In the book Zebra by Chaim Potok, Adam Martin Zebran (called Zebra by his friends) is loved to run because he loved the wind running over his face. One day Though he was running down a hill and out of nowhere a car comes of a side street and hits zebra breaking his hand and injuring his leg. After that he becomes depressed and stays away from everyone, but one day a man named John Wilson, an artist who was missing his left arm shows up to his school and asked Zebra if his school would be interested in holding a summer art class. when the school announces the class the next day Zebra signs up after seeing the drawing Mr. Wilson gave him. Then after learning many things in the class he is told to hand in a draw a drawing of something important.
The Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha), is a small freshwater mollusk that is an invasive species. It has slowly been making its way into the United States. It has done this by showing up in lakes and in rivers. The mussels get their name due to the striped pattern on their shells. They are a relatively small species, only growing to the size of a human finger nail but there have been cases of larger (“Zebra Mussels,” 2013, para. 2). Mussels live a short life span of 4-5 years and most do not make into adulthood. They live in freshwater at depths of 6 to 24 feet. The female produces 30,000 to 1,000,000 eggs per year starting at the age of two. Zebra Mussels are free moving and can move with an external organ called the byssus (“Zebra Mussels,” 2013, para. 3). But they can be moved around by currents and other objects too. Zebra Mussels are a threat to ecosystems. They damage the natural habitat of lakes and rivers and cause negative effects to the native aquatic life. They multiply in vast majority casing a lake of food and space for other animals. And also the U.S. has spent millions on the removal of these pests from our water (“Zebra Mussels,” 2014, para. 8). The Zebra Mussel has now made its way into Colorado. Just a few has been found in the waters of Colorado but a few is enough to cause a big stir. Extreme precautions have now been put into effect to make sure that the threat of Zebra Mussels is under control.
Haas and Flower created an interesting point when I read “Rhetorical Reading Strategies and the Construction of Meaning “. In the reading, Haas and Flower, provided multiple propositions to apply, however a key one certainly caught my eye. Haas and Flower proposed various arguments, yet their main idea implied that there needs to be an increase in rhetorical reading. I came to the conclusion that increasing rhetorical reading was their main point due to a statement in the text. “We would like to help extend this constructive, rhetorical view of reading, which we share with others in the field…” [Haas and Flower, 167] the following statement blandly states their intention to spread an important strategy, reading rhetorically, among community.
The tale of the flying African represents a common dream, a common disappointment, and a group identity. As the object of Milkman's quest, it suggests a multi-leveled equivalence between individual identity and community. Simply as a folktale, it is an artifact of Afro-American history; its content links Afro-American to pan-African history; it is localized to represent Milkman's family history. His discovery of the tale thus repre-
physical inabilities, so he decides to teach him to walk. He takes Doodle outside and
Billy is coming home from work one day when suddenly he hears some dogs up the street fighting. He goes to check it out and finds them picking on a redbone hound. He saves the dog and cares for it through the night. It reminds him of his childhood. When Billy was ten years old he lived on a farm in the Ozark Mountains of northeastern Oklahoma. He wanted two good coonhounds very badly, he called it “puppy love”, but his papa could not afford to buy him the dogs. For many months, Billy tries to content himself with some rodent traps his papa gives him, but he still wants a dog. Then one day he finds a sportsman’s catalog in an abandoned campsite. In it he sees an ad for good hounds, at $25 each. He decides he wants to save $50 and order himself two hounds. Billy works hard, selling fruit and bait to fishermen, and gathering fruit that he sells to his grandfather at his store. Finally, he saves enough money and gives it to his grandfather to order the dogs for him and asks him to keep it s secret. When a notice comes that they have arrived at the mail depot in the nearby town of Tahlequah, they decide to go into town the next week. That night Billy decides he can not wait any longer. He packs himself a little food, and heads of for town following the river through the woods. He walks all night, and finally reaches town in the morning. The people in town laugh and stare at the young hillbilly, but it does not bother Billy he is there on a mission to get his dogs. He finally collects his dogs and walks back out of town with their small heads sticking out of his bag. Some schoolchildren mob around him and knock him down, but the town sheriff rescues him. The sheriff is impressed with Billy’s determination, and says he has grit. That, night Billy camped in a cave with his two puppies. They wake up in the middle of the night to hear the call of a mountain lion. Billy builds a fire to keep them safe, while the bigger of the two dogs, the male, barks into the night air.
Jenny asked, “On the first picture what do you see?” Jacob replies, “I see a bird who wants to learn to fly. The bird then draws pictures so he can figure out ways to fly. This picture the bird has the fan so he can learn how to fly; the wind is pushing him, and he can stay in one place and learn. Now he has the air glider thing that way he could also fly different ways and then once he can do that he can fly. Now he has a rocket booster so he can learn how to fly fast, and now he has crashed in all of them. The birds that can fly are laughing at him, and it makes him sad. Then I ask do you think he will give up? Jacob replies, “No since he does not care what others think and now he is trying to make a new machine so he can fly. He made an airplane so now he can fly, and the others will not laugh at him. The bird is happy at first he was sad now he is happy. Jenny asked, “Why do you think he did not give up?” Jacob replies, “He knew he could not fly so he built machines so that he could
“The knowledge that Doodle’s” and the narrator’s “plans had come to naught was bitter” and causes a sudden “streak of cruelty [to awaken]” within the narrator. The narrator runs away from his brother leaving a “wall of rain dividing” them. [17]
...e of his appearance that is different from humans. He was race of his own and needed a companion of his own race and appearance.
The main focus of this story is the small child known as Doodle who was born with physical problems which he had to face every ...
The purpose of this lab report is to see if the upsurges and the diminutions on the invasive species populace along with the inferences that modifications of the ecosystem as one.
Ingham P. (2009) “The power of the zebrafish for disease analysis, n.d. Web. 15 March 2014
Buck used to live a contentedly at the judge’s house. His father was a St. Barned who use to be a loyal companion of the Judge, but after he passed away in up to him to take care of his responsibilities. Judge had two daughters and two grandsons. He always accompanied his grandsons in hunting and used to take care of them. Manuel (a gardener) had an addiction for Chinese lottery and one night he crossed the limit. He kidnapped Buck and sold him to a stranger. By the time Buck realized it was too late. He fought back, but the stranger chocked him and he went unconscious. Next day
A poem without any complications can force an author to say more with much less. Although that may sound quite cliché, it rings true when one examines “The Fish” by Elizabeth Bishop. Elizabeth’s Bishop’s poem is on an exceedingly straightforward topic about the act of catching a fish. However, her ability to utilize thematic elements such as figurative language, imagery and tone allows for “The Fish” to be about something greater. These three elements weave themselves together to create a work of art that goes beyond its simple subject.
On a very sunny day Chris was walking down on his block. He keeps walking until he said a green paper once he saw closely and he saw an hundreds dollars in the floor. While he was looking at it he was watching around because he though some one was seeing him and there was a man but he didn’t see him. He didn’t now what to do with it. That was his lucky day because he found the hundreds dollars. He was worried because he now’s that someone seen him.
On Thanksgiving Louis went across the street to eat with Jud and Norma. After eating he went back home and fell asleep. He woke up to the sound of the phone ringing, and when he answered it was Jud on the other end. Jud told Louis that he had found a dead cat in his yard and believed it was Church. Louis rushed right over to see it really was Church, and he worried about how to tell Ellie.