Teachers and those involved in the writing process concern themselves over the issue that writers abuse adjectives in their writing. For example, in the Course Reader week five materials the lecturer gives the following quote, “Isaac Asimov warns writers against ‘a having thick layer of fatty, adjectival froth’ in their work.” [Before the Golden Age: A Science Fiction Anthology of the 1930s, p.179, Doubleday, 1974.]. Asimov’s warning puts an eloquent exclamation point to the point concerning adjective misuse. Both novices and experienced writers face this quandary, and simply put, meaningless adjectives deaden the prose. The following example helps answer the question of why unnecessary adjectives stifle text.…
In the story “The Emperor of the Air” Ethan Canin uses different images as metaphors for what is going on in his life. I think Canin uses the image of the insects eating and slowly killing the tree as a metaphor for the different issues eating at him in his life. The relationship with the tree mirrors or affects every other relationship he has in the story. Throughout the story, the narrator provides many issues that are eating at him, just like the insects that are eating and destroying the tree, including: his health, his wife, his neighbor Mr. Pike, the lies, and the order of the stars.…
In conclusion, the prospects of space colonization appear to be very promising. Although Nash does address a future in which technology makes humans the master’s of nature, he fails to recognize the possibilities that humans can attain in space. Space is the wild west of the future, that will only bring more riches and expansions…
The Space Race and the Cold War “That's One Small Step for Man, One Giant Leap for Mankind”. These words were heard worldwide when astronaut Neil Armstrong first stepped foot on the moon. When the Apollo 11 mission launched on July 16, 1969, carrying astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin, the world was immersed in the middle of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union which had in essence split the globe into two radically different ideologies that lasted four decades.…
Space is the final frontier that we now know so much more about due to NASA’s exploration and research in geology, medicine, engineering, chemistry, physics, and climatology. Exploration in the name of science has only broadened our education and understanding into our world and our universe. This thus far has really only been possible through taxes which make about 0.5% of the $3.4 trillion United States federal budget. Once again, NASA. science is focused on better understanding of the Universe. As Carl Sagan said, too much money is being wasted on unnecessary pursuits, compared to the little amount required by NASA.…
1. The politics of space are profoundly gendered – the discourse of exploration, development, and colonization reproduce heteronormative hierarchies and ensure the continuation of patriarchy in space.…
When we feel like we’ve failed, we sometimes want to give up in fear that we will get the same result. In 1986, Ronald Reagan knew very well that NASA’s mission to send the Challenger into space had failed. People lost their lives that day. But he stood by NASA and said, “We’ll continue our quest in space. There will be more shuttle flights and more shuttle crews and, yes, more volunteers, more civilians, more teachers in space. Nothing ends here; our hopes and our journeys continue.” Reagan encouraged…
The ‘Space Race’ was an unofficial competition between the United States and the Soviet Union, the focus of which was space exploration. It began after World War II, in the mid-1950s, when Russia launched a satellite into space. After this, the race was on between America and Russia to gain as much ground in space as possible. The Space Race began in 1955, when both the United States and the Soviet Union announced they would be launching artificial satellites into space.…
In conclusion, the period known as the space age was a series of hostile and friendly competition even though we were at war with the Soviets at the time. But then again it increased the innovation of technology between both the Soviet and U.S. As for the tech. advancement due to the space age, it was encouraged to pursue the best accomplishments leading to the technology that got us to the moon and today’s…
The Space Race was a period of time in our history that most people today know very little about. Beginning in the mid-1950s and continuing into the 1970s, the fight for superiority between the United States and the Soviet Union found its way into space. The Space Race, while often thought of as a not so secret competition between these two powerhouses to get to the moon, was in fact a public forum where they could demonstrate who was more advanced in technology and military force, and in turn whose politics and economics were better. With the Soviet Union making notable advancements in science and technology, their early start in the race seemed as if it would lead to their inevitable win.…
In Kennedy’s speech, he says that many people believe that space exploration or sace research has no benefit for us here when they are wrong. He says that just as the wartime development of radar gave us the transistor, space research can promise benefits for us who are on earth. He also says that space research can revolutionize the technology we have here.…
All the time you see people’s eyes glued onto their phones and drowning the whole world out. People get so distracted from technology and they don’t really care about what’s going on around them, people tend to grow distant from people. When you go somewhere just look around, everybody has their phone or some other device in their hands, and if it’s not in their hands it’s near them. Americans are so attached to technology that it literally drives us away from families/friends. In the 1920’s this wasn’t a problem at all. They didn’t have the high technology that we have today but they still had phones and it didn’t cause them to grow distant from people. They would still go out and have a good time. But today, if you can’t have your cell phone with you, it’s like the end of the world. in the article “Smartphone Dependency: A Growing Obsession With Gadgets”, the writer says, “For others, being away from their phone will almost certainly cause separation anxiety.” This truly shows how attached americans are to their…
During the late 1950s to the mid 1970s, the US and the Soviet Union, the two Cold War rivals, engaged in a Space Race, a fierce competition for supremacy in spaceflight capability. The Soviet Union achieved an early lead in the Space Race by launching the first artificial satellite into the space with Sputnik 1. The United States quickly followed suit three months later with the launch of Explorer 1. Unsatisfied with being the second to reach space, President John F. Kennedy set his sights for a much higher goal: the Moon. In 1961, President Kennedy announced a national goal of landing a man on the moon by the end of the decade. Eight years later, the goal was actualized with the Apollo 11 mission. In the years between, there were copious technological…
There is no wonder that we have an obesity epidemic in America. Food is everywhere we turn. Whether it’s sitting along the roadside, calling at you in bright colors from grocery store shelves, glowing in vending machines or even in the elaborate television commercials we watch. There is no way to escape from the never ending advertisements. This is where the epidemic of obesity begins. We as Americans consume more food portions than our body can handle and not enough physical activity, causing higher medical costs and a lower quality of life.…
The under developed nations where people can not enjoy basic commodities such as food, health and sanitation, are completely deprived off the benefits of space technology. This aids in widening the pre-existent gap between the underdeveloped and developed world in terms of advancement. The goal of halving the population of underweight children will be missed by 30 million due to slow progress in Africa and Asia. So does the rat race of acquiring advancements in space technology seem superficial to the intelligent minds of today? Has the sense of universal brotherhood and fraternity been lost upon those living in better conditions? Political disorder has brought the economic condition of countries to a stand still. The tainted picture is further disembodied by the sky high prices of food and oil. Furthermore, the absence of civil liberties in countries such as Burma and Pakistan forms impenetrable ozone of tension and anxiety. People are not only being subjected to the hazards of dictatorship and military rule, but are also forced to learn the art of living amidst an economic standstill. Prosperity can not be attained while there is devoid of job vacancies. Hunger can not be fought if the food prices keep…