Background questions 1. What kind of person was your hero before he got superpowers? (A friendly but awkward nerd? Guilty of CIAing while black? A disgruntled accountant?) An American football player 2. Why should prospective readers care about your hero? What is it about his background that will appeal to them? They care he because he have families 3. What kind of goals did he have before becoming a superhero? The captain of his team 4. What sort of problems did his world have before he became a superhero
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short story "Don’t you hate having two heads" is about Richard and his trip to Venice. Richard meets Jessica‚ an unknown woman to him‚ at an art museum. He is married but hides his wedding ring and seeks other women. After a brief conversation with Jessica she disappears and Richard believes he has lost his chance to speak with her again. After leaving the museum he notices her again at a cafe and decides to make her company. Jessica tells about a serial killer who murders people with a cheese wire. After
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of Iago’s character. Was he a ‘skillful villain’? Or perhaps he was a ‘mysterious creature of unlimited cynicism’? Or was he simply a ‘wronged man’? More sinned against than sinning? What is your view of this complex character and how would a contemporary Shakespearean audience have responded to him? In Shakespeare’s ‘Othello’‚ the reader is introduced to the character Iago. There are many different interpretations of his character‚ was he a ‘skillful villain’? Or was he a ‘mysterious creature
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DISCUSSION Dr. Jose Rizal‚ our national hero‚ used education as a weapon when he wrote the ambitious novels Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo. He used his knowledge‚ his education‚ to let the people around the world comprehend the great abuse of the Spanish colonizers to the Filipinos during his time. This is a perfect example on how education can change the lives of an individual‚ or how it can change the perspectives of the majority of the population. Also‚ it is a vivid scenario
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from 1945 to 1991. During the Cold War‚ the two superpowers were competing with each other. They had varieties of competitions in different ways such as nuclear arms race. One of the biggest reasons for their competitions is that the U.S. and the USSR have two different political systems. As the final result we occur today‚ the Cold War forced the U.S. to cease their nuclear weapons and instead focus on conventional weapons. Both the United States and the Soviet Union emerged right after the World
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The average man does not want to be free. He simply wants to be safe.” This saying is in many ways true and shows in human behavior not only throughout history‚ but in modern day as well. In my opinion‚ humans display wanting either freedom or safety on several occasions‚ but in reality want aspects of both within their lives. In modern day‚ some people are against decisions involving change in society‚ which shows that humans want to remain safe within their own bubble‚ than face the differences
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the company has a lot of varied problems he can fix. But what if the real issue is something he can ’t face? By Marc Gunther Reporter Associate Carol Vinzant September 6‚ 1999 FORTUNE Magazine) – Michael Eisner‚ the famously hands-on CEO of Walt Disney‚ is up to his old tricks. Last night he screened a rough cut of Dinosaurs‚ Disney ’s big animated movie for next summer; he loved the story but complained that some jokes were stale. Today he ’s holding a four-hour brainstorming session about
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2014 Blank Canvas Who would have thought a yawn captured at the breaking point could become such a universally well known image. Photographer Noam Galai thought he was taking a simple picture but what he did not know is how the world was going to react to it. In the story “Who Is This Man‚ and Why Is He Screaming?‚” Rachel Kadish discusses how an art can be used universally for anyone to take it for what they feel it is. Images that are ambiguous can be interpreted by anyone however they
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Chesterfield’s letter to his son traveling far from home. The strategies used by Chesterfield not only display his desired intentions for his son‚ but‚ also‚ the rhetorical strategies implemented in the letter reveal the values Chesterfield holds as true. In order to persuade his son that the knowledge he holds is pertinent‚ Chesterfield first disbands the notion that parents only give advice to induce suffering in the child‚ then ties the ability‚ and pride of himself to the success of his son and finally suggests
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Happiness Assignment 1. What does Dan Gilbert mean when he says that happiness can be synthesized? How is this different from natural happiness? According to Gilbert‚ happiness can be synthesized if people remain content and happy even after losing something valuable or after not getting something they wanted. This implies that people can always learn to enjoy and be content with what they get regardless of what they wanted. For instance‚ some people remain happy even after losing wealth or a family
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