Alan Ruck

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    Ferris Bueller's Day Off

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    Ferris Bueller is no exception. The movie begins with Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick), a smart yet mischievous senior, who fakes being ill one last time before his graduation with the intention of spending the day with his best friend Cameron (Alan Ruck), and his girlfriend Sloane (Mia Sara). After breaking his girlfriend out of school and “borrowing” his best friend’s dad’s priceless Ferrari, Ferris does

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    Ferris Bueller Themes

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    Ferris Bueller’s Day Off Ferris Bueller is a high school kid that enjoys skipping school and always comes up with excuses on how to make it possible. Pretty much, this kid is living every high school kid’s dream. In this movie, he makes every wild planned event that he comes up with possible. The three friends (Ferris, Sloane and Cameron) all skip school and have an amazing time while their friends and classmates are stuck in school, exploring the great city of Chicago. As they carry on with their

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    Ferris Bueller is a male senior student who studies in a high school. His family structure is considered as a core family; Ferris has a father, mother, and sister, Jeannie. Ferris lives in a well-decorated townhouse, which indicates that his socioeconomic status as a middle-class family. Also, Ferris’s mother is a real estate agent; Ferris father works in a huge office and dresses up in a formal suit, which indicates that his father has a well-paid occupation. However, the movie does not introduce

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    Ferris Bueller’s day off is a comedic movie that shows a young high school boy going through difficult lengths to avoid going to school one day, through the deception of his family and school administrators to enjoy the day with his best friend and girlfriend. Throughout the movie, Ferris shows the audience and those around him that life is really short by saying that “Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.” The narration of the film creates

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    Synthesis Essay- Attila the Hun MSgt Aaron M. Hazen Class 17B Air Force Senior Noncommissioned Officers Academy 30 January 2017   Attila the Hun History has Attila, King of the Huns labeled as a barbaric savage that lacked refinement. The Huns had a powerful leader who used critical thinking to become one of the most powerful leaders of the time. He civilized the Huns and changed his people from a nomadic lifestyle that dated back 32 generations. He developed cities and gained territory for

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    In 448 AD, Greek writer and historian Priscus journeyed from Constantinople to meet with Attila the Hun. Pricus wrote down the events of his journey, leaving one of the few first-hand accounts of a diplomatic meeting with the Huns. His writings can tell us much about how the Huns interacted with other cultures and societies and how Attila—specifically—welcomed his guests to his court. Europe, in the 5th century, was undergoing many societal changes. Many of these changes were associated with the

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    Barbaric Nomads Analysis

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    There are many ancient sources stating that the Huns themselves were barbaric nomads. Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman writer states in the History of Rome, that “The nation of the Huns surpasses all other barbarians in wildness of life… They fight in no regular order of battle… It must be owned that they are the most terrible of warriors because they fight at a distance with missile weapons having sharpened bones admirably fastened to the shaft. When in close combat with swords, they fight without

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    Watchmen, A Comic Book

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    graphic novel that transcends this undue criticism of comic books. It is, “One of the first instances ... of [a] new kind of comic book ... a first phase of development, the transition of the superhero from fantasy to literature." (Klock, pgs. 25-26) Alan Moore’s story offers an immersive and complex plot that raises all sorts of moral questions. It is an extraordinary work of literature that occupies a well

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    Cry, The Beloved Country

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    Alan Paton’s Cry, the Beloved Country takes place during the late 1940’s in Southern Africa. Specifically, in High Place, Ndotsheni, and Johannesburg. It takes place during a time of social change. There is racial inequality taking place during the late 1940’s. The novel shows what it was like to be living during this time. Cry, the Beloved Country has an urban and crowded feeling for most of the novel. This novel is written in past-tense, third-person omniscient point of view. Occasionally, the

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    Paul Krugman an American economist, Nobel Prize Winner and Professor of Economics and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and is ranked among the most influential economic thinkers in the US.1 In his book The Return of Depression Economics and the Crisis of 2008 Krugman examines the economic crisis of 2008. He asserts that there were many tale tell signs and warnings throughout history that could have mitigated the crisis

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