Winx Club Essays

  • Lizard Brain Book Report

    555 Words  | 2 Pages

    Have you ever wondered what it feels like to have lizard brain? In my book, Audrey has a ‘lizard brain’. That means she runs away when she sees a new person and lets her ‘lizard brain’ take over her real brain. Then she meets Linus and he helps her get rid of her anxiety. Audrey’s mom doesn’t like video games, Audrey is getting better, and she might go back to school. Audrey’s mom is like my mom. They both are averse to video games. My mom doesn’t like it when I am on my phone for a long time. Audrey’s

  • Argumentative Essay On Micronations

    841 Words  | 2 Pages

    As a young child, I always wanted to be royalty. I dressed up as a princess for Halloween, I read hundreds of books on the Medieval times and the Elizabethan age, and I even tried stealing our house from my parents to turn into my own personal queendom. Despite all that hard work and hope, I was still just an ordinary American kid, without any chance of securing an apartment for myself, much less a queendom. Or so I thought until I read the book Do Not Open, by John Farndon over the summer before

  • Gilbert The Protagonist

    667 Words  | 2 Pages

    I believe in being like Gilbert Blythe. He is the antagonist in Anne of Green Gables. Anne of Green Gables is basically the tale of an eleven year old redheaded orphan girl who is mistakenly brought to an elderly brother and sister who live in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, Canada in a house called Green Gables. Which follows her life until she is sixteen.My aim in sixth grade was to be Gilbert Blythe. Crazy, right? Well right away I realized there were a few things wrong with that. I wasn’t a boy

  • Rhythmic Gymnastics - A Combination of Athleticism and Grace

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    bodies. The most common accessories are a small ball (approximately 7" in diameter, weighing slightly less than a pound), a piece of knotted rope (must be proportional to height of the individual), a hoop (about 35" in diameter), a set of clubs (similar to juggling clubs an...

  • Popularity of Soccer Around the World

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    Popularity of Soccer Around the World I am going to talk about the most popular sport in the world: football. Now, you may be having visions of huge quarterbacks, dressed up in their padding and helmets, parading down the field during the Super Bowl. But the other kind of football, the football the rest of the world knows, has no padding or helmets. This other football is known in America as soccer. In more than 175 countries across the globe, football, or soccer, rates as the number 1 national

  • Religion In Media

    1539 Words  | 4 Pages

    paralyzed limbs, or walking handicaps. They join these religious clubs, or are shown on television speaking with these “electronic preachers” as they are called, and they let Jesus into their hearts. All of a sudden they are miraculously cured and can live their life in harmony. Still paying their monthly fees of course to stay this way. One of the most successful and popular religious programs and organizations is Pat Robertson’s “700 Club” which you can belong to by paying fifteen dollars a month (of

  • Raves

    1329 Words  | 3 Pages

    300-6,000 kids aged to about 17-25. A big empty wear house, lights, a fog machine and a DJ. Every single rave has 1 type of music: techno with a lot of base. It's electronically created with a very fast-pace. Techno music has its origins in gay dance clubs. Hip-hop also has had a big impact on techno music. Rave dancing ranges from being highly choreographed and stylistic all the way to thrusting your body back and forth. Ravers say they lose themselves to the beat and become one with the music by letting

  • Coming out of My Heterophobia Closet

    1404 Words  | 3 Pages

    wanted nothing to do with the heterosexual and bi-sexual life I had lived in the past; I was on a mission to prove I could be as gay as anyone else. That meant forsaking all straight clubs and hanging out with the straight friends that I had, cutting my hair and actively searching out other lesbians. I went to gay clubs and events and made new friends with total lesbians; I was ashamed of my straight background and even claimed to have been out of the closet for many years when in fact I had not been

  • Bon Jovi

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    He was in the band, Raze, in the eighth grade. Then he attended Sayreville War Memorial High School. During his early teens he was hanging out at local clubs convincing people that one day he would be a rock star. Jon was influenced by rock stars like Bruce Springsteen, Southside Johnny, and the Asbury Jukes. When he was 16 he was playing clubs. It was not long before he started playing in a ten-piece rhythm and blues band called Atlantic City Expressway with keyboardist David Bryan. Jon Bon Jovi

  • Deer Hunting

    1065 Words  | 3 Pages

    season, you also need to find a hunting club or lease. When looking for a hunting club or lease, it is important to find an area that has plenty of hardwoods and a water source; otherwise you will be wasting your time. Now that you have found the club or lease that is right for your hunting needs, there are dues that are owed to your club or lease and the clubs or leases own rules and regulations that need to be gone over. Since, the rules and regulations, club or lease, and license are taken care of

