EYE DONATION- A NOBLE ACT‚ WITH AN ADDED RESPONSIBILITY - S BALACHANDRAN‚ CGM‚ SBT I am just watching the 200th episode of the Surya TV’s popular programme “Deal or No Deal” featuring film star Mukhesh with Sri Kochouseph‚ promoter and CEO of V-Guard group and Rev. Father Chirammel. It seems more than a concidence that when I sat down to pen my thoughts on Organ donation‚ specially Eye-donation‚ this episode is playing on my Television set. More than his entrepreneurial
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Emily Dickinson uses personification to similate how death is a gentleman that stopped to give someone a pleasant ride to their destination. The gentleman (Death) waits for her is the way the poet conveyed in the poem. As if death is a person waiting for her to join him. Another personification is when the writer compares death to someone having good manners‚ although this is not possible‚ they travel together at no certain speed with no time limit. As they pass through the town the sun sets
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In chapter thirteen there is one specific passage that holds a lot of meaning. This passage uses personification with the sun and how it “[sent] up spies ahead of him to mark out the road through the dark‚ he peeped up over the door sill of the world and made and went about his business all dressed in white.” This example of personification makes the sun seem like a person. The sun looks over the “door sill of the world” which is another way to say the sun was coming up and it got rid of the darkness
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Human Eye The eye is a wonderful and the most complex organ of the human body. It is strange to learn that such a small organ has so many parts. The human eye provides us with the ability to visualize the world around us. Light enters the eye through the cornea and excites special neurons on the retina. The brain receives this information and interprets it so that we are aware of what we are seeing. The parts of the eye contribute to its proper function. A. Parts of the Human Eye A1
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On a trip to the Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum I got to experience seeing a wide variety of objects from Ancient Egypt. However‚ one object in particular stood out to me: Wedjat Eyes. This particular Wedjat Eye is also known as the Eye of Horus. The museum had several on display—representing its popularity. The one I decided to study was a pale turquoise color that was made from Egyptian faience from Thebes‚ Egypt which was dated between the 21st-26th Dynasty‚ ca 1069-525 BCE (Accession number:
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The Bluest Eye The major characters in The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison were Pecola Breedlove‚ Cholly Breedlove‚ Claudia MacTeer‚ and Frieda MacTeer. Pecola Breedlove is an eleven-year-old black girl around whom the story revolves. Her innermost desire is to have the "bluest" eyes so that others will view her as pretty in the end that desire is what finishes her‚ she believes that God gives her blue eyes causing her insanity. She doesn’t have many friends other than Claudia
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The Seven Deadly Sins: How Deadly Can They Be The Seven Deadly Sins is a major aspect to the religion of Christianity. Religion in the Middle Ages was exceedingly important and the central character to the lives of the people living in this time era. In early fourteenth century‚ Robert Manning of Brunne wrote a poem of an educational text informing people to avoid the seven deadly sins. Sometime later‚ in the late 1500s‚ Edmund Spenser wrote a book entitled The Faerie Queene and in Book 1‚ Canto
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Publication: October 1998 in New York City at St. Martin Press “15 Biggest Lies about Politics” By: Major Garret & Timothy J. Penny One of the authors of “15 Biggest Lies about Politics” is Major Garrett. Garret was born August 24‚ 1962 in San Diego‚ California. Garrett attended University of Missouri where he graduates with honors in 1984 with a degree in Bachelor of Journalism degree and Bachelor of Science degree in political science. Gat Garrett has tons of experience in politics
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argument that if an omnibenevolent and omnipotent God were to exist‚ he would not condone the apparent suffering and evil that takes place. This argument was first proposed by the Greek philosopher Epicurus who devised: “Is God willing to prevent evil‚ but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able‚ but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?” One explanation for this is that the evil
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help create imagery. The first metaphor comes in the phrase‚ “The land rushed at him‚ a tidal wave”. This metaphor helps the reader understand how overwhelmed Bradbury is to be on land again after being in a river for so long. Bradbury also uses personification in the phrase‚ “He was crushed by darkness and the look of the country and the million odors on a wind that iced his body.” Bradbury gives darkness‚ the country‚ and smells the ability to crush Montag as well as ice him. Bradbury uses metaphor
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