Principal’s welcome speech on 40th Anniversary Inauguration Ceremony dated 7th February 2009 Dear Guest of Honor‚ Brother Patrick‚ Reverend Brothers‚ Distinguished School Principals‚ Friends‚ Parents‚ Old Boys‚ Teachers‚ and Students‚ On behalf of the school‚ I have great pleasure to welcome all of you to the 40th Anniversary and Open Days Inauguration Ceremony of Chan Sui Ki (La Salle) College. It is a day of rejoice because we will recall together a lot of touching stories we had experienced in CSK in the last forty years
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JABBERWOCKY Lewis Carroll (from Through the Looking‐Glass and What Alice Found There‚ 1872) `Twas brillig‚ and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe: All mimsy were the borogoves‚ And the mome raths outgrabe. "Beware the Jabberwock‚ my son! The jaws that bite‚ the claws that catch! Beware the Jubjub bird‚ and shun The frumious Bandersnatch!" He took his vorpal sword in hand: Long Lme the manxome foe he sought ‐‐ So rested he by the Tumtum tree‚ And stood awhile in thought
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Sitting cross-legged on the bay window at home‚ I study my canvas. A toddler sits in her pram‚ brown curly locks flying in all directions. Her cheeks are dimpled and her smile is gummy. Her hand holds a rattle‚ but she’s looking at me intently. At first glance‚ she’s exactly the way I remembered her when I first saw her while vacationing at a hill-station. (something not quite right about this sentence) My eyes linger on hers; the curve seems just right‚ the pupils a lovely hue of green-yellow‚ her
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Remember nobody’s feelings are more important than your own. So‚ take time to love yourself. Dont devote any time to thinking of painful memories fron your past; you cant drive well while lookin’ in the rear-view mirror. I love him not for the way he dances with my angels‚ but for the way the sound of his name can silence my demons She’s just a girl‚ and she’s on fire Hotter than a fantasy‚ lonely like a highway She’s living in a world‚ and it’s on fire filled with anarchy‚ but she knows
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John Marsden’s and Shaun Tan’s epic picture book‚ “The Rabbits”‚ is an allegorical fable about colonisation‚ told from the perspective of the natives. An unseen narrator describes the coming of ‘rabbits’ in the most minimal detail‚ an encounter that is at first friendly and curious‚ but later darkens as it becomes apparent that the visitors are actually invaders. My chosen image (above)‚ embodies the overall style of the book which is deliberately sparse and strange. Both text and image conveys an
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* “They had a choice‚ all of them. They could have followed in the footsteps of good men like my father‚ or President Truman. Decent men‚ who believed in a day’s work for a day’s pay. Instead they followed the droppings of lechers and communists and didn’t realize that the tail led over a precipice until it was too late. Don’t tell me they didn’t have a choice.” –Rorschach 1.1 * “because there is good and there is evil‚ and evil must be punished. Even in the face of Armageddon I shall not compromise
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“I can’t go back to yesterday because I was a different person then.” ― Lewis Carroll “Every man is a creature of the age in which he lives and few are able to raise themselves above the ideas of the time.” ― Voltaire “Be noble minded! Our own heart‚ and not other men’s opinions of us‚ forms our true honor.” ― Friedrich von Schiller “Alas‚ Siddhartha‚ I see you suffering‚ but you’re suffering a pain at which one would like to laugh‚ at which you’ll soon laugh for yourself.” ― Hermann
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Agam Sidhu Johnson Rhet 1302 26 February 2013 The Death of the Moth Analysis All living creatures must face the battle between life and death. In Virginia Woolf’s “The Death of the Moth” a moth is shown to be injured and laying in a window pane staring upon death. Like the moth‚ humans face the struggle of living life and facing death. The fact that death is inevitable‚ allows humans to shape their lives in a way that makes them content. Woolf effectively uses the dying moth to represent the
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Macbeth Power Point Visual Essay Visual Essay – 90 marks Macbeth Mind Map Template – 10 marks Now that you have finished viewing‚ reading and linking the play to your own experience‚ community issues or world events‚ it is time to apply these connections and complete a visual essay. Specifically‚ you will identify images in Macbeth (they may be the images highlighted in the course: Blood‚ Clothing‚ Sleep‚ Light/Dark or Children) that Shakespeare uses as motifs or patterns to reveal key universal
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Function SubMatchTest(inpStr) Dim oRe‚ oMatch‚ oMatches Set oRe = New RegExp ’ Look for an email address (not a perfect RegExp). oRe.Pattern = "(\w+)@(\w+)\.(\w+)" ’ Get the Matches collection. Set oMatches = oRe.Execute(inpStr) ’ Get the first item in the Matches collection. Set oMatch = oMatches(0) msgbox typename(oMatch) ’ Create the results string. ’ The Match object is the entire match - someone@example.com. retStr = "Email address is: " & oMatch & vbNewline
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