Othello Reaction Paper Sara Fletcher Othello is a very powerful play‚ and easily understood. The language used seemed to be less complicated than some of Shakespeare’s other works. The characters are well developed‚ and they are revealed to the audience to be exactly what they are. Iago is the protagonist of the story; he is evil and hates Othello. Desdemona is Othello’s wife and she is loyal‚ and very much in love with him. Othello is a proud and true soldier. He is a Moore (black man) who has
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REACTION PAPER 1. Terraforming Mars Terraforming is the process of transforming a hostile environment into one suitable for human life. Being that Mars is the most Earth-like planet‚ it is the best candidate for terraforming. At the rate that the human population is growing‚ it is already evident that we are overpopulating earth‚ and with no signs of the population increase slowing‚ it is obvious that we are going to need to find new living arrangements. Where are we to find more space? The
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Chapter 4 The Empire in Transition Loosening Ties -After the Glorious Revolution‚ the British Parliament established a growing supremacy over the king. -These parliamentary leaders were less inclined than the seventeenth-century monarchs had been to try to tighten imperial organization. -The administration of colonial affairs remained decentralized and inefficient; there was considerable overlapping and confusion of authority among the different departments. -Very few London officials had
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Saleena Naturalism on One Character (Trina) Reaction Paper November 21‚ 2008 Although numerous evidences of naturalism are portrayed for nearly every main character in Frank Norris’ novel McTeague‚ Trina Sieppe is one character in whom the idea of naturalism is most effectively expressed through. Two aspects of naturalism that go hand in hand are the environment and heredity. Both of these aspects had deep influences on Trina and her actions and behavior toward money‚ her husband McTeague
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Chapter 4‚ we learned the various aspects of an audience‚ when preparing a written or electrical document. How did I consider my audience needs and interests as I developed the presentation about Great Calls marketing strategy? I put myself in their shoes and considered the expectations that a manager of a large cellular company would expect. I recognized their time is valuable and I would need to be quick and direct. I also thought that I would have to put together a presentation that was professional
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Chapter 4 15. For discrete compounding‚ to find the EAR‚ we use the equation: EAR = [1 + (APR / m)]m – 1 = .0719‚ or 7.19% EAR = [1 + (.07 / 4)]4 – 1 EAR = [1 + (.16 / 12)]12 – 1 = .1723‚ or 17.23% = .1163‚ or 11.63% EAR = [1 + (.11 / 365)]365 – 1 To find the EAR with continuous compounding‚ we use the equation: EAR = er – 1 EAR = e.12 – 1 = .1275‚ or 12.75% 23. Although the stock and bond accounts have different interest rates‚ we can draw one time line‚ but we need to remember to
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Chapter 4 Case Study Questions REI Climbs the Web Mountain 1. Create a simple logical design and physical design for REI.com A simple logical design for REI.com would include the following concepts: HTTP requests and other data from a customer’s client computer that travels to Web servers‚ application servers‚ and data servers which displays specific Web pages in response to those requests. When the customer’s order is submitted‚ it is then forward to an order-processing application database
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Reading Journal #4 In chapters 3-5 in Outliers‚ Malcolm makes a very great point. People in this world tend to think that those with IQ’s higher than 140 are the ones that are going to have great futures with jobs that will make them great income. Now anyone in this world would agree that those with high IQ’s are intelligent‚ but just because they may be smarter than most people‚ does not necussarily mean that they are going to succeed in life. Having a high IQ does not define who you are‚ the
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Chapter 4 Case Study 1. Stakeholders: a. John Ryan – Superior Systems relationship manager – Aggressive. b. Nick – Superior Systems managing consultant – conservative. c. Sandy – Superior Systems Technical – observant. d. Sara – Superior Systems possible project manager - e. Ron Gimble – Point of contact for Capitol State Chemicals. f. Ron Newell – Capitol State’s IT operations manager. g. Kelly – Capitol State’s network technician – viewed as a project manager. h. Alex – Capitol State’s
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ECON CHAPTER 4 PRACTICE QUESTIONS Names____________________ 1. Melissa buys an iPod for $ 120 and gets consumer surplus of $ 80. a. What is her willingness to pay? b. If she had bought the iPod on sale for $ 90‚ what would her consumer surplus have been? c. If the price of an iPod were $ 250‚ what would her consumer surplus have been? 2. An early freeze in California sours the lemon. Explain what happens to consumer surplus in the market
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