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    Walk in Clinic

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    Report Walk-In-Clinic Table of Contents Introduction to the Company 3 Description of the company 4 Problems 5 Justification 6 Description of Database and Application Design 7 Entities: 8 Implementing to MS ACCESS: 9 Referential Integrity: 9 Forms 10 Query and Report: 10 Database Application Utilization: 11 Database Administration Issues 11 Conclusion 13 Appendix 14 Introduction to the Company These days walk in clinics and hospitals‚ are under strong pressures from several

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    rationalize their actions. This concept is put to the ultimate test when the people from the unnamed town in Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Chronicle of a Death Foretold and the boys from the gang in Yukio Mishima’s The Sailor who Fell from Grace with the Sea are faced with decisions that could mean the difference between life and death. As a result‚ the two novels assert that human beings can rationalize anything‚ even murder.

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    Irony in"the Lottery"

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    Irony in “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” offers an almost classic study of irony of situation: the reader expects a celebration; she gets a stoning. Such a reversal is the work of careful planning by the author. The reader expects the lottery to be a celebration of some sort because Jackson describes the setting‚ details the activities of the townspeople‚ and refers to the lottery itself in terms that belie the outcome of the event. First‚ Jackson establishes a setting which suggests

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    Jackson’s "The Lottery" as an Allegory Shirley Jackson’s "The Lottery" is an excellent example of an allegorical short story. In this story‚ the reader learns of a town’s "lottery" that takes place once a year‚ every year. It has been a tradition in this small rural town for many years and the villagers never question these activities‚ they just blindly go along with it. But what the reader doesn’t know is just what kind of prize the winner is going to obtain. Jackson’s

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    The Lottery Jackson

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    “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson‚ initially comes off as a happy and light-hearted story‚ with imagery showing kids playing in a yard and mothers gossipping with each other. An annual ritual called the lottery. Jackson keeps the reader in the dark as to what takes place in the lottery until the very end of the story. The story suddenly gains a very serious and solemn tone. The head of each household draws a slip of paper‚ and when Bill Hutchinson draws the paper with the black dot‚ his wife Tessie

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    The lottery is usually associated with beating the odds and winning something extravagant. In Shirley Jackson’s short story “The Lottery”‚ the reader is led to believe the story is about something cheerful and happy given the setting of a warm summer day and children out of school for the summer. Jackson turns winning the lottery into a bad thing. Of 300 villagers Tessie Hutchinson shows up late‚ claiming she forgot about the annual lottery drawing‚ but seems very excited to have made it on time

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    Yukio Mishima‚ Japanese author‚ is undaunted and audacious when it comes to writing plotlines in the novel The Sailor who Fell from Grace with the Sea. There are scenes that may seem odd and disturbing to Western readers who read his novel for the first time. But when one decides to take a closer look at his unique writing style‚ the passages that once seemed repulsive to some suddenly turn beautiful. Mishima writes in the very beginning of his novel‚ “I could defeat ugliness” (Mishima 9). The term

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    Irony in ’The Lottery ’ Shirley Jackson wrote the story ’The Lottery. ’ A lottery is typically thought of as something good because it usually involves winning something such as money or prizes. In this lottery it is not what they win but it is what is lost. Point of views‚ situations‚ and the title are all ironic to the story ’The Lottery. ’ The point of view in ’The Lottery ’ is ironic to the outcome. Jackson used third person dramatic point of view when writing ’The Lottery. ’ The third

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    The Lottery Society

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    Written by Shirley Jackson‚ the short story “The Lottery” focuses on a village with a tradition that provides fate by random chance. However‚ in this particular allegory Jackson uses the title to elude the readers mind from the ending to come. Throughout the entire story Jackson uses themes that greatly parallel with American society such as‚ family‚ fiscal and social class‚ and religion. For example‚ Jackson demonstrates family hierarchy comparable to American culture when she writes‚ “Soon the

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    there is lot to learn from having dreams and‚ most importantly‚ it gives a person’s life purpose. Nevertheless‚ dreams are thought to impossible to truly accomplish‚ therefore it’s not worth it to dream. “Winning the Lottery: Does it Guarantee Happiness” “...But an often-referenced study from 1978‚ comparing 22 major lottery winners with people who did not win‚ found no difference in happiness levels the two groups”(Pg. 2). This survey doesn’t give any details as to who the lottery winners were and

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