that the victim was shot in the head and discover a surgical tubing around the wrist of the victim. After a blood sample is taken, two dashes around the neck are noticed. Later in this episode we see two physical criminalists doing a spiral search of the crime scene with flash lights. A latent fingerprint(p.) is retrieved. During the body analysis, the pathologist in charge of the case finds a tick ( blood sucking insect found only in the woods) in one of the victim’s wounds. He reveals that the cuts on the neck were made by a surgical scalpel and that the tick was bloodless meaning, that it entered the wound prior to death. The ballistics unit (p.) identified the bullet as a 45 caliber weapon bullet which might have been mounted with a silencer. Also found at the crime...
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...Argument and Logic Axia Campus of University of Phoenix Parmenide’s most famous disciple, Zeno has devised a series of ingenious arguments to support Parmenide’s theory. The theory is reality is one. Zeno took a basic approach to demonstrate motion is impossible. His example was a rabbit moving from one hole to another, and must first reach the quarter point before reaching the next hole. The point needing to be reached is one-eighth the distance. Whether it is a rabbit or another creature it must reach a point of infinite number of points to get anywhere they wish to go. By the requirement of needing to move an infinite number of times anywhere would rule out motion. Second theory states for a rabbit to move from one hole to another, at each moment of its travel will occupy space meaning it is at rest. Since the rabbit occupies space each moment it is at rest each moment so it cannot move. Zeno’s argument is that motion is not possible. Basically stating when a rabbit moves from one place to another the rabbit moves infinite times ruling out motion. When anything is attempting to reach a certain spot or location whether it is an animal or human we at any point can all stop. Zeno is saying motion does not exist at all because we all stop at some point. I believe him stating motion does not exist is Ludacris, because as we are moving we are in motion and then we stop and then we are back in motion once we began to move again. I believe for the most part his logics and...
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...for some reason this free website wants me to write an essay. So I will use lots of simple words and tell a dumb story about a little red rabbit. I know right a red rabbit, who has ever heard of such a thing. So one day I was walking through a forest when I came along a red rabbit, his name was peter. No not Peter cotton tail, I asked him, they aren’t related. Anyway, I met Peter by a stream and asked him why he was red, he told me that he had once been a white rabbit, but he had fallen into a strange rabbit hole, one he had never traveled into before. Peter said that he had been running away from this blonde girl who had a fetish for rabbits. Anyway he ran away from her and fell down the hole. She followed him down the hole and continued to call after him. Peter was scared; he had heard of girls like her before and had heard about what they would do to little white rabbits like him, so he ran as fast as he could. But no matter how fast Peter ran that silly girl would follow him. He finally gave up hope and ran straight to the queen. Peter knew that she would be the only person in the world that could save him from being molested by this crazy blonde girl. Peter said that as he entered the castle grounds there were some tools painting white roses red, and that was when he had his epiphany, this girl was looking for a white rabbit, so Peter jumped head first into a can of red paint, rolled around for a bit, and was able to escape the clutches of this silly little...
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...Speaking of the allegories Disney version I will admit I do like the original version Disney released in 1951. The wonderful use of colors is what drew me in, granted that could be my inner hippie shining through. However, as an adult I took the time to look into the allegories associated with the book/movie and well I truly believe that Alice in Wonderland is a story of youth coming to adulthood and the many decisions and obstacles that we must face as we step foot into the adult world. Going "down the rabbit hole" has become a familiar allegory, symbolizing everything from exploring a new world to taking drugs to exploring anything unknown. In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland the rabbit hole is the place where it all starts, a gateway to...
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...Parmenides a world renowned philosopher produced a pupil by the name of Zeno who followed in principles that motion is nonexistent. Zeno believed that in order for something to move (i.e. the rabbit) for a rabbit to be in motion it would have to be one continuous motion without pause or break. Zeno’s notion was that no matter what the rabbit did for it to move from one hole to another it would have to had taken a break in time to make it halfway to the hole or even a quarter of the way and so on. Another concept of his was that for the rabbit to even be in motion to make it to the second hole it would have to occupy a space equal to its length at all times, which is improbable since the rabbit would not be able to occupy every moment equally therefore motion is absent. In this passage Zeno was making more of a statement than an argument, and judging from his thought process there was even lesser logic than his argument. If he really believed that there was logic in what he said then he was very dense. Motion is all around us in different forms like when a tree sways from the breeze blowing or a person jogging. I do not know if Zeno really believed in his logic but there is none behind it. A statement Zeno could have made to strengthen his argument is that motion doesn’t exist outside of the mind. It would have made a lot more sense if he would have said that ,because without our mind telling us its day or night time, time does not exist so in a sense motion...
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...CHAPTER I Down the Rabbit-Hole Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, `and what is the use of a book,' thought Alice `without pictures or conversation?' So she was considering in her own mind (as well as she could, for the hot day made her feel very sleepy and stupid), whether the pleasure of making a daisy-chain would be worth the trouble of getting up and picking the daisies, when suddenly a White Rabbit with pink eyes ran close by her. There was nothing so VERY remarkable in that; nor did Alice think it so VERY much out of the way to hear the Rabbit say to itself, `Oh dear! Oh dear! I shall be late!' (when she thought it over afterwards, it occurred to her that she ought to have wondered at this, but at the time it all seemed quite natural); but when the Rabbit actually TOOK A WATCH OUT OF ITS WAISTCOAT- POCKET, and looked at it, and then hurried on, Alice started to her feet, for it flashed across her mind that she had never before see a rabbit with either a waistcoat-pocket, or a watch to take out of it, and burning with curiosity, she ran across the field after it, and fortunately was just in time to see it pop down a large rabbit-hole under the hedge. In another moment down went Alice after it, never once considering how in the world she was to get out again. The rabbit-hole went straight on...
