Restrooms

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    irritating because we are not used to being separated from our thumbs so we will have the feeling something is missing, this is not right. Secondly, I have the chance to experience one of the most difficult tasks of my life so far, I went to the restroom…

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    10. (Exemplary). As a member of the Transportation Security Support Team, I was assigned to an important mission. After summiting emails and researching the topic, I became an expert in how to fill the traveling orders and the vouchers. Then; I mentored my team members about the matter. My team is formed by STSOs LTSOs and TSOs. Most of them were not familiar with the procedures, what to expect, how to fill the respective forms, or were able to collect all the information on time to meet the…

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    becoming lazy about their own health. Research has shown that over 80% of homeless people don’t shower, brush their teeth, wash their hands before they eat, and have reported being very sleep deprived. The other 20% of homeless people using public restrooms and showers. Some of the 20% are just considered homeless because they live in a car. Back to the 80% of homeless people; these people can conjure skin diseases from not showering, contract tar and gingivitis in their mouth. Not only should…

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    Generally-speaking, Ehrenreich employs a large array of metaphors, in order to better foster a conspicuous relationship between the kitchen’s features and bodily organs. In further elaboration upon this reality, the author sheds light upon the dire conditions of the restaurant’s workers by elucidating upon the crude features of the human body; for instance, the extensive elaboration made upon the small intestine, which is, in turn, home to arguably the most obnoxious digestive processes, is…

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    I was born in Prosser, Wa. and grew up in Sunnyside, WA. Where 82.2 percent of the population was Hispanic or Latino and 15.7 percent was white (Census). Only 52.3 percent of residence were high school graduates (Census). My parents did not go to college nor finish high school. My father stopped going to school when he was in 2nd grade. When my parents migrated to the U.S. in search of a better life they ended up working the in the fields, picking fruit. The community I grew up in was mainly…

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    like in the 1930’s. There wasn’t any slavery in the 1930’s. The town Macomb was segregated. That means black and whites didn’t and couldn’t do the same things. There was not any equality in the town Macomb. Example, they couldn’t go to the same restrooms or they couldn’t enter the same restaurant doors, they had to enter from the back. Harper lee explains in the story “ To kill a Mockingbird “ how life was different in the 1930’s. A real life situation in the story that can be compared to an…

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    years of 1876 and 1965 Jim Crow laws favored whites more than blacks. This was only because black people had so many restrictions on what they could do in the country as a whole. Segregation of public schools, public places, public transportation, restrooms, restaurants, and water fountains for whites and blacks was what the Jim Crow laws were based on. Another main impact was the US Military System. Because of the Jim Crow Laws white people felt like they were better than black people. First,…

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    Spinal Cord Injury is a major problem that effects approximately 282,000 people in the U.S. and estimated 17,000 new SCI cases each year (“National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center,” 2016, p.1). The leading cause of spinal cord injury (SCI) are car accidents (29.3%), followed by falls (22%), gunshot wounds (16.9%), and sport injuries (8%) primarily accounting with males (Vallines, 2016). Leading that males have an accounting primarily with car accidents, that what happened to a male name…

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    the fountains. The fountains went really high and would splash you. After sitting there for about five to ten minutes we started walking again. My sister, Sondos, felt like her hijab, a headscarf, was undone and wanted to fix it. At the park, the restrooms don’t…

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    Life of A Migrant There are many disputes, I had in my life that has shaped me into what I am today. Without those challenges and experiences (good and bad), I would not be where I am today. I was born and raised in an economic capital of Pakistan- Karachi. At the age of fourteen, my family decided to migrate to a new country due to perilous circumstances. We came to the United States for a better lifestyle which was earned but at a very extravagant cost. At first, my father decided to send me…

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