  • High School Vs. College

    632 Words  | 2 Pages

    school begins at eight o'clock, and ends around three. You go to the same seven or eight classes every day. You also see the same people you have grown up with since you were little. You have football season, school dances, after school activities, clubs, boys, plays, and a ton of homework. Also sitting through assemblies, dress codes,and who could forget getting sent to the office for misbehaving.College is a whole new step. You go away to an environment all new to you. You have to leave your friends

  • Has The Information Revolution Benifited Society

    2566 Words  | 6 Pages

    benefits. James Snider’s argument that the information revolution will be the down fall of the environment is fundamentally flawed. All of his justifications are could happens that are not supported. He even states that all of the major environmentally clubs don’t consider the information revolution as a threat. If the "tree hugger’s" don’t consider the information revolution a menace, why should we. On the other hand, John Mayo offers a very realistic and viable argument for the information revolution

  • Documentary Critique

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    for Roger Smith and bring him to Flint. Michael Moore is the author and narrator of this touching film. He is seen throughout the film. He interviews many people and tries again and again to find Roger Smith. He is thrown out of private clubs, offices and yacht clubs. His authorial voice is observational. He tells all sides of this sad story. He interviews the people of Flint and GM executives including Roger Smith. He even interviews the few very well to do people in the now struggling city. One executive

  • The Greenwich Association for Retarded Citizens of Greenwich High

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    carols, and have dinner. We have had bake sales and have sold candy in order to raise money for the clubs activities. These are usually a success because every one participates and we all seem to function well as a group. When there are dances or football games at school we each take one of the girls and it's good for them because they get to interact with the rest of the school at a big function. This club is not only fun, but it's like going to a meeting with some of your friends. We are a small group

  • Kelly Flinn

    1460 Words  | 3 Pages

    loved space and the challenge and the control she experienced. After Space Camp, she knew what she had to do and how to do it. She was going to go to the Air Force Academy and learn how to fly. She spent the next years in high school studying, joining clubs, and filling out applications. In late spring of her senior year, she finally got her acceptance letter. Then, a few weeks later, she received a letter from the Academy that she wasn’t qualified to be a pilot because of her poor vision. “I felt as

  • Catholicism V. Rangers: Catholicism Vs. Protestantism

    2498 Words  | 5 Pages

    Celtic vs. Rangers: Catholicism vs. Protestantism Most European cities can boast of a professional football (soccer) club and a competitive rivalry with a neighboring team. However, Glasgow, Scotland is the home of one of the oldest and most heated rivalries in the world. Two of the most prestigious football clubs in Europe, Celtic and Rangers, both call Glasgow their home. The cross-town rivals first met on the pitch on February 28, 1888. At that point, "none of the 2,000 spectators at the game

  • Laidlaw by William McIlvanney

    1353 Words  | 3 Pages

    at his interests and prejudices , Laidlaw is the main focus , in this novel and he captures everyone’s imagination and thoughts . He is an unorthodox detective who is always wondering about the nature of society , threading his way through pubs and clubs trying to find the murderer of an apparently innocent girl. Laidlaw is such a memorable character who requires to be looked at and examined closely. Jack Laidlaw is a universe apart from other examples of detectives , he examines the more intriguing

  • racial injustice

    1321 Words  | 3 Pages

    THE CRIES AGAINST RACIAL INJUSTICE “Racism is a bad thing, you find it everywhere in the schools, the clubs and also in the streets.” – Rasmus & Casper The belief that one race by nature stands superior to another defines racism. Racism can be traced back to the beginning of civilization and has always existed as a horrible issue in our society. Many attempts and reforms have occurred in hopes of eliminating racism and much progress has been achieved. Yet, even after the emancipation proclamation

  • Field of Dreams - The Innocence in History

    3903 Words  | 8 Pages

    but the game of baseball has remained remarkably constant throughout history into today. [2] Cartwright was a part of a baseball club team called the “New York Knickerbocker Base Ball Club,” and his rules were for use of only this club. Soon after, other clubs started to become interested in these rules, and they adopted them into their own ball clubs and games. “It is evident that other teams were playing a good brand of ball, for in the first baseball game on record, played in Elysian

  • Romeo And Juliet Journal

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    they started to sword fight, but then Benvolio came in and broke up the fight. After Benvolio broke up the fight, Tybalt entered and started to fight with Benvolio. Soon later, an Officer entered the room with three or four citizens all armed with clubs, bills, and partisans, or spears. Lord Capulet and Montague with their Ladies entered the room and started to quarrel aswell, but the Prince set them straight. Everyone, but the Montague's and Benvolio left the room, after the Prince said what he had