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    Limiting Freedom of Speech

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    TOBY TANDRA ENG 101 ESSAY #1: FINAL DRAFT 10/04/2013 Limiting Freedom of Endless Opportunities In the past few days‚ I ’ve been reading an interesting essay by Jill McCorkle titled "Cuss Time". The main purpose of this essay is to convey the idea that nowadays‚ society desperately needs freedom of speech in which some people‚ especially children‚ they do not get because of its limitation rules. Moreover‚ another important point that McCorkle also discusses is our ideological belief’s tendencies

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    should address this impact in our past as a moral question. The Natives had no sense of ownership of land‚ they thought land could not be owned‚ this was used as an advantage. The Native culture depends on different aspects of life compared to the Europeans culture. European Culture became the more dominant culture over the Natives. The Native Americans believed in tribal sovereignty which conflicted with the Europeans beliefs. The Native Americans did not believe in ownership of land‚ they believed

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    the author is seeking attention and grabbing the attention of the reader by writing from present to past and then to the future‚ which is the present. This in turn builds up suspense and sucks the reader into this text‚ which‚ after the first few paragraphs seems like a normal romantic story between a man and a woman. The relationship however comes to an end (this is mentioned in the beginning of the prose) as one person rejects the other for an older partner. We later learn that the ‘friendly’

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    Rubric for Essay

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    BOOK REVIEW RUBRIC Spring 2011 (5) 100- 90 (4) 89 - 80 (3) 79 - 70 (2) 69 - 60 (1) 59 & Below Response to Project Questions Writer responds fully to all project questions. Exceptional responses to questions; answers are given in depth and in meaningful ways. Includes specific material from book to support ideas. Full responses to questions; answers are thoughtful. Includes some material from book to support ideas. Adequate responses to question‚ but responses lack depth and detail.

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    A Mile In My Shoes

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    A Mile in My Shoes by Katherine Hillman 1 Someone once said‚ you don’t really know a person until you walk a mile in their shoes. Whoever said this must have met many a person like me. Where one’s shoes have been and what they have done can give you a great deal of insight into a person. I think my shoes reveal a lot about me—not only my everyday activities and hobbies‚ but the events that have shaped my inner self. 2 If you closely examine my shoes‚ you’ll notice many things that connect me

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    profit are reserved to a Native people. Reservations are only lent to their occupants and remain the property of the states under US law. Some spaces partially sold to non-Indian are sources of many administrative‚ political and legal difficulties. Half of women in reservations have been raped‚ sexual assaulted or kidnapped. According to the US department of justice Native women in reservations are more affected by homicide than other women in the rest of the country. Native women rarely complain about

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    habitats in North America‚ different native religions evolved to match the needs and lifestyles of the individual tribe. Religious traditions of aboriginal peoples around the world tend to be heavily influenced by their methods of acquiring food‚ whether by hunting wild animals or by agriculture. Native American spirituality is no exception. Traditional Lakota spirituality is a form of religious belief that each thing‚ plant and animal has a spirit. The Native American spirituality has an inseparable

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    for everyone to create something together.” This perfectly describes Native American music‚ for the drums are the sole basis of the beat and keep the rhythm going. Once the beat gets going‚ everyone can jump in‚ dance‚ chant‚ and create more sound to make one piece of music together as one. The drums carry out the beat throughout the entire chant and keep everyone in time. Victoria Lindsay Levine wrote in her article titled‚ “Native American Music” and says how “sacred narratives describe the origins

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    OJT Report

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    KIIT School of Management Guideline for Writing an Executive Summary of On-Job-Training: An executive summary is a brief overview of a report designed to give readers a quick preview of its contents. Its purpose is to consolidate the principal points of a document in one place. After reading the summary‚ your audience should understand the main points you are making and your evidence for those points without having to read every part of your report in full. In your case‚ your executive summary

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    Where The Sidewalk Ends

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    the second paragraph which shows the only beauty to find in the city is manmade. Another device he uses juxtaposition to contrast between the clean‚ natural and beautiful place beyond the sidewalk and the city that is dirty‚ dark and gritty. Also Silverstein uses symbols such as "the chalk-white arrows" (L.14) to symbolize that the only way to get to the place is through embracing a child like view of the world. Silverstein uses two line sentences in each of his first two paragraphs for flow but

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