Gilmore Girls

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    ex-playboy bunny, Shelley, stumbles upon the Zeta house filled with a group of misfit sorority girls. If the Zetas do not receive enough pledges, they will lose the charter for their sorority house. Shelley, portrayed as the ideal feminine character in the movie, persuades these misfit girls to allow her to become their housemother. Throughout the course of the movie, Shelley transforms a group of misfit girls into confident…

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    Infidel Book Review

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    her children the proper Islamic way. Examples of some settings are Saudi Arabia, Nairobi, and Ethiopia. During her childhood she describes the different treatments she and her sister, Haweya, would receive from being girls. Mahad, her bother was allowed to play outside while the girls were learning baarri, which is a concept of complete submission to their husbands and the Quran. During her teenage years she would consisted being looking for answers in her religion related to the inequality of…

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    In “Good Country People”, we learn everything is not as it seems. The story begins with dialogue between Mrs. Freeman and Mrs. Hopewell. The two mothers discuss of their children, comparing them, as if it’s a competition. During the conversation, Joy Mrs. Hopewell’s daughter is brought up. Mrs. Hopewell wants the best for her. Joy (Hulga) is the protagonist. She is very intelligent, and arrogant. She often secludes herself from the real world. She is obscure from reality. Hulga’s leg was shot…

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    where a woman, presumably his mother, looks at him with disdain. The boy then grabs a vase off flowers and walks into the next room where he sets them down on a bedside table next to a small girl , who is hooked up to machines. He opens the curtains to reveal the alley outside and when he sits down next to the girl, they look out the window. The alley walls are then shown, decorated with flowers and the message “Be Brave”. Then a text reads ‘Sometimes it takes more than medication’ followed by…

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    in her tracks. Even before she was born, whenever a song came on the radio, she would kick. He parents knew that, even before she was born, that she had a love for music. "You know" the mother would whisper, rubbing her stomach. "These little girls might even be on Broadway! We…

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    Being in cheerleading isn’t as easy as people say. Some people even think cheer isn’t a sport but I would beg to differ. Cheerleaders have a high chance of getting just as sweaty, tired, and hurt as you can in other sports. Cheerleaders can’t be afraid to perform in front of people because we have to be loud and proud of our team. Practice gets tough when you have to do painstaking stretches, many difficult jumps, then, depending on the day, stunts or cheers. To begin cheer practice, all us…

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    Bloody Mary Myths

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    to Young Girls Nikyra Capson Bloody Mary has become a hoax associated with the coming of age for pre-teen girls and has multiple versions and different roots depending on the context on which it is given. A hoax is a legend used by the teller to alter certain behaviors of the listeners, usually by fear. In the case of this particular legend, the teller is trying to get others to attempt to summon Bloody Mary’s ghost. This legend is a prominent game played among pre-teen and teenage girls. It is…

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    Respect for Charging Bull An article tells the story of two sculptures in New York City and a great discussion they bring. Fearless Girl and Charging Bull, These are two different sculptures made by two artists bring a series of incident which about one of the artist's rights has been violated and theirs repercussions. Here is the story of the statues and theirs meaning. The Charging Bull were created in 1989 when Wall Street was hit by an economic storm. The author Arturo Di Modica created it…

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    she looked like myself, many, many years ago” (Bradbury 65), by showing how Miss Foleys main desire is youth. This shows her internal conflict by describing how the mirror maze reflected Miss Foley as young girl that representing her strongest desire; she regrets things she didn’t do as young girl, therefore she loathes to start her life over. Her internal conflict is also shown through “she could feel the mirrors waiting for her in each room, much the same way you felt, without opening your…

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    the years, young girls all over the world have fallen in love with the princess culture. Peggy Orenstein, a contributing author for the New York Times, writes about her strong feelings on how princesses have adverse effects on children in her article, “Cinderella and Princess Culture.” The author does not see princesses as just a passing interest for young girls, but as a leading reason for their self-confidence issues. Orenstein wants to make sure that the generations of girls to come stay…

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