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    1 of 3 " Turning Rhetorical Melissa Felder an author with a hearing disability who attended Yale University explains her experience at Yale in her article‚ “How Yale Supports Students With Disabilities”; along with how other students with disabilities are treated as well. Although she does touch some on other students she focuses more on her hearing disability. Felder goes in to detail on her experience inside of the classroom along with outside they classroom. She compares how it was at

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    may themes including‚ faith and hopelessness‚ hypocrisy and corrupted youth through images‚ poetic words‚ as well as the rhythm mood and tempo they play the music and these can be interpreted through ethos‚ logos and pathos. Through the Rhetorical Triangle analysis style‚ I will investigate what has been mentioned and how the combination of images and sounds effectively communicate many powerful messages‚ especially for the short amount of time. This artifact is being shared to promote a world with

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    absolutely nothing wrong with an athlete exuding confidence‚ which is often one of those intangibles that separate the great ones from the bad ones. For running back Arian Foster of the Houston Texans‚ the confidence he currently shows has more to do with personal growth that it does with anything he is currently able to do on the field. Foster is currently sidelined with a groin injury sustained at the beginning of training camp. The injury required surgery and initial reports had him returning perhaps around

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    The negative effects of the system on foster children prove how the system fails to improve the lives of the kids it pledges to help and how critical it is that the government make an effort to improve foster agencies. No one would argue against how much kids need responsible adults in their lives. Most children‚ especially foster children many of whom have suffered abuse and neglect‚ need someone to keep them responsible and in line until they are old enough to mature and develop their own moral

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    Rhetorical Analysis The article ‘We Are Training Our Kids to Kill’ by David Grossman is an attempt at explaining the effect of mass media on our children as far as violence and the impacting role it plays. Grossman‚ a self entitled ‘world traveler and an expert in the field of “killology” uses the rhetorical aspects of ethos‚ pathos‚ and logos to get his point across. Regardless of the fact that Grossman did build some credibility for himself‚ used reasoning‚ emotion‚ and some facts to support

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    David Suzuki Analysis

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    David Suzuki is a Canadian scholar and an environmentalist. Born in 1936‚ Suzuki has been a great scientist known for the campaigns of a sustainable environment. Suzuki has written many articles and books that have been noticed to intrigue the public with his words and form of writing (Suzuki‚ p2). This essay will focus on the analysis of three of David’s writings. The first article goes by the title‚ get your kids way from the screen to the green. This was an article that appeared in the western

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    Alexandria Corcoran Jaren Schroeder English W131 October 17‚ 2012 Cancer Research – A Super Fraud? Is cancer research a super fraud? Is the money being raised by the several cancer organizations being used for good‚ or bad? Does the research the government puts forth really cover what needs to be researched‚ or are they missing something? These are all questions that Mr. Robert Ryan believes he has the answers to. Whether one trusts him or not is one’s own decision. Having only a bachelor degree

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    with his opinion. One of those insulted people being Liz Addison. Addison’s claim argues that college is yes‚ much different‚ but in a positive way‚ especially in the community colleges. All together in her one sided- argument‚ she includes several rhetorical devices to persuade‚ inform‚ and emotionally prove her claim. These devices being ethos‚ and pathos‚ gives her a strong foundation and effective argument to the liberal audience she is writing her article to. In the very beginning of Liz Addison’s

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    the main character and protagonist of the novel Ellen Foster‚ exemplifies a substantial amount of independence and mature‚ rational thought as a ten-year-old girl. The recent death of her mother sends her on a quest for the ideal family‚ or anywhere her father‚ who had shown apathy to both she and her fragile mother‚ was not. Kaye Gibbons’ use of simple diction‚ unmarked dialogue‚ and a unique story structure in her first novel‚ Ellen Foster‚ allows the reader to explore the emotions and thoughts

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    uses statistical data and refers to experts such as a Princeton criminologist and a former Supreme Court justice in order to further convince his audience. He makes an appeal to emotion by mentioning rape cases within prisons. Through effective rhetorical strategy‚ Jacoby argues that imprisonment contains too many flaws to be used in the American criminal justice system‚ and suggests flogging as an alternative. Jacoby uses ethos within his essay by displaying a conservative yet credible persona

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