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    In the 1800’s there was controversy over the land in the United States. There was an act put into place by President Andrew Jackson called the “Indian Removal Act”. The act stated the Native Americans who lived east of the Mississippi River had to relocate west of the Mississippi, regardless if the land was foreign to the natives. Oklahoma was then called “Indian Country”. Some Pacific Northwest tribes were taken to Oklahoma, but were like rubber bands, shot back. After warfare because of land,…

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    Black Oak Research Papers

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    It doesn’t matter what you use your wood for, in a stove, bon fire, fireplace, fire pit, furnace, etc. you always can enjoy the glow and warmth of the fire, but what kind of wood is the most flammable to give you the glow and warmth of the fire quickest? Oak is the most widely used hardwood. (2) Among those many things, the most popular is Gothic and William & Mary furniture and also many contemporary pieces. Oak is also known as a hardwood, and has over 60 species in the U.S. The species can…

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    a woman holding a baby in a room that looks like a basement or a barn. There is no floor coverings and the walls are not straight and dirty. Several buckets and barrels are around the room as well as some bags probably with clothes or duvets. The stove in the corner of the photograph is cold probably because the tenants have not anything to make fire with. The woman looks a little grubby but her clothes are not extremely dirty. She holds the baby tightly wrapped in some rugs and looks upwards at…

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    yet for the greater part of human presence, this is the means by which we lived. The sun was the nearest instrument we had to a clock, and it contained all the information we desired. Endeavor to picture a world where there is no such thing as a stove to cook an evening feast for your growing family; no television to watch your most beloved shows; not even a light bulb to light your path in the middle of the night. If you try to image any of the above scenarios, you get a vivid sense of the…

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    reality. Before the two men reach the ranch where they are to work, Lennie and George discuss their future. “Lennie shouted... ‘Tell about what were gonna have in the garden and about the rabbits in the cages and about the rain in the winter and the stove, and how thick the cream is on the milk like you can hardly cut it’...’Why’nt you do it yourself? You know all of it,’” (Steinbeck 14). Lennie lives off of those words. Like a child requesting a fairytale, Lennie has George recite that dream…

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    so much and there are so many differences during the Paleolithic and Neolithic period. In the present world people rarely go hunting for food to survive. They go shop for food so they can have food available to eat. In the present world they use a stove and an oven to cook food and as a shelter they live in houses and apartment buildings unlike the Paleolithic Stone age where they live in caves and tree trunks. Now we have actual weapons for hunting…

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    How to Make Brownies At some point in a person’s life they need to bake something. You may need to bake for a bake sale, party, or a nice gesture. As you can see, baking is an important skill, whether you like to or not. A common dessert that almost everyone loves is brownies. They are also one of the simplest to make. Everyone needs to know how to make a good batch of brownies. Ingredients First, the baker must gather the ingredients needed. Some of these would include: Brownie mix, Eggs,…

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    My Uncle John was sitting in the kitchen at the bar with the stove light on. Something about the whole situation seemed abnormal.”Why you up so late” he said, in a kind voice. ‘Oh, I was just going to get something to drink, but it fine.” “No, have a seat”. I have never been so afraid whenever i was around Uncle John…

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    Funny Trail Tales

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    traveling was like. My favorite snip in this part was “RULE NO.3: DO NOT COMPLAIN ABOUT ANYTHING. EVER.” I definitely agree on what he wrote in “RULE NO. 1: GET THE H*** OUT OF BED. Suppose your tentmates get up early to fetch water and fire up the stove while you lay comatose in your sleeping bag.” Later in that…

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    which he used to support his new wife Deborah Read (the daughter of John Read) and his son William (whose mother is not known). During the next few years Ben bought The Pennsylvania Gazette, wrote the Poor Richard’s Almanac, invented the Franklin stove, wrote a pamphlet called “A Proposal for Promoting Useful Knowledge”, had his first son by Deborah who died at four from small pocks, and had his beloved daughter Sarah. In 1752 he conducted his famous kite experiment while some of his electrical…

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