First-wave feminism was about suffrage and getting over legal obstacles like voting rights‚ property rights Second-wave feminism was about much more like sexuality‚ family‚ the workplace‚ reproductive rights‚ de facto inequalities‚ and official legal inequalities. Second-wave feminism also fought violence with proposals for marital rape laws‚ establishment of rape crisis and battered women’s shelters‚ and changes in custody and divorce law. Second-wave thought pop culture was sexist so the created
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Terry Gilbert ENGL-102 November 6‚ 2008 The Midwestern Crime Wave All across the nation during the Great Depression people were jobless‚ homeless‚ and starving; nowhere was this truer than in the American Midwest. Not only did the farms and cities of the Midwest have to deal with the poor economic conditions but the Midwest’s main source of income‚ agriculture‚ was being ravaged by the natural phenomenon now called the Dust Bowl. On top of low crop prices and a lack of employment farmland
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The evolution of sound in cinema Jay Beck General histories of the relationship between sound and image in cinema tend to perpetuate an ocular-centricity (emphasizing vision over the other senses) that dates back to the very earliest experiments in “moving pictures”—a term which itself serves to confuse historians. The vast majority of cinema histories tend to relegate the subject of sound in cinema to a subordinate position by studying the transition to the sound period in the late 1920s and
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& 18 Waves‚ Light & EM Spectrum Name___________________________ Study Your Notes‚ textbook‚ worksheets‚ workbook pages & labs to fill in this information: Chapter 17: Mechanical Waves: a disturbance in matter that carries energy from one place to another Transverse Waves: a wave that causes the medium to vibrate at right angles to the direction in which the wave travels. Surface waves: a wave that travels along a surface separating two media Longitudinal waves: a wave tin
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Waves effect our everyday life in many ways. Waves are very interesting ways to travel‚ and we don’t mean surfing! Many things we use every day involve waves. Lights and sounds are examples of everyday uses that travel by wave. On the spectrum of light there are waves listed which are X-Rays‚ UV-Rays‚ and Infrared. Some of these are harmful to life‚ and some of these are helpful to life‚ where mostly they all serve both of these purposes. Another type of wave‚ though not on the spectrum because it
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RIDING THE WAVES TOGETHER : a SUCCESSFUL PARTNERSHIP CASE-STUDY Brought to you by: Louis Poh Ihwa Myung Jane Ng Mabel Tan Sai Kaung Ngin Introduction 1) Surf Life Saving New Zealand (SLSNZ) is a lifesaving association that provideswere lifesaving services 3) SLSNZ benefited by DHL’s investment through its clubhouse which allows SLSNZ to update their facilities and equipment. • Has been in the communities for 100 years • onTotal of 9 districts 4) Based the social partnership‚ DHL provided reasonable
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The clinical treatments described and recommended in this publication are based on research and consultation with nursing‚ medical‚ and legal authorities. To the best of our knowledge‚ these procedures reflect currently accepted practice. Nevertheless‚ they can’t be considered absolute and universal recommendations. For individual applications‚ all recommendations must be considered in light of the patient’s clinical condition and‚ before administration of new or infrequently used drugs‚
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SCHOOL OF PHYSICS Physics 1001: Laboratory 3. Standing Waves. Your name/student number:_________________________________ Date:_________ Marker’s signature:______________ Mark:______ Pre-lab Question 1: What is the wavelength of a sound wave of frequency 500 Hz in air (you will need to look up the speed of sound in air)? ________ m. Pre-lab Question 2: If a person inhales helium gas the sound of their voice changes quite dramatically. Why? Pre-lab Question 3: A shower cubicle
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Measuring the Speed of Sound and Air using a Pulse-Echo Technique Purpose To determine the speed of sound in air using the pulse-echo experiment procedure‚ and comparing it to the predicted speed of sound in air using the measured air temperature of the classroom. Hypothesis I believe that the speed of sound it the air will be close to that of the predicted value. According to our predicted value‚ we should expect the speed of sound in the air to be at a speed of approximately 346 m/s. Materials
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British Sound Analysis: A voiceover in the film British Sounds states‚ "Sometimes the class struggle is also the struggle of one image against another image‚ of one sound against another sound. In a film‚ this struggle is between images and sounds." We as spectators are able to make connection with that statement as we watch the segments in the film unfold. As the tracking shot captures the auto assembly line‚ the diegetic sounds of the noisy machines overwhelm us. This similar technique can be
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