Next UK is the second largest UK retailer by sales value with 536 UK stores and an average of 278‚000 transactions per day. Like other market leaders‚ Next also took steps towards sustainability without facing any significant challenges in the way. Changes like reduced packaging‚ less waste to landfills‚ improved vehicle and store efficiency have proven effective as their direct carbon footprint has reduced by 3% from 2010 to 2011. However‚ they have not been able to achieve same success with their
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Imagine the happiness you would feel when you have your first child. Your heart swells with love for this newborn‚ but in the back of your head you know a loved one will have to die for this baby to have a chance to live. That’s what author Kurt Vannegut did in his short story “2BR02B”. In this story everything bad that has ever been in this world is gone. Everything seems perfect until someone has to volunteer to die in order to let a newborn live. Which begs the question is there such a thing
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Quote A from Kurt Vonnegut’s story “EPICAC” shows the narrator reading through EPICAC’s final message that was left behind before EPICAC killed himself. EPICAC‚ a machine‚ had learned that he was unable to be with his love Pat because he is a machine and that is his fate. This devastates EPICAC‚ causing him to commit suicide by short-circuiting himself. The author anthropomorphizes EPICAC to make readers empathize with and admire EPICAC. Before EPICAC kills himself‚ he leaves a message that reads
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THE NEXT CHRISTENDOM BY PHILIP JENKINS A SUMMARY AND RESPONSE Kyle Sutton Engaging Reformation and Modern Christianity CH503-XD December 16‚ 2011 In the preface‚ Dr. Philip Jenkins clearly states his thesis for The Next Christendom‚ “Far from being an export of the capitalist West‚ a vestige of Euro-American imperialism‚ Christianity is now rooted in the Third World‚ and the religion’s future lies in the global South”.[1] The distinctions of global North and global South describe the groupings
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Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut can be described as a novel that is interesting‚ creative‚ and well-written. Kurt Vonnegut writes this novel with a satiric voice but also expresses many other emotions as well. The first chapter is very unique because of the way Vonnegut tells the story of how he came about writing this novel and introduces his wartime friend Bernhard O’Hare. Although it seems like it might not belong at all‚ this chapter gives an introduction that might be needed for a character
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of Death In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Kurt Vonnegut uses irony to demonstrate the destructiveness and depreciations of war. Vonnegut incorporated many cases of irony in his book‚ and they overall enhance the meaning throughout the passage. One of the prime situations of irony took place with Edgar Derby. This poor man had to endure suffering and pain during the course of the war and the firebombing‚ only to be executed in the end for a meaningless little crime. Vonnegut reveals a bit of this situation
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How would a society be if everyone were equal? Kurt Vonnegut gives us a look into a dystopian future where everyone is “equal”. Equalization is achieved by the government enforcing weights for the physically strong‚ masks for the beautiful‚ and loud buzzing ear pieces to make those who have above average intelligence to be dumbed down. This in theory should create the perfect society in which no one has an advantage over anyone. The government is able to keep control over all the citizens with these
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Deer in the Works Deer in the Works is a Cold War era short story by Kurt Vonnegut. It first appeared in Esquire in April‚ 1955‚ and was anthologized in Welcome to the Monkey House. It revolves around David Potter‚ a paper owner who finds new work as a a publicity writer at the mammoth Ilium Works because of financial strain who consequently leaves upon viewing the dehumanisation and quantification of human life. Vonnegut’s experiences as a soldier and prisoner of war‚ coupled with his anti-authoritarian
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English Next Why global English may mean the end of ‘English as a Foreign Language’ David Graddol The moral rights of the author have been asserted. The opinions expressed in this book are not necessarily those of the British Council. Designed and produced by The English Company (UK) Ltd www.english.co.uk Cover design by Intro (Last minor revision Jan 2007) © British Council 2006 The United Kingdom’s international organisation for educational opportunities and cultural relations. We
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The novel Slaughterhouse Five written by Kurt Vonnegut is a book about the bombing of Dresden‚ Germany during World War II. However‚ this novel is far from the conventional war story‚ as author Kurt Vonnegut bends and breaks the standard rules of storytelling. As the bombing of Dresden was far from conventional Vonnegut wrote an unconventional story to go along with it. The novel is not written in chronological order and skips around to different times. Since the main character Billy Pilgrim is
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