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    I Like Lyra Constellation And The Mythology of It Greek I Like It Because She Liked Dancing A Lot She Can Dance Until Death The One warlock in town was so fascinated by the girls that he swore that he would marry one of them. The problem was that this particular warlock was irascible and cruel, and Vega, trying to dissuade him, proposed a test. He should dance with her daughters, and if any one of them got tired first, he could marry her. But if he got tired first, there would be no wedding. The

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    My Love Letter

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    The sole qualification for writing a love letter is that you feel the love and want to express it. That’s the beauty of it. But it would be trite and probably false to say that as an expat, I can love Canada more truly (observe: Gord Downie). I think it interesting, however, that my love for Canada has grown up – become richer, more intentional and more constant – since I left. I moved with my family from Toronto to New York in 2014 to take a job teaching philosophy – a fantasy job, a world-class

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    Glasgow the Uneasy Peace: Religious Tension in Modern Scotland – Tom Gallagher Gallagher provides a detailed narrative on the exertion of power and authority within the Catholic community from the second half of the nineteenth century, and on the development of strategies for the promotion of Catholic interests without instigating a Protestant backlash. His story skates back and forth over the last one hundred years from internal Catholic Church politics in Scotland, through the role of the Catholic

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    The Green Book Analysis

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    Protestant majority and the sizable Catholic minority in Northern Ireland was centuries old, but the Troubles as they are called lasted about 100 years and some argue still continue today in a lesser form. The Protestants fought to keep their majority and remain part of Protestant England; while the Catholics wished to cede from what they viewed as Protestant rulers and join the Irish Republic. However, while this conflict heated up in Northern Ireland the British decided to intervene by sending troops

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    That said, it is also clear that the protestant Northern Irish youth identified more closely with Morrissey and British politics than they did with their Irish republican neighbors to the south. Punk and pop music were the sound of the Troubles for many people in Northern Ireland, not the traditional types of music that the Republic of Ireland clung so tightly to. This interplay with regard to economic advantage is certainly visible in Northern Ireland during The Troubles. The minority Catholic

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    The text under consideration is a letter written by Mr Nicholas Cummins, a magistrate of Cork, on 17 December 1846 imploring the Duke of Wellington to be aware of the precarious conditions in which Irish people are living and to start acting. This period of “mass starvation” is mostly known and called as “The Great Irish Potato Famine”. In line with the previous we could say therefore that this text is first addressed to the Duke of Wellington by taking advantage of his Irish origins but also keeping

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    To kill a Mockingbird By Tom Hewett In the novel ‘To kill a Mockingbird’ Harper Lee uses the mockingbird to symbolise the novel and some characters in the story. The Urban Dictionary defines the mocking bird as ‘A bird who never sleeps, imitates other birds and animals’ Harper Lee uses the bird in the story it symbolise innocence. The mockingbird symbolises the novel by being used as sympathy for the suffering of others and being unwilling to help. When the Mockingbird is referred to in the novel

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    Discrimination. Violence. Political turmoil. This was the reality that plagued Northern Ireland in a thirty-year conflict known as “The Troubles”, which began in 1968 and ended in 1998. Paul McCartney’s song “Give Ireland Back to the Irish” was written in response to “Bloody Sunday”, and is an effective example of a rhetorical argument. “Bloody Sunday” was a major incident that took place on January 30, 1972 in Londonderry, Northern Ireland. On this day, twenty-six protesters were shot by British paratroopers

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    Barber Creek Observation

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    NMIT Yan Yean Farm is located in the Northeast of Melbourne, with the latitude of 37° 32’41.416”S and longitude of 145° 5’56.272”E. It is surrounded by rolling hills as well as the Barber Creek that flows through it. In order to observe the geology of the site, Pit 2(UTM: 145° 5.980'E 37° 32.948'S) which is on a flat plain and Pit 3(UTM:-37.54997°N 145.08756°E) is located near the Barber Creek, are chosen. The highest elevation of the site is 200m above sea level and Pit 2 is the closest to this

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    The Irish famine that created Irish crochet Irish crochet was a lifesaver for the people of Irelando It took them out of their potato famine, which lasted from 1845 to 1850 and threw them into poverty(Loss of money). During these times, living and working conditions for the Irish were bad and harsh. They crocheted between farm and house chores and outside to take advantage of sunlight. After dark, they went inside to work by candlelight, slow-burning peat fires or oil lamps. A place to keep their

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