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    Wild Life

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    Contents Introduction General Precautions Wildlife Diseases of Public Health Concern Directly Transmitted Diseases Rabies Hantavirus Trichinosis Mosquito-borne Diseases Protozoa Helminthiasis Virus Tick-borne Diseases Colorado Tick Fever Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (Tick-borne Typhus) Lyme Disease Tularemia Relapsing Fever Other Tick-borne Diseases Flea-borne Diseases Plague Murine Typhus Fever Commensal Rodent-borne Diseases Rat-bite Fever Leptospirosis (Weil’s

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    Reading

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    Notes for reading : Deface your books. Have fun writing in them. Indulge yourself as you never could with your grade school books. The purpose of making marks in a text is to call out important concepts or information that you will need to review later. Be aware‚ though‚ that underlining a text with a pen can make underlined sections—the important parts—harder to read. As an alternative‚ many students underline in pencil or use colored highlighters to flag key words and sentences. Using a highlighter

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    The Wild Children

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    Wild Children In the beginning of the 1920’s‚ Russia was controlled by a communist era. Everyone struggled to survive in a country they have considered their own. Parents were taken away‚ children were stolen from homes. Everyone was oppressed from the right to live freely. Felice Holman‚ author of the book the Wild Children centers her book on how the children of Russia in the 1920’s sought refuge to survive and pushed through the limitation of childhood caused by societal revolution especially

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    The Call of the Wild

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    Call of the Wild is an adventure tale of a dog named Buck who was kidnapped from his pampered life in California‚ taken up north‚ and sold in the black market. He was trained to become a sled dog and served a number of different masters‚ some merciful‚ others cruel. He learned how to live in the frozen north‚ and eventually left all his masters behind and became a wild dog‚ surviving without depending on or serving humans. One of the most striking aspects of The Call of the Wild is that the protagonist

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    Into The Wild Analysis

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    lead him to happiness. Chris McCandless was not crazy‚ he was a dreamer and an irrational one at that. Ultimately though‚ those qualities are what lead him into the wild. Chris McCandless was a do’er. He thought of something and then he did it. However‚ more likely than not the idea was irrational. On page 29 of "Into The Wild" by Jon Krakauer‚ Krakauer writes‚" He arranged all his paper currency in a pile on the sand- a pathetic little stack of ones and fives and

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    Wild Sex

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    If the film Basic Instinct’ is any yardstick to go by‚ wild sex is most found in couples who have either not had enough of each other or are simply intrinsically passionate by nature. An interesting feature of a sexual encounter of this type is that the more wilder it may be‚ the more chances there are for multiple orgasms to take place! The logic is simple. Like abstinence is the best method of keeping couples together; this‚ like any other form of sex is based on absolute and intense forms

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    Symbol of The Wild

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    Jeremy Chen Ms. Pat Cessna Grade 10 English 30 October 2008 Symbol of The Wild Symbol of The Wild The Call of The Wild by Jack London tells a story of a dog whose name is Buck. We follow Buck through his adventures in the Klondike. He experiences a transformation as he adapts to the cold temperatures‚ the heavy sled behind him‚ and the savageness of the other dogs. By the end of the story Buck overcomes his obstacles and learns the cruelty in both human nature and nature itself. A symbol

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    The Call of the Wild.

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    Buck‚ a huge‚ four-year-old half-Saint Bernard and half-Scottish shepherd dog‚ is living a life of civilized ease in California’s Santa Clara Valley in the home of Judge Miller. It seems to be the best of all possible worlds‚ for Buck is the most prized animal that the Judge owns. Around this time‚ however‚ gold is discovered in the great North‚ and large dogs suddenly become tremendously valuable because these types of dogs are needed to haul the heavy sleds through the deep snow fields. Tragically

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    Freneau focuses on the many social problems that concern him such as the beauty of nature and the uniqueness of it. Philip Freneau utilizes a language full of imagery. The analysis of “The Wild Honeysuckle” should convey and uncovers the significance of inclusion of nature. In order to comprehend Freneau poem‚ “The Wild Honeysuckle” we should look at the defining features of the flower. The species have sweetly scented bell shaped flowers that produce a sugary edible nectar. The fruit on the sweet honeysuckle

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    Reading

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    The English Effect 6 Mufwene 2010 – Globalization and the Spread of English 8 Pike‚ 2013 - 5 Reasons Why You Should Learn English 10 Shumann‚ E. (n.d.) – Effects of English Hegemony on Education 12 Reference List & Further Reading 14 Page |2 Adapted from Colls‚ T. (2009‚ October 19) The Death of Language? Retrieved from http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_8311000/8311069.stm The Death of Language? An estimated 7‚000 languages are being spoken around

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