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...A woman's voice, strangely alluring, starts to sing, ”One pill makes you larger / And one pill makes you small”. This woman in question is Grace Slick, the lead vocalist of the band, Jefferson Airplane, and the mastermind behind their hit song, “White Rabbit”. Released in September of 1967, in the band’s debut album Surrealistic Pillow, “White Rabbit” quickly jumped to #8 in Billboard’s Hot 100, and earned a spot on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. With the rising drug culture of the 1960’s came the evolution of psychedelic rock. A branch of traditional rock, this subcategory encompassed bands such as The Beatles and The Grateful Dead. For Jefferson Airplane, and especially Grace Slick, this culture was the main inspiration for the song....
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...other places in the book. But Mr. and Mrs. Cane, their little girl Lucy and their farmhands are fictitious and bear no intentional resemblance to any persons known to me, living or dead. Acknowledgements I acknowledge with gratitude the help I have received not only from my family but also from my friends Reg Sones and Hal Summers, who read the book before publication and made valuable suggestions. I also wish to thank warmly Mrs. Margaret Apps and Miss Miriam Hobbs, who took pains with the typing and helped me very much. I am indebted, for a knowledge of rabbits and their ways, to Mr. R. M. Lockley's remarkable book, The Private Life of the Rabbit. Anyone who wishes to know more about the migrations of yearlings, about pressing chin glands, chewing pellets, the effects of over-crowding in warrens, the phenomenon of re-absorption of fertilized embryos, the capacity of buck rabbits to fight stoats, or any other features of Lapine life, should refer to that definitive work. PART I The Journey 1. The Notice Board CHORUS: Why do you cry out thus, unless at some vision of horror? CASSANDRA: The house reeks of death and dripping blood. CHORUS: How so? 'Tis but the odor of the altar sacrifice. CASSANDRA: The stench is like a breath from the tomb. Aeschylus, Agamemnon The primroses were over. Toward the edge of the wood, where the ground became open and sloped down to an old fence and a brambly ditch beyond...
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...many unique and weird creatures which eventually help her escape wonderland. Alice shows that she is curious through her actions. At the beginning of the book Alice gets distracted from her "boring" work, and chases a white rabbit down a hole. This excerpt describes Alices curiosity, "Alice started to her feet, for it flashed in her mind that she had never before seen a rabbit with either a waistcoat-pocket". When Alice is at the bottom of the hole she find a bottle labeled "Drink Me", she wants to see what it tastes like, this excerpt describes the event "...this bottle was not marked `poison', so Alice ventured to taste it, finding it very nice". Another instant that shows her curiosity when she looks for the white rabbits fan and gloves, she finds a bottle, this time there was no table, "There was no label this time with the words `Drink Me' ... `I know something interesting is going to happen' ... ` I'll just see what it does',". Alice is like a little girl that is still exploring the world around her, but she finds that she is more mature than the creatures in Wonderland. Alice is very well mannered in Victorian ways to the creatures of Wonderland. Alice shows her good manners when she enters the white rabbits house and the rabbit tells Alice to go fetch his gloves and fan, "I'd better take his fan and gloves- that is if I can find them", since Alice is a guest, uninvited, she follows the owners orders. When Alice runs into caterpillar she calls him ...
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...simple blue dress and bow. In the first chapter of the book Alice lays sleepily under a tree as her elder sister reads to her. In Alice’s lack of interest a small white rabbit catches her eye and she impulsively runs after it and into a rabbit hole. Alice’s fear of the future is overpowered by her childish curiosity and need for entertainment, this clearly exhibits her naivite. Alice wanders through Wonderland meeting unusual characters and eating and drinking foreign foods and beverages without hesitation. The idea of Wonderland and all of its boggling aspects represent a journey through adolescence and sophistication in which...
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...Alice in Wonderland – Book Review Alice and Wonderland is a novel written by a man named Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). It tells the story of a girl named Alice who falls down a rabbit hole into this fantasy ‘wonderland’. This novel tells us about Alice’s weird and wonderful adventures down the rabbit hole and the unusual characters she encounters. She follows a white rabbit that was talking to himself, wearing a waistcoat and had a pocket watch, down the rabbit hole. She fell a long time through this tunnel and fell into a hall of doors. On the table in the middle of the room for a tiny door, on the other side of the door is a garden that Alice wants to get to. On the table, Alice finds a bottle with ‘DRINK ME’ on it, this makes her small, but then she finds a cake, which says ‘EAT ME’ on it, which makes her grow until her head hit the ceiling. Thus begins the series of shape change for Alice. The shape change confuses Alice and she gets up set, she cries and floods the room. As she shrinks she is forced to swim in her own tears and is soon joined by a number of other animals. They get out of the water and the mouse tells a story to a caucus race to dry all of the animals off.. Once Alice is dry, she enters the garden where she goes into a house and drinks from the bottle to make herself grow again, but this makes her too big, too big that she cannot get out of the house. Animals start to gather to make her leave, they throw pebbles at her (which are...
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...Mendanbar’s sword is missing?! In the fiction book entitled, Calling on Dragons, by Patricia C. Wrede, Morwen and her friends, Telemain, Cimorene, Brandel, Killer, Scorn, and Trouble go on an adventure through and beyond the Enchanted Forest to find Mendanbar’s, the King of the Enchanted Forest’s, sword. They find that the sword is missing when they first go to figure out what caused Killer, a rabbit, to turn into a seven foot, eleven inch, blue donkey with large wings. When they found that Killer had eaten a clover patch that had been invaded by wizards, they decided to inform the King and Queen about it. Starting from the beginning, knock! Knock! Knock! Morwen encounters a visitor. It was Chairwitch Archaniz. She came to tell her about the complaints the Deadly Nightshade Gardening Club has been getting...
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