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    realize he had the ability to “alter public space in ugly ways” (Staples‚ 135). He was walking during nighttime in Chicago when a woman noticed him behind her. She quickened her pace‚ eventually running off onto another street to avoid him. He didn’t realize he had that type of negative effect on people until the woman fled in fear. After that incident he began to notice it happened more often than not. People would lock their cars as he passed by. They would walk faster or cross streets to get away

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    “We ain’t thugs for the sake of just bein’ thugs. Nobody do that where we grew at N___‚ duh! The poverty line we not above. So I come in the mask and gloves ‘cause we ain’t feelin’ the love. We ain’t doin’ crime for the sake of doin’ crimes. We movin’ dimes ‘cause we ain’t doin’ fine. One out of three of us is locked up doin’ time. You know what this could do to a N___ mind? My mind on my money‚ money on my mind. If you owe me ten dollars you ain’t givin’ me nine! Ya’ll ain’t give me 40 acres and

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    for granted. Sex is an emotionally attaching bond in which women are provided a fulfillment in which they feel loved. This is the value that Dawn Eden vividly expresses and argues in "Casual Sex is a Con: Women Just Aren’t like Men." Eden feels that unfulfilled need and emptiness as a result of casual sex and untrue love. Her basis for argument is not so much that women can’t "shag" like men‚ but that women should not try to due to its harmful‚ emotional consequences. Eden strives to convince women

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    places on black men has always been a negative one. In our society today‚ black men are depicted as thugged out‚ uneducated‚ marijuana smoking men. They have acrimonious attitudes‚ only speak in "black" dialect known as Ebonics and are hell-bent on putting "Whitey" in his place. To accompany his other attributes he deems it necessary to legitimize his status as truly black. This puts him in the same category as all the other prison-bound‚ shiftless‚ misogynistic black men that he feels he can identify

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    April 24‚ 2012 French novelist‚ Albert Camus once said‚ “Don’t walk in front of me; I may not follow. Don’t walk behind me; I may not lead. Just walk beside me and be my friend.” What are friends? What kind of friends do we have? How are friends different? In Marion Winks article “What Are Friends For?” Winik supports the idea that each friendship we obtain has immeasurable value and many differences. “I was thinking about how everybody can’t be everything to each other‚ but some people can

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    How to Walk on Crutches

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    CRUTCH WALKING Two-Point Crutch Gait Two-point gait: one crutch and opposite extremity move together followed by the opposite crutch and extremity; requires use of two assistive devices (canes or crutches); allows for natural arm and leg motion during gait‚ good support and stability from two opposing points of contact. Indication: Weakness in both legs or poor coordination. Pattern Sequence: Left crutch and right foot together‚ then the right crutch and left foot together. Repeat. Advantages:

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    How It Feels To Be Colored Me “How It Feels To Be Colored Me” is an original writing from Zora Neale Hurston. The writing describes Zora Hurston’s own perception of her life and being colored. Zora begins by describing her life in the small all colored town of Eatonville‚ Florida. The town had no whites except for those that passed through. Most people didn’t acknowledge the whites that passed through but she was fond of them and enjoyed talking and preforming for them. She did not see the whites

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    How it Feels to be Colored Me" was written in 1928. Zora‚ growing up in an all-black town‚ began noticing the differences between blacks and whites at about the age of thirteen. The only white people she had contact with were those that passed through her town of Eatonville‚ Florida‚ many times on their way to or coming from Orlando. The main focus of "How it Feels to be Colored Me" is the relationship and differences between blacks and whites. When she was young. However‚ Zora cared very little

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    “A genius of the South‚ novelist‚ folklorist‚ anthropologist”--those are the words that Alice Walker had inscribed on the tombstone of Zora Neale Hurston. In the essay How It Feels to Be Colored Me‚ Zora explores her own sense of identity through a series of striking metaphors. After realizing that she is of color‚ Hurston never really places a significant emphasis on the racial inequalities that exist in America. “At certain times I have no race‚ I am me.” Zora Neale Hurston did not have any

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    “Zora from Orange County” Zora Hurston‚ author of How It Feels to Be Colored Me‚ takes readers on a journey through her personal experience on racism and self-identity. The beginning of her life takes place in Florida in the 1920s during segregation. Hurston did not know about race until she moved to Jacksonville where there were not many African Americans. Jacksonville‚ is where she learned she had an identity change and knew she was colored. As one piece of evidence‚ Hurston states‚ “I

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