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    The Drawer Boy

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    Written By: Presented to: Course Code: Date: The Art of Violence: Healey’s Character Representation in The Drawer Boy Reviewed by Word Press critic Michael Dykstra‚ the Canadian play The Drawer Boy‚ by Michael Healey‚ has been suggested to be a play containing “no violence” (Dykstra); however‚ this conclusion deserves further analysis. In the play‚ the author uses violence as a way to create an identity for Angus‚ a main character‚ as well as a method to develop Angus’s character. Through

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    Scottsboro Boys

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    Work Cited Page Aretha‚ David. The Civil Rights Movement; The Trial of the Scottsboro Boys. North Carolina: Morgan Reynolds‚ 2008. Uschan‚ Michael V. Landmark Events in American History; The Scottsboro Case. Wisconsin: World Almanac Library‚ 2004. Linder‚ Douglas O. Famous American Trials. 1999. http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/scottsboro/sb_hrrep.html. Johnson‚ Claudia D. Scottsboro Trial. 1994. The Greenwood Publishing‚ Inc. http:// library.thinkquest

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    The Bra Boys

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    Bra Boys From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation‚ search The Bra Boys is an Australian gang founded and based in Maroubra‚ an eastern suburb of Sydney‚ New South Wales. Dating back to the 1990s‚ the gang has gained notoriety through violent clashes with members of the public and police. The gang achieved national and international attention in 2007[1] with the release of a feature-length documentary entitled Bra Boys: Blood is Thicker than Water‚ written and directed by members

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    Scottsboro Boys

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    between groups of young black and white passengers riding a freight train through Jackson County. The white boys were forced from the train and wired ahead to the next stop on the line to have the black youths apprehended. When the train stopped just outside the town of Paint Rock‚ local police and a mob apprehended nine African Americans ranging in age from 13 to 20. Only four of the boys knew each other and were traveling together. The police also questioned Victoria Price and Ruby Bates‚ two white

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    History Boys

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    The History Boys Bennett’s setting is a northern grammar school and his focus is on the varied methods of training post A-level students for life. The headmaster‚ obsessed with league-tables and results‚ wants them all to be Oxbridge candidates. To this end‚ he engages a young historian‚ Irwin‚ who knows that the key to exam success lies in singularity and that "the wrong end of the stick is the right one". In the opposite camp is the gentle English master‚ Mr Hector‚ who argues that exams are

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    "Storm Boy".

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    Storm Boy is an Australian movie that has been loved and has given great pleasure and joy to a wide range of audiences for many‚ many years. Not just Australian audiences but also overseas‚ where people have learnt a little of what Australian scenery looks like. The first day of shooting the film was on 24th May 1976 but before this many decisions had to be made. Matt Carroll‚ the producer had to get permission from the author of the book‚ Colin Thiele who wrote the book in 1963. Once he got permission

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    The Lost Boy

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    Title: The Lost Boy (Based on a true story) Author: Dave Pelzer No. of Pages: 340 Major Characters: "¢ Dave Pelzer " A young boy who grows up in a home with a terribly abusive mother. He is incredibly skinny due to malnutrition‚ he wears rags for clothes‚ and his personal hygiene is appalling because he rarely has the privilege to bathe. He desires love from a family who is eager to care for him‚ and he desperately searches for that throughout his adolescent years as he moves from one foster home

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    Winslow boy

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    Paul Franks ENGL 1123 Essay #3 Topic #4 COL Toland 26 Feb. 2014 Let Right be Done “Let Right be done” (Rattigan 47) is one of the central phrases in The Winslow Boy by Terrance Rattigan. This play is about a small boy named Ronnie‚ who is expelled from the Osborne Naval Academy for stealing a postal order‚ although he says he did not do it. So his father hires the best lawyer around‚ Sir Robert‚ to prove his innocence. In the end Ronnie is proven innocent and Sir Robert cries in court. He

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    The Lost Boys

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    "In "The Lost Boy‚" the story describes the period in which the bewildered child‚ haunted by the fear of being returned to his mad and alcoholic mother‚ is passed between foster care homes. For six years‚ David Pelzer was sent to over ten different foster homes; sometimes returning to the same home twice. David’s desperate attempts to be accepted by his peers led him into a life of petty crime‚ which‚ including cruel tricks his "friends" played on him‚ included stealing‚ and ending up going to "The

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    The Blue Boy

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    The Blue Boy Summary: In Gary Stephen Ross’ excerpt‚ “The Blue Boy‚” he describes Vancouver through the eyes of the main character. The character recounts a story of his travels that he would take with his father and brother from Toronto to Vancouver. The character highlights the ongoing transformation of the city and describes how it has evolved over time. In the beginning of the excerpt‚ he describes what he saw Vancouver to be in the 60s: a small city with little to offer. Contrastingly

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