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    Wild Geese Analysis

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    Cruel nature of Caleb gare Wild Geese is a novel written by Martha Ostenso. The motive of paternal dominance and tyranny imposed by Caleb Gare is clearly felt throughout the whole novel. He is driven by his desire to get more land and therefore more money. Therefore he does not only tyrannize his family‚ but also his neighbours. Devoting all his life to just one materialistic goal‚ to acquire as much land as possible‚ Caleb uses his possessions to show his power and therefore possessions become

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    The Wild Frontier (3)

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    Introduction (Problem) The Wild Frontier has expanded even more with the services and support provided in the past few weeks. Each of the original four (4) satellite offices have doubled in size and four (4) more offices are being opened. The current licensing seats have managed to cover all of the existing personnel‚ without full utilization but the new demand will overtax them. The owner‚ Sam Yosemite‚ gets all fired up if he can’t allocate costs fairly according to use. We also need to make the

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    Into the Wild Reader Response Into the Wild‚ written by Jon Krakauer‚ is a memoir about how living in the wilderness and how Chris McCandless lived nearly two years in the wild. Throughout the novel‚ Krakauer relates Chris’ adventures to his own experience in mountain climbing and living on his own. This is not your typical memoir where the author tells a story about their lives. Jon Krakauer is not the main character; however he tells a story of this boy who leaves his well-developed family for

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    Buck’s new masters tried to conquer the vicious winter and the change in weather. Upon meeting John Thornton‚ he warned them that the ice is melting and they may fall through it. The trio‚ despite the warnings‚ rode the sled along with their cargo; pulled by the remaining dogs who pushed through. Not long after‚ the ice collapsed under them‚ leaving a massive hole in the trail. As Buck joined the new team‚ he’s baffled by the kindness and love that’s being portrayed. The other dogs weren’t consumed

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    The Wild Muir Analysis

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    The Wild Muir‚ written by Lee Stetson in 1994‚ is a collection of twenty-two of John Muir’s (Dunbar‚ 1838 – Los Angeles‚ 1914) most exciting and breath-taking adventures. From its famous‚ close encounter with a Sierra Bear‚ described as the “sequoia of the animals”‚ to his dangerous fights with venomous rattlesnakes in the Cañons. The climbing of the monstrous ice cone beneath the Yosemite Falls‚ or when he almost lost of his life in a well due to the inhalation of a carbonic acid gas settled at

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    Wild Gorillas Observation

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    First observation of tool use in wild Gorillas This article is about an observation of tool use in wild Gorillas (gorilla gorilla). The study took place in northern Congo where they found two adult female gorillas use branch and trunk to cross a swamp created by elephants during food processing. First observation was an adult female gorilla named Leah‚ used branch as walking stick to test out the water deepness to move forward in the swamp to get to her crying baby. At her first encounter with the

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    I believe Chris McCandless enjoyed the idea of transcendentalism. This is a philosophy that says; thought/spiritual things are more real than human experiences. This is shown throughout the book‚ Into the Wild‚ based off of his wanting to be away from society. Throughout the book Chris shows his mild hatred for the current society and life he was living "...he arranged all his paper currency in a pile on the sand - a pathetic little stack of ones and fives and twenties - and put a match to it."

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    Johnny Wong ENG 214-67 Nancy Sours Fall 2012 Irate Truth In his nonfiction book Into the Wild‚ Jon Krakauer starts out the story with the death of young Chris McCandless and his two-year adventure ending at Alaska in April 1992. The discovery of Chris McCandless’s body influences Krakauer to write a brief article of his death for the Outside magazine. Readers of the magazine had different point of views for Chris’s death. Some admired him for his “courage and noble ideals” (Author’s note)‚ while

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    Call Of The Wild Analysis

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    Call of the Wild‚ by Jack London‚ begins in 1897‚ at the start of the Klondike gold rush. The discovery of gold in the Klondike region motivated thousands of men to head for the far north‚ all of them in need of dogs to pull sleds across the frigid arctic trails. Buck is an incredibly large dog‚ half Shepherd and half St. Bernard‚ who has enjoyed a leisurely life on a California ranch. He is stolen and shipped to the Yukon by his family gardener‚ Manuel. Buck learns to survive in this harsh environment

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    The Wild One Analysis

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    Gary Cooper was the first star to wear denim on screen in High Noon‚ and then more famously Marlon Brando in the 1953 film The Wild One‚ before James Dean appeared denim clad in the film Rebel Without a Cause in 1955. Dean and Brando both represented a bohemian counterculture that pre-empted the movements of the 1960s: they played young GIs who returned from war‚ not to move into

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